RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘danny’

Greensky Bluegrass with Danny Barnes | NYE Run | Review

Words by: Sarah Hagerman | Images by: Josh Mishell

Greensky Bluegrass with Danny Barnes :: 12.30.10-12.31.10 :: Cervantes’ Other Side :: Denver, CO

Greensky Bluegrass by Josh Mishell

Denver certainly wasn’t short of choices in the New Year’s revelry department. One could have ushered in 2011 with Widespread Panic at the Pepsi Center, STS9 at the Fillmore, or Railroad Earth at the Ogden, and that’s just naming the bigger shows. But I think I made the right choice by spending it with Greensky Bluegrass and Danny Barnes at Cervantes’ Other Side . Nestled up in Five Points, a historically black neighborhood with a rich jazz history – and nowadays demonstrating the age-old story of rough-and-tumble urban center meets gentrification – the venue was somewhat removed from the neon and crowds of downtown just a few blocks away. It gave the show a semi-exclusive secret party vibe, and even The Motet thumping through the walls next door in the main room of Cervantes didn’t take away from the refreshing sense of intimacy. Not to say things didn’t get wild – when you’ve got one of the most fearlessly independent and creative musicians working today opening up for one of the most energetic, hard working acoustic roots outfits pounding that pavement, you know damn well some sparks are going to fly.

Danny Barnes by Josh Mishell

Barnes kicked off both nights’ festivities performing solo on the “barnjo” – a custom-made hybrid banjo/electric guitar that he debuted this summer at Northwest String Summit. Melding the hammering drive and fine detail of his banjo-work on an instrument that allows him to fully embrace plugged-in rock-and-roll aggression, it proved the perfect outlet for his own wonderfully mercurial musical nature. Unlike the FolkTronics approach he had previously taken with his music, where he used Ableton software to craft a broad palette with the banjo, looping the instrument and incorporating beats and samples, this method had a considerably more stripped-down aesthetic. But this was some pure diesel, as Barnes travelled between sonic moods and textures with a tight, dizzying quickness.

It was cool to hear the open-throttle versions of songs spanning his career over both nights, from Bad Livers (“Lumpy, Beanpole & Dirt,” “Little Bitty Town,” “Legend of Sawdust Boogers,” “Going Where They Do Not Know My Name,” “Love Songs Suck”) through his latest album, the brilliant Pizza Box. Take, “Sleep,” a claustrophobic tale based on a friend of Barnes who went to jail. He told Barnes he was relieved when the cops finally busted in his door, because he knew they were coming and he could finally get some sleep. On Pizza Box, it unfolds like an unhinged dream, but the barnjo interpretation tapped its murky, shuddering dread in direct, close-to-the-bone cuts.

Danny Barnes by Josh Mishell

Meanwhile during “Everything Fades,” on the line “Everything fades/That was made by a man,” Barnes simply let a lonely, lovely hum hang in the air, as if to emphasize that point, before spiraling down into some heavy Stooges-like stomping. Barnes utilized the instrument with equally potency on more delicate tunes like Things I Done Wrong‘s “Big Girl Blues,” which he nicely segued into T. Rex’s “Bang a Gong (Get It On)” on New Year’s Eve, and “Overdue,” where he let the notes gracefully float and dissolve in the air. Plus you have to appreciate a man who wrote “Love Songs Suck” – which lent itself to a crushing barnjo interpretation perfectly – writing “Overdue.” It’s a love song which, to put it mildly, in no way sucks at all. That’s how you show ‘em how it’s done.

The barnjo also allows Barnes to more-readily tap the punk rock heart that has always set him apart from the often-tired roots music scene. He even played Minor Threat on the first night of the run for, “All the designated drivers out there,” ripping out a vicious cover of “Straight Edge.” It was a pretty ballsy song choice, especially on the cusp of a holiday that’s become associated with getting as FUBARed as possible. Barnes has always had that element of subversion in his music, and this latest badass development is no exception.

Despite the “Bluegrass” in their name, Greensky aren’t trying to fit neatly into that category or cater to the IBMA crowd. They’ve obviously done their musical homework, but they pull from their own frames of reference in a way that keeps their sound fresh, rooted in a thoroughly modern sensibility rather than nostalgia. They are as likely to cover Bruce Springsteen or Michael Jackson as they are classic bluegrass tunes – and treat them with the same ace musicianship (not a lame Pickin’ On approach). Meanwhile, their original songwriting features a splendid attention to melody and old soul contemplations that dig deeper than the atypical road and mountain songs written by many acoustic roots bands.

