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Jayhawks Self-Titled Re-Release

THE JAYHAWKS’ SELF-TITLED 1986 DEBUT (AKA THE BUNKHOUSE ALBUM)

TO BE RELEASED ON CDFOR THE FIRST TIME ON MAY 18 BY LOST HIGHWAY

ONLY 2000 VINYL ALBUMS PRODUCED IN ORIGINAL PRESSING

For the first time on CD, the self-titled debut album from the highly-acclaimed, alt-country pioneers The Jayhawks will be released on
May 18 by Lost Highway. The Jayhawks (also referred to by fans as The Bunkhouse record) was
originally released in 1986 on Bunkhouse Records, with a pressing of only 2000 vinyl copies. Fans not fortunate
enough to own a copy of The Jayhawks will be happy to know that it will finally be available on CD, and again on
vinyl for the first time in 24 years.

The Jayhawks reissue will include an eight-page booklet with new photos from recording period and a new essay by
Jayhawks founder Mark Olson about album producer and then band manager Charlie Pine. The
tracks are the original thirteen songs that appeared on the album, including “Falling Star,” which recently resurfaced
on The Jayhawks Anthology (Legacy Recordings) in 2009.

The 1986 incarnation of The Jayhawks featured Mark Olson (guitar/vocals), Gary Louris (lead guitar/vocals), Marc Perlman (bass) and Norm Rogers (drums). After listening to The Jayhawks, it is clear why the band became a catalyst in the evolution of what would eventually be coined alt-country. The
album has more in common with Gram Parsons and The Flying Burrito Brothers than it does with later Jayhawks
classics Tomorrow The Green Grass and Hollywood Town Hall. It’s quite evident where those milestone albums grew out of.


Splendour in the Grass Lineup Strokes, Pixies, Ben Harper

COMPLETE LINEUP ANNOUNCED FOR 10-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF AUSTRALIA’S
SPLENDOUR IN THE GRASS FESTIVAL; HEADLINERS INCLUDE THE STROKES, THE PIXIES, BEN HARPER

The Pixies

Splendour in the Grass, one of Australia’s most celebrated music festivals, is set to commemorate its 10-year anniversary with its most exciting event yet.

The beautiful site of Woodfordia in the QLD Sunshine Coast hinterland will play host to
Splendour in the Grass in this very special anniversary year. And this year, the birthday party will take place over
three magnificent days from Friday July 30 to Sunday August 1. More than 80 acts that will perform across the three
main stages – the Amphitheatre, Mix Up tent and G.W McLennan stage.

Tickets will be sold through Moshtix via
www.moshtix.com.au or by phone on 1300 GET TIX (438
849). Mastercard and Visa accepted.

To view the complete lineup for Splendour in the Grass 2010, please click
HERE.


Sod it

The latest plastic pitches are a goal-scorer’s delight

IT’S official: the grass is greener in Europe. International football’s governing body, FIFA, has ruled that the soccer pitches in South Africa where the World Cup will be played next summer are not fit enough for the month-long competition. Pitches planted with locally grown kikuyu grass will have to be dug up and replanted with lush European rye grass.

No matter that the European turf, bred for a damper and cooler climate, will require more water, fertiliser and maintenance. FIFA is adamant: the hardy local stuff is not green enough for international television. Of course, once the final whistle has blown and the television crews have dispersed, the pitches will need to be resown at great expense with grass fit for South African conditions. …

Hot Rize: From Old Grass To New Grass

By: Kathy Foster-Patton

Hot Rize original press shot
(L to R) Scap, Sawtelle, O’Brien, Wernick

Those were heady days, back in the ’80s, when Hot Rize toured across the country giving their all to make it as working musicians. Bandmates Pete Wernick (banjo), Nick Forster (bass), Tim O’Brien (mandolin) and Charles Sawtelle (guitar) came together in 1978 and toured until 1990. They continued to play together sporadically until Sawtelle passed away from cancer in 1999. His surviving bandmates brought Bryan Sutton on board in 2002 to play guitar with them in the scant performances that are today scheduled around their individual projects. In many ways, Hot Rize led the way in bridging the music of traditionalists to many of the progressive groups like String Cheese and Yonder Mountain String Band. Wernick, Forster, and O’Brien recently spoke about their history and what inspires them to play the few gigs that they currently schedule.

Hot Rize came together with a simple goal in the beginning. “The original idea for Hot Rize was that we were going to get together for the summer and just play some festivals,” Forster explains. “Tim had a record and Pete had a record and the idea was that we were going to get together and play tunes from those records and play some festivals and see what happens. 31 years later we’re still playing music together. It was a very easy commitment to make early on.”

