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Cayamo 2020: Sun, fun, music and marriage


By Paul T. Mueller

Della Mae
Della Mae on Cayamo

The 13th edition of the Cayamo festival-at-sea was another (mostly) happy week of sun, fun and, above all, music – scores of shows performed by world-class musicians, all on a seven-night cruise to two sunny Caribbean islands.

Marquee names in this year’s lineup included Beach Boys founder Brian Wilson, soul icon Mavis Staples and Americana stalwart Jeff Tweedy, each making a first appearance on Cayamo. Just as important to the 2,000-plus music lovers aboard were dozens of performers maybe not as familiar to the world at large, such as Nashville-based Americana stars Buddy Miller and Jim Lauderdale, Mavericks frontman Raul Malo, folk standout Dar Williams, Texas favorites Rodney Crowell and Hayes Carll, brilliant guitarists Molly Tuttle and Joe Robinson, to name a few. It was a fine year for vocal groups, with excellent performances by The Wailin’ Jennys, The Quebe Sisters, Della Mae and Lake Street Dive, all newcomers to “the boat.”

Mavis Staples at Cayamo
Mavis Staples

A week’s worth of festival sets is too much to cover even in a long review, so here’s a highly subjective look at some high points:

Monday, Feb. 3: As the Norwegian Pearl left Miami, Mavis Staples filled the coveted sailaway show with her high-energy mix of soul, gospel and rock. She seemed to be fighting a cold, but powered through with help from Jeff Tweedy and Lake Street Dive. Staples’ music is full of spiritualism and optimism, but there’s also a healthy dose of realism about current conditions and the need to change them. As she sang on Ben Harper’s rocking, anthemic “Change,” from last year’s We Get By: “Say it loud, say it clear/We gotta change around here.”

Brian Wilson on Cayamo
Brian Wilson

Shortly afterward, the Brian Wilson Band, featuring fellow original Beach Boy Al Jardine and later member Blondie Chaplin, put on a stellar performance in the ship’s largest theater, the Stardust. The ensemble of nearly a dozen players and vocalists led off with “California Girls” and proceeded through a string of Beach Boys hits, including “I Get Around,” “Little Deuce Coupe,” “Little Surfer Girl,” “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” and so on – many of which turned into joyous singalongs. Wilson, who’s dealt with mental health issues for decades, is nearly 80 and his voice isn’t what it once was, so others, including Jardine’s son Matthew, handled many of the vocal duties. Wilson took the lead on a moving rendition of the lovely “God Only Knows,” and the show closed with his “Love and Mercy.”

Jim Laudersale on Cayamo
Jim Lauderdale on Cayamo

Tuesday, Feb. 4: Shortly before noon, Georgia singer-songwriter Shawn Mullins, the only performer to have sailed on every Cayamo, came onstage in a bathrobe and led off his “Variety Brunch” with Steve Martin’s “Grandmother’s Song,” starting out sweetly (“Be courteous, kind and forgiving”) but quickly spiraling into absurdity. A string of guest artists (most also in bathrobes or pajamas) followed, with support from the “house band” of guitarist Trey Hensley and dobro player Rob Ickes. Contributors included wild and crazy folkie Steve Poltz, bluegrass star Dan Tyminski, powerhouse vocalist Amythyst Kiah, Alabama-based singer-songwriter Grayson Capps, and The Quebe Sisters, a Texas trio of fiddlers specializing in Bob Wills-style Texas swing. Crowell joined Mullins and Poltz to tell a funny story about a meeting with his future father-in-law, Johnny Cash. The show ended with an all-hands performance of “I Shall Be Released.”

Hayes Carll on Cayamo
Hayes Carll

Texas singer-songwriter Hayes Carll focused on his earlier material in a windblown Tuesday night set on the pool deck, opening with “Hey Baby Where You Been” from his 2004 sophomore album Little Rock. Other well-aged material included “Girl Downtown,” “She Left Me for Jesus,” “Bible on the Dash” (written with Corb Lund) and “Crimson Dragon Tattoo,” by Ray Wylie Hubbard. There were also a couple of sweet duets with Allison Moorer (the two are married) – “None’ya,” from last year’s What It Is, and “Love Don’t Let Me Down,” from 2016’s Lovers and Leavers. Carll closed with a lovely rendition of Townes Van Zandt’s “Don’t You Take It Too Bad.”

Wednesday, Feb. 5: Australian guitar prodigy Joe Robinson, a member of Crowell’s band, was a late addition to the schedule – too late, in fact, to have his name displayed on the huge video board behind the stage. By the end of his set, no such identification was necessary. Robinson, not yet 30 but already an accomplished veteran, dazzled the crowd with a performance that included recording riffs and then layering melodies over the playback; playing bass lines, rhythm riffs and melody simultaneously, and playing an acoustic guitar and an electric guitar at the same time. It wasn’t all flash, as he showed off legitimate jazz chops on a lovely rendition of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” and a take on Duke Ellington’s “Caravan” that segued into Scott Joplin’s ragtime classic “The Entertainer.” Robinson finished with a hip-hop story-song about growing up in the Australian outback.

Wednesday night found the Pearl’s Spinnaker Lounge packed for “Well Rounded Women,” a singer-songwriter round featuring Dar Williams, Ashley Monroe, Allison Moorer and Eleanor Whitmore (half of The Mastersons), who accompanied the other artists on violin in addition to performing her own songs. A couple of highlights: Moorer’s rendition of “I’m the One to Blame,” with lyrics by her father and music by her sister, Shelby Lynne, and Williams’ rendition of “February,” a tale of aging and loss that Moorer asked Williams to sing and then wept through, along with many in the audience.

