Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Deadliest Catch Live! An Evening with Captain Sig and the Hillstrand Brothers at the Calvin Theatre in Northampton on Thursday, June 16 at 8PM. Tix on sale THIS FRIDAY 2/25.

The live action reality television series "Deadliest Catch" first aired in 2005 and has been going strong ever since, making it one of the most popular shows in Discovery Channel history. In this rare, live, interactive event, the Bering Sea's toughest crew swap stories as they take the audience through some of the roughest situations a captain and his crew have ever had to face on the high seas. From the treacherous weather and crew conflicts, to the triumphs of the team, Captain Sig and the Hillstrand Brothers bring the intimate world of crab fishing to a live audience. You'll have chance to hear the stories behind the show, view never before seen video, and partake in a question and answer session with the cast of "Deadliest Catch." Radio personalities and fishing buddies Bob Kester from Springfield's Rock 102 and Pat Kelly of Lazer 99.3, will serve as co-MC's.

Tickets for Deadliest Catch Live! An Evening with Captain Sig and the Hillstrand Brothers at the Calvin Theatre in Northampton on Thursday, June 16 at 8PM are $75.00 (premium seats with a meet and greet), $39.50, and $29.50 and go on sale this Friday, February 25th  at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street, 413-586-8686, and online at IHEG.com.


Dave Mason, legendary guitarist of Traffic, Fleetwood Mac plays Wednesday, March 9th at 7PM at the Iron Horse in Northampton

Dave Mason, at 18, teamed up with Steve Winwood, Jim Capaldi and Chris Wood to form the legendary band Traffic. At 19, Mason penned the song "Feelin' Alright,” a rock and roll anthem recorded by well over 48 artists, the best known version being Joe Cocker’s.  Mason struck gold with the rock classic "Alone Together,”  followed by five albums including "Let It Flow” with the top-ten single "We Just Disagree.”   Mason performed on The Rolling Stones' "Beggars Banquet", George Harrison's "All Things Must Pass", Paul McCartney's "Listen To What The Man Said" and Jimi Hendrix's "Electric Ladyland". In fact, "All Along the Watchtower" features Dave on acoustic guitar. The classic Dylan track remains a big favorite in Dave's live show. In October of 1993, Dave Mason formally joined the legendary group Fleetwood Mac and spent two years touring with them around the world. Their 1995 album "Time” features Dave's lead vocals on several songs. In 1996 Dave returned to touring with his own band, which included former Three Dog Night bassist Rich Campbell. In 1998, he toured with Traffic band-mate Jim Capaldi, and now is performing as The Dave Mason Band throughout North America, which includes Gerald Johnson (Bass), John Sambataro (guitar), Alvino Benett (Drums); Bill Mason (Keyboards.)

Tickets available at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street, 413-586-8686, and online at IHEG.com.


Friday, February 18, 2011

How Sharon Van Etten went from Murfreesboro, Tennessee coffee slinger to one of the country's most original voices. Sharon plays the Iron Horse on April 15th at 10PM.


Article by Steve Haruch from Nashville Scene: Brooklyn singer and songwriter Sharon Van Etten has two gorgeous and acclaimed albums to her name, a new album in the works with producer Aaron Dessner, a European tour with Dessner's band The National on the horizon, and enough well-deserved praise floating around the Internet to launch a denial-of-service attack against Tumblr. But just a few years ago, she was an MTSU dropout working as a barista and stealing away to play open mic nights against the wishes of her controlling boyfriend, who thought she wasn't any good. For all the musical talent we attract to Middle Tennessee, we sure let a good one get away.

Van Etten moved to Tennessee in 1999, straight out of high school. Within a year she had dropped out of college, taking a job at the Red Rose, the defunct Murfreesboro cafe and former music venue that now faces possible demolition. She cites her time in Tennessee as formative and inspirational, even if she had to leave, brokenhearted, to find her voice as a musician.

"Working at Red Rose was amazing," Van Etten says. "It was my home away from home. Everyone who worked there taught me a lot about music. Before I moved to Tennessee, I really only listened to radio and what my friends gave me, and so there were a lot of gaps there. ... I was exposed to a lot of newer music, and genres I didn't even know existed." Whatever pain those years dealt her — and there was an album's worth, at least — Van Etten can still smile on her time here.