Paul Hoffman by Josh Mishell

They also are one hard touring band. According to the stage banter, by mandolin player Paul Hoffman‘s math, the band has averaged 187 driving miles each day since 2007. But it’s so obvious that they love what they do for a living, that they are just flat out fun to watch. Take the jam out of ”Freeborn Man” during the first set on the first night, where they threw around musical references the way movie geeks throw around film quotes. This Jimmy Martin tune is one of those songs that is so oft-played that it can make for pretty tired covers, or dive into masturbatory bluegrass solo-passing territory. But Greensky kept things snappy and locomotive. Guitarist Dave Bruzza teased ‘The Simpsons’ theme, and dobro-player Anders Beck got down on “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” when he came up to bat. Hoffman jumped and boogied as he sang snatches of “Jump In Line” (an old calypso song made famous by Harry Belafonte), and later Beck and banjo player Michael Arlen Bont both riffed on Springsteen’s “Dancing in the Dark,” which Hoffman had led the band in a rousing cover of earlier in the set.

Other highlights on the first night included a spacious, swirling jam out from “Just to Lie,” off their 2008 album Five Interstates that drove straight on into Benny Galloway-penned “”Train Junkie,” featuring some particularly fierce playing by Bruzza and Beck. I also enjoyed Bont channeling Dwayne Allman on the banjo for the encore of “One Way Out,” a perfect choice for Bruzza’s strong whiskey-and-leather vocals.

But the standout of the night, and maybe all the Greensky sets over the two nights for me, was the Beck-penned “Tarpology.” “I wrote this for Sound Tribe to play, but they haven’t gotten back to me,” he laughed. Stretching well over ten minutes, the song had a perceivable pulse to it, building to mini-peaks and then crashing down again, moments of expanse giving way to tight, fist-pumping fury. It also displayed some killer use of the effects pedals by Beck and Hoffman, pushing the sound way out into bloinky, sci-fi territory. At one point, Beck’s dobro splintered over the drive of the band and then swooped in low and loud, a striking example of the tooth-baring rock and roll approach he takes to the instrument. When it was over, Beck said, “We were Greensky Bluegrass, in case you forgot.”

If Greensky on the 30th was all fire, New Year’s Eve seemed to move in snapshots, with each section of the show having a slightly different, albeit consistently joyful, vibe. After first set opener “What’s Left of the Night,” Barnes joined the band for “Groundhog” and Bad Livers’ “Deathtrip,” where he got deliciously freaky over Mike Devol‘s bruising bassline. Bruzza watched intently as he ripped it up on the barnjo, and Beck grinned wildly, obviously excited to have him on the stage. “Groundhog” dropped down into a disco-like thump for a while, before Bont picked up the tempo, giving Barnes and Bont the chance to exchange a little banjo/barnjo interplay. After Barnes’ exit, Greensky busted out a stretch of Beatles songs, including “Got to Get You Into My Life,” “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds,” “Help” (which lent itself to a fast bluegrass interpretation incredibly well), “A Day in the Life,” and the entire B-side of Abbey Road to take us up to set break.

Dave Bruzza & Vince Herman by Josh Mishell

The band came back in the nick of time to ring in 2011 with “Stop That Train,” the balloons falling, couples kissing, glasses raising all around us. The second set clocked in at over two hours, and featured some favorite Greensky songs, like the heart-wrenching “Reverend” and the pick-your-head-up “All Four,” an uplifting way to welcome the New Year as the balloons popped around us at our feet. They were also joined by some friends, specifically, a clean shaven Vince Herman , and later, Boulder-based singer/songwriter Pete Kartsounes, who wailed on the harmonica and picked Bruzza’s guitar while Bruzza drank champagne from the bottle, passing it to people in the front row.

Herman always brings a party to the stage. He shook his head so hard during “Way Up on the Hill Where They Do the Boogie” that his New Year’s hat tumbled off. Later in the song, his mic’s boom arm began to sink downwards. Caught up in the spirit, Herman kept singing into it, following it as went down, before Bruzza reached over and caught it, propping it back upright. Herman then kicked off a round of “Salty Dog,” a song that always gets decidedly dirty. It’s a number you bust out at a late night jam when the kids are in bed and everyone left standing is half in the bag. After passing around a few ribald verses, Herman cried, “Let’s all pick the shit out of this boys!” as Greensky rallied around him. After Herman’s exit, the band would keep up that infectious energy, propelling us past the 2:30 am mark with gusto.

It was a two-night stand that satisfied both my yee haw and punk rock factors, as we bid adios to the foul year of our lord and welcomed the clean slate possibilities of 2011. As I’m writing this, a few days into the year, 2011 is already shaping up to be a rough year. But as a friend of mine recently said to me, “The arts are mankind’s maybe one get out of jail free card.” I don’t know about you, but I take comfort in the fact that there are joyful road warriors and inventive badasses out there, adding to the collective spirit that may just be our one shot at redemption, if we’re smart enough to recognize it.

Greensky Bluegrass Tour Dates :: Greensky Bluegrass News :: Greensky Bluegrass Concert Reviews


JamBase | Ramblin’
Go See Live Music!


Ozzy Osbourne Danny Trejo Lipton Brisk Iced Tea Ad Campaign

Black Sabbath rocker Ozzy Osbourne and Machete star Danny Trejo have teamed up with Lipton for a series of “claymation commercials” promoting the company’s Brisk Iced Tea brand. Danny and Ozzy are the first of several celebs set to appear Lipton’s newly-revived of Brisk ads. Late crooner Frank Sinatra was among the high-profile featured in [...]