Thursday, Feb. 6: The music started in late afternoon, after passengers had returned from shore time on St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands. Rodney Crowell filled the Stardust Theater for his acoustic trio show, which featured London-born fiddler Eamon McLoughlin, a former member of The Greencards, in addition to guitarist Robinson. The band performed fine versions of several of Crowell’s songs and a couple of Guy Clark covers, “Stuff That Works” (which Crowell co-wrote) and “She’s Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere,” before Crowell turned the stage over to Robinson. Another brilliant performance of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” earned Robinson a standing ovation. “I can only follow that with this,” Crowell said before launching into his (and Vince Gill’s) very funny “It’s Hard to Kiss the Lips at Night that Chew Your Ass Out All Day Long.” He closed with a couple of serious songs from his 2001 album The Houston Kid, “I Wish It Would Rain” and “Wandering Boy.”

A few hours later, the Stardust was the setting for “Buddy Miller’s Musical Chairs,” which found the singer-songwriter-guitarist-producer playing host to a large cast of guests, some on instruments other than those they’re best known for (including Miller on drums and drummer Brady Blade on guitar). The show, while fun, had a less organized feel than many Cayamo sets. “You won’t believe how much work went into this,” Miller quipped. “In fact, you won’t believe ANY work went into it.” Notable performances included ex-Nickel Creekers Sean Watkins and Sara Watkins doing Ralph Stanley’s “Daniel Prayed,” Hayes Carll and Allison Moorer singing “That’s the Way Love Goes,” guitarist Rick Holmstrom (Mavis Staples’ bandleader) on a Bo Diddley-esque “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” and Jerry Steele, a high school friend of Miller’s, performing “Honky Tonk Blues.”

Friday, Feb. 7: Friday evening, after the Pearl left Cayamo’s second port stop, the former British colony of Antigua, singer-songwriter Amythyst Kiah dazzled a Spinnaker audience with her phenomenal voice and skillful playing on guitar and banjo. Kiah, a Tennessee native, was one of the four women who recorded the highly regarded Songs of Our Native Daughters album last year. Her set list included several covers, such as the traditional “Darlin Corey,” Precious Bryant’s “Broke and Ain’t Got a Dime,” and Dolly Parton’s “Jolene.” Originals included “Polly Ann’s Hammer,” about the wife of the legendary steel-drivin’ man John Henry (written with Allison Russell of Birds of Chicago), “Wild Turkey,” about the difficulty of dealing with loss, and the powerful, defiant “Black Myself.”

Later on the same stage, Nashville Americana couple Drew and Ellie Holcomb, backed by Drew’s band The Neighbors, played an energetic set of folk-rock that was focused on positivity, but not at the expense of meaning. Clues to the content could be found in the titles: “Family,” a rousing tribute to family life; “But I’ll Never Forget the Way You Make Me Feel”; “What Would I Do Without You,” played without the band, and “Love Anyway.” A highlight was a sweet rendition of Sting’s “Fields of Gold,” played to pin-drop silence.

Rodney Crowell and Allison Moorer
Rodney Crowell and Allison Moorer

Saturday, Feb. 8: Allison Moorer and Rodney Crowell took the almost bare stage of the Stardust Theater for a session called “The Art of Memoir,” an unmoderated and fascinating conversation about Moorer’s 2019 book Blood and Crowell’s Chinaberry Sidewalks from 2011. The two took turns praising each other’s work and quizzing each other about their motivations and their writing processes. They took note of the different ways their memoirs are organized – Moorer’s starting at the beginning of her story, Crowell’s at the end – and agreed that their writing was a way of coming to terms with their respective pasts, each of which was marred by domestic violence. Late in the session, each performed two songs, sharing the guitar that stood between their chairs. Crowell sang “The Rock of My Soul,” a somewhat fictionalized account of his relationship with his abusive father, and “I Know Love Is All I Need,” while Moorer performed “Night Light,” a tribute to her older sister, Shelby Lynne, who helped her deal with their parents’ troubled marriage and violent deaths, and “Heal,” the closing track of the Blood album, which she wrote with Mary Gauthier. When the session ended, the two embraced as the audience rose in a well-deserved standing ovation.

Another marquee event, “Sunset at Laurel Canyon,” took place Saturday evening on the pool deck stage, as a wide cross section of artists performed some of the enduring songs of the singer-songwriter era. Jim Lauderdale, accompanied by rising country singer Logan Ledger, did a nice version of “California Dreaming” by the Mamas and the Papas, followed by Amythyst Kiah with a fine rendition of Neil Young’s “Heart of Gold.” Madison Cunningham took a solo turn on Joni Mitchell’s “California,” while Della Mae performed Carly Simon’s “You’re So Vain” and Steve Poltz gave a heartfelt and faithful rendition of James Taylor’s “Fire and Rain.” Emily Scott Robinson and Soren Staff of Them Coulee Boys gave a beautiful rendition of Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now,” and the Brian Wilson Band, minus its namesake, reprised “God Only Knows,” with Probyn Gregory on lead vocal. Lake Street Dive, led by the lovely voice of Rachael Price and joined by many other artists, closed the show with the Eagles’ “Take It to the Limit.”

Sunday, Feb. 9: Sunday morning’s gospel show, on the pool deck under a hot sun, featured a surprise performance by Mavis Staples, who was believed by some to have left the cruise earlier in the week. Staples, in a Tom Petty/Bob Dylan T-shirt, was joined by vocalist Saundra Williams, a member of her band, on “Woke Up This Morning (With My Mind on Jesus).” Other highlights included hosts Drew and Ellie Holcomb with “The Old Rugged Cross” and “Amazing Grace,” Dan Tyminski with his original “Money Can’t Buy,” and Emily Scott Robinson, backed by Hulda Quebe of The Quebe Sisters and members of the Quebes’ band, with “Wayfaring Stranger.” The all-hands finale was Hank Williams’ “I Saw the Light.”

The Spinnaker Lounge was the setting for the 2020 edition of the Cayamo Community Showcase, featuring seven all-passenger bands performing songs by Cayamo artists. Most of the bands consisted of three or four members, with professionals providing rhythm section assistance. All gave fine performances for an appreciative audience, which at times included the artists they were covering. Selections included “Drunken Poet’s Dream,” by Hayes Carll and Ray Wylie Hubbard, Buddy Miller’s “Does My Ring Burn Your Finger,” Shawn Mullins’ “Shimmer,” and Rodney Crowell’s “ ‘Til I Gain Control Again.”

