Country Music People November 2018 | Page 3

contents cmp Features 10 Asleep At The Wheel Frontman of the Austin-based swingers, Ray Benson, talks to Duncan Warwick about the New Routes they’re taking. 18 CMA Songwriters Series Spencer Leigh gets the lowdown from this year’s visiting tunesmiths. November 2018 For nearly 50 years Ray Benson’s band has ensured that ‘Western Swing Ain’t Dead ... It’s Just Asleep At The Wheel.’ The multiple Grammy-winning band take the listener down some New Routes on their latest. The band’s frontman and giant of Texas music talks to Duncan Warwick. Asleep Wheel AT THE A sleep At The Wheel don’t need to reinvent the wheel, they’ve already done that. It was a 2006 album titled exactly that. But for their latest, New Routes, they might have gotten hold of some highly polished alloys. The album marks something of a change in the sound of the Western swing juggernaut that has been rolling for very nearly 50 years and the title couldn’t be more suitable. Whilst there is nothing that will frighten away long-time fans of Ray Benson’s mighty machine, it finds The Wheel tackling Guy Clark’s Dublin Blues and embraces shades of rockabilly on a terrific version of Paolo Nutini’s Pencil Full Of Lead. “Well, it’s different people.” reflects the lofty frontman. “When I started assembling this new band… when I first met Katie (Shore), I actually used to have a bar in town and she was playing there and I saw her on a YouTube feed and I said, ‘that’s the style voice that I love… and oh, oh my gosh she plays fiddle,’ so we got her in the band, and over the period of a few years, she’s been with the band four or five years now, she joined the band when she was 26-years-old and then she brought Connor (Forsyth), her old piano player from a band they had together, and then we needed a slappin’ bass player and got Josh (Hoag), and then Jay (Reynolds) on the clarinet and sax, so all of a sudden I had a new band of really talented folks. So I thought, ‘Well it’s time to do what Asleep At The Wheel has done for 50 years, make eclectic records based on the talents that are in the band.” The title was suggested by Benson’ long-time drummer Dave Sanger. “Dave’s been with me for 33 years and I said, ‘Dave, we gotta figure a name for this album, whaddaya think?’ and he said ‘New Routes - R-O-U-T-E-S’.” One track from the new release picking up attention is the witty yet poignant Willie Got There First, which was written by Seth Avett of Americana favourites The Avett Brothers and it features the siblings on the track. “We’ve been good friends with The Avett Brothers,” recalls Ray, “and Seth sent me that and said, ‘Hey, I wrote this song, what do you think about it?’ I said, ‘Wow, that’s incredible.’ Normally I do not cotton to those kind of tribute songs where you mention the titles and talk about the guy because they tend to be trite… but this was poetry. I was so impressed, I said to Seth, 10 cmp - NOVEMBER 2018 NOVEMBER 2018 - cmp 22 Stella Parton 11 Page 10 Fresh from her Masterchef appearance, the other Parton speaks to Kelly Gregory about her new album and more. 26 Dustin Sonnier KASSI ASHTON TENILLE TOWNES Louisiana’s best kept secret is the traditional country singer you need to know about. “ 56 Ian Tyson The Canadian legend by Larry Delaney. I love hearing my friends and fellow performers talking about their songs and playing them,” the singer and songwriter Tenille Townes told me, “It is my favourite way of listening to music.” I agree. I had heard about these songwriters-in-the-round evenings in Nashville but I hadn’t experienced one until the Bluebird Café came to Liverpool in 2015. Since then the Country Music Association has staged two concerts at St. George’s Hall in Liverpool, this year’s with Ashley Campbell, Chris DeStefano, Kassi Ashton and Tenille Townes. I have now written about all three of them for CMP and I am hooked. It is a marvellous way of hearing creative performers and you can enjoy watching the way they react with each other and with the audience. When I told Ashley Campbell that she was standing where Charles Dickens and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle read their stories, she said, “Wow! That is beyond cool!” I went backstage to interview the performers before the show and found them harmonising on Easy by the Commodores. “Very country,” I remarked, “but shouldn’t you be rehearsing a Beatles song for tonight?” “No, no” said Chris DeStefano, “We’re not rehearsing anything. We’re just having fun. If there is anything on stage tonight, it’ll be spontaneous.” Oddly enough, I think that the biggest overall influence on country music since the 1960s and through to now have been the Beatles. “You’re probably right,” says Chris, “Everybody knows their work. They set the bar for songwriting and performing and I don’t think anyone has reached it since. I’ve got my hands on