In this episode we have some new music bands we’ve heard before, old music never heard, and I say farewell to a loved one.
Music in this episode:
- Back In The Back by Kingsley Flood
(from Dust Windows)
www.KingsleyFlood.com
- Sould And Song AND Hole In My Head by The Avery Set
(from Returning to Steam)
www.TheAverySet.com
- Against This Wall AND [...]

By americanaroots.com
Yaab

Paul Cataldo-Rivers, Roads and Mountains – 39th Edition

Posted by: admin   
July 27th,
2010

I love discovering a talented new singer-songwriter.  In this case, a new singer-songwriter reached out to us here at AmericanaRoots.com and offered to send  a disc to check out.  Check it out I did and dig it I do (say that 3 times fast…)!!
The mountains of western North Carolina are home to  Paul Cataldo, who [...]

By americanaroots.com
Yaab

This episode is a pretty mellow set. But it’s got some strong rock flare thrown in there too.
Cowboy Junkies
Lincoln Theatre
Raleigh, NC
Feb 7, 2009
Setlist:
- Crossroads
- Shining Moon
- A Common Disaster
- The Girl Behind The Man Behind The Gun
- My Little Basquiat
- Crescent Moon
- Confessions Of Georgia E
- Hold On To Me
- Working On A Building
- Rake [...]

By americanaroots.com
Yaab

Blending genres of music has become much more common today, with mixed results. Why should we even attempt to categorize all music? Breaking free of these unnecessary habits and allowing the music to speak for itself is what everyone should strive to achieve. The true artists already do it, and unfortunately some pay the price [...]

By americanaroots.com
Yaab

Country and blues music has always mined the life’s mundane moments and extracted nuggets of domestic mythology shimmering with love, lust, booze, blood, tears, asphalt and diesel fuel.  With these elements masters like Hank Williams Sr., Neil Young, Townes Van Zandt and Bob Dylan – and latter day troubadours like Bruce Springsteen, Steve Earle and Chris Knight – transcend whatever genre they are bridled with and forge minor pedestrian masterpieces.

This second solo release from Sioux City, IA’s Mat D (Mat deRiso) draws from the same humanistic sources. Assuming a more Americana tone than the country-rock his Profane Saints offers, Plank Road Drag works a well-worn sonic landscape but still manages to uncover many dusty gems.

Resurrection Cadillac, the album opener is bathed in the sanctified blues of Leadbelly and Lightnin’ Hopkins as it lurches forward like a revved-up version of Led Zeppelin’s back-porch stomper Black Country Woman.

Street souls collide in Ford Marriage. Mat D colorfully throws his Born to Run-style tramps toward a ramshackle wedding  – “I’ll trade a fan belt and a hub cap for a suit-coat and a tie, we’ll use her panties a a veil and wrap an old rag around her thigh and make a bouquet out of tumbleweeds and hold on ‘til we die, my my.” – until passion’s heat burns away all that’s left is matrimonial ash – ”Turns out a house of love don’t run on truck-stop grease and gasoline.”

Doomed romance continues with Cannonball as family plight and hardship runs as rough as their path toward Texas. Three A.M. refuels the dirt-floor romance, gliding like a fever-dream vision of trailer-part trysts. 40 Watt Moon is the fever aftermath recounting beautiful memories and empty bottles.

Ribbon of Dirt uses the hard-bluegrass of Steve Earle’s Copperhead Road to tell another hard tale of the road’s siren call and Motorbelle is a beautiful, moody white-trash serenade “she was silver and gold from the trailer, she was sequins and jewels from the trash, she was flesh, she was blood,she was lonely, spilling out of old strapless dress with her big hair all pinned up and perfect all that Tammy Faye make-up a mess.”

The album closes with the bluegrass-tinted title song, where Mat d uses hillbilly poetry that could easily be inspired by watching the Coen brothers’ O Brother, Where Art Thou? with the sound down and Guy Clark on the turntable turned way up high.

Mat D’s Plank Road Drag is an ambitious record that hits on all cylinders to set a high water mark for any other contender for this year’s album of the year.

Official site | MySpace | Facebook | Buy

Click here to view the embedded video.

Related posts:

  1. Music Review: Kara Suzanne – Parlor Walls [self-released]
  2. Music Review – Chris Knight “Heart of Stone” (Red Distribution)
  3. Angela Easterling – Blacktop Road (De L’Est Music) Release Date 7/14

By Baron Lane
Yaab

Charlie Louvin Battles Pancreatic Cancer – 8th Edition

Posted by: admin   
July 19th,
2010

Country Music Hall of Fame member Charlie Louvin, best known with his brother Ira as a member of the close harmony duo The Louvin Brothers,  is scheduled for surgery for pancreatic cancer on July 22 in Nashville. His manager, Brett Steele, says doctors expect a full recovery. Louvin just celebrated his 83rd birthday and had a tour planned to start July 21 but had to cancel. Louvine will release a new album, “Hickory Wind,” a tribute to Gram Parsons, on July 20.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Related posts:

  1. Charlie Louvin Gets Help From Friends for New CD
  2. Charlie Louvin Reviewed on Pitchfork.com
  3. Charlie Louvin Redies New Releases, Adds Tour dates Dates with Levon Helm and the Old 97’s.