Sunday night saw a Cayamo first – the wedding of an artist during the festival. Steve Poltz and his fiancée, Sharon Daddi, were married by Dave Scruggs, an employee of Cayamo producer Sixthman, near the top of the Atrium staircase (the event was originally scheduled for the spacious pool deck but was moved to the smaller Atrium because of weather concerns). Several Cayamo artists performed before and after the vows, the large crowd (which included Poltz’s father and his sister) shared cake and sparkling beverages, and Poltz later returned to the stage to perform briefly.

The festival’s final show (not counting late-night passenger jams) was the Tas-Jam, an all-star event that was to have been hosted by singer-songwriter and Cayamo favorite Aaron Lee Tasjan. Tasjan unfortunately had fallen victim to illness, but the event went on, capably hosted by The Mastersons (the other half is Eleanor Whitmore’s husband, Chris Masterson). The high-energy Atrium set included a vigorous take on Cheap Trick’s “Surrender” and a fine rendition of Tom Petty’s “The Waiting” to close the evening.

Review: Gurf Morlix’s “The Soul & the Heal”

By Paul T. Mueller

On his latest CD, The Soul @ the Heal, Austin-based singer-songwriter Gurf Morlix celebrates humanity in all its flawed glory. These 10 songs comprise an unsparing examination of what’s good and what’s not so good in people, all seen through Morlix’s critical but sympathetic lyrics and conveyed in his familiar gruff voice.

Now in his mid-60s, Gurf Morlix has had the opportunity to observe a wide variety of people, from his early years in upstate New York through his long musical career in places like Nashville and Austin. It’s a safe bet he’s known the subjects of these songs, or people much like them. Some of his characters aren’t very likable – for example, the narrator of the ominous “Bad Things,” who insists, not entirely convincingly, that he’s “a good man who may have done some bad things.” Some, such as the wounded-by-love protagonist of “I’m Bruised, I’m Bleedin’,” come across as more victim than perpetrator.

But amid the darkness, there is also light. “Love Remains Unbroken” celebrates the emotional connections that help us through tough times; “Right Now” is an ode to focusing on the present instead of dwelling on the past or the future; “Quicksilver Kiss” recalls the first flowering of new romance; “Move Someone” is a plea for human interaction.

The contradictions of life are neatly summed up in “The Best We Can,” the album’s closing track, which is built around what Morlix has described as a “pretty chord” of the kind he rarely uses. “Ain’t none of us are noble/We lead tawdry little lives/We’re animals roaming the land,” he sings matter-of-factly. “We might be made of stardust, but that don’t make us special/And we gotta do the best we can.” It’s not exactly a rousing pep talk, but Morlix’s gentle, jazzy guitar and restrained optimism make for a welcome message for anyone dealing with the daily grind.

The songs’ thematic contrasts are echoed by the artwork of the CD cover – on the front a cross-section of a cherry, bright red and shaped like a heart, and on the back an amorphous splatter, also bright red, that looks a lot like blood.

In addition to producing, Gurf Morlix handled all of the singing here and much of the playing – guitars, bass, keyboards and percussion. Other contributors include Rick Richards on drums, Ray Bonneville on harmonica and Nick Connolly on B3 organ.

Cayamo music cruise review: An astounding line-up

By Paul Mueller

The 10th edition of the Cayamo music cruise enjoyed sunny skies, smooth seas and a fairly astounding musical lineup. The festival at sea, aboard the Norwegian Jade, left Tampa on Feb. 19, and returned a week later, after stops at the islands of Cozumel, Mexico, and Roatan, Honduras. As always, it was billed as “A Journey Through Song,” and as always it lived up to that promise. The number of shows and their scheduling made it difficult to see every performer, but that’s a good problem to have.

Buddy Miller and Aaron Lee Tasjan

Most of the more than 50 performers played individual shows, and many appeared in themed and collaboration shows as well. Themed shows included a tribute to the late Guy Clark; a “Songs of Protest” show hosted by Gretchen Peters; a “variety show” hosted by Shawn Mullins; “All the Girls Who Cry,” a sad-song fest hosted by Alabama country-folk crooners The Secret Sisters, and a guitar-focused show dubbed “Buddy Miller’s Guitar 101.” There were several “and friends” shows, mostly featuring several singer-songwriters in an in-the-round format, and singer and multi-instrumentalist Luke Bulla hosted “Last Man Standing” jams that capped off three evenings’ music. Many made guest appearances at other artists’ shows throughout the week, and passenger jams, sometimes including professionals, were easily found all over the boat.

A weeklong festival inevitably produces too many high points to list them all, but here are a few. Be assured that at the same time as pretty much any of these shows, there was at least one other equally memorable show going on somewhere else on the Jade.

Sunday, Feb. 19: The opening set on the pool deck can be a tough slot, with many passengers still boarding and those already aboard busy looking around or reuniting with old friends. But singer-songwriter Christian Lopez, a West Virginia native who’s all of 21 years old, made the most of his rookie appearance, demonstrating a veteran’s savvy in capturing the attention of the crowd. Alternating between well-written originals and covers, and between full-band and solo formats, Lopez rocked hard and showed that he’d earned his spot

North Mississippi All-Stars

on the roster. Well-done renditions of the Beatles’ “I Want You (She’s So Heavy),” Blaze Foley’s “Clay Pigeons” and Bill Withers’ “Use Me” played to the sensibilities of the crowd, much of which was three times Lopez’s age, but in a respectful way.

Also: Brandi Carlile,  a veteran of the first Cayamo music cruise in 2008 and most since, had herself a great time at the sail away show later in the afternoon, proclaiming the cruise “the greatest Cayamo ever.” Assisted as always by the Hanseroth twins (Phil on bass and Tim on guitar), she tore through favorites such as “Wherever Is Your Heart” and “The Eye” and closed with a nice rendition of Led Zeppelin’s “Going to California.”

