Dec 192011
 

Howdy,

Tonight I’ll be working my way through as much of the Taproot Best of 2011 as I can given the time limitations, which means I’m going to be talking really really fast. Fortunately you can see the list below:

As usual, local listeners can tune into WCOM 103.5 FM and everyone else can tune into the WCOM netcast.

We won’t have time for these CDs, but I wanted to list them here for completeness.

20. Lie to Me / Bettysoo & Doug Cox / Across the Borderline / Lie to Me / 4:46
19. Stars Fell On Alabama / Tara Nevins / Wood And Stone / 2:57
18. Blackwater Wildlife / Arty Hill And The Long Gone Daddys / Another Lost Highway / 3:30
17. Moonlight In Ojinaga / The Border Blasters / The Sun Session / 2:26

Play List
16. Your Hero? / Scotty Alan / Wreck And The Mess / 3:07
15. Don’t Live There Anymore / Eric Hisaw / Ghost Stories / 3:13
14.  Welding Burns / Rod Picott / Welding Burns / 3:43
13. Down Here In The County / Grant Peeples / Okra And Ecclesiastes / 3:51
12. Bad Man’s Blood / Ray Bonneville / Bad Man’s Blood / 4:20
11. Mississippi Girl / Pokey LaFarge & the South City Three / Middle of Everywhere / 3:32
10. The Librarian / Tokyo Rosenthal / Who Was That Man / 4:44
9. Lonely Mountain / Paladino / Paladino / 4:01
8. Show Me A Sign / Mark Jungers / More Like A Good Dog Than A Bad Cat / 4:34
7. You’ve Gotta Take Steps / Ted Hefko And The Thousandaires / If I Walked on Water / 5:28
6. Dontcha Lie to Me Baby (Album) / Scott H. Biram / Bad Ingredients / 1:54
5. To Drink The Rain / Malcolm Holcombe / To Drink The Rain / 4:22
4. The Love That Faded / Bob Dylan / The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams / 2:30
3. Johnny Ace Is Dead / Dave Alvin / Eleven Eleven / 4:27
2. Drop What I’m Doing / The Gourds / Old Mad Joy / 4:17
1. Queen Of The Minor Key / Eilen Jewell / Queen Of The Minor Key / 2:03

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 Posted by at 5:00 pm
Dec 192011
 

Jonathan Harkham talks about trying to capture the textures of the southern California landscape and latino culture, listening to his mother’s country music while growing up in Los Angeles, and why he chose to cover “Green Green Grass of Home.”

Jonathan Harkham and PaladinoTPR#67 Jonathan Harkham from Paladino (MP3)

 

Show Notes

Recap of Interview with Jonathan Harkham

Jonathan Harkham talks about how he’s been writing songs for 15-20 years but has never been part of the “folk scene”.

Jonathan Harkham walks through Paladino’s line up. Chris Isom on guitar and back up vocals. He also writes songs. Adrienne Isom  plays guitar and sings. She was in art punk bands in the past. Annie Rothschild. Is also in the band. She grew up with a blues-centric upbringing. She plays stand up bass. Jon Rygiewicz plays drums. Jonathan had been playing country songs for a while and Chris and Adrienne told him they wanted to work on them with him. Then through friends of friends they pulled the rest of the band together. The do feel like a crazy family

Jonathan Harkham introduced first track from Paladino,  “Lonely Mountain.” Jonathan said it comes from some hard times when his best friend passed away and he went through a period of isolation.

We talk about Jonathan Harkham’s vocal style. Jonathan said it’s an honest way for him to sing. He’s been pushing himself to project more. But his style feels honest to him.

Jonathan Harkham writes the songs and then brings it to the band to work with them. The band fits music to it. Most of his songs come from a solitary place so he write alone currently and then brings it to the band.

Jonathan Harkham introduced “Mexacali Rainsong” from Paladino’s CD.  He wanted to say something about the textures of the landscape in southern California, the mountains, oceans, and deserts. The Latino presence also speaks to him. He’s interested in music / art that says something about the place where it is made.

Jonathan Harkham talks about growing up in the LA area. It’s home to him for most of his life. He got into folk and country. His mother always had it on the radio. Her favorite musician in the world was Johnny Cash. So it was “three chord craps” for them growing up. When he got to high school he had his punk rock phase.

Hank Thompson is one of his all time favorite inspirations, especially his early career. He thinks Thompson’s music is dark and powerful. Hank Williams and Johnny Cash are also big influences because they lived what they sang about. It’s not making a statement but it’s just about being yourself. He cites Porter Wagoner’s “Green Grass of Home.” and how they absolutely felt it he sang that song.

Jonathan Harkham approach “Green Grass of Home” on Paladino was based on his grandfather because it was his grandfather’s favorite song. Jonathan wanted to show his grandfather’s ghost that he could do it well.

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Legal

The Taproot Radio Podcast is copyright 2011 by Taproot Media. The music and interviews in this episode are used with permission of the artists. The Taproot Theme music is called “Meltdown Man” by Derek K. Miller of Penmachine.com. The episode as a whole is copyright 2011 by Taproot Media.

Feedback

If you have any feedback for this episode or any other episode, please send mail to feedback@taprootradio.com.