"You know, apart from the relationship shit, I think it was really good for me. I learned a lot." She adds, with a laugh: "It was just kind of like a sitcom — Jersey girl moving to Tennessee."

Over the course of two albums, Van Etten has emerged from a crowded field as a singular talent. There is, after all, no shortage of singers who've heard Nick Drake and Vashti Bunyan, and who think they and their guitar have something to say to the world, the great majority of it having to do with their feelings. Whether your local Cafe is the Bluebird or the Sidewalk, you've heard this genus before, many times over, ad nauseam — but the species Van Etten is rare.

For starters, there's her voice. A rich, enthralling, versatile instrument, it can go from a hushed vulnerability, reminiscent of indie-folk singers like Julie Doiron, to a soaring, cathedral melancholy. And as painfully intimate as her subject matter can be at times, Van Etten is able to strike the balance that eludes so many — mournful but not grave, delicate but not precious, serious but not self-serious. Only art this perfectly wrought can hold so much pain under its command. In the space of her songs, Van Etten never lets her intelligence overpower her heart, nor the other way around.

Even more impressive than her emotionally ravishing 2009 debut, Because I Was in Love, is how much its follow-up, last year's Epic, manages to build on her strengths. Just as the bare-bones instrumentation on Because never feels inadequate, the added sonic layers on Epic — harmonium, drums and synth to go with acoustic and electric guitars — never feel obtrusive.

"I think these songs are more coming to terms with my old record, and understanding more where I was, and being OK with it," she says. "They're a little more aggressive, and I think they're more confident as well."

Whereas Because finds Van Etten singing, "I hate to admit it / but I don't know shit," Epic sees her singing from a wiser, though no less devastating, perspective. On the transcendent "Save Yourself," her voice is cool, almost sly, delivering the lines with a knowing, sidelong grin: "Don't you think I know," she sings over rolling drums and sighing pedal steel, "you're only trying to save yourself / You're just like everyone else." The new assertiveness, combined with a fuller, more varied sound, adds up to make one of her early lyrics seem especially prescient: On "Much More Than That," she sings, "One day I'll be a better writer."
  
"I guess it was a deliberate move, to have a band on this album and be able to tour with the band to able to show that I'm versatile," Van Etten says. She credits Brian McTear, who produced a recording of her song "Love More" for Weathervane Music and WXPN's Shaking Through series, with helping her see the possibilities of more fleshed-out arrangements, and considers their session together as a crucial turning point in her recent success.

"When people realized I wasn't just a solo singer-songwriter, that I can have a band, that I can do something other than super sad songs — you know, like, feeling sorry for myself or whatever — that opened the door," she says.

And she's still getting used to her life on the other side of that threshold: "People's response was a lot stronger than I thought it would be," she says with a laugh. "I'm still freaking out about everything. It's crazy."

While there is no longer a Red Rose for her to play, Van Etten sees her return to Tennessee as special. It will be only her second show here since she fled for her parents' home in New Jersey seven years ago — the other being a solo appearance at The Basement with Festival and Cortney Tidwell in 2008.

"I'm kind of nervous about playing in Nashville, actually," she says. "It's like playing for my parents or something, you know?"

Despite any jitters she may experience when she takes the stage at The 5 Spot Saturday night, they likely won't last long. Club owner Todd Sherwood is an old friend and, after all, this is familiar soil.

"There's something really comfortable and slow and relaxing about the South," she says. "I miss that. That's one thing you don't get in New York.

Article by Steve Haruch from Nashville Scene

Nashville Scene's Cream Interview with SVE is here. 

Sharon Van Etten plus Lady Lamb the Beekeeper play the Iron Horse in Northampton on Friday, April 15th at 10PM. Tickets are $10.00 at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street (walk right in!) or call 413-586-8686 or buy online at IHEG.com.

The Buzz About Sharon Van Etten


UK singer/songwriter Bobby Long makes Iron Horse debut Monday, February 28th. Local psychedelic popsters The Sun Parade open.