Help Craft Gov’t Mule’s NYE Setlist

SEND IN IDEAS BEFORE FRIDAY DECEMBER 17 AT 5 PM EST


Gov’t Mule

From Mule.Net:

We’ve spent the last few months discussing different theme ideas for this year’s New Year’s Eve show at The
Beacon
Theatre in NYC. Of all the ideas that came up, we kept coming back to a theme we have been calling “Get Behind
The Mule: Past, Present and Future.” As part of Get Behind the Mule we will be looking to play The Ultimate Gov’t
Mule set list, and we would like our fans to have some input as to what songs we include.

We’re asking you to vote for your favorite songs of ours, your favorite songs that we cover, and a few that you always
wanted to hear us cover. We’ll take all this feedback, and use it to help craft the 3 sets on New Year’s Eve. We
appreciate your help, and thanks again for all your support over the years.

See you in a few weeks.
-Warren, Matt, Danny, & Jorgen

You can make your suggestions by clicking here before Friday
December 17 at 5pm Eastern.

We are looking for
* Your 10 Favorite Gov’t Mule songs
* Your 5 Favorite Songs that Gov’t Mule covers
* 5 Cover Songs you always wanted to hear Gov’t Mule play”

All those who make song suggestions will be entered to win some prizes, including a NYE Poster signed by Gov’t
Mule, downloads for the full 3 show NYE run (12/28 in DC and the shows from NYC on the 30th & 31st) and
more.

Tickets for the shows in the New Year’s run can all be purchased through LiveNation.com.

Gov’t Mule
Tour Dates

::
Gov’t Mule News
::
Gov’t Mule
Concert
Reviews


Danny Bonaduce Married Manager Amy Railsback In Hawaiian Wedding

Former teacher Amy Railsback got the surprise of her life when fiance Danny Bonaduce — best known for his role on the ’70s sitcom The Patridge Family — jetted her off for a pre-Thanksgiving trip to Maui, Hawaii and announced that they were getting hitched! Danny and Amy, who is Bonaduce’s manager, tied the knot [...]

VH1 “My Big Friggin’ Wedding” Slammed By Italian-American Organization

VH1′s newest edition of trashtastic reality TV has been branded “racist” by an outspoken Italian-American organization that has famously protested some of television’s most-watched programming. New Jersey-based civil rights group UNICO — the same organization that battled HBO for six years over the airing of its Emmy-winning Mob drama The Sopranos — is now calling [...]

Backstreet Boys New Kids on the Block American Music Awards Performance Will Precede Summer 2011 Tour

Backstreet’s back and they’re hangin’ tough with NKOTB! By popular demand, the leading boy band of the ’90s is teaming up with the boys from Beantown for a concert tour that will invade arenas and thrill pop aficionados in the Summer of 2011. Fans have been clamoring for such a collaboration ever since last June, [...]

“Jersey Shore” Meets “Bridezilla” In VH1 “My Big Friggin’ Wedding”

If watching Snooki and The Situation knock back shots of Tequila shots until they pass out in a drunken stupor is your idea of Must-See TV, bliss is just a remote control click away. It’s Jersey Shore Meets Bridezilla as five outraged engaged duos from The East Coast — two from Long Island, NY and [...]

Carrie Fisher Used Cocaine On Set Of “The Empire Strikes Back”

Carrie Fisher’s cocaine addiction was in full swing as she battled Darth Vader’s forces as Princess Leia in the hit 1980 film The Empire Strikes Back, the actress has revealed. “We did cocaine on the set of ‘Empire’, in the ice planet,” Fisher told Australian newswire AAP Monday while visiting Sydney for her Wishful Drinking [...]

“Who’s The Boss?” Child Star Danny Pintauro Is Now A Tupperware Salesman!

Having Tony Danza as your tough-talkin’ “manny” and Judith Light as a TV mom isn’t the key to eternal success in showbusiness later in life. Just ask former Who’s The Boss? child star Danny Pintauro.We haven’t heard much from Danny since he was outed as a homosexual in a expose splashed across the pages of [...]

Julia Roberts to adopt child from India?

Julia Roberts, who recently converted to the Hindu faith, is now trying to adopt a child from India, according to sources. The 42-year-old, who already has three children with cameraman Danny Moder – twins Hazel and Finn, five, and Henry, three, suffered from complications during her previous pregnancies but is still keen to add to [...]

Julia Roberts to adopt child from India?

Julia Roberts, who recently converted to the Hindu faith, is now trying to adopt a child from India, according to sources. The 42-year-old, who already has three children with cameraman Danny Moder – twins Hazel and Finn, five, and Henry, three, suffered from complications during her previous pregnancies but is still keen to add to [...]

Justin Bieber Miley Cyrus “Grease” Remake?