Monday, Feb. 20: East Nashville-based singer-songwriter Aaron Lee Tasjan made his much-anticipated Cayamo music cruise debut at an evening pool-deck show, and fully met his fans’ high expectations. Accompanied by fellow singer-songwriter Brian Wright, Tasjan played most of his most recent album, Silver Tears, as well as a few older tunes. His outgoing personality contrasted with Wright’s more stoic approach, but they were two of a kind when they started trading guitar licks. Late in the show, Wright took the spotlight to offer a fine rendition of his murder ballad “Maria Sugarcane.” Tasjan closed with a vigorous workout on his anthemic “Success” that had much of the crowd singing along.

Love Junkies on Cayamo music cruise

Also: The Love Junkies (singer-songwriters Lori McKenna, Liz Rose and Hillary Lindsey) played an engaging show, performing songs made famous by bigger names in Nashville. These included McKenna’s “Humble and Kind” (Tim McGraw), Lindsey’s co-write “Blue Ain’t Your Color” (Keith Urban) and “Girl Crush” (written by all three and recorded by Little Big Town). The trio got support from Cary Barlowe and Ruston Kelly. It’s always fun to hear songs performed by the people who wrote them, without the usual studio trappings. Extra points to Rose for pushing through despite a case of laryngitis.

Tuesday, Feb. 21: The Songs of Protest show, hosted by Nashville singer-songwriter Gretchen Peters and featuring several Cayamo newcomers, was one of the emotional high points of the cruise. Performances included a powerful rendition of Dylan’s “Gotta Serve Somebody” by soul powerhouse Sarah Potenza; Allen Toussaint’s joyful “Yes We Can Can,” by Amy Helm; Randy Newman’s “Political Science,” sung by Peters’ husband, keyboardist Barry Walsh, from the viewpoint of the new U.S. president; and Mary Gauthier’s “Mercy Now,” sung with intensity by Gurf Morlix and Potenza. Peters’ selections included a beautiful rendition of Woody Guthrie’s “Deportee.”

Will Hoge

Also: A pool-deck tribute to Guy Clark tribute featured contributions from longtime Clark associates (Rodney Crowell, “Stuff That Works”; Emmylou Harris, “Immigrant Eyes”) as well as more recent acolytes (Sarah Jarosz, “Boats to Build”; Brian Wright, “Coyote”). Oddly missing from the set was the iconic “L.A. Freeway,” but Crowell and Steve Earle teamed up to close with “Desperadoes Waiting for a Train.”

Wednesday, Feb. 22: Fans might have expected the basics in a show called Buddy Miller’s Guitar 101; what they got was far more advanced. Singer-songwriter and producer Miller alternated between describing his own journey to guitar mastery and using his laptop to play snippets of six-string artistry by predecessors such as James Burton, Link Wray and Jimi Hendrix. Things got even better when Miller brought out his guests. Tasjan ripped through a terrific acoustic rendition of “Streets of Galilee,” which incorporates his own musical autobiography. Nashville session player Tom Bukovac played a funky/jazzy bit of electric improvisation that had Miller and Tasjan grinning and shaking their heads. North Mississippi Allstars frontman Luther Dickinson talked about his band’s mission in the blues world (“There’s a responsibility to respect the repertoire”) and demonstrated his mastery of both the acoustic six-string and a two-string instrument made from a coffee can. Finally, the legendary Richard Thompson talked a little about having played with Hendrix and executed a beautiful acoustic take on “Turning of the Tide,” along with an instrumental piece he described as “an Irish tune with Scottish variations.”

Also: Nashville singer-songwriter Will Hoge’s show in a well-packed Spinnaker Lounge, in which he talked about burning out and leaving music a few years ago before rediscovering his craft and returning to the road. The set featured the kind of confessional songs you’d expect, plus some favorites such as the funny but pointed “Jesus Came to Tennessee.” Hoge is a very funny guy, but also an intense performer, and his powerful songs and playing often had the sometimes-rowdy Spinnaker crowd listening in dead silence.

Sarah Jarosz on Cayamo music cruise

Thursday, Feb. 23: Against the backdrop of a nice Caribbean sunset, Kacey Musgraves and her band serenaded the sail-away from Roatan on the pool deck. The set list included a well-chosen mix of originals (“This Town,” “Merry Go ’Round,” “It Is What It Is”) and interesting covers (Weezer’s “Island in the Sun,” Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy,” Santo & Johnny’s “Sleepwalk”). There was also a fun and witty reworking of the Beach Boys’ “Kokomo,” with lyrics tailored to the Cayamo experience and a laid-back vibe that suited the occasion perfectly. Musgraves closed with her anthemic “Arrow.”

Also: Singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Sarah Jarosz, another Cayamo music cruise rookie, still looks about 17, but she sings and plays like she’s been onstage forever. Accompanied by bassist Jeff Picker and Australian-turned-Austinite guitar ace Jedd Hughes, Jarosz played a lovely set highlighted by the powerful (and Grammy-winning) “House of Mercy,” co-written with Hughes. Jarosz seems able to play anything with strings; her instruments in this show included acoustic and electric guitars, banjo and her unusual octave mandolin, an eight-stringed instrument the size of a small guitar.

Friday, Feb. 24: If you’ve ever wondered whether it’s possible to play rock ‘n’ roll at 10 a.m. on a cruise ship, the answer is, “It is if you’re the North Mississippi Allstars.” Playing to a nearly capacity crowd in the Jade’s largest indoor venue, the Stardust Theater, the Allstars (Luther and Cody Dickinson, plus bassist Dominic Davis, who played with several artists) featured a mix of acoustic blues and all-out boogie. Cody, usually the Allstars’ drummer, yielded the

Richard Thompson

skins to Brady Blade, also from Miller’s band, to step out front on guitar and vocals for the traditional “Deep Ellum Blues.” The set closed with a fine rendition of the classic “Sitting on Top of the World,” featuring Luther and his coffee-can guitar.