O’Brien goes a little further to enumerate their goals at the time. “We wanted to play traditional bluegrass with our own stamp on it, but we wanted to try to fit into the genre and pay tribute to it, really,” he says. “We also wanted to explore other areas and one of those was doing a little bit of comedy with the Trailblazers and another was writing songs. We mostly walked inside the line of the bluegrass borders but we went outside it a little bit here and there.”

Wernick came up with the name for the group. “That was my idea to use the Hot Rize name; I take credit for that. Hot Rize was the secret ingredient in the Martha White flour, and Martha White was the sponsor for the Flatt and Scruggs television show,” he explains. “I had some names for bands tucked away in a file and I suggested the name and everybody said, ‘Okay.’ Normally it takes longer than that – sometimes it can take forever. The Martha White Company allowed us to print our t-shirts with no compensation. The one stipulation they had when I called and asked them if I could use the Hot Rize name, they said, ‘Keep the show clean.’”

The guys outfitted themselves in vintage ties and suits that they purchased from thrift stores. In a time when they could have gotten away with wearing t-shirts and jeans, they chose to dress up for the stage. Forster explains, “That was the tradition. That’s where bluegrass came from. Bill Monroe played in suits and ties and Ralph Stanley and the Osmond Brothers and Jim & Jesse. That’s what people did. Now it just happened that people of our generation didn’t. But we made a conscious decision to separate ourselves from the pack and it made it such that the older audience and the traditional bluegrass fans could look at us and say, ‘Oh, my, look at those nice young men and aren’t they good and don’t they look good in their suits.’ But if people looked closer they would see that we were wearing thrift store suits and we had old ’40s ties, big old wide silk ties that were a throwback. We were wearing vintage ties as an homage to the people who came before us. So there was a certain amount of tongue-in-cheek from the get-go.” Wernick adds, “Our ties were an indication that we’re not just carbon copies of the guys you’ve been watching. We’re winking at you a little bit while we do this.”

There was any number of contributions that made the Hot Rize sound unique, but Forster remembers the vocals with particular reverence. “Singing with Tim is a unique thing in my world” says Forster. “I get to sing with a lot of people on Etown and I have sung with lots of other people in other musical situations but I think it’s because we kind of grew up together and I became a better singer and I know Tim did too in the course of Hot Rize. He’s always been an amazing singer, just remarkable. Our duet sound, I think, is a distinctive part of what makes Hot Rize sound like Hot Rize.”

Hot Rize – Wernick, Sawtell, O’Brien

“We broke some ground, with Pete using the phase shifter [a device Wernick invented to morph his banjo sound] and me using the electric bass and Tim’s mandolin playing style and our songwriting and original material and Charles’ style of playing the guitar and the whole evolution of the show” continues Forster. “It was really ground breaking in a lot of ways. We brought a lot of people to bluegrass that otherwise may not have felt welcome. I’m really proud of that.”

Stringing one thought into the next, Forster was eager to talk more about the songwriting associated with Hot Rize.

“I think the challenge in bluegrass music is to write songs that fit the genre and that achieve some level of timelessness while still representing a new body of work. I think that was one of the strengths of Hot Rize. Tim, Pete, and I contributed a bunch of new material. Songs like Tim’s ‘Nellie Kane’ and I wrote a song called ‘Shadows in My Room’ and Pete’s ‘Just Like You’ and some others with that sort of classic bluegrass timelessness to them that were part of the modern bluegrass repertoire. I think that is a really important thing,” Forster observes. “If you look at all the original material that Hot Rize contributed over the years I think there’s a lot of those songs that really stand the test of time and they fit the older style but are touching on more contemporary ideas and more contemporary influence. We were really lucky that we had some fresh songwriting in the band, that we could contribute some new material that wasn’t sub-standard. Original songs are better if they’re good songs. I think that that’s a very distinctive thing that Hot Rize did. It comes from that same thing that we really did our homework. We loved listening to traditional bluegrass and really connected with it and respected it and it was natural to us as songwriters to start with that. I think almost any of [the songs are] memorable because you’re talking about not just nostalgia but these songs are kind of iconic. We started every show with ‘Blue Night.’ ‘Blue Night’ is a song that says to me, ‘Okay, this is Hot Rize.’”

Continue reading for more on Hot Rize…

 


We broke some ground, with Pete using the phase shifter and me using the electric bass and Tim’s mandolin playing style and our songwriting and original material and Charles’ style of playing the guitar and the whole evolution of the show. It was really ground breaking in a lot of ways. We brought a lot of people to bluegrass that otherwise may not have felt welcome. I’m really proud of that.