Justin Bieber believes he’s the ideal person to fill John Travolta’s shoes and take on the role of Danny in a remake of the 1978 movie musical Grease. In fact, he’s already got an idea of who he wants to star as Danny’s Aussie love interest, Sandy — a role originated by singer/actress Olivia Newton-John. “I [...]

Kelly Brook’s ex Danny Cipriani ‘dating Alexandra Burke’

English rugby player Danny Cipriani is said to be dating X Factor winner Alexandra Burke, after his split from model Kelly Brook. Cipriani and Burke kissed each other in a crowded nightclub and then left for the same destination in separate cars. “It was obvious where it was going to end,” an onlooker said. Cipriani [...]

Liberate Music & Yoga Fest: Lotus, Brothers Past, Hamilton

BEATS ANTIQUE, DEAD SESSIONS AND FRIENDS, SPIRITUAL REZ, TOM HAMILTON’S AMERICAN BABIES, &
MORE

Celebrating 3 years with a mission to support community, arts, camping, yoga and conscious uplifting music, EMP is
pleased to announce the artists presenting at the 2010 Liberate Music & Yoga Festival on Friday, August
20 & Saturday, August 21 at 845 Poor Farm Rd. in Sheldon, Vermont.

Friday begins with a Welcome to Liberate Yoga Flow followed by Hip Hop Yoga, Kirtan with American Raga, and
music from Bearquarium followed by Lucid. Next up is the captivating triple header of Rubblebucket, Dead Sessions
and Friends, and Brothers Past- playing one of the classic late night sets that they’ve become famous for. Stretching
into the late night and morning is a performance-art filled set with a belly dancer and more by Beats Antique.

Lotus brings their energy-driven, technically-precise performance to the stage on Saturday to headline the festival
with one unforgettable extended set. Leading up to Lotus, Liberate features a yoga discussion with Prem Prakash, a
Groove DJ Yoga Flow, Thai Yoga Massage, and activities for Kids, Workshops like: Learn to Spin Fire and Learn to
Hula. Also taking the main stage on Saturday: Spiritual Rez, Barika Ensemble, Twiddle, & Tom Hamilton’s American
Babies. Late Night Saturday performances include: Jeff Bujak, Dopapod, and empancipator.

The lineup for the two-day event on August 20 & 21, 2010 curently reads:

Lotus, Brothers Past, Rubblebucket, Beats Antique, Dead
Sessions and Friends, Spiritual Rez,
emancipator, Kirtan w/ Prem Prakash,
Tom Hamilton’s American Babies,
JaneYoga Welcome to Liberate Yoga Flow, Lucid, Bearquarium, Jeff Bujak, Twiddle, DJ Reverence of Rise Up Sound, Dopapod, Barika Ensemble, Kirtan w/
Patrick McAndrew & American Raga, The Human Canvas, Groove Yoga w/ Danny & DJ tonybonez, Hip Yoga Flow w/
Danielle & DJ Duke
, and more coming!

Weekend passes to this musical oasis in VT with camping are $70 if you buy before June 30, $80 regularly priced,
and $90 week-of. This includes without camping. Tickets on sale at LiberateVT.com.

To further set Liberate apart, the festival offers family camping area featuring a quieter location on the property, a
shaded kids’ area on the concert grounds, arts & crafts, children’s entertainment including kids’ yoga, hula, and a
parade through the festival. Children under 12 are free with a paid adult.

For more information on the Liberate Music & Yoga Festival, visit
LiberateVT.com
.


Kelly Brook ‘dumped beau Danny Cipriani’

Kelly Brook is the one who dumped her rugby beau Danny Cipriani, according to pals. “Kelly and Danny both knew they needed a break but it was definitely instigated by Kelly. She ended it,” The Daily Star quoted her pal as saying. Apparently, Danny knew it was coming but I think he wanted to give [...]

The reason behind Kelly Brook, Danny Cipriani’s split

Kelly Brook apparently ended her relationship with Danny Cipriani because she was tired of all the female fans the rugby player used to attract on their night out. The stunning model split from the rugby star three weeks ago and told pals the female fan hurling over Cipriani, 22, was too unnerving. “Danny is a [...]

Gwyneth Paltrow”s ultra healthy lifestyle goes for a toss

Fitness freak Gwyneth Paltrow was faced with quite a calorific challenge while training with chefs in a London restaurant kitchen – the actress was put in charge of the deep-fat fryer. The ”Iron Man” star is known for her extremely strict diets, exercise and yoga regimes, for maintaining her lean figure. Paltrow recently admitted that [...]

Stan Lee: “Black Spider-Man Would Be Confusing”

Movie Trailers – Movies Blog Could a Black actor play Spider-Man?Donald Glover (No relation to Danny….) thinks its high-time one of the comic book world’s most celebrated heroes got a splash of “color.” The young actor — who plays Troy Barnes on the NBC sitcom Community — has launched a Twitter campaign in an official [...]