Also: Singer-songwriter and Cayamo music cruise first-timer Aoife O’Donovan played a mostly original set, by turns quiet and loud, in the Spinnaker. She was assisted by guitarist Anthony da Costa and drummer Steve Nistor, along with guests Stuart Duncan on fiddle and Sarah Jarosz (who has played in the folkie trio I’m With Her with O’Donovan and former Nickel Creeker Sara Watkins). O’Donovan closed with a lovely rendition of Steve Winwood’s “Can’t Find My Way Home” that might have drawn a few tears from those old enough to remember Blind Faith’s version.

Saturday, Feb. 24: The gospel show has become a well-loved Cayamo tradition. This year it took the form of a songwriter round rather than a succession of artists as in the past. Featured were country singer turned soul belter Bonnie Bishop, Nashville songwriters and performers (and spouses) Lari White and Chuck Cannon, and Sarah Potenza. Lending support were guitarists Ian Crossman, who’s married to Potenza, and Ford Thurston, who plays with Bishop, and bassist Patrick Blanchard). The show featured some traditional gospel, or at least gospel-ish, songs such as “I Shall Be Released” and “Power in the Blood,” as well as spiritual offerings such as Dylan’s “Gotta Serve Somebody” and (perhaps inevitably in the wake of Leonard Cohen’s passing) a slow, intense rendition of “Hallelujah” by Potenza.

Bonnie Bishop

Also: The Wainwright Family, featuring patriarch Loudon Wainwright III and various descendants, exes and others, performed an excellent and eclectic set in the Stardust, kicking off with a team-effort “Meet the Wainwrights” to introduce the players. The cast included Wainwright’s son, Rufus Wainwright; his daughters, Martha Wainwright and Lucy Wainwright Roche; Lucy’s mother, Suzzy Roche, and Wainwright’s sister, Sloan Wainwright. Guests included Emmylou Harris, who performed a song in honor of Wainwright’s former wife, the late folksinger Kate McGarrigle; Brandi Carlile, with the Hanseroth twins; fiddler-mandolinist David Mansfield, and guitarist Stephen Murphy. The show closed with an all-hands-on-deck sing-along on Bruce Springsteen’s “Hungry Heart” and a nice solo piano rendition of “Hallelujah” by Rufus Wainwright.

Honorable mentions on the Cayamo Music Cruise: Oklahoma folk-blues prodigy Parker Millsap, Mississippi rocker Paul Thorn, Nashville neo-diva Angaleena Presley, Colorado bluegrass outfit Trout Steak Revival, Nashville country-pop band Skyline Motel, North Carolina rockers American Aquarium, soulful Nashville singer-songwriter Sam Lewis, singer-songwriters Beth Wood and Patty Griffin, Nashville country traditionalist Lee Ann Womack, former Civil Wars member John Paul White, rising country artist Ryan Hurd, Nashville songstress Ruby Amanfu, former Toad the Wet Sprocket frontman Glen Phillips, young singer-songwriter Brian Dunne, new country star Maren Morris, Cayamo t’ai-chi master and clotheshorse Jim Lauderdale, Alabama folkie-rockers The Mulligan Brothers, and former Sea Level keyboardist and saxophonist Randall Bramblett.

