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<  Music  ~  CARRY ME BACK - new album July 2012

TAlderson
Posted: Sun Jul 22, 2012 11:05 pm Reply with quote
Raisin' a Ruckus Joined: 08 Aug 2008 Posts: 126 Location: Worcester, MA
Ehar wrote:
On another note does anyone else think We Don't Grow Tobacco sounds a lot like the Mississippi Sheiks Bootlegger's Blues?


That's it! I've been listening to We Don't Grow Tobacco thinking "damn, this sounds so familiar." Same thing happened with Trials and Troubles first time I heard it (from Henry Thomas' Arkansas). It most definitely is "inspired" by that song in a Dylanesque way (AKA lifted almost note-for-note). The folk process lives!

-Tyler
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missyjay6
Posted: Mon Jul 23, 2012 4:27 am Reply with quote
Old Crow Joined: 09 Sep 2008 Posts: 453 Location: Scotland
Ehar wrote:
On another note does anyone else think We Don't Grow Tobacco sounds a lot like the Mississippi Sheiks Bootlegger's Blues?


Yes! This! I couldn't remember for the life of me what song this reminded me of. Thank you, Ehar!
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kg
Posted: Mon Jul 23, 2012 7:31 am Reply with quote
*Data Miner* Joined: 30 Jun 2007 Posts: 3427
http://www.motherjones.com/media/2012/07/interview-old-crow-medicine-show

Old Crow's Musical Medicine
Old Crow Medicine Show's Ketch Secor on Michael Jackson as inspiration, ladies in country music, and why indie rock is such a bummer.
—By Kiera Butler, Mon Jul. 23, 2012

If you're the kind of person who enjoys the combination of a campfire, stringed instruments, and a healthy (or, let's face it, unhealthy) dose of whiskey, then you've probably heard the song "Wagon Wheel"—it's pretty easy to play on the guitar and impossible not to sing along with. Bob Dylan wrote it, but the guys who made it popular are the Nashville-based string band Old Crow Medicine Show. Known for its rowdy and infectious brand of country, old-time, and folk music, Old Crow officially formed in New York City in 1998. But the sextet's two founding members, Jay "Ketch" Secor and Chris "Critter" Fuqua, go back much further than that: They started playing music together as middle schoolers in Harrisonburg, Virginia, in the late '80s. Since then, the band has won a giant following among people who like their country music a little more Carter Family and a little less Toby Keith.

Last week, the band released its seventh full-length album, Carry Me Back. Fans are especially excited about the return of Fuqua, who took a three-year hiatus, during which he quit drinking. I caught up with Secor, who writes songs, sings, and plays fiddle, harmonica, and banjo, to talk about the new album, how country music is eclipsing indie rock, and what it's like to play whiskey-soaked songs without the whiskey.


Mother Jones: You're originally from Appalachia. Was it that region's musical traditions that inspired you to play country music?

Ketch Secor: Like anybody else of my era, I listened to a whole lot of Michael Jackson. I guess I was probably inspired by the way he danced, and the way he sang, and his image. He was on the cover of every magazine and every TV screen, in every pinball machine and chewing gum dispenser. That is to say, I didn't grow up on the porch of a cabin looking out over the 90 acres that the mule was plowing with paw-paw playing the banjo. But I was always interested in folk music. I heard Pete Seeger records when I was a kid. I saw Bob Dylan when I was about 12. The first song I ever learned to play was a song by Phil Ochs.

MJ: What's the deal with these people who, when you ask them what kind of music they like, they say "anything but country"? How did country music get to be so maligned?

KS: I guess it's a bit like not claiming your brother at school. This kind of disowning of the thing that you're most like. You want to be something cool, like Michael Jackson say, with a boom box over your shoulder and wearing leather. But you know deep down you're just a hayseed. It's not very long ago that we were all singing country music. And country music is equally black as it is white and that's important to recognize. Country music is the combination of African and European folk songs coming together and doing a little waltz right here in the American south. They came together at some cotillion, and somebody snuck a black person into the room, and he danced with a white lady, and music was born.

MJ: I want to talk about your new album a bit. I really like the song "Levi," and I was wondering if you could tell me about the inspiration for it.

