Lera Lynn "Fire & Undertow"

I have fantasies of the world being all right. I wish for world peace and prosperity, to be done with the white water rapids of turmoil that we are in now. It is so hard to think about how many people have lost their jobs, never to work at the same level, or pay grade again. To look at the rust belt and know it is shedding population as the townspeople move on to find a better life. Not even qualitatively better, but just something self-sustaining a job, benefits, a bit of security. Money to pay the bills, and a place to rest one’s head. It is unsettling looking at the future what with the erosion in our society. It is easy to be mystified by all this, to ponder what has happened, and to wonder what comes next. Music is a microcosm of it too. Back in the day, artists could reach out and touch the stars, become household names and live happily ever after. Well sort of. But things are different in today’s hard scrabble world.

The indie spirit is born of this, of trying to make sense out of this environment. In March, Houston Native Lera Lynn released her debut CD, Have You Met Lera Lynn? She is already well-known in Athens, GA where she now lives, for her stint as part of the group, Birds & Wire. She says,

“Like many songwriters, most of my songs come from turbulence in my life, be it with a lover or with family or with myself as an artist, or my job. This record is about my rebelliousness in love, hard-headedness, distrust. It’s also about being confused about where I’m going and not always getting what I want out of my creative self.” 

Confusion can lead to clarity, beauty too. Lera came to us during Americana Fest at Marathon Recorders. She brought Ben Lewis on guitar, Bain Mattox on bass, and C.K. Koch on drums. We were bewitched.

-Jessie Scott

Fire And Undertow - Have You Met Lera Lynn?

Smoke Signals "Black Holes"

Another day, and another band to turn you on to. They are called Smoke Signals. Now I just want to say that with domain usage, it is getting harder all the time to even research a band name like this, because it is so easy to get waylaid by the common usages. In this case, the rabbit hole is the use of smoke signals through the ages; from the Great Wall Of China, to the Aboriginals and Native Americans, to the Vatican using smoke to alert the masses to the selection of the new Pope. It is all on the WIKI. Seriously, though, it’s like movies having to say the title and tag it with the word ‘movie’ for the dot com. I am finding more bands these days with names that include “music” or “band.” And don’t even get me started on the global nature of all of this. I predict more absurdist names of bands, because it is getting harder to clear band names all the time these days.

That said, I love the name Smoke Signals. Coley O’Toole and Joe Ballaro formed their first band when they were in the 7th grade in Shelton, Connecticut. Then Coley met Zac Clark over a decade later, when Zac moved into a house on the banks of the Housatonic River. The three toured as The Queen Killing Kings. In early 2011, they headed out to Silverlake, California where Simon Katz  from Youngblood Hawke and Christian Letts from Edward Sharpe welcomed them at the Effie House- a home equipped with recording consoles, a Steinway baby grand, two dozen guitars, a Hammond organ, and a ghost. Woot! Smoke Signals brought more than 30 songs. Over nine days, they recorded one song each day, live in the living room, for the band’s  self-titled debut which came out in August.  The song “Black Holes” features Rocco Deluca, who also appears in the video. Urgent, gospel infused, with an overlay of the monastery choir chain gang. Note the Papal art on the wall.

-Jessie Scott

Billy Burnette "Wrong One Right"

Today is a tale of music royalty. In the 50s, brothers Dorsey Burnette and Johnny Burnette were two of the three members in the legendary Rock and Roll Trio (Paul Burlison was the third one). We are talking the dawn of rock and roll here. And Billy Burnette is to the castle born, as Dorsey Burnette was his dad. The term Rockabilly – well, Billy is the ‘billy’ part of it; his cousin is Rocky. There is a cool short history to be found here.

By age eleven Billy had recorded his first album, and then two years later at thirteen, he toured with Brenda Lee while he was teaching himself to play guitar. Aside from myriad solo projects through the years, Billy spent time playing with the likes of Fleetwood Mac, Roy Orbison and John Fogerty. Among lots of others, Ray Charles, The Everly Brothers, Gregg Allman, and Ringo Starr have recorded his songs. And he had the good taste to cover Peter Green’s classic “Oh Well,” just part one, on the album Memphis in Manhattan in 2008.

Cut to 2011, as we welcome a new release from Billy Burnette called Rock N Roll With It. It is his first studio album in a decade. Later this week, on Saturday, November 12, he will be inducted into the International Rockabilly Hall of Fame in Jackson, TN. Billy has kept it fresh, powerful, and alive for all these years. He brought royalty to Marathon Recorders in Nashville when he came to play for Music Fog: guitar God, Kenny Vaughan, monster drummer Jimmy Lester, and the legendary Dave Roe on upright bass. It don’t get no better, that is for sure, as Billy Burnette pours it on. This is a wake up, a Monday song, so fasten your seat belt, it’s “Wrong One Right.”

-Jessie Scott

Wrong One Right - Rock & Roll With It