Jane’s Addiction: Cinco de Mayo Show

DUFF’S FULL SHOW DEBUT

Surrounded by piñatas, sombreros and green, white and red flags in celebration of Cinco de Mayo, Jane’s Addiction threw a fiesta on Wednesday at the intimate Bardot in Hollywood, where 150 or so fans and friends squeezed together to experience the very first show by lead singer Perry Farrell, guitarist Dave Navarro and drummer Stephen Perkins with new member, bassist Duff McKagan (Velvet Revolver, Guns N’ Roses).

The band played a seven-song set that marked the debut of a new song, “Soulmate,” mixed in with the staples like “Stop,” “Mountain Song,” “Had a Dad,” “Whores,” “Ain’t No Right” and “Ocean Size.” Cheering the band on were actors Joaquin Phoenix and Danny and Chris Masterson, as well as pro-skater Danny Way, along with musician friends Tom Morello, Matt Sorum, Gilby Clarke and Fishbone’s Chris Dowd.

Writing at Rollingstone.com (5/6/10), Steve Appleford said: “Onstage with Jane’s in 2010, McKagan set a thick, watery bassline against Navarro’s speedy solo on ‘Whores’ (from 1987), and it sounded like a collaboration built to last.” Steve Baltin at AOL’s Spinner.com (5/6/10) noted: “Musically, McKagan, who is an old friend of the band and came from the same L.A. scene, slid in to the foursome as smoothly as ‘Soulmate’ made its way into the set last night.” Liam Gowing at Spin.com (5/6/10) added the evening was “Â…a chance to see the alternative rock gods play a room no bigger than a volleyball court” and took note of the “mesmerized crowd.”

Jane’s Addiction is now continuing to write for their next album, tentatively due out in the winter of 2011 on Capitol and to be supported by a worldwide concert tour.

Jane’s Addiction Tour Dates :: Jane’s Addiction News :: Jane’s Addiction Concert Reviews


Danny Barnes: It’s All So Elemental

By: Sarah Hagerman

Danny Barnes

The rapid changes that have occurred in the music industry in the last decade have left a lot of folks sour as they wistfully long for the good old days. But not Danny Barnes.

“I can’t understand it,” he says, regarding that negative outlook. “When I was a kid it was hard to get music. I lived in this little town north of [Austin] and it was so hard to get records. I would mail order these records out of magazines, and because of the heat a lot of them would come warped. It would take weeks to get a record. Now you can sit in your hotel and just have access to all this stuff. I’m working on this theory of the universal set that includes all existing data. It’s this massive thing that we have access to now, but man, we didn’t have that back then. It was hard to get books and records and movies. Now, the database that we’re working with is so gigantic. The whole way data is operating now is just amazing to me because I’m talking about making ideas. Holy cow, there’s just so much stuff out there to work on because we’ve got this giant database.”

He mentions sitting in a hotel room before a Yonder Mountain String Band gig, shuffling through the iTunes of others in the hotel and finding “Jay-Z, Metallica, Kitty Wells, Beethoven, The Beatles, Bob Marley and Bill Monroe. And everybody’s doing this. I think the whole iPod shuffle thing has just totally changed the way we hear music. The whole genre-based way of looking at stuff is becoming more and more invalid as time goes by because people are really aware of everything.”

For some, this new method of listening to music constitutes mere consumption. But where others see closed doors, Barnes sees creative possibilities. In some ways, his take on things reminds me of these wise words from Louis C.K., albeit delivered in a gentle Texas accent with more joy and less misanthropy. It’s a refreshing perspective (especially if you’re prone to misanthropy yourself).

“I think putting [music] in a new context is the point,” Barnes says. “To me, art is recontextualizing things and making a new context for myself. I hope that we can have the freedom to do that. That’s what I really enjoy and get off on, that idea of making those contexts. I grew up on traditional American stuff that’s been played in my house since I was a kid. I think if you discovered it in middle life you may yearn for some other period, or some [perceived] purity of it that wasn’t there to begin with. You may have a different view of it.”

Danny Barnes by Michael Short
dannybarnes.com

“It’s like the way DJs build things out of other things,” he continues. “I think that’s a totally valid approach. We need that vantage point. They have a way of looking at music that a traditional musician might not. They have this way of melting and realigning things and using things chopped up and moved around. Man, that’s where it’s at! I do not see the problem with that. I think it’s, like, the bomb! I get so jacked up about it, I rise out of bed and I’m just so excited about work and about music and about finding new things. To me, it’s a very rich experience as a fan. Then, when you go to make these ideas you got all this stuff to draw upon. I just think it’s a golden time for ideas.”

It may seem odd to a lot of folks to hear a banjo player praise DJs, but those folks don’t know Barnes. Creating new contexts has always been a mark of his music, from Bad Livers through his prolific solo output. Whether playing his own folkTronics, where armed with a banjo and his Ableton software he crafts a whole auditory world, or sharing stages with artists from YMSB to Robert Earl Keen, or even picking up a Flying V electric guitar and playing his songs with the hard-rocking members of Honky (which also features Jeff Pinkus from Butthole Surfers), Barnes is an artist that trusts his inner compass. It may point in directions that seem far flung to some, but if there’s any justice, people will catch up eventually.