KS: I heard on the radio one day in 2010 an NPR reporter talk about the life of a soldier named Levi who'd been killed in Baghdad in an explosion from a suicide bomber. He was about 25 years old, and the story that was told of his life depicted a boy that grew up in the mountains of Virginia, riding around on a four wheeler, raised by his grandpa, cutting tobacco. Knew how to handle a mule. Somebody from the country, somebody who liked country music, and somebody who really liked Old Crow. And at the end of the story, they said that at his funeral they played his favorite song by Old Crow, and it was called "Wagon Wheel." Well, the first thing I did was write down some lines, and then I wrote a letter right after that to Levi's mother and father saying, "I've written a song about your boy and where can I send it?" And then we recorded it. And we played it for them near their hometown last summer. They all came out, his grandmother came out, and the song was complete.

MJ: What was that like performing for his family? It must have been emotional.

KS: It really was. I feel that song really connects me to this boy I never knew. I had to take liberties about it, and I had to make assumptions about it, and I had to write about somebody dying. That is somebody's son and somebody's brother and somebody's best friend. I don't want anybody to feel like it's an anti-war song or a pro-war song, just a story about a kid that came to me through the radio.

MJ: People in bluegrass sometimes think virtuosity is the most important thing and people in old time and folk music think that the emotion is the most important thing. Where do you guys fall in that spectrum?

KS: It's true that bluegrass is a virtuousic form and asks that of its performer. Old-time music is older rawer and purer. It's less stylized. We don't solo. Well sometimes we do, but it's different it has more to do with rock-and-roll than bluegrass does. You know, you don't choose that stuff. You're either wired for it or you're not. We weren't straight-A students. We didn't start playing until we were teenagers, and we started playing rock and roll and punk rock—power chords—before we ever thought we would play folk music. So virtuosity was just never in my reach.

MJ: I always associate your music with whiskey. A lot of your songs are about booze. My friends and I listen to your music and drink whiskey. I've heard that Critter is back in the band and that he got sober. Has that changed your style of performance in any way?

KS: You just can't do it drunk for that long. We sure did booze it up for a long time there, in more ways than one. A lot of vice going on there, and not too much virtue. But it's good to be clean. It just feels a lot better. I'm really glad to have Critter back in the band. For 20 years now we've been making music together. We grew up in the same town, and we snuck beers together out in back of the school and all that stuff. But I'm glad to hear that our music makes you drink whiskey. Because y'all drinking whiskey is probably a gregarious act. When you're not an alcoholic it's pretty fun to drink whiskey. But when you are it's a very solo ritual. It's not gregarious at all. But vice has always informed country music and all music. Because music gets you high, so it makes sense to sing about what else gets you high.

MJ: Seems like old time, folk and country music is having its moment in the sun. The same kind of people who were listening to indie rock five years ago are now listening to country music. Is that true?

KS: Well, that's what they tell me, and the faces in the crowd seem to depict a similar view of what's popular. It seems like everyone's listening to fiddles and banjos. This indie rock stuff, I mean I like it, too—it pushes all my buttons: sex appeal, dissonance. It's emotive, disenchanted. But if I want that, man, I'll listen to Morrissey. Why would I listen to some snot-nosed 18-year-old tell you what he's got? So I think this side of the coin is more celebratory, more gregarious. It's like drinking alone versus drinking whiskey with your friends. Which one is more fun? You can only stay disenchanted for so long before you just want to smile and raise your glass.

MJ: So you guys are an all dudes band. Have you ever had a woman in the band? Or considered it?

KS: Well we certainly have played with a lot of gals. And sometimes our significant others travel with us. But no, we never had a girl in the band. Why? Certainly there's some rippin' female players in our kind of music. We have no objection to it. It'd be wonderful.

MJ: Seems like in some ways country music is still dominated by men. Would you agree?

KS: No. I think country music is a champion of women. That stuff coming out of Nashville now wants to see a woman looking good in the kitchen whipping up some biscuits. A woman who knows how to handle her minivan at the mall. It's a concrete jungle out there, darlin'. Turn up your radio and get into a bubble bath kind of thing. But country music has been empowering to women. Women invented it—it was women singing to their children that built country music. The people making country music today might not even know that it all started with a midwife. But it's true, it really did. That's where Michael learned to shake it the way he did. It wasn't from old Papa Jackson, I'll tell you that.

