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My passion since adolescence has been writing about and discussing music. I grew up in a country radio station, penned alternative album reviews in my high school newspaper, DJ’d at my college radio station, worked as an Associate Editor at Premier Guitar magazine, interned at KEXP radio in Seattle and freelanced for national women’s music and culture magazines throughout my 20s.

While I took a break from professional print media during my years as a writing and journalism instructor, I never lost my love for language, art, editing or news production.

Laura Gibson | Beasts of Seasons CD Review

Little Village Magazine

Disheartened Iowans hopefully anticipating a lamb this spring may enjoy Laura Gibson’s newest flower, aptly entitled Beasts of Seasons (Hush Records). And if in the flocking mood on April 8th, one can see Gibson display her talents on the weathered stage of the Picador.

If you haven’t heard Gibson, the folk/blues artist out of Portland has a delicate, untouched tone that seems hard to find anymore. The soft, mysterious quality of her voice makes every song thoughtful and inspired by a whimsical, almost child-like inner monologue. Keeping it simple doesn’t seem so stupid if it means putting out an album as touching as her February 24th release, Beasts of Seasons.

Artists like Caroline Smith and Jolie Holland (circa Escondida and Catalpa) come to mind in ability to capture an audience with little more than sensual vocal chords and a guitar to back. Beasts of Seasons transitions from said simplicity to more heavily orchestrated pieces including bells, banjos, trumpets, pianos and clarinets.

Though many of the songs have a slower tempo, the variance in instrumental sound comes from the numerous collaborators, including Grammy-nominated producer Tucker Martine, Laura Veirs, Adam Selzer (M. Ward, Norfolk and Western), Rachel Blumberg (M. Ward, Bright Eyes), Nate Query (The Decemberists), Danny Seim (Menomena) and several others. Gibson alone is pleasing, but matching her with such a list surely makes for a conversation catalyst.

Rather than layering several artist’s individual takes, most sections were recorded live at one time. The beauty in making a well-produced album with the raw sound attained from a single live recording is that it translates well to the stage.

If the collaboration lineup wasn’t indication enough, you won’t be hearing this one after M.I.A. at any of the local dance parties. This album will be well-received on a grey day spent in one’s head, or a temperate spring afternoon wading through puddles under budding trees on the cozy streets of Iowa City. If that’s not in your book of things to do, just go see Gibson at the Picador on Wednesday, April 8, when she opens for Damien Jurado.

Suggested starting track: “Spirited”

Honeydripper

PREMIERGuitar

This month Brittany sits down with famed director, John Sayles, who recently released his latest film "Honeydripper." The film revolves around the 20th century musical shift in the south from piano-based to guitar-heavy blues.

John Sayles is a busy man with the release of his recent movie, Honeydripper. His 16th film explores the dynamic nature of the South in the 1950s, when people returning from the war discovered communities dealing with long-simmering conflicts over race and morality. The story is set in Harmony, Alabama, where Tyrone Purvis (Danny Glover) owns the Honeydripper Lounge. To bring larger crowds back into his bar, he is forced to transition from the boogie-woogie and blues music that once dominated popular culture to the newest trend in music: the guitar. Purvis barely puts together enough money to hire the famous Guitar Sam, a musician that gets the town thinking about the Honeydripper again, but when Sam doesn’t show, Purvis recruits the drifter and electric guitar-owning Sonny Blake (Gary Clarke, Jr.).

Sayles did a tremendous amount of homework for the film. The independent director, whose only for-hire work was for Bruce Springsteen, spoke with Premier Guitar about the guitars used in the movie, guitarists that inspired the film, directing guitarists Keb Mo’ and Clarke, Jr., and the role of music during times of change.

On your website you talk about using film to tell very important stories. Why did you tell a story about a guitar?
Honeydripper really came out of this long relationship I have with American music. I have this feeling that we integrate, we move across racial and ethnic lines in music before anything else. Before people are really ready to look each other in the eye, they’re listening to each other. So music has been really important to American culture.

When I grew up, I listened to Top 40 radio and didn’t ask any questions. In my midteens I started realizing that rock n’ roll came from some place. That got me thinking about what it was for the players when that solidbody electric guitar showed up – that little bit of technology allowed the guitar player to take the stage from the piano guy. All of a sudden, you’ve got this guitar and more places are electrified because of Roosevelt’s TVA [Tennessee Valley Authority]. I think there was a feeling on the part of musicians about, “This whole thing is going to change really fast,” and, “Can I get onboard or do I get left behind?” I think that’s interesting to think about – what happens when people realize there’s something threatening about this change.