By Baron Lane
Yaab

Hank Cochran Passes On – 7th Edition

Posted by: admin   
July 17th,
2010

Hank Cochran, one of country music’s most storied and prolific songwriters who wrote songs for Patsy Cline, Ray Price, Eddy Arnold, Merle Haggard, George Strait an many others passed away yesterday morning. His Wikipedia bio reads like a  Mother lode for source for country gold:

Born during the Great Depression in Isola, Mississippi, he contracted pneumonia, whooping cough, measles and mumps all about the same time at age 2. The doctor didn’t think that he would survive. His parents divorced when he was 9, he moved with his father to Memphis, Tennessee, but then went to an orphanage. He was sent to live with his grandparents, in Waynesboro, Mississippi, after he had run away from the orphanage twice. His uncle Otis Cochran taught him how to play the guitar as the pair hitchhiked  from Mississippi to southeastern New Mexico to work in the oilfields.

and my persoan favorite.

While working at publishing company Pamper Music, he used to spend nights playing at a Nashville bar called Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge. While there a new guy showed up and Cochran was amazed, he then encouraged management to sign the young songwriter, Willie Nelson, giving Nelson a raise that was coming to him at the time.

This from the press release:

Last night, Jamey Johnson, Billy Ray Cyrus and Buddy Cannon dropped by to sing songs with Hank, and this morning the legendary songwriter was surrounded by family and friends when he passed away at his Hendersonville, Tennessee home. A private, family memorial will be held in the near future, and a public service will follow. Details will be forthcoming.

The family asks that you respect their privacy at this time and, in lieu of flowers, request those wishing to honor Hank make donations to the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Foundation.

Hank was inducted in to the Nashville Songwriters Association International Hall of Fame by unanimous vote in 1974, and was honored by B.M.I. in June 2009 for his six-decade long career of hits, that includes country classics: “I Fall To Pieces,” “Make The World Go Away,” “Ocean Front Property,” “The Chair” and “Don’t You Ever Get Tired Of Hurting Me.”

Click here to view the embedded video.

Related posts:

  1. Happy Bithday Hank Williams Sr.
  2. Country Music Legend Hank Locklin Passes
  3. Country Music Hall of Fame to Present the Williams Family Legacy

By Baron Lane
Yaab

Denver, Colorado’s Suburban Home Records has released a fine compilation (Or for this roots music blogger, a convenient sonic crib sheet)  of new and classic roots rock and Americana music entitled Suburban Home Records Mix Tape Vol. 5, Someone’s Gonna Die. The title is inspired by I Can Lick Any Sonofabitch In the House’s new album, “The Sounds of Dying (featured here as the first two cuts as well as ICLASOBITH lead singer Micahel Dean Damron ballsy solo version of Townes Van Zandt’s Waiting Around to Die.) This mix was bound for greatness. How can you not trust this kind of music to a label owned by a guy named Virgil?

Go grab this release (via You Send It)  for some fine music for your next Summer cookout or that next riveting game of whiskey-fueled Russian roulette.

1. I Can Lick Any Sonofabitch in the House – Swear to God
2. I Can Lick Any Sonofabitch in the House – Postcards and Apologies (Two Cow Garage cover)
3. Two Cow Garage – Postcards and Apologies
4. Micahel Dean Damron – Waiting Around to Die (Townes Van Zandt cover)
5. Townes Van Zandt – Waiting Around to Die
6. Austin Lucas – Sleep Well (Demo)
7. Trampled By Turtles – Wait So Long
8. Oblio’s Arrow – End of the Burning Moon
9. Tim Barry – Exit Wounds.mp3
10. Slobberbone – Placemat Blues.mp3
11. John Moreland and the Black Gold Band – Bastards of the Highway
12. Jeff Rowe – Kate
13. The Replacements – Unsatisfied
14. Jon Snodgrass – Fast in Last
15. Arliss Nancy – Stella Lovely
16. Jr. Juggernaut – Another Two Weeks
17. Alexander Hudjohn – Down So Low
18. Calling Morocco – Break Your Heart
19. Tin Horn Prayer – Louis Collins
20. Jared Grabb – Devil Between
21. Lucky Old Sun – Back in Style
22. Armchair Martian – …Not Fine (Demo)
23. The Takers – Drift
24. Look Mexico – Take it Upstairs, Einstein
25. Geraldine Fibbers – Lilybelle
26. Pariah Beat – Elvis in Jerusulum
27. Drag the River – Beautiful and Damned
28. BEERS – I Love You (But I Don’t Trust You)
29. The Evening Rig – Half Asleep
30. Hank Williams, Jr. – If You Don’t Like Hank Williams.mp3

Related posts:

  1. Michael Dean Damron “Father’s Day” (In Music We Trust Records)
  2. I can any Lick Any Sonofabitch in the House
  3. Chris Neal’s Mix List – “Woman Enough: 20 Reasons to Take the “O” Out of Country“

By Baron Lane
Yaab

In this episode I’m spreading the word on some indie bands that deserve the support!
Music in this episode:
- Best You Ever Had AND Here’s to Rock ‘n’ Roll by Shurman
(from Waiting For The Sunset)
www.ShurmanVille.com
- The Breaks AND Don’t Tell Me How To Lose My Mind by Fort Shame
(from EP)
www.Myspace.com/FortShame
- Easy On Me AND Fortune Teller [...]

By americanaroots.com
Yaab

My fellow patrons of the internets, webs and tubes, I am pleased to bring you a new music video from a friend (or group of friends) of The Americana Rock Mix and AmericanaRoots.com, The Famous. This is the video to the title track of their newest and fantastic album, Come Home To Me. So please [...]

By americanaroots.com
Yaab

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