-Nick Forster

 

In their heyday, they had a grueling travel schedule. Forster itemized a typical day. “I’ll just give you an example of what our days were like. I was the principal bus driver; Frank [Edmonson, their sound man] and Charles both drove, but year in and year out I did most of the driving. I did almost all the driving pre-Frank. Charles did drive – we had different sleeping patterns, so Charles would do the morning driving and I would do afternoon and evening and nighttime driving. We were a very hard-working band so we would play a gig, sign autographs, sell a bunch of merch at the end and then unwind and pack up. A lot of times we carried our own PA system and put up our own PA. So we would pack up all the gear and load it into the bus and I would drive at night until I ran out of energy and that was oftentimes at 3 or 4 in the morning. Then Charles would wake up around 8 and he would drive in the morning and we’d go to a truck stop around noon and get some diesel fuel and breakfast. A lot of times we’d take showers in the truck stop and then drive on to the next gig and try to get there around 2 p.m., where we could do a load in and a soundcheck and get done with that by 6 so we could go and have dinner and then get back to play a long show, sign autographs and load up the PA and do the whole thing again.”

Hot Rize by Bill Smith

The bandmembers divided their tasks in accordance with each man’s strengths. Forster explains, “Pete, for example, had that logistics gene. He liked to solve the problems of traveling and worked closely with our agent when we finally got one. Charles was a sound guy so he really understood what it took to make things sound good – really helped us with microphone selection and making sure our sound was as good as it could be. I was focused more on driving and managing the merchandise and fixing stuff and crisis management. Tim was focused on material and getting new songs and keeping us full of good ideas about creative stuff. We really played on our individual strengths, both musically and in terms of personality. It was an incredibly dynamic group of smart, capable and talented people. I think it was a happy coincidence that we found each other.”

While everyone played their part in giving Hot Rize a chance, Forster credits Wernick with really getting the band going down the road to success.

“In our first year, we had only been together for about six weeks when we played at Telluride – the third [year of the] festival. We played on Garrison Keeler’s show after we’d been together for less than a month. A lot of that credit goes to Pete, who was our agent. Pete did all the booking and he really worked hard. Our goal was to make $100 a week. If we could do that we could keep the band together. That was basically it and he made sure that we did – and not a whole lot more than that. He gets credit for really seeing the potential for having an impact on the whole field of bluegrass. He fought hard to make sure that we kept going.”

O’Brien imparts a fond story about their booker. “We left Pete behind in a rest area once. Frank was driving and it was late at night and everybody was bedded down except for him. He had the graveyard shift and he pulled in to fuel and Pete got up after Frank got out of the bus, without seeing Frank or Frank seeing him, and went to the bathroom. Meanwhile Frank finished up and paid and got on his way. About 25 minutes later this flashing light pulls behind Frank and the cop pulled him over. The policeman comes up to the bus window and says, ‘You got a Pete Wernick on board?’ He says, ‘Yeah.’ The cop said, ‘Guess again.’” Forster sheepishly recalls one aspect of the story differently. “That was definitely my fault. I was driving then.”

Red Knuckles and the Trailblazers by Benko Photographics

Wernick has tale after tale of memorable events from their touring days. “When Hot Rize was in Sweden on our first European tour, the road manager was a pretty bizarre guy. He booked the tour based upon hearing our first record and he didn’t know anything else about us. He just listened to the record and booked us on a three-week tour and had us going to several different countries. We were relatively young guys visiting Europe for the first time [and] we just put ourselves in his hands,” says Wernick. “We were in Stockholm, I believe, and we played the show and then we asked about our accommodations and he said, ‘I have to work that out.’ So, basically, he didn’t have any place for us to stay and we were living pretty close to the bone and we didn’t have much money. So he says, ‘First we’re going to go to this party.’ Some of us got kind of tired so we find a table that they were serving food on and a couple of us went to sleep under that table. Basically this guy picked up a young woman there who ended us providing us accommodations. We just remember that he seemed to know he could do this and he trusted his ability to find it.”

Those who have been to a Hot Rize show know that a staple of their entertainment is their alter-ego band, Red Knuckles and the Trailblazers. Forster beamed as he discussed that aspect of their work.

“We all loved that kind of music. In the early days we played a lot of bars and when you’re playing nine-to-one in a bar there’s times when people are really ready to hear a Hank Williams or Bob Wills song. We loved that music so it was really great when we had an opportunity to bring the Trailblazers on into our show and have them come out and play that stuff. And they were pretty manageable people and they didn’t take up a lot of room on the bus. They were easy to get along with – low expectations.”