Most played 2015: Americana Music Association Top 100

 isbell
The Americana Music Association today released  its year-end compilation of the Top 100 Albums of the Year, tracking the most-played Americana albums from  December 2, 2014 through November 30, 2015. Jason Isbell has the top album of the year, followed by JD McPherson, Brandi Carlile,  Alabama Shakes, Steve Earle and the Dukes, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Kacey Musgraves, Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell, Chris Stapleton and the Mavericks.
The full list:
Jason Isbell                                                           Something More Than Free
JD McPherson                                                       Let The Good Times Roll
Brandi Carlile                                                         The Firewatcher’s Daughter
Alabama Shakes                                                    Sound & Color
Steve Earle & The Dukes                                        Terraplane
Ray Wylie Hubbard                                                 The Ruffian’s Misfortune
Kacey Musgraves                                                   Pageant Material
Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell                  The Traveling Kind
Chris Stapleton                                                       Traveller
Mavericks                                                                  Mono
Robert Earl Keen                                                     Happy Prisoner – The Bluegrass Sessions
Ryan Bingham                                                         Fear And Saturday Night
Dwight Yoakam                                                       Second Hand Heart
Willie Nelson & Merle Haggard                                  Django and Jimmie
James McMurtry                                                     Complicated Game
Richard Thompson                                                   Still
Rhiannon Giddens                                                    Tomorrow Is My Turn
Asleep at the Wheel                                                 Still The King, Celebrating The Music of Bob Wills
Calexico                                                                  Edge Of The Sun
Eilen Jewell                                                             Sundown Over Ghost Town
Amy Helm                                                               Didn’t It Rain
Dale Watson                                                            Call Me Insane
Dave Alvin & Phil Alvin                                             Lost Time
Houndmouth                                                             Little Neon Limelight
Allison Moorer                                                           Down To Believing
Watkins Family Hour                                                  Watkins Family Hour
Rhett Miller                                                                The Traveler
Lost on the River: The New Basement Tapes                Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes
Pokey LaFarge                                                           Something In The Water
Sonny Landreth                                                           Bound By The Blues
Patty Griffin                                                                Servant Of Love
Kasey Chambers                                                         Bittersweet
Uncle Lucius                                                                The Light
Ashley Monroe                                                             The Blade
Warren Haynes Featuring Railroad Earth             Ashes & Dust
Leon Bridges                                                                Coming Home
John Moreland                                                              High On Tulsa Heat
Punch Brothers                                                             The Phosphorescent Blues
Blackberry Smoke                                                         Holding All The Roses
Drew Holcomb & The Neighbors                                      Medicine
Sam Outlaw                                                                   Angeleno
Don Henley                                                                    Cass County
Larry Campbell & Teresa Williams                          Larry Campbell & Teresa Williams
Joe Ely                                                                           Panhandle Rambler
Nathaniel Rateliff and The Nightsweats                              Nathaniel Rateliff and The Nightsweats
Jimmy LaFave                                                                 The Night Tribe
Lucinda Williams                                                           Down Where The Spirit Meets The Bone
Los Lobos                                                                         Gates Of Gold
Statesboro Revue                                                              Jukehouse Revival
Mark Knopfler                                                                    Tracker
The Bros. Landreth                                                             Let It Lie
Josh Ritter                                                                         Sermon On The Rocks
Bottle Rockets                                                                   South Broadway Athletic Club
The Mike & Ruthy Band                                                      Bright As You Can
Gretchen Peters                                                                 Blackbirds
Whitey Morgan & The 78s                                                   Sonic Ranch
Will Hoge                                                                           Small Town Dreams
Jorma Kaukonen                                                                 Ain’t In No Hurry
Whitehorse                                                                          Leave No Bridge Unburned
Langhorne Slim                                                                    The Spirit Moves
Justin Townes Earle                                                              Absent Fathers
Turnpike Troubadours                                                            Turnpike Troubadours
The Deslondes                                                                      The Deslondes
Milk Carton Kids                                                                    Monterey
Nora Jane Struthers & The Party Line                                      Wake
Leftover Salmon                                                                     High Country
Shelby Lynne                                                                          I Can’t Imagine
J.J. Grey And Mofro                                                                Ol’ Glory
Laura Marling                                                                          Short Movie
American Aquarium                                                                 Wolves
Honeycutters                                                                           Me Oh My
Daniel Romano                                                                         If I’ve Only One Time Askin’
Jonathan Tyler                                                                         Holy Smokes
Black Lillies                                                                             Hard To Please
Shakey Graves                                                                        And The War Came
Jackie Greene                                                                          Back To Birth
Anne McCue                                                                             Blue Sky Thinkin’
Wood Brothers                                                                          Paradise
Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers                                                    Loved Wild Lost
The Grahams                                                                           Glory Bound
Sugarcane Jane                                                                        Dirt Road’s End
Glen Hansard                                                                            Didn’t He Ramble
Steeldrivers                                                                              The Muscle Shoals Recordings
Sister Sparrow & The Dirty Birds                                                The Weather Below
Stoney LaRue                                                                             Aviator
Sam Lewis                                                                               Waiting On You
Honey Honey                                                                            3
Della Mae                                                                                 Della Mae
Darrell Scott                                                                             10 Songs of Ben Bullington
Dar Williams                                                                             Emerald
Yonder Mountain String Band                                                     Black Sheep
Ryan Adams                                                                             Ryan Adams
William Clark Green                                                                   Ringling Road
Whitney Rose                                                                            Heartbreaker Of The Year
Underhill Rose                                                                            The Great Tomorrow
Liz Longley                                                                                 Liz Longley
Shawn Colvin                                                                              Uncovered
Waifs                                                                                          Beautiful You
The Lone Bellow                                                                          Then Came The Morning
Kentucky HeadHunters                                                                 Meet Me In Blues Land

Review: Robert Earl Keen and Lyle Lovett in concert

Robert Earl Keen and Lyle Lovett

Robert Earl Keen and Lyle Lovett

By Paul T. Mueller

A recent show at Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion in The Woodlands, just north of Houston, marked a kind of homecoming for a pair of celebrated Texas singer-songwriters. The Sept. 11 gig featured Robert Earl Keen opening for friend and former college classmate Lyle Lovett, who was winding down his usual summer tour with his Large Band. Both are from the area – Keen grew up in southwest Houston, while Lovett is from the town of Klein, just northwest of the city. Plenty of friends, family members and longtime fans were in attendance on what turned out to be a mild late-summer evening at the open-air venue.

Backed by his longtime band, Keen started off with “Corpus Christi Bay,” an anthem to brotherly love and good times. Next came his tribute to the late Levon Helm of The Band, “The Man Behind the Drums.” More favorites followed over the next hour and a half – a solemn rendition of Townes Van Zandt’s “Flying Shoes”; a lively take on “Ready for Confetti”; the jazzy “Dreadful Selfish Crime,” featuring nice keyboards by Marty Muse, better known as a pedal-steel player; “Gringo Honeymoon,” with nice acoustic guitar work by Rich Brotherton, and “Shades of Gray,” Keen’s tale of small-time crime and mistaken identity, fueled by an excellent guitar duel between Brotherton and Muse.

 Of course the set included two of the biggest hits of all: “Merry Christmas from the Family,” which Keen proclaimed as the official kickoff of the holiday season, and the closer, a hard-rocking treatment of the crime-love-and-betrayal ballad “The Road Goes on Forever.” Called back to the stage, Keen briefly quieted the crowd by saying he wanted to talk about “something a little bit serious” – but that turned out to be an announcement of the impending sale of “Robert Earl Keen beer” by a local grocery chain. The band finished with “I Gotta Go,” featuring Brotherton’s acoustic guitar and Muse’s resonator.

 After a short intermission, Lovett’s Large Band took the stage with its usual instrumental intro. Lovett, accompanied by the legendary Francine Reed, came out and launched into the classic “Stand By Your Man.” A few songs later, the 14-piece ensemble took a jazzy turn on “Penguins,” featuring some quasi-line dance footwork by Lovett and others near the front of the stage, including Reed, fiddler Luke Bulla and guitarists Keith Sewell and Ray Herndon.

Lovett called Keen back to the stage for a beautiful rendition of “This Old Porch,” which the two wrote together during their college days at Texas A&M. “Robert and I are real friends, not just show-business friends,” Lovett noted at one point. A rousing version of “My Baby Don’t Tolerate” was followed by an extended take on “What I Don’t Know” in which almost every band member got to take a short solo – all of which Lovett observed with obvious appreciation.