 

 

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Dec 162011
 

Rotation #291, December 19, 2011

read: http://www.taprootradio.com

listen: http://www.live365.com/stations/cspowers?play=1
live: Monday nights at 9pm eastern on WCOM: http://www.wcomfm.org

Howdy,

I’m happy to announce the Taproot Radio Best of 2011. This marks the best of what’s been submitted to Taproot Radio and I’m very happy to share these CDs with you. I can honestly say every one of them is worth the money in their own way. There’s quite a few new and emerging artists as well as a few familiar names.

I’ll be playing music from the Best Of 2011 list on this week’s show. So it’s gonna be a good one.

On episode 66 of the Taproot Podcast, Ted Hefko talks about the extremely competitive music scene in NYC and how that’s a positive influence on artists, how Dylan’s early work was a huge inspiration for him, riding the Greyhound Bus to move to New Orleans when he was just out of high school, and learning to “fix his face.”

Dig Deep,
Calvin

Recent Podcast Episodes

Episode 61 –  Tilford Sellers talks about his roots music inspirations on his most recent release, What You’re Doing To Me, how he writes smooth sounding lyrics, and shares a cut from his most recent recording session.

Episode 62Ernie Hawkins talks about the influence The Rev Gary Davis’s early days in Durham, the influence Davis has had on his own music, the technique of playing guitar riffs as if they are piano or horm lines, and his upcoming show at the University of North Carolina’s Southern Folklife Center.

Episode 63Scotty Alan talks about living in the wilds of Michigan, his punk rock days, making music at home, how he found himself in Los Angeles to record his CD, Wreck and the Mess, and his “Irish roots.”

Episode 64 – Todd Jagger and JR Harrell from The Border Blasters talk about listening to border radio stations when they were kids, their own radio show, the joys of Texas swing, and their experience recording in Sun Studios with ghosts looking over their shoulder.

Episode 65 – Mary Flower talks about the Piedmont blues as “band in a hand,” how she met Elizabeth Cotten, her square-necked Gibson and when she works it into her shows, playing everywhere from bars to Merlefest, and talks about three tracks from her Misery Loves Company CD.

Episode 66 – Ted Hefko talks about the extremely competitive music scene in NYC and how that’s a positive influence on artists, how Dylan’s early work was a huge inspiration for him, riding the Greyhound Bus to move to New Orleans when he was just out of high school, and learning to “fix his face.”

This Week’s Rotation

Taproot Play Lists on iTunes

This week’s play list on Live365

This week’s play list on Spotify

Poison / Danny Barnes / Rocket / 4:39
That’s How I Got To Memphis / Solomon Burke / Nashville / 3:20
How Much I’ve Lied / Gram Parsons / Sacred Hearts And Fallen Angels: The Gram Parsons Anthology (Disc 2) / 2:29
Song Of The Old Rake / Paul Kelly / Paul Kelly’s Greatest Hits: Songs From The South: Volume 1 & 2 / 2:49
Black Diamond / Mike McClure / 50 Billion / 4:24
Everything Will Be Fine / JC Brooks & The Uptown Sound / Want More / 3:30
Home / Don Gallardo / When The Daylight Whispers Darling… / 3:09
Hot Barbecue / Biscuit Kings / Hambones & Trombones / 4:14
Lost John (Live) / Van Morrison, Lonnie Donegan & Chris Barber / The Skiffle Sessions: Live In Belfast 1998 / 3:33
Sing Like Mary Sang / Ryan Delmore / The Spirit, The Water, And The Blood / 7:18
Snow Deer / Paladino / Paladino / 2:29
What Can a Mother Do / Chuck Prophet / ¡Let Freedom Ring! / 3:08
You Better Pray / Marquise Knox / Here I Am / 4:45
California Calling / Mark Lennon / Home Of The Wheel / 3:02
Come On In My Kitchen / Red Molly / Light In The Sky / 3:24
Double Line / Heavy Trash / Going Way Out / 3:03
I Want To Go / Fiona Boyes / Blues Woman / 2:46
Long Ways From Laughin’ / Scotty Alan / Wreck And The Mess / 3:55
Sounds Of The City / Lucero / 1372 Overton Park / 3:13
Perfect Far Away / The Bottle Rockets / Not So Loud: An Acoustic Evening With … / 5:21
Somebody’s Been Using That Thing / The Great Recession Orchestra / Have You Ever Even Heard Of Milton Brown / 2:36
You Know That I Know / Jack White / The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams / 3:53
Big Things / R. Mutt / Leash On Life / 4:03
Haunted / The Gourds / Old Mad Joy / 3:49
I Never Planned / Downtown Ramblers / On The Other Side Of The City / 2:56
I’m Gone / Pieta Brown / Mercury / 2:21
Inside Out / Blue Moon Harem / Finland / 3:22
One More Dollar / Gillian Welch / Revival / 4:35
SSA / Javelinas / Seven Sisters / 3:38
Can´t Be Satisfied / Asie Payton / Worried / 3:09
Cleaning House / Grandpaboy / Dead Man Shake / 2:32
Kept My Soul / The Black Crowes / Before The Frost…Until The Freeze / 5:21
Montana / Hymn For Her / Lucy & Wayne And The American Stream / 3:37
Milk And Honey / Gene And Gayla Mills / If Stones Could Talk / 3:05
People Just Love To Talk / Delbert McClinton / Acquired Taste / 3:17
Step By Step / John Lilly / Cold Comfort / 2:32
Terraplane Blues / Robert Johnson / The Centennial Collection / 3:01
Blonde Of Mine / Ray Bonneville / Bad Man’s Blood / 4:36
Do Right / Lydia Loveless / Indestructible Machine – CLEAN / 3:51
For a Time / Deadstring Brothers / Deadstring Brothers (2001) / 3:58
Staring Back At Blue / Parker Roads / Youngblood / 2:44
Devil’s Night Auction / Th’ Legendary Shack Shakers / Cockadoodledon’t / 2:12
Higher You Climb / JJ Grey & Mofro / Orange Blossoms / 4:09
It Ain’t Right / John Fogerty / Revival / 1:50
Two Clouds / Angela Easterling / Beguiler / 3:44
A Hundred Proof Heartache / Loretta Lynn / Sings LP / 2:27
In My Heart I Love You Yet / Caleb Klauder / Western Country / 2:52
Black Creek Risin’ (Album) / Scott H. Biram / Bad Ingredients / 2:53
White Lines / T Jarrad Banta / White Lines / 3:25
Reflecting Light / Sam Phillips / Crazy Heart: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack / 3:22
A Man And A Half / Wilson Pickett / Greatest Hits / 2:52
When I Get Like This / Steve Cropper & Lucinda Williams / Dedicated – A Salute To The 5 Royales / 2:29
Smokey Joe’s Cafe / The V-Roys / Sooner Or Later / 2:34
I’m Depending On You / Otis Redding / Live On The Sunset Strip / 4:47
I Can’t Sleep / Tejas Brothers / Tejas Brothers / 2:55

