The Infamous Stringdusters At The Visulite
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The Infamous Stringdusters and Sara Watkins Of Nickel Creek
 
The Visulite
Friday November 20, 2009
Doors 8:00 PM / Music 9:00 PM

Tickets:  $12.00 Advance & $15.00 DOS

Tickets can be purchased in advance at CD Warehouse (King's Drive), Manifest Discs, Sunshine Daydreams (NoDa), online at CarolinaTix or Music Today and by phone at 1.800.594.TIXX or 704.372.1000
The Infamous Stringdusters

For the Infamous Stringdusters’ fiddler and vocalist Jeremy Garrett, 2007 was truly a “blur of highlights.” Dobroist/vocalist Andy Hall says the year came off better than anyone in the band ever imagined.  Now, on the eve of the release of their self-titled second album, the Infamous Stringdusters have had a chance to reflect on their individual high points.
 
For mandolinist Jesse Cobb, it was standing on stage at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival for the first time. For banjo player Chris Pandolfi, it was welcoming newgrass hero David Grisman to their stage at the famous Freight & Salvage in Berkeley, California. And all six of the Infamous Stringdusters will always remember October 4, 2007. That’s the night they won all three of the International Bluegrass Music Awards for which they were nominated: Emerging Artist of the Year, Song of the Year, and Album of the Year.  Their debut record, Fork in the Road, was arguably the most successful bluegrass release of 2007.
  
In the midst of a frenetic touring schedule, the time arrived for the band to record their second album. In January 2008, they holed up in Nashville’s famed Hillbilly Central studio with roots music pioneer Tim O’Brien in the producer’s chair. The resulting CD is self-titled, a move usually made on debut albums; but as they’ll tell you, this project feels like a debut album in its own way. Because the most remarkable thing of all that happened in 2007 was that, after all the hard work, the Infamous Stringdusters truly became a band.
 
“We just learned to play together better and I think we’ve learned to be a little more fearless,” says Jesse Cobb. “We used to change our sets up at really traditional bluegrass festivals, but now we just kind of do what we do. Two thousand seven was about being more ourselves in pretty much every way.” Andy Hall concurs: “We learned about each other, about each individual in the band,” he says. “Everything became really smooth, and the result was much better music.”
 
2007 also saw the band’s recruitment of Andy Falco, a gifted flatpicker whom Garrett and Hall had known for years through Northeastern festivals like Grey Fox. Falco joined the Stringdusters in the late summer, and according to bassist/vocalist Travis Book, “It ended up giving the band a lift I don’t think anybody anticipated. It was almost like the sails finally filled up completely.”
 
That’s pretty much been the trajectory since the Stringdusters emerged from a web of musical, personal and professional relationships so common in the bluegrass musicuniverse. The band’s genesis can be traced back to 2002, when Andy Hall, Chris Pandolfi, and original guitarist Chris Eldridge met in Boston. They knew they had musical chemistry, but their lives were too out of synch to start a band until they all found themselves in Nashville in 2004. By then, Hall had been in the band of acclaimed bluegrass singer and songwriter Ronnie Bowman, where he met Jeremy Garrett and Jesse Cobb. Together, this newly-formed alliance of superpickers searched for the right bass player, who wound up being Travis Book, a product of the Colorado jamgrass scene. The departure of Eldridge in 2007 led to the addition of Andy Falco, whose blues-infused style perfectly complemented the Stringdusters sound. 
 
So whereas Fork in the Road was made during their potent formative stage, The Infamous Stringdusters represents a band that has matured during two years of intense touring, woodshedding and jamming.  Stunning virtuosity, polished harmonies, and a versatile repertoire have become the Stringdusters’ trademarks -- and all are interwoven in this new record to create a sound that is all their own; and which promises to redefine progressive bluegrass.
 
Song selection was driven by the band’s collective desire to add fresh and diverse material to their repertoire. With one exception, none of the songs included on the record had ever been performed live by the Stringdusters.
 