Exactly. There is a scene where Glover is downtown and he is starting to put everything together with Guitar Sam. The guitar comes in and you see that Glover is exhausted; he’s contemplating what’s going on.
Yeah, I think what it is – he’s 50-something in 1950; he’s grown up with the music. He was there for all that New Orleans jazz, the Ma Rainey era in the thirties and the swing era in the forties, and now he’s playing boogie-woogie piano; but can he really make this next big leap? A lot of people – like the jazz guys – just wandered away. Other people figured, “I can play this stuff – it’s not much harder than what I’m already playing. Do kids want to see a 45- year-old piano player?”

And is it professionally? Certainly people can always play music – they played folk and didn’t get paid for years, but if you’re a professional, what do you do? Do you play stuff you don’t like? Robert Johnson probably sat on a street corner and sang “White Christmas” at some point because it was just whatever the people paying wanted to hear. But does it feed you? For [Glover], the music has meant something to him – but is he willing to follow it to this new place?


Going with that younger crowd, what was it like working with Gary Clarke, Jr., who hasn’t acted before? What was it like working with him and the other musicians who aren’t used to acting?
With Gary, we read him and he was a little shy, but it was like, “Oh god, he can act.” He actually listens and does those great things you want people to do when they’re onstage and in the movies. The hardest thing was to get him to be a showy player, because he’s just not a show-off onstage. He does it all with his fingers. In the fifties you had, I think starting with T. Bone Walker who was like a flash dancer before he was a guitar player, this tradition of guys doing acrobatics onstage and being showmen. I needed a little bit of that from Gary.

I really needed the input of those musicians. It was important to me that the music feel live and as much of it be live as possible. With Keb Mo’, I said, “I want you to go and write your character’s arrangement of ‘Stagger Lee.’” He’s kind of a student of the blues and he came in with a guitar that he bought and said, “Well, Possum only plays in G, so here it is.” And it was great. It sounded exactly like what those guys would have played on a street corner.

There were some very interesting looking guitars in this film, as you obviously had to take them back to a certain style. Where did you get those?
We had a luthier named Ted Crocker build one after we sent him the script. I always felt like Gary Clarke’s character was a guy who was a radio repairman in the army and probably read an article in Popular Electronics about what Les Paul was up to.

I wanted something that would really play and so Ted made two identical [guitars]. One had a radio hook-up in the back for when Gary goes out in front of the club and the other for the club doesn’t have the hook-up. It’s a single coil, so it doesn’t have the humbucker.

I wanted the sound of those early guitars. If you listen to T-Bone Walker’s stuff, it’s great, but it’s a little thinner than what came only a few years later when they got the other coil. Where did you get the idea for this film?

It all started with the rock n’ roll legend of Guitar Slim. I think his real name was Eddie Jones, and he was known in New Orleans in the early fifties. He was one of the guys who put that long extension chord on his guitar and in New Orleans where there are a lot of clubs close together, would go into the street and play in the doorway of the other clubs to get everybody in his club. He was also known to miss a gig. I think Earl King was the most famous of them who spent years going out as Guitar Slim. Somebody would pretend to be somebody else, but as long as you could play, the audience didn’t care. There were no rock videos, no album covers, no TV; it was just a name on the jukebox. The celebrity was a lot less important.

Speaking of music videos, I’ve read that you worked with Bruce Springsteen in producing some of his videos.
Yeah, we did “Born in the USA,” “Glory Days” and “I’m on Fire” for Bruce. The jobs were the only times I’ve ever really worked for hire. It was his story that I was telling, and he had a lot of good ideas for what the visuals would be. If you were going to choose a job that has anything to do with the music business, those were really good jobs.

In the past few issues of our magazine, we’ve touched on rock music entering the church. Discuss the presence of God and the idea of morality, which is very strong in this film, especially in relation to the music.
This was very controversial at the time. I tried to track down what would have been on a jukebox in 1950 in the Deep South and I came across this playlist. One of the people featured was Sister Rosetta Tharp, who played a hell of an electric guitar, but was a gospel singer. Johnny Cash, Bonnie Raitt and other guitarists mention her as an influence on their playing. We shot in Georgiana, Alabama, where Hank Williams grew up. He was famous for playing honky tonks at night and then passing out and being driven to the church he would sing in the next morning. He ended up writing some really seminal gospel songs, and he was a wild guy; same with the Louvin Brothers. Some of them are able to make a living doing just that stuff, and others finally just say, “If I’m going make a living as a musician, I’m going to start singing secular stuff too.”

Where do you think music is heading in a strong technological era?
The thing that record labels don’t like is that it’s heading in every direction at the same time and people aren’t listening to the same thing. So they don’t know how to make money on it. For the musicians, for the fun of playing, it’s a great time, because there are so many things to play and the access to great players is so great. I think for professional musicians, it’s kind of a scary time. Unless you can go out there and tour, the idea of just selling albums is gone. But you can put albums out there as a sample and then you can tour. If you’re tired of the road, it’s a really tough time.