Recent Adds

None this week.

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 Posted by at 2:11 pm
Dec 152011
 

Taproot best of 2011 logoIn the six years I’ve been hacking away at Taproot Radio, the thing that keeps me going is that every CD that shows up in the mail has something going for it. Every single CD has an enthusiastic, heartfelt band or singer behind it. I get a kick out of the enthusiasm people have for their music.

But some CDs are better than others. Some folks are still working on their musicianship and some folks are still trying to learn the elusive art of songwriting.

And some CDs knock my socks off. Every now and then I’ll be slogging through what seems to be the 100th not-quite-ready-for-prime-time CD and I’ll slide one into the car player that blows me away. When the music’s right and the lyrics are right, and the band’s attitude is right everything feels right with the world.

This year’s Taproot Best of 2011, as always, comes from CDs that have been submitted to Taproot Radio. And the number of CDs that came into the station was the largest ever. So these 20 CDs are truly the cream of the crop. I’m proud to be able to share them with you.

Enjoy. As always I value your thoughts and feedback in the comments or by email. And please, support and thank these artists. They deserve it.

Calvin Powers, Music Director, Taproot Radio

1. Queen Of The Minor Key – Eilen Jewell

queen of the minor key by eilen jewellEilen Jewel’s had hints of rockabilly in her previous CDs, hidden behind the blues crooning and the sweet country twangs. But on Queen of the Minor Key, Eilen Jewell bring the rockabilly front and center, just to prove she can. She’s still got the surf guitar, blues, and country bits in these songs. Most importantly her strong feminine voice carries it all. By all rights Queen of the Minor Key ought to be an instant rockabilly classic.

Queen of the Minor Key on iTunes

 

2. Old Mad Joy – The Gourds

old mad joy by the gourdsThe problem with every Gourds CD that comes out is that you have to get over the “but it doesn’t sound exactly like the last CD which I liked so much” problem. They never go for a radical change from one CD to the next. They just keep evolving and growing in new directions. This year’s Old Mad Joy is no exception. They’ve moved in to full-on rock and roll territory on Old Mad Joy, with Jimmy Smiths’ lyrics being just as obtuse and intriguing as ever and Kevin Russel’s mandolin taking a beating like never before. They keep adding instruments. They keep adding more and more vocals. The sound just keeps getting richer, grittier, heavier and, well, funner. The Gourds are still the best bar band ever in my book.

Old Mad Joy on iTunes

 

3. Eleven Eleven – Dave Alvin

eleven eleven by dave alvinNo one makes you want to drop what you’re doing to run off and join a band like Dave Alvin does. His blues rock vibe has just the right mix of bittersweet sleaze and aloof indifference to the facts of life most people have to pay attention too. This year’s Eleven Eleven rides into my top 10 on the strength of “Johnny Ace is Dead” with good support from “Harlan Country Line” and “Black Rose of Texas.” I also give him props for having the guts to include a song like “Dirty Nightgown” in the mix as well.

Eleven Eleven on iTunes

 

 

4. The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams – Various Artists

the lost notebooks of hank williamsIt’s not just a historic project destined to sit on the shelves of museums. It’s also a really fine CD, carried both by the amazingly powerful melodic simplicity of Hank Williams’ lyrics and the “posthumous collaboration” from 13 stellar singer/songwriters who knew how to stay true to the Hank Williams sound. Hardly a weak track on the CD.