The one crowd favorite that did make the cut was “Lovin’ You,” a moody and unconventional work by Grammy-nominated writer Sarah Siskind. Most of the new songs are the work of the skilled writers within the band itself. Andy Hall’s spirited “Well, Well” captures a character stuck in limbo between desperation and optimism. Jeremy Garrett shows his unique ability to craft memorable and dramatic melodies with his contribution “When Silence is the Only Sound.” Travis Book penned three songs, including the sentimental “Bound for Tennessee,” which seems destined to become an Americana classic. Rippling original newgrass instrumentals came from the hands of mandolinist Jesse Cobb (“Golden Ticket”), banjo master Chris Pandolfi (“Glass Elevator”) and Hall (“Black Rock”). The carefully chosen cover songs include “Four Days In July,” a stirring Civil War tale whose harmonies and vibe seem especially “Dusterish” according to Hall, and “Get It While You Can,” composed by Bad Livers mad genius Danny Barnes, which lets Book tear into his finest vocal yet.
 
“This band is definitely not about one member,” says Garrett. “It’s about the whole… It’s a unit.” That cohesion is built chiefly on the road, performing in front of audiences, says Pandolfi. “What’s unique about this band is that there are six very distinct voices. It doesn’t live and breathe until you get it on stage. Live performance is our thing; we like to take chances every night and do things differently, and the only way to move that process along is through experience.”

 With The Infamous Stringdusters, the band has put on record the dynamic of intimacy and virtuosity that distinguishes their live shows. The album is both a nod to traditions and a challenge to conventions, proving that the Infamous Stringdusters’ combination of innovation and experience has truly molded a new level of newgrass music.

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Presented In Conjunction With Landshark Entertainment

   

You could say that Sara Watkins’ solo debut has been a lifetime in the making. The 27-year-old singer-songwriter and fiddle player spent nearly two decades—all of her teenage and young adult life—as one-third of Nickel Creek, the Grammy Award–winning acoustic trio that used contemporary bluegrass as a starting point for its no-genre-barred sound. Along the way, she’s hinted at her desire to do a project of her own and even organized some exploratory sessions in Los Angeles about six years ago. Now, with Nickel Creek on indefinite hiatus, she is releasing her self-titled solo disc, recorded in Los Angeles and Nashville and produced by former Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones. It features an impressively wide range of backing players and old friends, including itinerant alt-country duo Gillian Welch and Dave Rawling, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers keyboardist Benmont Tench, Elvis Costello drummer Pete Thomas; fellow travelers from the bluegrass world like Tim O’Brien, Chris Eldridge, Ronnie McCoury and Rayna Gellert; and her Nickel Creek bandmates.

“Listening back to the finished record,” Watkins says, “it felt very natural. It is authentically me. I know that has so much to do with the process, with the years that I had been playing with all these guys, with the relationships I’ve made. I come from bluegrass and I wanted that to be part of the record. On the other hand, I’ve spent most of my life playing things that were not bluegrass, but maybe related to it, so all of the instrumentation and all of these players mean something to me. There are a lot of Nashville musicians on the record that I grew up performing with and players from L.A. who are musical heroes of mine. Even though not all of the songs on the album are my songs, it’s still really personal because I lived with this material for so long and I’ve played a lot of this music with the performers who are on it.”
 
Watkins’ debut has an air of easygoing virtuosity. She displays her skill as a multi-instrumentalist, playing the guitar and ukulele as well as the fiddle, and proves herself to be just as versatile, and breathtakingly mature, as a vocalist. Watkins segues gracefully from the lighthearted country and western swing of Jimmie Rodger’s “Any Old Time,” to the world-weariness and spiritual yearning of Norman Blake’s “Lord Won’t You Help Me,” to the romantic wistfulness of Jon Brion’s “Same Mistake.” Though she still considers herself a neophyte as a songwriter, her own work is as evocative as any of the material she’s chosen to cover. Her wordless fiddle tunes are exuberant, foot-stomping pieces, while the songs for which she wrote both music and lyrics have a heart-meltingly lovelorn quality. There’s honesty and empathy on tracks like the sweetly soulful “My Friend,” the brooding “Bygones,” and the rueful album closer, “Where Will You Be.” Watkins is newly, and very happily, married, but she knows how to channel the plaintive emotions of classic country and timeless pop in her own work.
 