a multi-track of Sgt. Pepper and I am able to play the horn arrangements or the bass parts and they are just magic on their own. Put them together and it is absolute brilliance. No one else but the Beatles and George Martin would have thought of putting reverb and delay on a bass guitar but that’s what they do on With A Little Help From My Friends and the vibe is just incredible.” Chris DeStefano was raised in New Jersey and studied film music at Berkeley, spending 10 years in the film industry and learning from great composers. “I knew Jerry Goldsmith and I will always be a fan of his work. You don’t have to see the film Poltergeist to be terrified: just listen to his score – that music is terrifying in its own right. Then I went to Nashville for a songwriting camp. I got a hit with Why Ya Wanna for Jana Kramer the following year and I found I was making so many friends there. I love co- writing. They help you and you help them. It’s great.” Tenille agreed: “Songwriting is like the craziest thing. You find yourself SPENCER LEIGH AT THE CMA SONGWRITERS SERIES 60 Eliza Gilkyson The Austin folk legend and activist speaks to Spencer Leigh. aSHLEY CAMPBELL opening up and talking about very vulnerable things with people you have just met for the first time. It is like a sacred, safe place and you become instant friends because you are going to these places.” Unlike the old Brill Building days where someone wrote the words and someone else the music, the songwriters of today do both. “To me it is hard to write one without the other,” says Tenille, “They feed off each other and whatever the music is saying needs to match what the lyric is saying. Everybody is different but in Nashville, those two things go hand in hand. Chris is best known for writing with Carrie Underwater including the gospel-based Something In The Water. “I brought the track in with pretty much the instruments you hear on the record but with no melody and no lyric. Carrie had the idea for Something In The Water and that’s her brilliance really. It was a familiar sounding title but it was saying something in a way that had never been said before. It was baptismal water. It was a very special song and I did feel that God was in the room when we wrote it.” Another big one for Chris was Rewind by Rascal Flatts and I loved the way that he brought George Strait into the lyric. “Yeah, well, Waylon and Willie were doing that sort of thing all the time and I love it. Actually, I had ‘Gonna talk Tom Petty into giving us an encore’ and it was the Flatts who changed it to George Strait. If you hear me sing it now, you never know who I’m gonna put in there.” Chris didn’t do Rewind on the show but Ashley sang Nothing Day with the lyric “I’ve smoked a joint with Willie Nelson’s son”. Although there was some structure to the CMA show, it did have a spontaneous feel in that one performer could sense what another performer was doing and then knew what to do next. In a way, I would prefer it without the regimented order of performance – first Tenille, then Chris, then Kassi and then Ashley – and, as they went round five times, we heard 20 songs. Nothing wrong with that but it would have been good if someone had said, “I must follow that song of so-and-so with this one of mine”, but that route can lead to anarchy if you have one pushy singer, so it is probably best their way. That apart, I loved its informality and even though it was in a theatre, it was like a concert in your living room as it was relaxed and good-natured. Any hot-blooded male will envy me for being backstage with three stunning ladies, but I don’t understand modern living. Ashley told me CHRIS DeSTEFANO that her witty song Better Boyfriend was the result of bad internet dating. What is that all about? Why should a gorgeous woman, and the daughter of a country legend to boot, be seeking dates on the internet? Still an excellent song has come from it. “Thanks, I was trying to write that song the way Roger Miller would. He would say, ‘Why can’t I say ‘Ninja fighter’ in a country song?’ and he would put it in. He is my ultimate songwriting hero.” What, I say, even more than Jimmy Webb? “Oh, there’s no comparison as they are very different. Jimmy told me that he wanted to write songs for Glen Campbell and then it happened. He writes the most beautiful poetry set to the most beautiful music. He doesn’t often do co-writes but he has said that we must work on something together and I will have to take him up on that.” On her album, The Lonely One, Ash performs Carl And Ashley’s Breakdown with Carl Jackson, who was also associated with her father. The banjo, I said, is an unfashionable instrument. “Excuse me!” said Ash, “it is not! The banjo is certainly very cool these days. It is becoming a lot more popular in every genre of music. You can hear it in mainstream pop and rock and not just in bluegrass and folk. A lot