The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams on iTunes

On Episode 68 of the Taproot Podcast, listen to a special audio show about the making of The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams. 13 singer/songwriters were given the opportunity to set lyrics from Hank Williams’ notebooks to music and perform them on the CD. On this show hosted by Alejandro Escovedo, we hear the artists such as Jack White, Rodney Crowell, and Alan Jackson talk about what it was like to “collaborate” with Hank Williams. (To be released on December 26, 2011)

 

5. To Drink The Rain – Malcolm Holcombe

to drink the rain by malcolm holcombe Like all great visionary artists, Malcolm Holcombe sounds equal parts childish, grandfatherly, and crazy. His Appalachian blues/soul music has a tough as nails energy to it without losing the foot tapping appeal. Studio musicians have said they would fight for the right to play on a Malcolm Holcombe CD and To Drink The Rain shows you why.  This is one of those CD’s that I’d like to put every track into rotation, but I limited myself to “One Leg At A Time,” “Down In The Woods,” “Becky’s Blessed (Backporch Flowers),” “A Mighty City,” and “To Drink The Rain”

To Drink The Rain on iTunes

On episode 44 of the Taproot Podcast, talks about living in the North Carolina Mountains and talks about 3 tracks from the CD, To Drink The Rain.

6. Bad Ingredients – Scott H. Biram

bad ingredients by scott h biramThe dirty one man band is back with Bad Ingredients. Some people have tried to characterize this CD has his “quiet” album. But as I said in my review, “quiet” is a relative term in this context, more along the lines of channeling his demons rather than exorcising them.My focus tracks were “Black Creek Risin’,” “Dontcha Lie to Me Baby,” “Hang Your Head and Cry,” and “Memories of You Sweetheart.”

Bad Ingredients on iTunes

 

7. If I Walked on Water – Ted Hefko And The Thousandaires

if i walked on water by ted hefko and the thousandairesTed Hefko writes New Orleans inspired jazz that appeals to the NYC crowd. That’s a tall order but he and his band, the Thousandaires know how to make music that sounds upbeat, sophisticated, and fun while staying true to the spirit of New Orleans. Think of him as an urban Dr. John. My focus tracks are “If I Walked On Water,” “It’s Cold In Here,” and “You’ve Gotta Take Steps.”

If I Walked On Water on iTunes

On episode 66 of the Taproot Podcast, Ted Hefko talks about the extremely competitive music scene in NYC and how that’s a positive influence on artists, how Dylan’s early work was a huge inspiration for him, riding the Greyhound Bus to move to New Orleans when he was just out of high school, and learning to “fix his face.”

8. More Like A Good Dog Than A Bad Cat – Mark Jungers

more like a good dog than a bad cat by mark jungers The Texas highways are littered with the discarded Texan  songwriters who failed the authenticity sniff test. But veteran singer Mark Jungers has survived, writing songs that fit the here and now of  rural Texas without sounding cheap or pandering. My focus tracks are a”Show Me A Sign,” “Wasn’t Thinking,” “50 Head,” and “Drive.”

More Like A Good Dog Than A Bad Cat on iTunes

On episode 47 of the Taproot Podcast, Mark Jungers talks about the upcoming Frio River Festival, how he came up with the title “More Like A Good Dog Than A Bad Cat,” and why he needed to write a cattle-rustling song,

 

9. Paladino – Paladino

paladino Most of Paladino’s songs explode out of the psyche of lead man Jonathan Harkham so fast that the backing band can hardly keep up.  You don’t so much listen to them as hit against them like flying into the side of a beautiful southern California mountainside. The things is, you’ll want to thank the band when it’s done. My focus tracks are “Have You Ever Been Lonely,” “Lonely Mountain,” “Mexicali Rainsong,” “Ode To Misery,” and “Snow Deer.”

Paladino on iTunes

On episode 67 of the Taproot Podcast, Joanathan Harkham talks about trying to capture the textures of the southern California landscape and latino culture, listening to his mother’s country music while growing up in Los Angeles, and why he chose to cover “Green Green Grass of Home.” (To be published on December 19, 2011)

10. Who Was That Man? – Tokyo Rosenthal

It would be a mistake and a shame to saddle Tokyo “Toke” Rosenthall with the label”singer/songwriter.” Better to call him one of the most entertaining story tellers working today. His latest CD, Who Was That Man?, unfolds like the opening credits of an epic western movie, complete with dramatic mariachi horns. There are elements of “Country and Western” music woven throughout the CD, but he’s not riding off into cliche’ territory. He’s just setting expectations for a set of songs that are borderline mythic ballads. Highlights for me are “Maybe I’ve Been Where I’m Goin’,” “San Antone,” and the bizarre and catchy tune, “The Librarian.”

Who Was That Man? on iTunes

On episode 50 of the Taproot Podcast, Tokyo Rosenthal talks about the award he won for his song “Black To Blue,” his experience with European “listening rooms,” and where he got those mysterious horn players on his latest CD.

11. Middle of Everywhere – Pokey LaFarge & the South City Three

middle of everywhere by poky lafarge and the south city three Not since the Squirrel Nut Zippers has 20′s/30′s/Depression era music been so fun. I don’t know how a group of young guys can make such achingly authentic music, but they do it. They treat it like the fun romp this sort of music was always intended to be. The track “Mississippi Girl” could earn the CD a spot on anyone’s Best of list all by itself. “So Long Honeybee, Goodbye,” and “Head to Toe” are winners too.