British singer-songwriter-guitarist Bobby Long's anticipated debut studio album 'A WINTER TALE', produced by Liam Watson (White Stripes) came out this month on Dave Mathews ATO Records. Currently residing in New York City, the 24-year old Long has been writing finely-crafted songs since taking up the guitar at age 17; from then on he's been creating memorable songs inhabited by hauntingly poetic lyrics. 

After relocating to London from the countryside of South West England, he became a fixture at London's open-mic nights while attending London Metropolitan University where he studied Music in Film and wrote his thesis on The Social Impact of American Folk Music. He quickly established himself on the local open mic circuit, finding his voice and beginning to develop songs characterized by catchy melodies paired with elusive, imaginative lyrics. In London he met a circle of fellow musicians, among them Marcus Foster, with whom he wrote a song called "Let Me Sign," and soon-to-be megastar Robert Pattinson, who would sing it in the 2008 blockbuster film Twilight. It is Bobby Long's intensely personal songs, vocal prowess, and heart-wrenching soulfulness that resonate with audiences on both sides of the Atlantic, creating a loyal following through constant touring over the past two years. In 2009, Long played 160 shows in seven months in seven countries.


A WINTER TALE merges band power with acoustic rawness, featuring Nona Hendryx (LaBelle) on backing vocals on "Penance Fire Blues," B. J. Cole (Elton John, Sting) on pedal steel, Icelandic singer Lay Low on several tracks, and other top-drawer musicians. And by way of continued extensive touring, he will be bringing A WINTER TALE and what has been called his "tapestry of tales" to the ever-growing audiences seduced by his compelling voice, musicianship and charm.

Bobby Long, who opened for Michael Franti and Spearhead at the Calvin this summer makes his Iron Horse debut on Monday, February 28th at 7PM. Local psychedelic popsters The Sun Parade open the show to celebrate the release of their great new EP. Tickets are $12.50 at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street (walk right in!) or call 413-586-8686 or buy online at IHEG.com.

 
Twitter: twitter.com/bobbylongnews/
Facebook: facebook.com/musicbobbylong
Website: musicbobbylong.com/
MySpace: myspace.com/bobbylong
Recent Release: A Winter Tale
Release Date: February 1, 2011
Label: ATO Records
Hometown:London/Calne

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Los Straitjackets tear it up at the Iron Horse this Sunday night at 7PM with Boston's Sarah Borges


The Hartford Courant
 
Should Los Straitjackets play a tune or two on Sunday night with twang-rock songstress Sarah Borges, who opens their show in Northampton, it will mark a rare moment of spontaneity for the masked Nashville instrumentalists.

"We're the opposite of a jam band," says guitarist Eddie Angel, days before the start of an East Coast tour. "Everything we do is sort of rehearsed, so there's not a lot of leeway."

Rigidity and rock 'n' roll don't often mix, but in the case of Los Straitjackets — four ace players who take the stage in black Chuck Taylors, Aztec medallions and Mexican "lucha libre" wrestling masks — there's a good reason for sticking with the script.

"First and foremost, we want to put on a good show and make sure everyone is entertained," Angel says. "As opposed to when you go see Bob Dylan, and he sings 'Blowing in the Wind,' and you can't even recognize the song. We don't subscribe to that theory."

"I understand where he's coming from," he adds. "It seems like it's more important to him that he expresses himself than it is he entertains the audience. We're coming from the opposite end of the spectrum."

Or maybe the other end of the galaxy. Even when they're not touring with burlesque dancers or colorful guest vocalists, such as California neo-rockabilly king Big Sandy, the Jackets go for spectacle, recycling decades of American junk culture.

They draw on Vegas kitsch, vintage sci-fi comic books and campy B movies, imagining what four Creatures from the Black Lagoon might look like if they got a hold of sparkly guitars and played one of Frankie and Annette's '60s beach parties.

Known primarily as surf rockers, the Jackets don't limit themselves to Ventures covers or tunes from the "Pulp Fiction" soundtrack. Live, they might follow Link Wray's proto-punk fuzz-bomb "Rumble" with Sam Cooke's "You Send Me" or even Celine Dion's "My Heart Will Go On," proving that almost no song is off limits.
 "People are always asking me if it's sort of restricting playing instrumental, and I'm like, 'No, man, we can do whatever we want,'" Angel says. "We can go from exotica to surf to rockabilly to mambo to spaghetti westerns, anything, you know? It's funny how people have this preconceived notion, that it's a one-trick pony or something."

Los Straitjackets performs with Sarah Borges at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Iron Horse Music Hall, 20 Center St., Northampton. Tickets are $15 in advance and $20 at the door. Information: 413-586-8686 or http://www.iheg.com.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Valentine’s Week at the Iron Horse gets (tastefully) risqué with Burlesque-A Pades starring Angie Pontani and The World Famous Pontani Sisters Thursday, February 17 at 7 PM


BURLESQUE-A-PADES is a sexy, sultry, randy and racy 90 minute show conceived by The World Famous Pontani Sisters, trailblazers of the burlesque movement! Burlesque-A-Pades harkens back to a more glamorous time in entertainment, evoking the classic imagery and feel of traditional burlesque, but with modern twists and turns that will have you cheering in the aisles. The sisters have assembled an award winning national all-star core cast of the best in burlesque, vaudeville, sideshow and variety entertainment! From side-splitting humor, earthquake inducing shimmies, spark igniting tap dances, high kicks and back flips! In addition to the core cast, Burlesque-A-Pades will feature guest acts in each local, representing the best of each cities burlesque performers!

Tickets for Burlesque-A Pades  at the Iron Horse on Thursday, February 17th at 7PM are $15 at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Legendary jazz bassist Buster Williams brings his Something More quartet to the Iron Horse on Tuesday, February 22nd with Cindy Blackman on drums, Patrice Rushen on piano, and Steve Wilson on alto sax.


One of jazz's most valuable sidemen, Buster Williams has been able to flourish through many periods of changing fashions in jazz. Best known since the 1980s for his solid, dark tone and highly refined technique on the acoustic bass, the jazz-rock generation knew him as the mobile anchor of Herbie Hancock's exploratory "Mwandishi" Sextet from 1969 to 1973, doubling on acoustic and electric basses sometimes attached to electronic effects devices.

Williams learned both the double bass and the drums from his father, but having been enormously impressed by Oscar Pettiford's recordings, he ultimately decided to concentrate on the bass. After studying theory and composition at Philadelphia's Combs College of Music in 1959, Williams joined Jimmy Heath's unit the following year and played with Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt in 1960 and 1961, as well as behind singers Dakota Staton (1961-62), Betty Carter (1962-63), Sarah Vaughan (1963) and Nancy Wilson (1964-68). The gig with Wilson prompted a move to Los Angeles, where the Jazz Crusaders used him on concert dates and recordings from 1967 to 1969, and he also played briefly with Miles Davis in 1967 and the Bobby Hutcherson/Harold Land Quintet. Moving to New York in 1969, Williams joined Hancock's sextet, appearing on all of his Warner Bros. albums, as well as The Prisoner (Blue Note), Sextant (Columbia) and with trumpeter Eddie Henderson's spinoff group on Capricorn and Blue Note. Over a five-year period (1976-1981), Williams led numerous recording sessions for Muse, Denon and Buddah while continuing to freelance before, during and after that span. In the 1980s, he was a member of both the Timeless All-Stars and Sphere, writing a number of compositions for the latter. Among the musicians for whom he has played from the 1980s onward are Kenny Barron, Frank Morgan, Stanley Cowell, Steve Turre, Emily Remler and Larry Coryell.

"After working almost continuously for 30 years as a sideman," says Buster, "I decided it was time to take the plunge, step up to the front, play my music, and express my concept of a cohesive musical unit. I've served my apprenticeship under many great masters and feel that it's my honor and privilege to carry on the lineage that makes this music such an artistically rich art form.
 
Since the inception of "Something More'' in 1990, the group has had numerous tours of Europe including the first International Jazz Festival in Moscow; tour of Japan and Australia; countless engagements throughout the U.S.  The current quartet features Cindy Blackman on drums, Patrice Rushen on piano, and Steve Wilson on alto sax.

Tickets for Something More, The Buster Williams Quartet at the Iron Horse on Tuesday, February 22nd at 7PM are $17.50 at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Pianist Bill Charlap Plays Iron Horse with Guitar Trio Thursday, February 10th at 7PM. By OWEN McNALLY, Special to The Hartford Courant

Pianist Bill Charlap, an inventive improviser with an exquisite touch and a profound understanding of the Great American Songbook, leads his trio Thursday, Feb. 10 at 7 p.m. at the Iron Horse Music Hall, 20 Center St., Northampton, Mass.

Charlap's high art of the piano trio, both in memorable live sessions and on his blue-chip Blue Note Records masterworks, has long featured the pianist in tight, interactive collaboration with bassist Peter Washington and drummer Kenny Washington.

Although the Grammy-nominated pianist appeared with that familiar trio lineup last winter at the Iron Horse, he's back for an encore with a different instrumentation of piano, guitar and bass, featuring Peter Bernstein (below) on guitar and Sean Smith on drums.
A smart, sensitive player whose empathy is as expansive as his technique is wide and deep, Charlap won't be affected in the slightest by the harmonic clashes that sometime arise when two chordal instruments, here piano and guitar, wrestle for textural dominance.

As irrefutable proof of Charlap's knack for harmonious collaborations even in the most intimate bonding of chordal instruments, there is his most recent and elegant Blue Note release, "Double Portrait." It features him in a classy duo piano partnership with his wife, Renee Rosnes, an exciting pianist, composer and a master modern jazz practitioner in her own right.

With two virtuosos at separate pianos with 88 keys apiece, for a total of 176 keys in play in seemingly infinite combinations, the possibilities for clattering keyboard collisions are, mathematically speaking, quite dizzying.

Despite the potential for keyboard chaos, clarity not clutter is this famous jazz piano playing couple's pristine, coherent signature sound.

With their two distinctive and distinctly different styles happily wedded in this performance, they generate coherent orchestral textures with their totally in-tune, harmonic sophistication; bright contrapuntal conversations, brassy, hornlike single-note lines and seamless, in-sync phrasing. Their challenging repertoire features three American Songbook standards, covers of tunes by Lyle Mays, Wayne Shorter, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Gerry Mulligan and Joe Henderson, plus one Rosnes original.

Instead of the proficient but mechanical sound that sometimes afflicts even the brightest all-star piano duos, the Charlap/Rosnes alliance, without compromising its classically high standards, generates some real emotion,

On George Gershwin's "My Man's Gone Now," for example, the mood is elegiac, a lyrical expression of sorrow. Each of the four individual notes that state the song's four-word title is wreathed in museful melancholy.

But the very next tune, the Dietz and Schwartz classic, "Dancing in the Dark," is a pure joy, a jazz pas de deux as perfect as a flawless routine by Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers. Only here, the two pianists cohere so fluidly and are so seamlessly in step with one another that it's hard to know when one leads and other follows.


Part of Charlap's seemingly effortless way at the keyboard and natural sounding, wide-sweeping emotional range may well be accounted for, at least in part, by the fact that, as a child prodigy, he grew up in a household totally immersed in music.

His father, the late Moose Charlap, was a Broadway composer and songwriter whose credits included the scores to "Peter Pan," "The Conquering Hero," Whoop-up," "Alice Through the Looking Glass" and "Kelly." His mother, Sandy Stewart, is a popular song singer who performed with Benny Goodman and starred on TV's "Perry Como Show" and earned a Grammy nomination for her hit single, "My Coloring Book" by the noted songwriting team of Kander and Ebb.

Early in his career, Charlap appeared as an emerging sideman in Hartford, including an impressive showing with his then boss and mentor Phil Woods in the 1990s.

In another memorable local appearance in 2002, he accompanied Joel Frahm, the noted, New York-based tenor saxophonist from West Hartford, on one of Frahm's periodic triumphant returns to Hartford in a concert at Asylum Hill Congregational Church. Charlap's alliance with Frahm that night marked yet another empathetic pairing for the fine, flexible pianist, one that should have but hasn't yet been preserved in a recording studio.