His latest album, Pizza Box (released last October online and in-stores January 2010 on ATO Records), brilliantly combines his diverse musical explorations – electronic pulses, bloodshot country ballads, skittering free-form banjo lines, Bill Frisell-inspired sonic blooms and even balls-to-the-walls rock adrenaline. But in Barnes’ hands, these contrasting elements meld so effortlessly you can’t detect the seams. It’s simply his sound, and it’s never sounded better. Powered with premium studio gas to rev it up to 11, this record is big, rich and full of heart. It’s the product of an artist who never stops studying, listening, and perhaps most importantly, being an enthusiastic music fan.

“What I’m always interested in doing is propelling acoustic music forward,” Barnes reflects. “Pushing it into the modern world and using it as a form for contemporary expression. I’ve enjoyed being in bluegrass and country music. I like that music, but what I really enjoy is its potential in the pop realm, the way you can use the forms and elements in a pop way so it speaks to more people. I think that’s the most valuable thing really, because people can pick up on that so easily. If you put away some kind of banjo cantata, you’re speaking above people a lot of the time, regular people that have jobs. [But] you can speak to someone whose five years old with a good song.”

“One of the things that I’ve matured [about] and come to understand about myself on this particular record is that I’m best suited for idea generating,” he says. “In this particular instance, the banjo is really used as a tool, a supporting role to get the idea across rather than the idea itself. I wrote a lot of the songs on the banjo, which makes different ideas come out than just [writing] on the guitar. That’s a trick I learned from John Hartford, that writing pop songs on a banjo gives you a different little trip. Your foundation is a little skewed, which is really cool.”

Danny Barnes

He’s being quite modest here, as anyone who’s seen Barnes play can testify, he’s a banjo-wielding maniac of the highest caliber. But Pizza Box could certainly reach a wider audience. The bluegrass and country entry points often associated with Barnes’ music are not prerequisites to buy a ticket for this ride. However, that fact provided considerable difficulties when he was initially trying to find any label support.

“I worked on [the songs] for about three years and I just didn’t really have an outlet for [them],” says Barnes. “I talked to some different labels in the acoustic world and they were more interested in my regular acoustic banjo-picking kind of stuff. I really felt these songs are more fractured pop songs than bluegrass or acoustic songs. I wasn’t really known for [bluegrass songwriting] anyway, but some of the labels I was talking to were discouraging me from what I was working on. But the music was going a little more open.”

Barnes found an enthusiastic fan and supporter in Dave Matthews. Their friendship had developed as Barnes played several shows with DMB. Matthews would visit him while he was writing the tracks that would become 2009′s Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King (where Barnes plays banjo), and Barnes was writing his own material, playing each other their songs in informal jam sessions. One day in early 2009, Barnes says, “I got a call from Coran [Capshaw - Matthews' manager] and Dave, just, ‘Hey we want to help you make a record. What can we do? We’ve got a bunch of resources. How can we help ya make a record?’ At this point I was kind of calling Dave’s machine and leaving these songs, kind of teasing him with these songs [laughs]. I think he started liking what he heard.”

Thinking of what he needed first and foremost, Barnes, who could play the other required instruments, thought, “What I’d really like to do is just get one bad ass drummer, and we got Matt [Chamberlain]. He may be one of the most recorded drummers in American history. If you look at his resume it’s almost like someone made it up; it’s unbelievable.”

Producer John Alagia (DMB, John Mayer, Ben Folds Five) was also brought on board, a pairing Matthews had been conspiring for some time.

Danny Barnes

“I would talk to Dave and he’d be like, ‘You really need to talk to this guy John Alagia.’ When I finally got a hold of him, John was telling me that Dave was telling him, ‘Hey, you need to meet this guy Danny Barnes,’ [laughs]. I got him on the phone and talked to John for maybe an hour, but I realized pretty quick into the conversation that the references that we had for what we wanted to do were really similar. I felt like this is the guy; this is going to work great,” says Barnes. “He was great. If I was doing something, he could just make it happen, make it into something bigger. I would never be able to make a record like that without him.”

The album was recorded in Matthews’ private Haunted Hollow Studios in Charlottesville, Virginia. For Barnes it was “a real blessing I got through Coran and Dave. They said, ‘Work here if you want to. Would you like to do this?’ And I was like, ‘Man, this place looks awesome!’” In the comfortable, state-of-the-art facility, the team recorded the album in two weeks with a relaxed attitude but focused approach. Barnes says, “Working with super talented people in a no pressure environment, you can get a lot done like that. If you get really good guys and just turn ‘em loose, something’s going to happen.”