Middle of Everywhere on iTunes

 

12. Bad Man’s Blood – Ray Bonneville

bad man's blood by ray bonneville Ray Bonneville is one of the best barroom balladeers working today not to mention a guitar player second to no one. Whether he is pounding on it like a rock and roll star or creating bluesy atmospherics, he knows how to tell a story in song and music. Every song will keep your attention. There’s always something building in there. Think Dave Alvin, but more rugged, more scarred, more stories.  Highlights for me are “Bad Man’s Blood,” “Sugar and Riley,” “Mississippi,” and “Blonde of Mine.”

Bad Man’s Blood on iTunes

On Episode 52 of The Taproot Podcast, Ray Bonneville talks about whether or not he’s a blues man, his time in New Orleans, and the spaces in his songs.

13. Okra And Ecclesiastes – Grant Peeples

okra and ecclesiastes by grant peeples Grant Peeple’s third CD, Okra And Ecclesiastes wins my reward for best original CD title in, oh, well, a long time. Some how that title builds an image of Deep Woods Gothic that permeates the whole CD and Grant follows through with Ray Wylie Hubbard style lyrics and gritty, grindy, guitars. Highlights for me are “Power Lines,” “Down Here In The Country,” and “My People Come From Dirt.”

Okra and Ecclesiastes on iTunes

On episode 31 of the Taproot Podcast, Grant Peeples talks about selling music on the honor system, his North Carolina connection, and how he nearly set his dog on fire.

14. Welding Burns – Rod Picott

welding burns by rod picott Rod Picott’s latest CD, Welding Burns, is just right for the times, which is to say it’s about tough people working their way through hard times. It’s a CD full of stories about people doing the right thing sometimes, and sometimes, well, not so much. Picott’s CD comes across as a set of tough as nails rock and roll ballads tempered with just a little bit of mournful country twang. Highlights for me are the title track, “410,” and “Sheetrock”.

Welding Burns on iTunes

 

15. Ghost Stories – Eric Hisaw

ghost stories by eric hisawEric Hisaw has a way with the Joe Sixpack Rock and Roll Ballad. His songs deserve to be turned into anthems for the working class. All the characters in his songs are so real you’d swear you’ve met them before. My focus tracks are “Johnston County,” “California,” “Don’t Live There Anymore,” and “The Love She Wants.”

Ghost Stories on iTunes

On episode 53 of the Taproot Podcast, Eric Hisaw talks about his cheap living days, the writers who inspired him, and the challenges and rewards of writing songs about your family.

16. Wreck And The Mess – Scotty Alan

wreck and the mess by scotty alan Scotty Alan knows how to write songs with a hook in them. Wreck and the Mess wins my 2011 award for most songs I like to sing along with at the chorus. Most songs are driven by an acoustic guitar riff that could be at home in a punk band, which is pretty much where Scotty cut his teeth musically.  My focus tracks are “Good-Bye,” “Your Hero?,” “Long Ways From Laughin’,”  and “Ain’t Much.”

Wreck and the Mess on iTunes

On episode 63 of the Taproot Podcast, Scotty Alan talks about living in the wilds of Michigan, his punk rock days, making music at home, how he found himself in Los Angeles to record his CD, Wreck and the Mess, and his “Irish roots.”

17. The Sun Session – The Border Blasters

the sun session by the border blasters I have to give props to The Border Blasters’ new CD, The Sun Sessions.  It was recorded in the legendary Sun studios in Memphis, but these songs are so easy-going and relaxed it has a back porch music vibe which I really really like. This is a fantastic CD to listen to after a hard day’s work.

The Sun Session on iTunes

On episode 64 of the Taproot Podcast, Todd Jagger and JR Harrell talk about listening to border radio stations when they were kids, their own radio show, the joys of Texas swing, and their experience recording in Sun Studios with ghosts looking over their shoulder.

18. Another Lost Highway – Arty Hill

another lost highway by arty hillHere’s what you need to know about Arty Hill and his band, The Long Gone Daddys. They are the the best honky tonk band working today. Their songs are original, fun, and just right for the times. Yeah, they cover the classic tried and true honky tonk songs at their live gigs. But you’ll want to dance to their originals even more.

Another Lost Highway on iTunes

On episode 60 of the Taproot Podcast, Arty Hill talks about changing the name of his most recent CD, his theory of what makes a song great, getting preloaded on a Ford, and why he had to write a song about drinking charcoal.

 

19. Wood And Stone – Tara Nevins

wood and stone by tara nevins Tara Nevins’ solo CD, Wood and Stone, is a deeply personal set of songs about working through relationships, work, and life in general. But she manages to make them universal  and you’d swear she’s singing about your life by the time you get to the end of the CD.  You can hear strains of her Donna The Buffalo music in this CD, but at the end of the day, this CD is Tara’s voice.

Wood and Stone on iTunes

On episode 40 of the Taproot Podcast, Tara Nevins from Donna The Buffalo discusses her new solo CD, Wood and Stone, her reunion with her previous band mates, and announces the location of the new Grass Roots Festival.

