From Beethoven to Emily Dickinson and Earl Scruggs: The Musical Archaeology of Tony Trischka
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
1M ago
It is natural that a second generation bluegrass banjo player would have soaked up as much of Earl Scruggs’ style on the five string as possible when starting out; it is just as natural that they would push outside of those boundaries of the territory staked out by their pioneering forebears. In Tony Trischka’s case, part of this instinct to turn bluegrass on its head early on in his career involved doing things like adding saxophone to an instrumental version of “Roll In My Sweet Baby’s Arms”, which began with a cacophonous drum solo. Now, we find the habitual trailblazer discovering and rein ..read more
Visit website
Going Solo, With Soul: Travis Book
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
1M ago
It was one of the first cold days of the fall in the western NC mountains when I trekked up from Spindale to Brevard to talk with Travis Book ahead of his show in town that night. Spindale is perhaps 60 miles away, where I work at WNCW, and with special shortcut directions from a trusted source who travels that route regularly, I figured it would take about an hour to get there. Only that travel time forecast was wildly optimistic, compounded by the fact that I wound up with most of the directions but did not have the last bit, which I figured I would somehow intuit, but could not. So instead ..read more
Visit website
Teaching the Art of the Bluegrass Jam: Pete Wernick
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
2M ago
What connects you to the year 1946? Think of the time immediately following World War II, and perhaps black and white images of men in fedoras and women in long dresses come to mind. Maybe you have parents or grandparents who were born around that time, or maybe you know someone who lived then and has past on. It is an era that now seems quite distant for most of us, a kind of abstraction that can be read about but which remains present only in its dusty tomes and mono records. But like all eras of our past, the time when bluegrass music was born remains with us in tangible, even impactful way ..read more
Visit website
Blurring Lines and Packing a Punch With Stillhouse Junkies
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
3M ago
Here at Southern Songs and Stories, we take some liberties from time to time with what we put forward as songs and stories that fall under the umbrella of the American South. After all, we have featured a band from England (The Ruen Brothers), an artist from Idaho (Eilen Jewell), and several artists out of the sui generis state of Texas (Shinyribs, Joshua Ray Walker, The Deer), for starters. Add to that list the second group from Colorado profiled here (Yonder Mountain String Band being the first), as we bring Durango trio Stillhouse Junkies to the series. Although all these artists are not fr ..read more
Visit website
Diversifying and Exporting Bluegrass With Dark Shadow Recording’s Stephen Mougin and Ben Wright
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
3M ago
It was day five of the IBMAs and I had been up until four that morning, but Stephen Mougin and Ben Wright might have even seen the sun come up that day after they hosted yet another late night music showcase. Technically their showcases shut down around two or three in the morning, but there was always the chance that artists such as Sierra Ferrell might show up and want to jam after folks like myself called it a night, like she did a couple nights before. Such was the atmosphere in Raleigh, NC for the marathon annual fall event — business conference by day, with shows and jam sessions all nig ..read more
Visit website
An Update, and Two Quick Takes With Tony Trischka and Travis Book
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
4M ago
Here at Southern Songs and Stories, there is never a shortage of stories to draw from a seemingly bottomless well of music artists; we only scratch the surface of what we would love for you to hear on this series. But even with that, we have a parallel problem, a good problem if you will, of having a whole lot of material on hand waiting to make it into a podcast episode. I have been anticipating, waiting for the right time to publish episodes featuring a number of artists going back to fall 2023 (and I have to admit that the urge to scratch that itch is strong), and with this mini, hybrid epi ..read more
Visit website
Gravy: King Biscuit Time
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
4M ago
Delta blues found its voice and audience on the airwaves of KFFA’s King Biscuit Time, a daily broadcast out of Helena, Arkansas. Bluesmen like Sonny Boy Williamson and Robert Lockwood Jr., who would go on to become legends, interspersed their own songs with advertising jingles. King Biscuit Time, which launched in 1941, gave unprecedented exposure to African American musicians while selling everyday grocery staples like flour and cornmeal. And it’s still on the air. Reporter-producer Betsy Shepherd travels to Helena to tell the story for Gravy. Today, we’re sharing a special episode from Gravy ..read more
Visit website
Finally, A Country That Welcomes Her: Rissi Palmer
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
4M ago
Imagine getting your dream job and immediately being scrutinized for your appearance; being asked to wear a wig that was nothing like your natural hair; being quizzed on obscure bits of the history of your field; being asked whether you took the job as a stepping stone to another one. Imagine getting lots of hate mail about the fact that you look different than everyone else with that job. What about being stopped by security when they did not believe that you were really supposed to be in front of people at your own event? Would you stay in that job? I would not. And neither did Rissi Palmer ..read more
Visit website
Is Making A Year-End Top 10 List Relevant Anymore?
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick
5M ago
It is that time of year when the pundits and hoi polloi alike sharpen their pencils to whittle down the previous twelve months’ worth of music into crisp, definitive lists of favorites. The intensity of this navel-gazing exercise varies widely, but the imperative remains the same: one must make a top 10 and publish it, preferably with a lot of pomp and fuss. For someone like myself, a public radio program director, music blogger and podcaster, it is part of my job, so misgivings notwithstanding, you are going to see my top 10 albums of 2023 here. It is a good list. Maybe not what you would pic ..read more
Visit website
Legacy Media, Legacy Artists and Bluegrass’ Big Pivot With No Depression’s Stacy Chandler at IBMA
Southern Songs and Stories
by Joe Kendrick, Joe Kendrick/Osiris Media/WNCW
6M ago
When was the last time you picked up a book or a magazine instead of going to your smart phone or computer to read about music? I admit that, like so many of us these days, my first instinct is to scroll through social media or look at websites. The rise of digital media along with the ubiquity of smart phones has been nothing short of dramatic; the subsequent decline of print and other physical media is also impossible to ignore. Roots music journal No Depression, like so many others, went out of print in the midst of that sea change, although it continued online. Eventually it would reemerge ..read more
Visit website

Follow Southern Songs and Stories on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR