Thursday, February 02, 2023

Folk Alliance Day 1,, "Imagination Is a Discipline," the 2023 Folk Music Awards' Vision of Change

 

Sara Curruchich
“They say women hold up half the sky,” NPR's Ann Powers began at last night’s Folk Alliance International awards. She added, “They’re holding up more than half the sky tonight,” the comment met with exuberant cheers and applause.

The Alliance’s infrastructure has seemingly always been women. But with Board president Ashley Shabankareh replacing Amy Reitnouer Jacobs, and the Alliance’s new executive director Neeta Ragoowansi replacing Aengus Finnan, the women at the top of the organization are clearly holding their own.

Guatemalan singer Sara Curruchich opened the evening with an all-woman band—marimba, acoustic guitar, drums, and bass—performing the spirited, march-like, anthem, “Mujer Indigena.” Mujer Indigena video Janis Ian received two awards, one for lifetime achievement and one as artist of the year for her 2022 album The Light at the End of the Line. Most of the award recipients—including Leyla McCalla, Molly Tuttle, Anais Mitchell, Aoife O’Donovan, Marcy Marxer and Cathy Fink—were all women, and the evening closed with a tribute to John Prine that featured a surprise appearance by Iris DeMent.

Josh White, Jr. Sings "One Meatball"

But the award Powers gave was a posthumous lifetime achievement award for singer Josh White, given to his son Josh White Jr. After a touching tribute to his father—cast out on the road as a child by the de facto lynching of White’s own father into a rough and tumble youth witnessing “more violence than any child should see”—Josh White Jr. led the room in a sing along of his father’s biggest hit, the tragicomic “One Meatball.” Josh White Jr. Playing "One Meatball" a few years ago 
This was immediately followed by Leyla McCalla alone with her cello singing White’s “The Riddle Song.”  

Even Jimmy Lee Beason II, the representative of the Osage Nation who gave the land acknowledgment, cited a woman, Buffy Sainte-Marie, as the first artist who came to mind when he thought about his connection to folk music. He added that he thought of what he was doing as, “Not so much a land acknowledgment as a native people acknowledgement,” reminding those in attendance that “we’re still here, and still resisting” and recalling the crucial role played by folk in the 60s and 70s. He said the music “gave Native voices a platform that is still sorely needed.” 

Leyla McCalla Sings "The Riddle Song"

In her lifetime achievement award speech, Janis Ian echoed Beason’s call by stating how she’d always hoped to give “voice to the voiceless.” Ironically, 2022 was a year in which the “Seventeen” and “Society’s Child” singer both released what she feels is the best album she ever made, The Light at the End of the Line, and permanently lost her singing voice.

Ian reflected on the loss. “I don’t know what to say yet to be honest. It’s been less than six months,” but she added, “I came to a realization of how much time I wasted.”

Of course, she noted this is a feeling common to artists. “Artists are born looking at the hourglass and watching it run out. We measure time by how much we’ve accomplished of what we plan to accomplish.”

To help, Ian advised the artists in the room to, first, “Trust your talent”—to steer them to the uncomfortable places they need to go and to steer clear of business dealings that don’t feel right.

She also underscored the spirit of the evening with a call to “Be brave.” Recognizing, she had not always been particularly courageous herself, she had some thoughts about how to go about it. “If you pretend to be brave long enough,” Ian said, “You will be brave.” Adding that heroic people have to act the part first. With a self-deprecating smile and an implied wink, she confided, “There’s more sleight of hand to this business of being a ‘legendary’ and ‘heroic’ person than you might think.”

Then, Providence, Rhode Island’s Jake Blount sang “Seventeen” before a performance by Irish singer Wallis Bird. With a gregarious laugh, Bird joked about the pressure she felt singing in front of Ian. She then moved the crowd to sing along with Ian’s 2022 “Better Times Will Come.” Janis Ian's "Better Times Will Come"

Wallis Bird sings "Better Times Will Come"

Tying themes together, People’s Voice Award winner Leyla McCalla quoted prison abolitionist Mariame Kaba with “Hope is a discipline.” McCalla then added “I believe that imagination is also a discipline.” She acknowledged that, though we live in a capitalist, colonized society that works to keep people from realizing their own power, “The work that we do as artists is the active undoing of this conditioning.” Furthering such connections, Dan Rafferty of the Shambala Festival (which received a sustainability award) said that the environmental solutions “are inseparable from the fight for social justice,” calling once again on the crowd “to bring about the change that’s sorely needed.”

Award shows are problematic events, honoring a handful of “stars” in their field while the breadth and the depth of the real community around any organization, certainly Folk Alliance, isn’t really made up of stars and is so much larger than any such show can convey. At their worst, such events tend to celebrate the wrong people. But what’s remarkable about the Folk Alliance awards each year is how it recognizes itself as setting the tone for a community bent on, sure, selling their work, but more generally striving to change the world.

The night ended with a tribute to perhaps the most unassuming practitioner of that vision, John Prine. The award went to Oh Boy, which reportedly is the second oldest indie label in the business. That took this writer back to both my delight and puzzlement finding a new John Prine album, Aimless Love, at a Stillwater, Oklahoma grocery store back in 1984. I thought maybe Prine lost his record deal. I was worried about him. Little did I know, Oh Boy would not only keep the rest of Prine’s career going but provide a venue for everyone from Todd Snider and Kelsey Waldon to Kris Kristofferson.

Iris DeMent, the Milk Carton Kids, and Company
Fiona Whelan Prine and Prine’s adopted son Jody Whelan accepted the award, Fiona declaring, “If John wasn’t folk, I don’t know what is.”  And Jody once again reminded the Folk Alliance of its power and potential.

“[Oh Boy] started with faith in the community, the fan community,” Whelan said. Then he added that the label would come to realize how much it needed “the larger community” to survive. To be clear, Whelan said, “The only place you could hear Oh Boy’s music was folk DJs.”

With that, the Milk Carton Kids played a cover of Prine’s “That’s the way that the world goes round” before backing Iris DeMent as she sang “Mexican Home.” Delight united the room as we celebrated “that sacred core that burns” inside us all.

The whole show is broadcast here: 2023 Folk Music Awards



Sunday, January 29, 2023

"All Genres Are Part of the Vision," DJ NONAME at Tulsa's Mercury Lounge

dj noname debut, "Who Else But Me?"

At the end of December, we went to the Mercury Lounge in Tulsa to check out a hip hop set by DJ NONAME (from here out dj noname) featuring several special guests. So many hooks drew me in. First, the event was a fundraiser for an organization called the Center for Public Secrets, which seemed to be focused on raising awareness about the details of the 1921 Greenwood Massacre, specifically a new film called Oaklawn about the public fight to find the mass graves from that horrific chapter in our history. 

The evening also promised three sets, one by the metal band Blind Oath  https://blindoath.bandcamp.com/ and a final set by a band I knew fairly well, the great Tulsa Sound rockers, the Paul Benjamin Band https://www.paulbenjamanband.com/


Blind Oath due March 2023
Just the mix of styles would have been enough to draw me in, but the kicker was that they were all there to build cultural unity out of tragic divisions. 



2015 Horton Records Release










Right away, I was impressed by the mix of people and the energy gathering in this small space. Hip hoppers, head bangers, and cowboy longhairs greeting each other with warm hugs and huddling in the chill air on the outside deck as well as around the bars and booths inside. A woman with a pet skunk made her way through the crowd, people taking pictures and petting the docile, curious creature as she passed by.

Despite the noise of a crowded, excited room, I had a nice conversation with the folks running the Center for Public Secrets table. They told me about Lee Roy Chapman, the character they credited with starting the organization who dedicated his life to raising awareness about what had happened in 1921. More about Chapman here: https://www.centerforpublicsecrets.org/about 

The people at the table were, not surprisingly, musicians themselves [by the way, if you all see this, can you send your names and the band’s name again?], and they made sure I had a copy of ASLUT zine, which focused on the Greenwood Massacre, diving into the politics of the violence, including the class politics that rarely get discussed in the national shorthand: https://aslutzine.com/

With an early start the next day, we only stayed for the hip hop, but what a set that was. The crowd gathered around the stage, some rapping along with pieces of the rhyme, others responding with smiles and hands up, everyone rocking in their heels with increasing intensity. The final MC had a green and black scarf covering the bottom of his face but managed to spit rhymes with a clarity and intensity that captivated the room.

I now know that last MC was Earl Hazard, who worked with noname as Lou Purch https://djnoname.bandcamp.com/album/home-furniture-nothing-older-than-1977 He’s also been featured in the ongoing Tulsa hip hop podcast Fire in Little Africa https://anchor.fm/fire-in-little-africa/episodes/Episode-32-m-E-em96j6

Anyway, I downloaded the Lou Purch mix and a few other things, including the new solo work Three https://djno.name/ and hit this eclectic, connected DJ up with a few questions. I knew what was happening in Tulsa was, in some ways, singular in my experience and, in others, very much like the best of what I’ve experienced all across America over the past three decades. In my years as a writer, I’ve never felt a greater need for the vision I saw in Tulsa’s Mercury Lounge in December.  

Q: That night at the Mercury Lounge, I was impressed to see so many different kinds of groups coming together with community activists, Is that unusual for Tulsa? If not, how did that night come about? If so, why do you think that's happening in general?

dj noname: It’s not unusual around these parts. Tulsa’s been getting better at that, especially during the past year. Center for Public Secrets reached out to me to be part of their Benefit Concert (we raised a nice amount). Once we followed-up and confirmed, I had a “noname. & friends.” set in mind. Outside of the 3 MCs you watched perform: Joey Organic, Keezy Kuts and Earl Hazard… I had even more artists I wanted to put together and perform and then decided to peel back.

It’s happening in general because Tulsa is (finally) realizing how much talent we have outside of the usual suspects, and there are more facilitators giving platforms. The only way it happens at this rate is by continuing to have different genres and acts on the bill and being consistent about it.

Q: You have at least a dozen albums on Bandcamp, but the oldest date is 2020? How did your work develop so quickly over such a short amount of time?

dj noname: The way I started was funny because my original idea for my first solo album was going to have nothing with me doing any beats. I was going to put producers together to make stuff, and make it have a mixtape feel like how it was during my high school days (ca. ‘04). I was connected with artists in the Town so I knew I could turn into DJ Khaled and put some songs together.

Fast forward, I was working with another artist and producer MaliMotives, and when I told him what I was trying to do with my solo album, he told me I can make beats with my phone (I had an iPhone). Ever since he told me, I kept trying with GarageBand and couldn’t get it down. One morning, I told myself I wasn’t doing anything else until I got it down. The very next moment, I started making joints off GarageBand, and there was no going back, I was going at it day and night. This was before “Halftime” (2019) and “Snackin’ with Flavor” (4/3/2020).

Snackin’ with Flavor (Photo by nosamyrag)

I dropped my solo debut a month after “Snackin’ with Flavor” on 4/20/20 which is in connection to the first night I ever DJ’d, which was the year before at The Soundpony Lounge. Once I dropped my solo debut, I convinced myself to go on a run to just drop material at high volume. I did it to gain traction along with competing with myself to catch-up with everyone else as far as discographies go (I have over 40 projects). 2020 and 2021 were great years. I slowed down last year, which I called my “Cook Up Year” to where I was being more direct and intentional with what I was doing. I’m about to put it back in gear again.

Q: I'm pretty obsessed with the solo EP No Days of Christmas: Three. I'm intrigued by what you're doing with that--the opening George Benson stroll, the Maze stuff in the middle that's evocative of the two sides of a relationship, and then Joe Bataan's version of "I'll Be Sweeter Tomorrow," which seems to have moved the opening search to a new resolve. It's a little symphony that—though the music comes from 1969 to 1982 maybe—fits together as a coherent piece.

 

dj noname: I do everything in threes, and the two from the series before that give the same feel. I listen to George Benson heavy. The first beat that gave me a spark to start on my first solo album was a George Benson song that was chopped up by MaliMotives.

dj noname. presents Tra3Qwan (Artwork by Blake Brown)
Q: This seems like a new approach to me. Is it different than the way you've approached your previous solo work or with MCs?

dj noname: My approach with each MC is both the same and different. The same because once I hear it, I already have someone in mind and want that artist to have it. Different because I won’t send the same type of beat to Artist A I’d send to Artist B; I don’t shop it around to see who gets first dibs. I know the artists sense that; that’s what makes the projects even better.

Pie In The Sky (Artwork by Elizabeth “Feahther” Henley)













The approach for my solo work, it depends if I’m doing a studio album or just all instrumentals. When it comes to my solo studio albums, I just have to know, it’s a feeling. Once I get a direction, the wheels start spinning. I have two solo albums out and want to drop my third this year. It’s something I want to consider my magnum opus.

Q: In February, you have a month-long residency at the Mercury Lounge. What is your hope and plan for this residency?

dj noname: The more shows I do and the more people I connect with, I vow to showcase talent whenever I’m given the opportunity. That’s the purpose of my residency. I know where I stand in Tulsa, and I’m starting to plant seeds and share the wealth.

GTR, COMBSY & dj noname
The homie Costa, an artist and producer who also does work at Mercury Lounge, put me on. Super unexpected, I got right on it once everything was confirmed. At this very moment I have three shows lined-up for the first three Mondays of February while plotting on the last Monday of the month to cap it off.

Q: What’s next?

dj noname: I see myself at festivals more. Each year I get bigger opportunities, and it’s fun, I love what I do. I also see myself branching out to more artists outside of Tulsa along with producer placements on other projects that aren’t mine. All genres are part of the vision; I’m very open to that. Community is something I’m big on, and I show that in things I do. With more experience and opportunities, I know we can make a bigger impact.






Thursday, January 19, 2023

Much Depends Upon Bushwick Bill, Merle Haggard, More Poems about Money, Survivor's Songs, and Pallbearer's Clubs


 I used to write book reviews in my blog, and I may still occasionally do so. However, lately, it seems if I really want to help a book out, it needs to go on the Amazon page.

Don't get it twisted, when we can figure out a way to replace Amazon's hold on almost everything we read, watch, or listen to, I'm there. I'm down for the conversation right now, just like I'd like to have one about Ticketmaster and LiveNation and why regular folks can't afford big concerts anymore.

That said, more eyes will see these reviews on Amazon than anywhere else, and Amazon won't abide the duplicate posting here. So, I'll post the links. I thought it was some of my better work this past year.

I started with Charles Hughes' indispensable work on Bushwick Bill--https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/R26OTDF0WBNHKB/ref=cm_cr_dp_d_rvw_ttl?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B0BS4F9MKD

Before moving to David Cantwell's perfect reworking and expansion of his book The Running Kind: Listening to the Music of Merle Haggard-- https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/R22A4355KPXOPR?ref=pf_ov_at_pdctrvw_srp  

And Daniel Wolff's latest, one-of-a-kind and crucially important More Poems About Money--



https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/RYZN5DBBKVQDQ?ref=pf_ov_at_pdctrvw_srp

To two reviews of Paul Tremblay's latest books, one of my favorite novelists growing richer and warmer with each outing--

https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/R16DOKDLGPONJF?ref=pf_ov_at_pdctrvw_srp

https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/R3M3IIY3J8D0ZO?ref=pf_ov_at_pdctrvw_srp




Sunday, January 01, 2023

Bruce Springsteen's "Any Other Way" and Other Conversations

 

People argue over which version of William Bell’s “Any Other Way” Springsteen is covering on his new record (as Greil Marcus put it “a fan’s record”). I have half a dozen reasons for suspecting it starts with Chuck Jackson, not least of which is that he substitutes Jackson’s “you might see a big man cry” for “you might see a grown man cry.” The other singers simply say “you might see me cry.”

Bell’s 1962 single charted at 131 on the Hot 100, meaning most stations 12-year-old Bruce Springsteen might have listened to never played it. Released soon after, Shane’s version only charted in Toronto but hit #68 in Canada with a 1967 reissue. Jackson’s version charted #81 pop and #47 R&B, but, most importantly, was a track on Chuck Jackson’s 1967 Greatest Hits collection, a record an R&B-loving Jersey Shore musician with a band may well have picked up at the time. If nothing else, that collection’s a record Springsteen likely would have known by the time he worked with Jackson on the 1982 Gary U.S. Bonds record, On the Line.

Of course, a crate digger since his early days, Springsteen has mentioned that several of the songs here were, for him, recent discoveries, recent discoveries that play like more than a fair share of the DNA for his entire career.  When Springsteen heard anything doesn’t much matter. It’s the dialogue that went on because of the music that matters. What Springsteen heard whenever he heard it was filtered through all sorts of musical dialogue, including the Beatles “She Loves You,” a similar discussion between two friends about a girl, and a single released about a month before the Jackson version. I enjoy pondering the whole arc of a teenage romance occurring over the course of that month.

But that’s just musing. All four versions add something to the discussion I would like to hope records like this may still start. The build certainly illustrates Steve Van Zandt’s notion that rock and roll, at least in its origins, is white kids trying to make Black records and “failing gloriously.”

William Bell’s record conjures the sort of pre-Beatles (and Beatle-fueling) grandeur of, say, the Drifters, the backing singers even evoking the great girl groups. Without either we don’t have Born to Run

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Msa5LRtIJ-k    


Jackie Shane’s sultry version, substituting the word “gay” for happy, is at once the saddest sounding version of the record and the most defiantly certain of itself, dispensing with the fragile male bravado central to the other versions. While the sexual ambiguity no doubt resonates with any number of Springsteen’s decisions (the names of partners in song after song, the nightly Big Man stage kisses, the decision to cancel a 2016 North Carolina concert to protest transgender discrimination), I would argue that lack of a certain front-to-keep-from-crying aesthetic is precisely why Springsteen's record doesn’t move this direction—

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZnwLamCia4

Chuck Jackson’s comes closest, with its emphasis on horns and its celebration of freedom, though Springsteen stops short of the gospel outro—

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FELQMDkkxt4

Bruce plays it as the Jersey Shore party song where the singer fights to live brokenhearted—

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcvxp5E-ROw  


FWIW, not the best of 2022 in any objective way, but my 2022 playlist nevertheless—

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6PdzTp2VCQHToBA6ZQNHmJ