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Even though you can't expect to defeat the absurdity of the world, you must make that attempt. That's morality, that's religion. That's art. That's life. --Phil Ochs
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gwrap
Posted: Mon Jul 23, 2012 8:03 am Reply with quote
Charlie Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 925 Location: Stankonia, GA
I'm on about my 50th listen. You know it's bad (well, good) when our 1-year old starts bouncing when Carry Me Back comes on!

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Throwing your life away
Someday, sorry coming home
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bopanic
Posted: Mon Jul 23, 2012 10:02 am Reply with quote
*King of da Vuld* Joined: 04 Dec 2005 Posts: 4190 Location: Nashville, TN
theres not a tune on they new album that i cant listen to.

good to hear them getting back to their roots! loving the upbeat'ness of this album!
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Indiana Girl
Posted: Tue Jul 24, 2012 9:10 pm Reply with quote
Old Crow Joined: 28 Aug 2006 Posts: 433 Location: A flatlandah in NH
Thanks for posting that one, kg! Interviews with Ketch are always a delight. Gotta love a man with a large vocabulary.

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<-- Van Gogh's "Wheatfield with Crows" 1890
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DirtyHogg
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 7:04 am Reply with quote
Raisin' a Ruckus Joined: 16 Jun 2010 Posts: 71 Location: Louisville, KY
Thanks kg, great read!

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kg
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 7:04 pm Reply with quote
*Data Miner* Joined: 30 Jun 2007 Posts: 3427
http://leoweekly.com/music/carry-me-back-new-old-crow

http://blurt-online.com/reviews/view/3978/

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Even though you can't expect to defeat the absurdity of the world, you must make that attempt. That's morality, that's religion. That's art. That's life. --Phil Ochs
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gwrap
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 8:16 am Reply with quote
Charlie Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 925 Location: Stankonia, GA
I'm liking that everytime I log into the forum, there are stars on nearly every category! Very Happy

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When you wake up you're all weak
Throwing your life away
Someday, sorry coming home
Sorry snail
Down in my heart
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therodge
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 8:29 am Reply with quote
*Law Dog* Joined: 17 Oct 2004 Posts: 6602 Location: Nashville, Tennessee
BOOM!!!

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bopanic
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 11:14 am Reply with quote
*King of da Vuld* Joined: 04 Dec 2005 Posts: 4190 Location: Nashville, TN
def a lil more action round here than in the past few months!
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therodge
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 11:14 am Reply with quote
*Law Dog* Joined: 17 Oct 2004 Posts: 6602 Location: Nashville, Tennessee
Billboard Charts for Carry Me Back!

Billboard 200»
22

Country Albums»
4

Independent Albums»
5

Folk Albums»
1

Bluegrass Albums»
1

Digital Albums»
16

Tastemaker Albums»
5

Nice!

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pittsyltucky
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 11:17 am Reply with quote
*Johnny* Joined: 15 Sep 2006 Posts: 4268 Location: Pigg River District, Pittsylvania County, Virginia
Congrats, boys!!!

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GumboStu
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 11:21 am Reply with quote
*Irish Stew* Joined: 03 Oct 2007 Posts: 3666 Location: Joe's Cornfield
turn my head for a minute and there are three new posts just in this topic Laughing

good figures, they deserve it.

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kg
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 11:32 am Reply with quote
*Data Miner* Joined: 30 Jun 2007 Posts: 3427
What in the world are tastemaker albums?

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Even though you can't expect to defeat the absurdity of the world, you must make that attempt. That's morality, that's religion. That's art. That's life. --Phil Ochs
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Jumpin' Bean
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 11:35 am Reply with quote
Thousandaire Joined: 25 Sep 2008 Posts: 1018 Location: Madison, WI
i had the same question kg.

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kg
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 11:36 am Reply with quote
*Data Miner* Joined: 30 Jun 2007 Posts: 3427
Must read: http://consequenceofsound.net/2012/07/interview-critter-fuqua-of-old-crow-medicine-show/

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Even though you can't expect to defeat the absurdity of the world, you must make that attempt. That's morality, that's religion. That's art. That's life. --Phil Ochs
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therodge
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 12:55 pm Reply with quote
*Law Dog* Joined: 17 Oct 2004 Posts: 6602 Location: Nashville, Tennessee
Kudos to the interviewer, Len Comaratta, for knowing his stuff.