“In terms of song selection.” Watkins explains, “I didn’t have a goal of making this a country record or a folk record. I didn’t want to avoid anything—except faking it. This was a chance to make a record that doesn’t represent anyone else but me. That’s a totally new thing and kind of felt selfish at first, but I’m starting to embrace it a lot more. I love being part of a team and I love bands so much, but I’m also learning to really enjoy figuring out what I specifically add to a band. In all these different situations, in sessions and playing with other friends, what exactly is it? How do I express what my musicianship is? It’s been really fun learning about that, developing it, trying to refine it.”
 
In 1989, Watkins, barely out of her childhood, started playing in a nascent version of Nickel Creek at the seemingly unlikely venue of That Pizza Place in Carlsbad, California, along with her guitarist brother Sean and mandolinist friend Chris Thile (and chaperoned, of course, by her bluegrass-playing parents). The prodigious young trio built a reputation in bluegrass, folk, and country circles, then catapulted to mainstream prominence in 2000 after releasing an album produced by Alison Krauss. When not on the road or in the studio with Nickel Creek, Watkins guest-starred as fiddler and/or harmony vocalist on albums by Bela Fleck, the Chieftains, Ben Lee, Dan Wilson, Richard Thompson, and Ray La Montagne, among others. In addition, Watkins and brother Sean established an informal get-up-and-jam residency called the Watkins Family Hour at L.A. club Largo, “an uber-cool but cozy music and comedy club in Hollywood,” as Sean has put it.
 
Watkins brings the spirit of the long-running Watkins Family Hour to her debut. It was there, in fact, that she developed and fine-tuned the repertoire for the album: “I had lived with a lot of this material for a while. It was tested and tweaked through the years playing at Largo. Songs would come and go; these are the songs that have stuck. Some are newer than others—’Lord Won’t You Help Me’ was a deliberate choice for the record. Some I had done for years, like Jon’s ‘Same Mistakes.’ ‘Too Much’ is a David Garza song, and I always loved it.”
 
John Paul Jones, who’d briefly toured during 2004 with Nickel Creek and Toad the Wet Sprocket lead singer Glenn Phillips in an ad hoc group called Mutual Admiration Society, had long encouraged Watkins to make a record of her own, offering his services well before she was ready to hit the studio. As Watkins recalls, laughing, “A couple of years ago we saw John Paul Jones at the Cambridge folk festival. He came up after our performance and said that if I didn’t let him produce my record he would never speak to me again. I was thrilled that he was that excited about it. He actually stayed with it and kept in touch. At that point, in Cambridge, I believe we had already talked about winding down the Nickel Creek touring, so it was a really convenient time and it helped me stay focused. It was a perfect moment to start transferring over the creative energy.”
 
Jones kept a familial atmosphere, and maintained an unobtrusive presence, in the studio, says Watkins: “I think he was allowing the band to be a band and play for each other, rather than have us play through a song, then look to see if that’s what he was or wasn’t looking for. Eventually, John would give us his feedback and directions to guide us in. I think that has a lot to do with the sound of the record being band-oriented, especially considering there were a lot of different musicians coming in.” Cutting John Hartford’s “Long Hot Summer Day” was especially inspired—with Rawlings playing “caveman drums,” Welch strapping on an electric guitar, and Watkins revving up everyone with her fiddle playing. The compellingly straightforward arrangements she and Jones devised allow Watkins’ personality to come through, illustrating both her sensitivity and her strength. These sessions had been a long time coming, but it’s clear that Watkins has only just begun.
 
—Michael Hill

Sara Watkins

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