This past fall also saw him signed to ATO by Matthews, a move which places him on the same roster as Drive-by Truckers and My Morning Jacket on a label that’s released albums by Radiohead and Paul McCartney. For an artist who’s had to adopt a DIY approach for most of his career, this is a mighty sweet spot.

“I’m stunned,” he says with humble gratitude. “I was thinking about this today. In sports, like in car racing, at about your mid-forties you’re going to start tailing off. But with music you can keep getting better and better. So, I keep practicing and taking lessons and studying. It’s strange to be 48-years-old and have the best record that you ever did. Typically a person my age has already done something significant and they’re just replicating that, or they haven’t done anything significant and they’re just going to quit. It’s pretty cool to be getting better and developing new ideas and having new relationships and new energy. I’m so thankful and blessed about that.”

Continue reading for more on Danny Barnes…

 


What I’m always interested in doing is propelling acoustic music forward. Pushing it into the modern world and using it as a form for contemporary expression. I’ve enjoyed being in bluegrass and country music. I like that music, but what I really enjoy is its potential in the pop realm, the way you can use the forms and elements in a pop way so it speaks to more people.

-Danny Barnes

 

Working Without Parameters

“Music is so malleable, when you play something it’s so easy to change it,” Barnes says. “It’s an idea that’s not really set in stone. It’s endlessly engaging in that regard. The trick is to not impose your own structure on it but to work with whatever ideas come into your head, because you get a lot of them. I think that’s why more people don’t write music and come up with art because it’s so easy to go, ‘Oh that’s not good, I’m not gonna do that,’ or, ‘That’s a dumb idea.’ You never get anything done that way, as opposed to just getting all your ideas down and then listening to what they tell you. If you’re doing that, you can be as prolific as you want because [the ideas] just keep talking.”

Danny Barnes from dannybarnes.com

When it becomes about ideas and not about you, it’s liberating. Tapping into that means letting go of the ego attachment that often runs hand-in-hand with the artistically afflicted.

“Working without parameters and getting a lot of ideas down is really good. Sometimes, for instance, musicians have a hard time making records because the part on a song you have to play [is] something really simple, and a guy might be thinking, ‘Man, my friends won’t know what a great guitar player I am unless I do something really complicated here,’ and then the part never works. It’s like you’re making a house and you want to put this weird room in there that doesn’t go with the rest of the house, and you get stuck because you’re trying a million ways of making it fit and it won’t fit. I learned just to take myself out of it as much as I can.”

Pizza Box is an album with a grand scope crafted out of intimate details. It’s a multi-character, fractured narrative that unfolds with cinematic richness. Violent drug dealers, sketchy loners, repeat convicts, the lonely and the lovelorn claw and slack their way through the stories. Barnes renders them in flesh and blood in vividly detailed micro-views that pull us down into these creatures’ hilarious and heartbreaking lives.

“It’s a bunch of vignettes,” he explains. “The common theme in there is a kind of learning for these people that are wrecking their own lives. It’s sort of like a film where you’re exposed to the narrative out of order. There’s these characters that pop up, and then one of the characters robs somebody else in another song. They coexist and intermingle. There’s little bits in the poetry and in the sonic palette, things that pop in and out. There’s a lot of little hidden Easter eggs, like internal rhymes. Those are the records I really enjoyed, and still enjoy. I like when there’s stuff buried in there and you have to dig around. There’s always little meanings and motifs that will show up in another song, reverb times and compression schemes that get used more than once, loops that get moved around, buried processes within other processes.”

Those layers and nuances taken as a whole provide a mural of early 21st century America’s substrata. Much like the protagonist of the title track who looks around at various objects – “A pizza box/ A baling wire/ And a ball of twine” – that bring up memories of a lost love, depending on where the listener’s focus falls, different images leap out and demand attention.

“There’s something about the way, cinematically, things can operate,” Barnes says. “There’s a post-structuralist way, where all the movements and the shapes and the color palette and everything in the scene can have other meanings. For instance, if a character is talking on the phone but there’s a song playing in the background, maybe that’s more important than what’s happening in the foreground. When I was a little kid I used to listen to a lot of radio dramas. They had this thing called Mystery Theater, and it was this hour-long show with host E.G. Marshall. The way all this stuff would happen in your mind, it was in-between reading and watching a movie. Movies sometimes nail everything down for you and can be a passive experience, but reading is a very active experience. This [radio drama] was in-between, and I try to make that happen in my songs, where things are open enough where people can interpret them in different ways.”

Danny Barnes

Well I’ve read the Bible through from stem to stern
To see what a feller like me could learn
Well, the times get harder and the cities burn
It ain’t no different than the caveman time

There’s an old saying, a curse really, that says, “May you live in interesting times.” Well, things are pretty damn interesting out there. It makes one wonder, as the whole darned human comedy keeps perpetuating itself, how much we’ve really evolved. It’s a theme that runs through the song “Caveman.”