of people play it loud and hard but I’ve found you can get a lot of things out of it if you play it soft and mellow.” I commented that even Glen Campbell couldn’t make the bagpipes fashionable, but did he ever play anything other than Mull Of Kintyre? Ashley thought for a moment, “I can’t recall any other tunes he played on the bagpipes but he could have done as he said you played it like a recorder. I know he took one of the drones out to get a cleaner sound.” Ash spent a lot of time on stage with her dad when he had Alzheimer’s disease. “When he was diagnosed, he decided not to cancel his touring schedule of 20 dates but it went so well that we did 150! I know other musicians were interested to see how he was coping. When we played in Liverpool, some musicians from the Philharmonic Orchestra came to see him and we all went to a pub afterwards. I remember it well as there was a springer spaniel there.” And how difficult was it? “Well, my dad had good nights and bad nights but most of them were okay. If he was starting to go in the wrong direction, he might look to me for help and sometimes I would adjust the capo for him, but the audiences loved him. If he forgot the words, they would sing along and so it was a beautiful thing.” 18 cmp - NOVEMBER 2018 NOVEMBER 2018 - cmp 19 Page 18 Reviews STELLA PARTON Kelly Gregory gets the lowdown on Celebrity Masterchef, family, relationships, acting, and the new album, Survivor, from Dolly’s little sister. 30 Album Reviews I t isn’t easy when your elder sister is one of the biggest stars in the world, but Stella Parton has been releasing her own albums since the late 60s and having hits in her own right since 1975’s I Want To Hold You In My Dreams Tonight. Fresh from her recent appearance on BBC’s Celebrity Masterchef and with a brand new album, Survivor, recently released, the ‘other’ Parton continues to do her own thing. The trouble is, when your big sis is none other than Dolly Parton it can be hard not to mention it, and the media always does. “Well, it goes with the territory. There’s not much I can do about it, I accept it, and I love her,” says Stella resolutely. “I just run my own race, I stay in my lane, do things the way I want to according to my personality and my beliefs and my standards and I leave her business to her. We’re sisters first and foremost and we will always be sisters last. But I mind my own business and I have a lot of people criticising me because I don’t align with the way she handles her career but that’s, I think, unfortunate and uninformed people would say stuff like that. I do as I please. I have a right to be me as an individual, I have a right to be me as an artist as an individual. I’ve always carved out my own niche in the world and in my industry. I understand that that’s part of the territory. I just have to accept it and I do. I accepted that a long time ago, decades ago, and it doesn’t bother me at all; it bothers other people a hell of a lot more than it bothers me.” On Masterchef Stella won the hearts of both her fellow competitors and viewers alike, and not just because she had a penchant for making dishes that included bourbon at every opportunity. Her down-homey Southern charm was irresistible but recalling the show she says, “It was quite traumatic, let me say. It was nothing like I had hoped it would be but I survived so… “I liked all of them,” she says of her competitors. “They were all very sweet and Lisa [Maxwell] and I really got along well and Clara [Amfo] and I bonded very well. So the two girls that I was in the competition with, in my heat, I really bonded with them and I hope Regulars 22 cmp - NOVEMBER 2018 NOVEMBER 2018 - cmp 23 Page 22 4 News 8 Tour Guide 15 The David Allan Page 16 Nice to meet y’all... - Carson McHone 21 Corner Of Music Row 50 Nice to meet y’all.. - Kimberly Kelly 53 Lonnie Ratliff 54 Americana Roundup 63 Nice to meet y’all.. - Mason Ramsey Dustin Sonnier has been Louisiana’s best kept secret for far too long. That could be all about to change discovers duncan Warwick. DUSTIN TIME S ome people can be hard to track down and Dustin Sonnier was one of them. First coming to my attention with a self-titled EP release in 2008, the Louisiana- based traditionalist proved elusive for years. With no on-line presence and the odd track on YouTube I had visions of some backwoods Cajun singer living miles from anywhere in an alligator infested bayou who ventured to the local bar to sing some country songs now and again. And I might not have been too far off. “I grew up way out in the sticks but in the last eight years I’ve moved to the city. I need to be close to an airport and I need to be able to move around and get things done pretty quickly,” admits the singer from Vatican, Louisiana. Back then, in 2008, with songs such as his stone country Leave Hurt Enough Alone, the honky tonkin’ Two Steps At A Time or his