Americana Music

Elephant Revival "Remembering a Beginning"

I've been thinking about the slogan we had for the workforce at XM Satellite Radio, it was AFDI...an acronym for "actually F***ing doing it." It is so easy to dream, to ponder and scheme, and then to do absolutely nothing about it at all. I suspect that is a very common occurrence. We all have aspirations, though most of us don’t follow through and then the dream dies. I am struck by how musician friends travel the globe, knowing they can’t stay home to make a living, and that they must leave what they love to keep their careers alive. How that act of packing the vehicle and the bags and setting back out on the road becomes the norm, the forward motion.

Photo Credit: Anne Stavely

All I can tell you is that you have to put the 10,000 hours in, and have the fire burn deep within you to make it a reality. You never get done paying your dues; but the mere fact of continuing to walk the path is its own reward. If we had bailed on our dreams, we wouldn’t have encountered Elephant Revival in Nashville during the Americana Music Festival. Wow. Pure and simple, with a Celtic tinge. The five are Bonnie Paine (vocals, washboard, djembe and musical saw), Sage Cook (electric banjo/guitar, acoustic guitar, mandolin, viola and vocals), Dango Rose (double-bass, mandolin, banjo and vocals), Daniel Rodriguez (acoustic guitar, electric banjo/guitar and vocals) and Bridget Law (fiddle and vocals). Their second album Break In The Clouds, came out in June. The song we're presenting to you today, “Remembering A Beginning,” is an unreleased entrée into their articulate, intricate, and earthy world.

- Jessie Scott

Elephant Revival

Blackie & The Rodeo Kings "I'm Still Loving You"

There are some people, I believe, that you are just destined to meet. In the late 90s, living in Nashville, I haunted the clubs; Exit/In, 12th and Porter, 3rd and Lindsley, making the rounds to immerse myself in the most imaginative and celestial music the era and the city had to offer. And there were fellow travelers, ones with whom I shared many an evening, though in many cases I didn’t know their names, I just recognized them from their attendance at the same shows as me all the time. Some emerged out of the mist of anonymity. One was Colin Linden. I would see him in his Amish style hat and we would greet each other by the glint of an eye, of being a fellow traveler. After months of finding ourselves in the same spaces so often, we finally introduced ourselves and started getting to know each other. And through the years since, I have watched with glee as Colin plied his abundant craft. There are his solo projects, others that he produced, and then there is the entity Blackie & The Rodeo Kings.

Photo Credit: Bob Lanois

The band, Tom Wilson, Stephen Fearing and Colin Linden, formed in Ontario, Canada fifteen years ago. They spent the last two years or so working on an album they had been thinking about for way longer, Kings and Queens, on which they have lots of well-respected folks contributing. Rosanne Cash, Emmylou Harris, Pam Tillis, Serena Ryder, Lucinda Williams, Cassandra Wilson, Amy Helm, Janiva Magness, Mary Margaret O’Hara, Sam Phillips, Sara Watkins, Exene Cervenka, Patti Scialfa and Holly Cole. It was a very satisfying exercise indeed. I saw the trio in Boulder, Colorado this August and made my plans to get them before the Music Fog cameras in Nashville, during the Americana Music Festival. They brought their Nudie suits (Manuel, actually) and Bryan Owings and John Dymond along to play.

- Jessie Scott

I'm Still Loving You (feat. Amy Helm) - Kings and Queens

Soggy Bottom Boys "In the Jailhouse Now"

So allow me to wax nostalgic, as it was ten years ago that the O Brother phenom occurred. The movie, the soundtrack, the galvanization around the roots music presented within, the race to the top of the charts, the sales story, and arguably, a whole new generation of artists coming to the fore by the seeds that were planted with its success. It has been a hell of a ten years, and to mark the occasion, there is a new double-disc commemorative O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack album out, with bonus tracks, of course. No Depression did a listener generated comprehensive interview with maestro T Bone Burnett, who became a brand himself through this and his other landmark efforts that have followed over this last decade.

When the Coen brothers' film O Brother, Where Art Thou? was released in 2001, Americana music was redefined through the legendary soundtrack that featured songs like "Man of Constant Sorrow." Now, to commemorate the 10 year anniversary of the film and soundtrack, the Soggy Bottom Boys return with a music video for "In the Jailhouse Now." And everything old is new again.

- Jessie Scott

O Brother, Where Art Thou? (Soundtrack from the Motion Picture) [Deluxe Edition] - Various Artists