 

20. Lie To Me by Bettysoo and Doug Cox

lie to me by bettysoo and doug cox Two great voices, a guitar, and a dobro is all it takes for Bettysoo and Doug Cox to knock it out of the park with their latest CD, Lie To Me.  Bettysoo’s voice is strong, feminine, and mesmerizing, and Doug Cox’ guitar riffs are a perfect complement, soulful, tight, and clear. The CD  highlight the duo’s strengths and range from old-school Doug Sahm to more modern fare like Jane Siberry. Highlights for me are “Lie To Me,” “Boxcars,” and their cover of “Dublin Blues.”

Lie To Me on iTunes

On episode 51 of the Taproot Podcast, Bettysoo and Doug Cox talk about their one year anniversary as musical collaborators, their naming challenges, and the sensuous mysteries of the dobro..

 

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Dec 122011
 

Rick is out this week so I’ll be doing a two hour Taproot Radio show. Can’t wait to share all the good music with ya.

In the first hour of the show, I’ll be interviewing John Lilly and playing some tracks from his latest CD, Cold Comfort. He’s been dominating the FAR chart with this CD and you’ll hear why. Also playing new Lydia Loveless on the show this week and a new (to me) band called Hymn For Her.

The second hour is all music, leaning more to the rock and roll side more than usual, featuring Drive-By Truckers, Paladno, R. Mutt, Reckless Kelly, Danny Barnes, etc. You get the idea. But I wrap it up with a blues track from Bettye LaVette who knows how to do the slow burn blues like nobody’s business.

As usual, local listeners can tune into WCOM 103.5 FM and everyone else can tune into the WCOM netcast.

Hour 1

Slips / Hymn For Her / Lucy & Wayne And The American Stream / 2:41
Mississippi / Ray Bonneville / Bad Man’s Blood / 2:33
Blue Rider / Pieta Brown / Mercury / 2:57

*** Special Guest: John Lilly ***

Oh, Mama, Come Home / Jakob Dylan / The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams / 2:26
Six Nights a Week / Peter Case / The Man Of Somebody’s Dreams: A Tribute to the Songs of Chris Gaffney / 3:27
I Miss The Mississippi & You / T Jarrad Banta / White Lines / 3:32
Jukebox Of Steel / Son Volt / American Central Dust (Amazon MP3 Exclusive Version) / 2:57
Ain’t Going Back / Mark Viator & Susan Maxey / These Arms / 3:13
Cody, Cody / The Flying Burrito Brothers / Sacred Hearts And Fallen Angels: The Gram Parsons Anthology (Disc 1) / 2:47
The Man In Love / Charlie Feathers / Get With It: Essential Recordings (1954-69) [Disc 2] / 1:54
Signs / The Avett Brothers / Mignonette / 3:45
Stars On The Water / Rodney Crowell / The Essential Rodney Crowell / 3:44
Does My Ring Burn Your Finger / Red Molly / Light In The Sky / 3:09
Think / Steve Cropper / Dedicated – A Salute To The 5 Royales / 4:02
Good-Bye / Scotty Alan / Wreck And The Mess / 2:33
Hate It Here / Wilco / Sky Blue Sky / 4:34
Hang Your Head and Cry (Album) / Scott H. Biram / Bad Ingredients / 3:48

Hour 2

Melchert / The Gourds / Old Mad Joy / 2:55
I Am Trying To Break Your Heart / JC Brooks & The Uptown Sound / Want More / 3:34
Stranger In The House / Elvis Costello / My Aim Is True / 3:07
It’s Cold In Here / Ted Hefko And The Thousandaires / If I Walked on Water / 3:18
More Like Them / Lydia Loveless / Indestructible Machine – CLEAN / 4:06
Henry Nearly Killed Me (It’s A Shame) / Ray LaMontagne / Gossip In The Grain / 4:25
Lonely Mountain / Paladino / Paladino / 4:01
Aftermath USA / Drive-By Truckers / A Blessing And A Curse / 3:16
I Hope You Know / R. Mutt / Leash On Life / 3:56
One False Move / Reckless Kelly / Bulletproof / 3:55
Wine / Danny Barnes / Rocket / 5:08
No More Chains / The Coal Porters / Durango / 4:02
Jealousy / Bettye LaVette / The Scene Of The Crime / 5:36

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Dec 122011
 

Ted Hefko talks about the extremely competitive music scene in NYC and how that’s a positive influence on artists, how Dylan’s early work was a huge inspiration for him, riding the Greyhound Bus to move to New Orleans when he was just out of high school, and learning to “fix his face.”

Ted HefkoTPR#66 Ted Hefko – Interview and Music (MP3)

PSA

Jack Benny PSA on the importance of racial and religious tolerance.

Show Notes:

Recap of Interview With Ted Hefko

Ted Hefko talks about moving to NYC in 2003 and putting out his first CD a few years later. But he spent his formative years in New Orleans and that’s always the center of his musical focus. Egyptland was specifically looking at New Orleans and its changes. This CD If I walked on water is a lot more playful.

Ted Hefko talks about how competitive NYC is and how that’s a good thing because it pushes you. New York is all about original music. It’s not background music. It’s on a stage to say “This is something I created.”

Ted Hefko introduces the title track, “If I Walked On Water”. It’s got a gypsy jazz flavor. Ted had to push himself on clarinet on this on. A playful song of courtship done in the language of the King James Bible, with Old Testament reference.