 After several more well-received numbers, including “That’s Right (You’re Not from Texas),” “God Will” and “L.A. County,” Lovett turned the stage over to Bulla and Sewell, each of whom performed one of his own songs. Then came the crowd-pleasing “If I Had a Boat,” featuring nice cello work by John Hagen, and Lovett’s always-entertaining duet with Reed, “What Do You Do?” Then Reed got her turn in the spotlight, with excellent, high-energy performances of her signature tunes “One Monkey Don’t Stop No Show” and “Wild Women Don’t Get the Blues.”

Keen returned to join the choir for “Church,” whose joyful mood was only barely nicked by a rare vocal glitch on Lovett’s part. After more effusive thanks to the audience, Lovett left the stage, returning a few minutes later to close with a rocking rendition of Van Zandt’s “White Freightliner Blues.”

 Contributing throughout was the excellent Large Band horn section, consisting of Harvey Thompson on tenor sax, Brad Leali on alto sax, Charles Rose on trombone and Chad Willis on trumpet. Also in fine form were the rhythm section – pianist Matt Rollings, drummer Russ Kunkel, conga player James Gilmer and bassist Viktor Krauss – and pedal-steel man Buck Reid.

 

Follow Sun209 on Twitter at @Sun209com.

 

 

Americana Music Festival: Thursday line-up

Luther Dickinson

Americana Music News — Most of the Americana Music Festival’s showcase events take place in Nashville’s city’s top clubs, but Thursday night is an exception as the festival moves to the great wide open at the city’s “Live on the Green.” This downtown space boasts performances by many of the top names in music and tonight features the Wallflowers, Dunwells and Delta Spirit.Back indoors, the “Music of Memphis” evening at the Rutledge celebrates the music of Alex Chilton and Big Star, plus performances by Jim Lauderdale and the North Mississippi All-Stars, a solo turn by Luther Dickinson, the Bo-Keys and Star and Micey.

The Mercy Lounge features some of the best emerging artists and a couple of Americana all-stars. The up-and-comers include Turnpike Troubadours, John Fullbright and Jason Boland and the Stragglers.  In the middle of that line-up are the always outstanding Billy Joe Shaver and Steve Forbert, both touring behind new albums.

The line-up for Thursday, Sept. 13:

THE BASEMENT

8:00            Lydia Loveless

9:00            Angel Snow

10:00          Sons of Fathers

11:00          The Deep Dark Woods

12:00          The Black Lillies

 

THE STATION INN

8:00            The Amy Helm Band

8:45            Teresa Williams and Larry Campbell

9:20            The Dirt Farmers

10:00          Mary Gauthier

11:00          Richard Thompson

 

THE RUTLEDGE

The Music of Memphis

8:00            Star and Micey

9:00            Luther Dickinson

10:00          Jim Lauderdale and the North Mississippi Allstars

11:00          The Bo-Keys

12:00          Songs of Big Star

 

MERCY LOUNGE

8:00            Turnpike Troubadours

9:00            Billy Joe Shaver

10:00          Steve Forbert

11:00          John Fullbright

12:00          Jason Boland & The Stragglers

 

THE HIGH WATT

8:30            The Mastersons

9:30            Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers

10:30          Eilen Jewell

11:30          Julie Lee & The Baby Daddies

 

CANNERY BALLROOM

8:00            Blue Highway

9:00            Sara Watkins

10:00          Paul Thorn

11:00          Punch Brothers

 

 

LIVE ON THE GREEN

6:30          The Dunwells

7:15          Delta Spirit

9:00          The Wallflowers

Follow the Americana Music Festival on Twitter at @sun209com.

Americana Music Festival 2012 line-up

Americana Music News — The Americana Music Festival returns to Nashville this week. It’s a world-class music festival at a very economical price. For $50, you have access to shows by an amazing array of artists over four nights. Details here.

The 2012 Americana Music Festival line-up:

WEDNESDAY SEPT. 12

THE BASEMENT

10:00          Sallie Ford & the Sound Outside

11:00          Blue Mountain

12:00          Shovels and Rope

THE STATION INN

10:30          The Carper Family

11:30          Kasey Chambers & Shane Nicholson

THE RUTLEDGE

10:00          Gretchen Peters

11:00          Bearfoot

12:00          Delta Rae

MERCY LOUNGE

10:00          Corb Lund

11:00          This Wheel’s On Fire: A Tribute to Levon Helm

THE HIGH WATT

10:30          Whitehorse

11:30          Chris Stamey

CANNERY BALLROOM

10:00          Star Anna

11:00          Brandi Carlile

THURSDAY SEPT. 13

THE BASEMENT

8:00            Lydia Loveless

9:00            Angel Snow

10:00          Sons of Fathers

11:00          The Deep Dark Woods

12:00          The Black Lillies

 

THE STATION INN

8:00            The Amy Helm Band

8:45            Teresa Williams and Larry Campbell

9:20            The Dirt Farmers

10:00          Mary Gauthier

11:00          Richard Thompson

THE RUTLEDGE

The Music of Memphis

8:00            Star and Micey

9:00            Luther Dickinson

10:00          Jim Lauderdale and the North Mississippi Allstars

11:00          The Bo-Keys

12:00          Songs of Big Star

 

MERCY LOUNGE

8:00            Turnpike Troubadours

9:00            Billy Joe Shaver

10:00          Steve Forbert

11:00          John Fullbright

12:00          Jason Boland & The Stragglers

THE HIGH WATT

8:30            The Mastersons

9:30            Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers

10:30          Eilen Jewell

11:30          Julie Lee & The Baby Daddies

CANNERY BALLROOM

8:00            Blue Highway

9:00            Sara Watkins

10:00          Paul Thorn

11:00          Punch Brothers

LIVE ON THE GREEN

6:30          The Dunwells

7:15          Delta Spirit

9:00          The Wallflowers

FRIDAY SEPT. 14

THE BASEMENT

8:00            Caitlin Harnett

9:00            American Aquarium

10:00          Cory Branan

11:00          Chuck Mead and His Grassy Knoll Boys

12:00          Buxton

THE STATION INN

8:00            Red June

9:00            Della Mae

10:00          McCrary Sisters

11:00          Steep Canyon Rangers

12:00          Humming House

THE RUTLEDGE

8:00            Mandolin Orange

9:00            Mindy Smith

10:00          The World Famous Headliners

11:00          Belle Starr

12:00          BoDeans

MERCY LOUNGE

8:00            Jimbo Mathus & The Tri-State Coalition

9:00            Holy Ghost Tent Revival

10:00          Dylan LeBlanc

11:00          Darrell Scott

12:00          Reckless Kelly

THE HIGH WATT

8:30            Max Gomez

9:30            Two Gallants

10:30          Sons of Bill

11:30          Andrew Combs

CANNERY BALLROOM

8:00            Shelly Colvin

9:00            Amanda Shires

10:00          Robert Ellis

11:00          John Hiatt

12:15         Jason D. Williams

 