“In one sense, we have this chronological pride,” Barnes reflects. “We think, ‘Boy, we’ve really advanced.’ In another way, we’ve really not. ['Caveman'] came about when I was flying one day. It was one of those days when they just shut down the airports. It just freaked me out because I couldn’t get to work. It wasn’t 9/11, but it was one of those days after that. There was like 3,000 people. It was like being in the stands at a Mariner game. Nobody could get on their flights, and it just reminded me of the way cavemen must have operated, just digging in the ground for grub worms. In some ways, we’re not so far removed from that reality. Every now and then the brutality of existence kind of strikes me as poignant.”

This brutality is most acute in the punk rock menace of “Road.” Barnes plays a bone-crunching electric guitar on the song, while Chamberlain’s drums pound with chain gang intensity. It’s unapologetically heavy, but Barnes says, “I’m underground enough so that I don’t have to worry about alienating anybody.” The music fits the story; as the drug dealer protagonist barrels full-tilt towards a self-destructive end, Barnes vocals go unhinged and raw as he sings:

I got a .40 Smith and Wesson in a car downtown
I got a hollow point safetied on a chambered round
Selling methamphetamines to Jungle Jim
‘Til I crashed and burned and dropped the dime again

The song was inspired by a friend who was sent to prison.

Danny Barnes with Mike Gordon from dannybarnes.com

“He was telling me about how before he went down, the last two or three days was this amazing story. Basically, when they kicked the door in he was relieved because he could finally go to sleep and relax. He could just go to prison and chill out. It was so hard to keep that life going. It was so dangerous and such a mess. I just thought that was interesting. You wouldn’t have expected that. I think William Blake says, ‘Excess of sorrow laughs, excess of joy weeps.’ Talking to my friend, they kicked in the door with a big battering ram and he was never so happy to see those guys because he knew he was going down; it was just a matter of time. [In] that song, the guy hasn’t figured it out yet, but he’s fixing to.”

The song’s chorus – “I left it laying by the side of the road” – hints at leaving a destructive way of living behind.

“I realized that getting the right people in your life AND getting the wrong people out is really important, because being around a lot of negative energy can take up a lot of your forward motion. So, I’m trying to encourage people, sort of surreptitiously in that song, to put down their burdens and move on with their lives. It’s buried in there; it’s a subtext. I’m trying to build people up, because you carry around all these burdens and you see the world through this guilt. So, if you look at a rose, you can’t really look at the rose without the guilt. You don’t look at it and think, ‘What a beautiful flower.’ You look at it and go, ‘Man, I should really have a garden. I need to go home. I haven’t been doing that. I’m really letting that down. I’m not holding up my end of the deal. Somehow, I’m coming up short.’ I say that from experience because I’ve looked at life that way and have let that stuff go a little.”

It’s the fact Barnes speaks from experience that lends extra weight to his words. He wasn’t born an optimist. Although it might seem hard to imagine him ever having to take an anger management class, there was a time when he found himself looking up classes in his town in Washington State:

Danny Barnes

“I live in this little town, so I’m thinking, ‘Where am I going to do this?’ I found this place that had a class, a support group for anger management. They said, ‘Okay, we’re going to meet Wednesdays at 5:30.’ So, I arranged the next couple of months so I could always be at that class. The day before the class started, they called and said, ‘Oh, we’ve changed it to Thursday,’ and I completely lost it. I’m like, ‘What in the hell is wrong with these people? You can’t change this the day before!’ I got completely incensed and I’m stomping around the house screaming. And I realized, ‘Whoa, I’m getting angry at the anger management class.’ I realized that’s what keeping me down. It’s not this other system. It’s really me that’s doing that. That was a big epiphany for me.”

Personal change often starts with examining our own self-inflicted wounds. If we can face them, we can grow from that scar tissue. At one point in our conversation, I ask Barnes if he’s hopeful about people’s abilities to shift their own situations?

“I am hopeful. I just have this idea that everything is going to be great. That’s my idea, that the world is getting better and we’re getting better and things are good, you know? I just sense that. I’m a reformed pessimist. I used to not think that way. I used to have a real doom-and-gloom way of looking, but I do think we’re in the process of moving into win-win. In my business, in my relationships, I’m learning that win-win to me is really the best model that we have. I just stumbled on that in the last few years. We think a lot of times [that] we really got to get what’s ours, what’s coming to us. The problem with that philosophy is you’re taking it away from somebody, or you’re grasping and you’re really in a negative mindset. Win-win is something I think we’re slowly learning as a society.”

Lord knows you don’t need to look too far to see plenty of examples of lose-lose, as America seems to be dissolving into a partisan pissing contest. But despite what the culture war profiteers want you to believe, there’s empowerment in seeing the world as a place of potential rather than a place of terror and failure. In our own lives it ultimately comes down to each of us deciding what we want – love or fear. In many ways, Pizza Box couldn’t have come at a better time, as it reminds us that no matter how insane things get outside, inside, we always have the power to make a choice for the better.

Danny Barnes Tour Dates :: Danny Barnes News :: Danny Barnes Concert Reviews

JamBase | Delivered
Go See Live Music!