Ted Hefko talks about the band and how the CD is really a group effort. Trumpet player Satoru Ohashi. Was in New Orleans with Ted. He has a very positive spirit. The guitarist Luca Benedetti and he is not a straight ahead jazz guitarist. He does bluegrass also. He put out an instrumental telecaster CD And Ted wanted to pull something like that on to the CD to show him off some. Scott Ritchie great bass player in New York, “people sound a lot better when Scott’s around.” Moses Patrou plays drum and a little bit of piano. They went to grade school together. His dad is a singer of old time blues and Moses gets a lot from that. Guests: Billy Blend on  Hammond organ. Neil Thomas plays on accordion.

Ted Hefko talks about the name of his backup band, The Thousandaires. First heard the word on a Saturday Night Live skit “Who wants to marry a ten thousandaire.” so he took off from there. .

Ted Hefko talks about his neighborhood. Williamsburg at northern end of Brooklyn which has become a popular area for music with good paying gigs. They also like to play The Shrine in Harlem.

Ted Hefko introduced “You Gotta Take Steps If You Want To Get Started.”

Ted Hefko talks about his inspiration. When he was a kid we worked on songwriting. Then focused on sax for a while. Then he started back into songwriting. One of the first albums that got to him was Dylan’s Nashville Skyline. Ted also has a Dr. John influence. Howlin’ Wolf and Willie Dixon speaks to him. And of course Duke Ellington and the lyricists that worked him.

Ted Hefko starts with the lyrics and then lets them take him where they need to go musically and this time he was fitting the music into the band. But he doesn’t see himself as a strictly jazz guy. He does like the whole CD to fit together and not sound like individual songs

He introduces Greyhound Coach. He rode one at 18 when he moved to New Orleans. Spent the trip next to a call girl twice his age who explained to him the ins and outs of the business. Went to New Orleans with a foot locker of personal stuff, a sax and a couple of guitars. Ted says that New Orleans is very welcoming, everything smells moldy, but the thick air is also like a blanket.

I asked him if these hard economic times makes people more receptive to his feel good music. Ted said he tries to create a good value with his music and making sure his music is entertaining. He’s not so much into the cult of personality in music.

He talked about a lesson he learned in New Orleans. Some of the old guys would tap him on the shoulder and tell him to “fix his face.” By that they mean he needs to smile an remember that the audience came to see and hear him and he needs to act like he’s having a good time.

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Legal

The Taproot Radio Podcast is copyright 2011 by Taproot Media. The music and interviews in this episode are used with permission of the artists. The Taproot Theme music is called “Meltdown Man” by Derek K. Miller of Penmachine.com. The episode as a whole is copyright 2011 by Taproot Media.

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Dec 112011
 

Taproot Radio News #290

Rotation #290, December 12, 2011

read: http://www.taprootradio.com

listen: http://www.live365.com/stations/cspowers?play=1
live: Monday nights at 9pm eastern on WCOM: http://www.wcomfm.org

Howdy,

Hymn For Her took the Americana Music Fest by storm, exploring new corners of the trailer park southern rock territory. Crowds love their live show and their songs have a vision and sense of music that goes way beyond the usual three chord rock and roll. Glad to be adding them into rotation this week.

Also glad to be adding John Lilly’s Cold Comfort CD. He’s pretty much dominated the FAR charts recently. His particular brand of honky tonk is amazingly heartfelt and bittersweet for two-step music.

On episode 65 of the Taproot Radio Podcast, Mary Flower talks about the Piedmont blues as “band in a hand,” how she met Elizabeth Cotten, her square-necked Gibson and when she works it into her shows, playing everywhere from bars to Merlefest, and talks about three tracks from her Misery Loves Company CD.

Finally, by popular request, I have started publishing the weekly rotation as a Spotify play list. See the link in This Week’s Rotation section. Drop me a line if you have any trouble accessing it. As always the week’s rotation can also be listened to on Live 365 and can be viewed and previewed on iTunes.

Dig Deep,
Calvin

Recent Podcast Episodes

Episode 61 –  Tilford Sellers talks about his roots music inspirations on his most recent release, What You’re Doing To Me, how he writes smooth sounding lyrics, and shares a cut from his most recent recording session.

Episode 62Ernie Hawkins talks about the influence The Rev Gary Davis’s early days in Durham, the influence Davis has had on his own music, the technique of playing guitar riffs as if they are piano or horm lines, and his upcoming show at the University of North Carolina’s Southern Folklife Center.

Episode 63Scotty Alan talks about living in the wilds of Michigan, his punk rock days, making music at home, how he found himself in Los Angeles to record his CD, Wreck and the Mess, and his “Irish roots.”

Episode 64 – Todd Jagger and JR Harrell from The Border Blasters talk about listening to border radio stations when they were kids, their own radio show, the joys of Texas swing, and their experience recording in Sun Studios with ghosts looking over their shoulder.

Episode 65 – Mary Flower talks about the Piedmont blues as “band in a hand,” how she met Elizabeth Cotten, her square-necked Gibson and when she works it into her shows, playing everywhere from bars to Merlefest, and talks about three tracks from her Misery Loves Company CD.