For more information about the film, including a plot synopsis, theater locations, cast bios and interviews, visit honeydripper-movie.com.

Van Zandt’s Rock ‘n Roll High Schools

PREMIERGuitar

Steven Van Zandt and Scholastic put together a curriculum devoted to Rock 'n Roll. This is an effort to combat funding cuts in national school music programs.

Washington (November 13, 2007) -- Think back to the glory days of leather jackets and GTOs. It is 1979, and the Ramones just released the video for "Rock 'n Roll High School." You know it... the detention hall, the voices of rowdy students building over that single guitar chord, and then the drums kick in. Joey is standing at a chalkboard underlining "I don’t care about history!" It was rebellion at its best.

Fast forward 30 years and things are a little different. Now top rock bands are vying for the approval of Presidential candidates and music programs are taking a major hit from government legislation. Now we find ourselves wondering why there isn't more music in schools --  Rock 'n Roll music, to be more precise. By now we know it can be a force of positive change.

Guitarist Steven Van Zandt, who is riding high on the E Street Band’s current tour and recent release of the critically-acclaimed Magic, has another project in the works. He's working to create Rock 'n Roll high schools across the nation. Van Zandt, through his non-profit Rock and Roll Forever Foundation, is collaborating with Scholastic’s InSchool division to revive music education and music history after years of funding cuts to middle and high school programs.

The project is called Little Steven’s Rock and Roll High School. The curriculum is aimed at teaching the cultural impact and historical relevance of rock music to a new generation of teens. The program, expected to begin with the 2008-2009 school year, will give free resources to the nation's 30,000+ middle and high schools. The materials will include a teacher's guide, lesson plans, Web-based resources and corresponding DVDs and CDs with information starting at Elvis and working toward modern rock and hip-hop. The curriculum is endorsed by the National Association for Music Education.

In an interview published in USA Today, Van Zandt said, "If the Rolling Stones came out today, there's nobody that would play them." By placing more money, resources and instruments into schools, Van Zandt hopes to restore, safeguard and promote rock music among today’s teenagers.

This is not Van Zandt’s first push for music education. In 2006, the Rock and Roll Forever Foundation and Hard Rock Café put on an event called A Wiseguy New Years Eve In Times Square. It included a charity effort that went toward placing instrumental music in public schools.

Musicians For Minneapolis

Benefit CD

PREMIERGuitar

Burnsville, MN (March 13, 2008) -- When the I-35W Mississippi River bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota, collapsed on August 1, 2007, the people at Electro-Voice audio company decided they wanted to help those involved. Seven months later, they released Musicians For Minneapolis: 57 Songs For the I-35W Bridge Disaster Relief Effort, a compilation disc with 100 percent of profits going toward the Minnesota Helps – Bridge Disaster Fund.

The compilation, released February 16, is an eclectic mix of genres and artists, including Steve Vai, Dick Dale, Calexico, Les Claypool, Howe Gelb, George Clinton and Rockie Lynne.  Many tracks are unreleased, and Lynne's, the lead off single, is the only topic-specific song on the three discs. Around 1,600 copies have already been purchased, but the company hopes to sell all 5,000 copies and raise $100,000 before the first anniversary.

In addition to the CD, Electro-Voice is hosting a memorabilia auction through eBay's Giving Works website (powered by Mission Fish) starting the first week of April. The benefit auction includes autographed gear from music and guitar greats. Autographed guitars were donated by Ozzy Osbourne (Les Paul), Zakk Wylde (Les Paul), Megadeth (Dean bass), Dick Dale (custom Minarik flamed), Steve Vai (Ibanez) and others. Four inked EV microphones -- Raven, N/D967 and N/D767a -- will also be available.

Electro-Voice has started talking to artists about a benefit concert to pull everything together toward the end of the summer. If plans move forward, the event would take place at a Minneapolis venue sometime before the first anniversary (August 1, 2008). Though plans are tentative, artists like George Clinton & the P-Funk All Stars, Calexico, Sparklehorse and Steve Vai have already shown interest.

The idea for the project came to a head shortly after the I-35W bridge collapse, when artists who endorse the Minnesota-based company called to make sure staff members were safe. Conversations started on how to help the survivors and victims'' families. Soon after, EV started receiving calls from artists who were unaffiliated with the manufacturer, but heard about the project and wanted to help.

"During conversations with the artists, we said, ''Hey, we need to band together and help people,'" said the project's producer, James Edlund. He continued, "All these people realized and came together to say that the Twin Cities are important, and we can do something as musicians; we have a certain amount of power – we have ability to help people through our craft."

Since the set needed to be made quickly, they could only take enough to fill three discs. Though other artists offered, Rockie Lynne was the only one with an original track specific to the bridge's collapse. After submissions were made, Prince engineer Tom Garneau remastered each song for the project. Six months later, the album was done and new plans were moving forward.