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DirtyHogg
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 12:56 pm Reply with quote
Raisin' a Ruckus Joined: 16 Jun 2010 Posts: 71 Location: Louisville, KY
Absolutely a must read, thanks. Critter getting pretty insightful. Love the comments on the Nashville industry and the bandwagon fans.

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DirtyHogg,
"...my heart is broken cause my spirit's not free..."
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bopanic
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 1:22 pm Reply with quote
*King of da Vuld* Joined: 04 Dec 2005 Posts: 4190 Location: Nashville, TN
bus jamming

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GumboStu
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 1:27 pm Reply with quote
*Irish Stew* Joined: 03 Oct 2007 Posts: 3666 Location: Joe's Cornfield
nice accomodations!! Laughing

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pittsyltucky
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 2:07 pm Reply with quote
*Johnny* Joined: 15 Sep 2006 Posts: 4268 Location: Pigg River District, Pittsylvania County, Virginia
Let's Go O'S!!!! Laughing

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kg
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 3:17 pm Reply with quote
*Data Miner* Joined: 30 Jun 2007 Posts: 3427
Another must read: http://www.nashvillescene.com/nashville/old-time-string-band-and-occasional-buskers-old-crow-medicine-show-are-back-to-doing-what-theyre-best-at/Content?oid=2941679

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Even though you can't expect to defeat the absurdity of the world, you must make that attempt. That's morality, that's religion. That's art. That's life. --Phil Ochs
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bopanic
Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2012 4:08 pm Reply with quote
*King of da Vuld* Joined: 04 Dec 2005 Posts: 4190 Location: Nashville, TN
wouldnt ya have liked to have been the bus driver in the pic above? rolling down the interstate with a live OCMS show being played in the background...

morgan posted that pic on his twitter the a few hours back...
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missyjay6
Posted: Fri Jul 27, 2012 6:44 am Reply with quote
Old Crow Joined: 09 Sep 2008 Posts: 453 Location: Scotland
Great interviews! Very insightful!

And thank the lord, my CD has FINALLY ARRIVETH! And just in time for the holidays too!

I shall listen to it properly and comment and also go and vote on my favourite song. I held back on the poll, as I first wanted to hear the actual cd, rather than the preview streams.

Ahhh, happy days Very Happy
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GumboStu
Posted: Fri Jul 27, 2012 7:20 am Reply with quote
*Irish Stew* Joined: 03 Oct 2007 Posts: 3666 Location: Joe's Cornfield
Hmm. i'll just go and check my post box (again)

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missyjay6
Posted: Fri Jul 27, 2012 7:35 am Reply with quote
Old Crow Joined: 09 Sep 2008 Posts: 453 Location: Scotland
GumboStu wrote:
Hmm. i'll just go and check my post box (again)


I ordered mine on 29/06, and they sent an email to say it had despatched on 12/07, so it took quite a while to get across. Hope you get yours soon!

The extra autographed booklet is nice, with Ketch, Kevin, Morgan and Gill's signatures on it.
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GumboStu
Posted: Fri Jul 27, 2012 7:50 am Reply with quote
*Irish Stew* Joined: 03 Oct 2007 Posts: 3666 Location: Joe's Cornfield
ok the pressure is off then - mine shipped on the 17th (ordered on the 16th)

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Jumpin' Bean
Posted: Fri Jul 27, 2012 11:41 pm Reply with quote
Thousandaire Joined: 25 Sep 2008 Posts: 1018 Location: Madison, WI
I'm going to have to argue with Critter and say that Interview with a Vampire had more influence in starting the vampire craze in books than Twilight did... or maybe it is the old time of vampire books...

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kg
Posted: Sat Jul 28, 2012 6:58 am Reply with quote
*Data Miner* Joined: 30 Jun 2007 Posts: 3427
Vampire crazes come once a generation. If I live long enough, I should write something for when today's infants grow to 12!

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Even though you can't expect to defeat the absurdity of the world, you must make that attempt. That's morality, that's religion. That's art. That's life. --Phil Ochs
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