SATURDAY SEPT. 15

THE BASEMENT

8:00            Anthony da Costa

9:00            Chastity Brown

10:00          Fort Frances

11:00          The Pines

12:00          Chris Scruggs

THE STATION INN

8:00            Brennen Leigh

9:00            Phoebe Hunt

10:00          Marvin Etzioni

11:00          Rodney Crowell

 

THE RUTLEDGE

8:00            Felicity Urquhart

9:00            The Wood Brothers

10:00          Kevin Gordon

11:00          Jordie Lane

12:00          The Trishas

MERCY LOUNGE

8:00            Lera Lynn

9:00            honeyhoney

10:00          Tift Merritt

11:00          Buddy Miller & Lee Ann Womack

THE HIGH WATT

8:00            Jill Andrews

9:00            Derek Hoke

10:00          Kasey Anderson and the Honkies

Follow the Americana Music Festival on Twitter at @sun209com.

 

 

2012 Americana Music Festival line-up announced


Americana Music News — The Americana Music Association issued its 2012 festival schedule today, bringing a great mix of long-established and emerging talent to Nashville in September:

WEDNESDAY SEPT. 12

THE BASEMENT

10:00          Sallie Ford & the Sound Outside

11:00          Blue Mountain

12:00          Shovels and Rope

 

THE STATION INN

10:30          Carper Family Band

11:30 Kasey Chambers & Shane Nicholson

 

THE RUTLEDGE

10:00          Gretchen Peters

11:00          Bearfoot

12:00          Delta Rae

 

MERCY LOUNGE

10:00          Corb Lund

11:00          This Wheel’s On Fire: A Tribute to Levon Helm

 

THE HIGH WATT

10:30          Whitehorse

11:30          Chris Stamey

 

CANNERY BALLROOM

10:00          Star Anna

11:00          Brandi Carlile

 

 

THURSDAY SEPT. 13

 

THE BASEMENT

8:00            Lydia Loveless

9:00            Angel Snow

10:00          Sons of Fathers

11:00          The Deep Dark Woods

12:00          Black Lillies

 

THE STATION INN

8:00            The Amy Helm Band

8:45            Teresa Williams and Larry Campbell

9:20            The Dirt Farmers

10:00          Mary Gauthier

11:00          Richard Thompson

 

THE RUTLEDGE

The Music of Memphis

8:00            Star and Micey

9:00            Luther Dickinson Solo

10:00          Jim Lauderdale and the North Mississippi Allstars

11:00          The Bo-Keys

12:00          Songs of Big Star

 

MERCY LOUNGE

8:00            Turnpike Troubadours

9:00            Billy Joe Shaver

10:00          Steve Forbert

11:00          John Fullbright

12:00          Jason Boland & The Stragglers

 

THE HIGH WATT

8:30            The Mastersons

9:30            Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers

10:30          Eilen Jewell

11:30          Julie Lee

 

CANNERY BALLROOM

8:00            Blue Highway

9:00            Sara Watkins

10:00          Paul Thorn

11:00          Punch Brothers

 

 

LIVE ON THE GREEN

6:30          The Dunwells

7:15          Delta Spirit

9:00          The Wallflowers

 

FRIDAY SEPT. 14

 

THE BASEMENT

8:00            Caitlin Harnett

9:00            American Aquarium

10:00          Cory Branan

11:00          Chuck Mead and His Grassy Knoll Boys

12:00          Buxton

 

THE STATION INN

8:00            Red June

9:00            Della Mae

10:00          McCrary Sisters

11:00          Steep Canyon Rangers

12:00          Humming House

 

THE RUTLEDGE

8:00            Mandolin Orange

9:00            Mindy Smith

10:00          The World Famous Headliners

11:00          Belle Starr

12:00          BoDeans

 

MERCY LOUNGE

8:00            Jimbo Mathus & The Tri-State Coalition

9:00            Holy Ghost Tent Revival

10:00           TBA

11:00          Darrell Scott

12:00          Reckless Kelly

 

THE HIGH WATT

8:30            Max Gomez

9:30            Two Gallants

10:30          Sons of Bill

11:30          Andrew Combs

 

CANNERY BALLROOM

8:00            TBA

9:00            TBA

10:00          Robert Ellis

11:00          John Hiatt

 

 

SATURDAY SEPT. 15

 

THE BASEMENT

8:00            Anthony da Costa

9:00            Chastity Brown

10:00          Fort Frances

11:00          The Pines

12:00          Chris Scruggs

 

THE STATION INN

8:00            Brennen Leigh

9:00            Phoebe Hunt

10:00          Marvin Etzioni

11:00          Rodney Crowell

 

THE RUTLEDGE

8:00            Felicity Urquhart

9:00            The Wood Brothers

10:00          Kevin Gordon

11:00          Jordie Lane

12:00          The Trishas

 

MERCY LOUNGE

8:00            Lera Lynn

9:00            honeyhoney

10:00          Tift Merritt

11:00          Buddy Miller & Lee Ann Womack

 

THE HIGH WATT

8:00            Jill Andrews

9:00            Derek Hoke

10:00          Kasey Anderson and the Honkies

Ticket information for the Nashville event is available here.

Follow Sun209: Americana Music News on Twitter @sun209com.