Charlap, who began picking out tunes on the piano at age three, studied with jazz pianist Jack Reilly and classical pianist, Eleanor Hancock. Informally, he picked up pointers from the great jazz pianist and keyboard savant, Dick Hyman, a distant cousin on his father's side.

Well-known composers and musicians regularly dropped by the Charlaps' Manhattan home to socialize or talk about their craft or the music biz.

Speaking of the impact his musically privileged childhood had on his adult success, the pianist told The Courant in an interview in 2002:

"Sure it was great to grow up in a house full of music. It was nice to know my parents musically, to see my dad composing. But you know it was one of those things that you just take for granted when it's happening.

"I didn't recognize my father, who died when I was only 7, or my mother as being special or unusual because of their musical skills. Maybe sometimes I did as I got older. But it was just great having that kind of energy, that kind of creativity around. It was very inspiring."

Along with natural gifts and a nurturing environment, Charlap's success is also rooted in plain-old fashioned hard work.

After dropping out of college after two years so he could focus totally on the piano, he set a grueling regimen for himself, a commitment necessary no matter how much talent you start out with, who your parents may be or how much music you've heard since infancy.

Here's Charlap on how that necessary commitment can completely and, in a way, gloriously absorb your life:

"I would just wake up in the morning and start playing. The next thing I knew, it would be midnight. I had taken the most inexpensive apartment I could find, a fifth floor walk-up, and rented a piano. I put acoustical foam up on the walls to soundproof it and just played all day."

Before his big Blue Note triumph — which some may have mistakenly thought of as an "overnight success story" — he had labored long and hard and learned from mentor/bosses like Mulligan and Woods.

Pianistically, all that fervent woodshedding paid off big time.

Charlap's crisp, articulate touch, robust sense of swing and knack for the well-turned phrase, clarity, vitality and expressiveness have elevated him into the jazz pantheon alongside such Old Masters of elegance, luminous tone and swing as Hank Jones and Tommy Flanagan.

Tickets for the Iron Horse concert: $22.50 in advance, $25 at the door. Information: 413-586-8686 and online here.


Saw Doctors to celebrate St. Patrick's Day early at Calvin Theatre on Sunday, March 6th. New album on the way.


An influx of Irish bands perform in Northampton in honor of St. Patrick’s Day each March. Yet, County Galway’s Saw Doctors will be celebrating more than just the high holiday as they embark on a “Coast to Coast” tour behind their upcoming release, The Further Adventures of the Saw Doctors. The band will play Northampton's Calvin Theatre on Sunday, March 6th at 8PM.  Tickets for the show are $28.50 through Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com.

Released last fall in Ireland and the United Kingdom,  The Further Adventures of the Saw Doctors will hit American shores this spring (no offical release date has been set). The new album, the band’s seventh studio effort, follows 2006′s The Cure. Produced by Philip Tennant, The Further Adventures of The Saw Doctors’ lead single is “Takin’ The Train”. Check out the video for the song below.

Supporting the fun-loving Irish rockers will be Chicago-based AM Taxi, who released their first LP, We Don’t Stand A Chance, last June.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Robert Randolph and the Family Band play the Pearl Street Ballroom on Friday, February 18th. New album “We Walk This Road,” produced by T Bone Burnett, explores the roots of African-American music over the past century.



Robert Randolph talks about the new album and where he is at this moment in time as an artist, a nice alternative to a publicist’s press release we’d say. 

“This record is a celebration of African-American music over the past one hundred years and its social messages from the last thirty.  Although we cover a whole timeline of different eras on We Walk This Road, what ties these songs together remain their message of hope, their ability to uplift.

After we finished our last record, Colorblind, we began searching for a great producer to help guide the follow up. We wanted someone who understood me and the road I’ve walked this far, who understood our connections of my roots within rock and gospel and the church, who would help us put those things in their most compelling context.

T Bone Burnett shared the vision of how gospel, blues and rock could be put together in a way that could relate to my history and connect to my present. It was important to us that we make the record we wanted to make, even if the end result was unclassifiable. We just focused on making great songs and great music that spoke to me, and that reflected the way I try to speak to the world. 