Sweet Pedal Maker’s Bout

With Cancer Unites Gear Community

Fort Lauderdale, FL (May 7, 2008) -- Considering the harsh and sometimes downright nasty tone of online gear forums, you'd think such a venue might be an unlikely place for mobilizing musicians and gear makers to work together for a worthy cause. That's exactly what happened when word got out that one of their own had fallen hard. In fact, the collective efforts of these gearheads is still at work.

Bob Sweet is a pedal maker out of southern Florida whose line, Sweet Sound Electronics, is often noted for its simple designs, high quality construction and truly sweet sounds. In December, Bob found out that he had a cancerous tumor in his neck (squamous cell carcinoma). 

Needless to say, the cancer is trying to take him down. Since the start of chemotherapy he has encountered problems with his back. Several of his vertebrae have cracked as a result of calcium depletion. This has required more surgery and brought additional debilitating pain, beyond what was caused by the tumor alone. The back surgeries forced Bob to put off some of the chemo treatments and have limited his ability to make pedals that people continue to order -- pedals that he desperately wants to make.

In an interview with Premier Guitar, Bob described the pain, saying that at times he cannot even write an e-mail without pain shooting up his back and forcing him back to his bed -- a reclining chair that keeps his back at an appropriate angle.

Besides being an emotionally and physically draining experience, the actual cost of fighting the cancer is staggering -- chemotherapy costs up to $3500 a week. As we all know, being a professional musician and independent builder usually means having no health insurance and Bob's situation is no different. However, Bob is not fighting this alone, thanks to a charity started by Musictoyz.com owner/Administrator, Ted Rasch, and user Paul DiBenedetto.

Since the public announcement of Bob''s situation on forums like forums.musictoyz.com and The Gear Page, both noteworthy and under-the-radar gear makers and musicians, most of whom compete with or have never met Sweet, are pooling resources in an effort to raise money for the electronics maker. Fundraising methods have included community-based fundraisers, direct donations to Sweet's PayPal account, b0bsweet@bellsouth.net (with a zero), forum-based auctions and eBay auctions.

The wealth of items contributed to eBay auctions for the self-described "old musician making pedals" could restore anyone's faith in humanity; it surely has for Bob, who, along with others, had previously grown impatient with negative comments in the forums. With the help of manufacturers like Dunlop, Wah-Wah and Lovepedal, and musicians like Slash, Steve Vai and Steve Stevens, the call to action started resonating quickly. Gear already auctioned includes an Ibanez Jemini Distortion Proto-Type #2, signed by Steve Vai; a Lovepedal 200lbs of Tone - Eric Johnson pedal; a Teese Picture Wah, autographed by J Mascis of Dinosaur Jr.; a Teese Wizard Wah, autographed by Moby; a Dunlop Slash Wah, signed by Slash; a Pro Analog MKIII fuzz, signed by Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top; and an assortment of custom-built pieces designed specifically for the Bob Sweet Charity.

More items are expected to be posted in the upcoming months, each listed without shipping fees, which -- along with eBay's posting fees -- are being taken care of by Rasch.

In addition to the enormous help generated through eBay auctions, the South Florida Blues Society hosted a Bob Sweet Fundraiser. The Happy Hour Open Mic Jam at Red's Club in Fort Lauderdale, immediately following the SFBS monthly meeting on Friday April 25, featured 2006 International Blues Competition winner Joey Gilmore and Premio Estrella Music Latin Rock Award winner Galo Rivera. Sweet is a member of the Blues Society, so the event consisted largely of fellow players, friends and family from the region. Bobby Weinberg, president of the South Florida Blues Society, put the event together after a suggestion was made by Bob's friend Jack Carchio. The following morning, Carchio, on behalf of the Blues Society, handed Bob an envelope containing cash and checks totaling $1000.

You have to wonder what is motivating so many people to come together to help someone they don't even know personally. We went to the forums to find out.  In a turnabout for such venues, some overwhelmingly positive themes emerged. People mention hearing about his efforts to help victims of Hurricane Katrina, and others share stories of his excellent customer service.

Bob's response to the help and positive comments is pretty typical for someone in his position -- he has no words. In a voice cracking under the pressure of tears (Ted Rasch says he's a big softy these days), Sweet told Premier Guitar, “I cannot find the words that will relay the extent of my feelings of what the online community is doing for me. From manufacturers, dealers, rock stars, wannabe rocks stars, musicians to non-musicians and just plain old good folks from Norway to Singapore, Japan to Germany and everywhere in between, and of course across the United States; I don't know what to do to thank people. It can really change you. I really look at things differently.”

As for Bob's condition, the tumor is responding well to the chemo treatments he is able to make. He is in his third round of chemotherapy (once a week for about eight hours) and radiation (39-40 treatments five days a week) started in February.

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