cover of Eddie Rabbitt’s Two Dollars In The Jukebox it was obvious that this 21-year-old had absorbed an awful lot of hardcore traditional country. Sonnier’s profile 26 cmp - NOVEMBER 2018 remained low however, and despite establishing himself on the Louisiana club circuit it wasn’t until 2016 that more music became available. Another EP, this one was simply titled ‘Country’, and whilst that’s been done before, rarely can so simple a title have been more appropriate. Now though, Sonnier has upped his game, upped his profile (he now has a website) and has been generally putting himself about rather more. He even played some dates in France last year. One thing that needs to be dealt with right away is whether he is any relation to the Come On Joe accordionist Jo-el Sonnier. The answer is a flat no, but Dustin laughs at the question. “No man, I get it a lot. “Jo-el actually lives about an hour and a half from. We’ve done shows together over the years and we’re good friends. I actually just did a show with Jim Lauderdale a little north of Dallas and that was the first question he asked, ‘Any kin to Jo- el’. There’s no other Sonniers that have ever done anything. 27 IAN TYSON A CANADIAN LEGEND  FOUR STRONG WINDS AS HALF OF THE DUO IAN & SYLVIA AND RESPONSIBLE FOR SONGS SUCH AS SOMEDAY SOON AND HIS SIGNATURE FOUR STRONG WINDS, IAN TYSON HAS EARNED HIS LEGENDARY STATUS IN A CAREER SPANNING SIX DECADES by Larry Delaney Charts T he first names that surface when you think of Canadian- born singers will likely include Anne Murray, Paul Anka, Gordon Lightfoot, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Bryan Adams... but seldom does that list make mention of Ian Tyson, perhaps the most creative of all Canucks... yet someone who has flown under the radar, at least when it comes to international recognition. Ian Tyson has been part of the music scene, especially in Canada, for more than six decades, and until just recently sidelined by heart surgery, had remained active on the recording and the tour scene. Now 84, he tells his fans that this latest setback with his health is only temporary and that he will “be back” !! No one doubts the claim. During his lengthy career Ian Tyson has pretty much done it all. He initially surfaced during the ‘folk scene’ of the 1960’s, as part of the duo Ian & Sylvia, with his then wife, Sylvia (Fricker) Tyson. Their folk days eventually merged into heading- up the seminal country/rock band The Great Speckled Bird. After the break-up of the duo (and the marriage) Ian Tyson pursued a solo career as a ‘country’ singer, releasing several critically acclaimed albums; and then, by the late 1980s, he re-discovered his horse-ranching roots with a series of ‘cowboy’ song albums, familiarly identified as his ‘Cowboyography’ music; a musical form he remains devoted to. Throughout this ongoing musical evolution the one constant was Ian Tyson’s song writing talent. The very first song he wrote, Four Strong Winds, from the early ’60s era, has become his signature 64 Americana & UK Country Charts 65 Billboard Country Charts Courtesy of Billboard Inc. NOVEMBER 2018 - cmp Page 26 56 cmp - NOVEMBER 2018 song, although initially identified as an Ian & Sylvia ‘classic’. Bobby Bare countryfied the song in 1965, earning a #3 spot on the Billboard Country Charts; with subsequent albums cuts by Waylon Jennings, Johnny Cash, David Houston, George Hamilton IV, Flatt & Scruggs, Hank Snow, among many others... the song also earning crossover attention with recordings by such diverse artists as Bob Dylan, John Denver, The Seekers, Harry Belafonte and Trini Lopez. While Four Strong Winds (inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall Of Fame in 2003), would eventually be named “the greatest Canadian song of all-time” in a 2005 poll of CBC Radio listeners; the Ian Tyson song Someday Soon would attract even greater attention by Nashville recording artists... Kathy Barnes (1976), Moe Bandy (1982) and Suzy Bogguss (1991) all scored Billboard Country Chart Hits with Someday Soon, which was also recorded by Glen Campbell, Tanya Tucker, Lynn Anderson, Crystal Gayle, Skeeter Davis, Chris LeDoux, and others. Likewise his song Summer Wages (with the memorable opening line “Never hit seventeen when you play against the dealer”) has been recorded by Nashville artists Bobby Bare, George Hamilton IV, Nanci Griffith, J.D. Crowe & New South, Tony Rice, Chesapeake, David Bromberg, etc); as well as being a major chart hit in Canada for Gary Buck. Other notables who have recorded an Ian Tyson composition include Judy Collins, Michael Martin Murphy, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, Jerry Jeff Walker, Chris Hillman, Roy Drusky, The Jordanaires, and occasional co-writer Tom Russell; in addition to dozens of Tyson’s fellow-Canucks who have for years mined the Tyson song catalogue. NOVEMBER 2018 - cmp 57 Page 56