We recorded We Walk This Road over about two years, after T Bone had finished his record with Alison Krauss and Robert Plant. We went into the studio with virtual libraries of songs, whole volumes worth of material to go through. T Bone brought in old archival songs from the twenties and thirties and many of them were in the public domain. I had songs that I had written with the band, or that other artists had sent me, and we sat down and starting sifting through history. 


When we found something we liked, we would either cover it or re-work it using our own words or melodies. Through this creation came an education. T Bone opened a lot of doors for me serving as a link between the past and the present. He knows how to take something from the past and bring it into the present while still allowing the artist to make it his own, in the same way that Hendrix took Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower and made it belong to him. T Bone listens to music that our grandmothers would listen to as children–not even music that our fathers listened to, but songs that go even further back…some from Gospel and Christian blues, the music that people working in fields across the south likely sang nearly a century ago. Those are the real roots of rock and roll, where everything else comes from. 


I was only allowed to listen to modern Christian and gospel music growing up, so there was so much I didn’t know about. My mind is expanded now. The record is finished and I still feel as if I’m not done. I’ve spent over $5,000 on iTunes in the past eighteen months just catching up. Before this record, I didn’t sift through music past the Seventies. I didn’t know about Blind Willie Johnson, or Chess Records. I thank T Bone for being a tour guide into the deepest parts of my musical roots. We connected the last one hundred years of African-American music in the way people used to: You write your own songs, you cover other people’s material, you re-work older songs. We had some amazing people come in to help. Leon Russell came by to hang out and wound up playing piano on the last track, “Salvation.” Ben Harper plays guitar and sings on “If I Had My Way.” The base of that song came from Blind Willie Johnson, and it was really difficult to get right. It was a country tune for a while. I had honestly given up on it. But Ben came down and said, “Let me get in there! I know just what to do!” He went in there and smoked the choruses, and I thought, “Now we’ve got a tune.” It’s one of my favorite songs on the record. 


Where We’ve Been

I grew up in the House of God church. The pedal steel was a big part of our church tradition. I grew up watching older guys play, and I started playing when I was fifteen. When I was nineteen, someone gave me tickets to a Stevie Ray Vaughan concert. After that, I wanted to play pedal steel like Stevie Ray played his guitar. I wanted to take another path than the people who played traditional pedal steel to take it to a whole new level. We started playing and touring around New York City in 2000, playing clubs like Wetlands, and things started to take off. We were selling out large New York clubs with no record deal, and it started to spread to Philly and Boston. Soon, we signed to Warner Brothers, and word began to get around about us nationally. Great artists like Eric Clapton and Dave Matthews and B.B. King accepted us. Young artists, too: we toured with The Roots and Pharrell and John Mayer. We have been fortunate to be accepted by a wide range of fan bases, and we have been able to build from there. I definitely feel as if everything has been working up to this moment, to this record. 


Where We’re Going

I’m very excited to play these tracks live. Those people who have been our fans and followers should see the progression from our last record to this one, and the road we’ve taken won’t seem too foreign to them. When people come to see us, they know that it’s really about the message, about making them feel good. Hopefully, this record will inspire them in the same way. It certainly makes me feel happy. I can’t see myself recording depressing lyrics, lyrics that leave people without a sense of hope. It’s not in me to use the power of the microphone to make music like that. That’s why this record is uplifting - it’s got great messages. It’s all there. My goal is to open the door for people, in the same way that musical doors have been opened for me. I want to take this musical history and make it relevant to give people a better idea of who I am and where I came from. I think even though I’m a young guy who was born into the era of hip-hop and contemporary gospel, I can help bridge the cultural gap between people who are seventy-five years old and kids who are fifteen years old by reaching back into this history of music. We Walk This Road was done in our belief in what we all need right now: young voices saying something positive without preaching in hopes of inspiring people. When you stick to what you believe in, and with the roots of where you come from, things will always work out.”

Tickets for Robert Randolph and the Family Band plus The Constellations in the Pearl Street Ballroom on Friday, February 18th at 8:30PM are $20 at Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com