This Week’s Rotation

Signs / The Avett Brothers / Mignonette / 3:45
Jealousy / Bettye LaVette / The Scene Of The Crime / 5:36
And The Band Played Om / The Black Crowes / Before The Frost…Until The Freeze / 4:11
The Way It Used To Be / The Bottle Rockets / Lean Forward / 2:47
Gypsy Woman / Cam Penner / Cam Penner – Gypsy Summer / 4:17
The Man In Love / Charlie Feathers / Get With It: Essential Recordings (1954-69) [Disc 2] / 1:54
No More Chains / The Coal Porters / Durango / 4:02
Everytime I Try / Copper Box / People Change / 2:58
Wine / Danny Barnes / Rocket / 5:08
Time Pass By / Don Gallardo / When The Daylight Whispers Darling… / 4:09
The Famous Rocket Cage / DPHinely / The Famous Rocket Cage / 3:50
Aftermath USA / Drive-By Truckers / A Blessing And A Curse / 3:16
Stranger In The House / Elvis Costello / My Aim Is True / 3:07
Cody, Cody / The Flying Burrito Brothers / Sacred Hearts And Fallen Angels: The Gram Parsons Anthology (Disc 1) / 2:47
River, Railway, Road / Gene And Gayla Mills / If Stones Could Talk / 3:27
Melchert / The Gourds / Old Mad Joy / 2:55
Slips / Hymn For Her / Lucy & Wayne And The American Stream / 2:41
Oh, Mama, Come Home / Jakob Dylan / The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams / 2:26
I Am Trying To Break Your Heart / JC Brooks & The Uptown Sound / Want More / 3:34
Tuesday Afternoon / John Cowan / Moody Bluegrass TWO…Much Love / 4:45
Come And Go / John Lilly / Cold Comfort / 4:23
Man of Somebody’s Dreams / Los Lobos / The Man Of Somebody’s Dreams: A Tribute to the Songs of Chris Gaffney / 3:59
Blue / Lucinda Williams / Live @ The Fillmore [Disc 1] / 4:23
More Like Them / Lydia Loveless / Indestructible Machine – CLEAN / 4:06
The River Stays The Same / Mark Lennon / Home Of The Wheel / 3:15
These Arms / Mark Viator & Susan Maxey / These Arms / 4:07
Ain’t Going Back / Mark Viator & Susan Maxey / These Arms / 3:13
Jordan River / Naomi Shelton & the Gospel Queens / What Have You Done, My Brother? / 2:31
Respect / Otis Redding / Live On The Sunset Strip (disc 2) / 2:13
Lonely Mountain / Paladino / Paladino / 4:01
Be Careful What You Pray For / Paul Kelly / Paul Kelly’s Greatest Hits: Songs From The South: Volume 1 & 2 / 3:02
Six Nights a Week / Peter Case / The Man Of Somebody’s Dreams: A Tribute to the Songs of Chris Gaffney / 3:27
Blue Rider / Pieta Brown / Mercury / 2:57
I Hope You Know / R. Mutt / Leash On Life / 3:56
Mississippi / Ray Bonneville / Bad Man’s Blood / 2:33
Busted / Ray Charles / Anthology / 2:10
Henry Nearly Killed Me (It’s A Shame) / Ray LaMontagne / Gossip In The Grain / 4:25
One False Move / Reckless Kelly / Bulletproof / 3:55
Does My Ring Burn Your Finger / Red Molly / Light In The Sky / 3:09
The Great Hank / Robert Earl Keen / This Is Americana Volume 2 / 4:52
Phonograph Blues / Robert Johnson / The Centennial Collection / 2:40
Stars On The Water / Rodney Crowell / The Essential Rodney Crowell / 3:44
The Story In Your Eyes / Ronnie Bowman / Moody Bluegrass TWO…Much Love / 3:11
Hang Your Head and Cry (Album) / Scott H. Biram / Bad Ingredients / 3:48
Good-Bye / Scotty Alan / Wreck And The Mess / 2:33
Jukebox Of Steel / Son Volt / American Central Dust (Amazon MP3 Exclusive Version) / 2:57
Think / Steve Cropper / Dedicated – A Salute To The 5 Royales / 4:02
I Miss The Mississippi & You / T Jarrad Banta / White Lines / 3:32
It’s Cold In Here / Ted Hefko And The Thousandaires / If I Walked on Water / 3:18
Bramble Rose / Tift Merritt / Bramble Rose / 4:30
Burned / The V-Roys / Sooner Or Later / 2:21
Arlington / The Wailin’ Jennys / These Times We’re Living In / 4:51
Hate It Here / Wilco / Sky Blue Sky / 4:34
If You Could Touch Her At All / Willie Nelson / Willie & Family Live / 2:59
You Keep Me Hangin’ On / Wilson Pickett / Greatest Hits / 4:56

 

Recent Adds

The Great Escape / Danny Darst / American Songwriter / 3:58
You Got Me Spinnin’ / Silvertones / You Got Me Spinnin’ / 2:55
Cold Comfort / John Lilly / Cold Comfort / 3:00
Come And Go / John Lilly / Cold Comfort / 4:23
I-95 / John Lilly / Cold Comfort / 3:10
Step By Step / John Lilly / Cold Comfort / 2:32
Slips / Hymn For Her / Lucy & Wayne And The American Stream / 2:41
Montana / Hymn For Her / Lucy & Wayne And The American Stream / 3:37
Cave / Hymn For Her / Lucy & Wayne And The American Stream / 2:28
C’mon / Hymn For Her / Lucy & Wayne And The American Stream / 3:13

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