Wernick & Anastasio by Jeremy Stein

Wernick takes the discussion further, “Hot Rize has always had a duality aspect. One was that none of us was from the rural Southeast, yet we were singing the music from the rural Southeast and making it our own, redoing it from the inside as well as the outside. Yet we had all these other influences that made us different from a lot of the other bluegrass people. Then we had the whole Hot Rize/Red Knuckles duality. In some ways we’re hippies at heart.”

Looking at the current batch of progressive string bands it’s clear Hot Rize has been a major influence. That might not be obvious to the casual music fan, but as Forster explains, they’ve left their indelible mark.

“The agency that represented us was Keith Case. They represented John Hartford, Norman and Nancy Blake, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, New Grass Revival, and Brian Bowers, and at the time it was sort of like the hippier side of bluegrass,” Forster says. “We were associated, and rightly so, with the progressive side of things, bands that were jammers, bands that were interested in pushing the boundary and going for it in a new way. I think there was a really interesting crossover between being progressive and also being respectful of the traditions among all of those people. If you talk to the guys in String Cheese and YMSB and the progressive string bands, a lot of them will point to Hot Rize as a pretty significant influence. A lot of that has to do with geography but it also has to do with the place in time that we occupied. I think we really made a difference and made a mark. The greater musical community may or may not know that.”

Continue reading for more on Hot Rize…

 


It isn’t just about being fast, it isn’t just about speed, it isn’t just about energy. It’s about what’s behind the music and what’s behind the singing and what’s the emotional depth of a song and how can that be reflected in some way in the actual music.

-Nick Forster

 

Photo of Hot Rize by Nathan Rist

In 1990 the band members made the decision to go their separate ways and devote themselves to their individual projects. O’Brien explains, “I was feeling like I wanted to do something different. I felt we had really accomplished a lot of good things but I felt like I wanted to try some other things. It was really just time for me.”

Hot Rize in the 80s

Wernick believes they went out on a high point. “The first time IBMA gave away their main award for Entertainer of the Year, we got it. It was the last year for the band, so it was kind of like just in time. As we retired, the bluegrass community gave us their highest endorsement. That felt great.”

These days Hot Rize plays sporadically. There were only two shows on their calendar for 2009, both in Colorado, and the most recent this past Sunday at the RockyGrass Festival. “Hot Rize just does a few gigs when it’s a special occasion or when it’s been too long between shows together because we need to check up on one another,” O’Brien laughs. “We sort of grew up together and we need to check up every once in a while.” Forster elaborates, “There are two things. One is that we’ve recorded probably 150 songs or something like that with a pretty good percentage of that being unique material to us, either original songs or something we arranged and claim as our own and so for the most part none of us is playing. So, we’ve got this great body of material and it’s really fun to play those songs. Secondly, we have a thing. When we get together we do that thing and none of us gets that thing in a different context. Musically it’s great material and a musical interaction that’s really unique. Some of the other factors include schedule, logistics, and opportunity.”

Forster agreed that they could do more. “We could easily play more,” he says. “There are occasionally pressures to do more. There’s a bunch of places we could play where folks would love to hear us play, but I think we are all understandably focused on our own things and that’s the way it is right now.”

Hot Rize :: 1982

Those individual projects are many. Wernick plays in Flexigrass, Long Road Home, Pete and Joan Wernick, and conducts jam and banjo camps across the country. His activities are itemized on his website. O’Brien plays solo and with different bands and is producing a record for a songwriter from Salt Lake City, with another project involving an Irish band on tap for the summer. His website details his ongoing projects. Forster is focused on his radio show, Etown, and has been playing on numerous recordings. Etown can be found at etown.org.

When O’Brien reflects on what he learned from Hot Rize and from the Trailblazers he says, “You learn to make fun of yourself because that’s the only option. I learned that you take the music seriously and you work your hardest to do what you want to do, but you can’t take yourself too seriously. You need to loosen up every now and then. I learned how to work as a team with Hot Rize with what we had in our bag, what our available tricks were and how to use them. We grew together as a group and learned as we went along. It’s always been a fun part of my history, those 12 years with those guys, just amazing.”

“I don’t know how many relationships you’ve had that have lasted more than 30 years. So, in most people’s lives that is limited to the sphere of siblings. We’re kind of like that, we’re kind of like siblings,” Forster sums things up. “Charles was an absolute brother to all of us. Brian Sutton is doing a great job of fitting in and absorbing. Brian, lucky for us, grew up listening to Hot Rize. He’s got a great, dry sense of humor kind of like Charles did. So, he’s really a wonderful addition to our unit. But Tim and Pete and I have this bond that is unique in my life. I don’t have any other relationships like that with people with whom I was that close for that long. And that can be both good and bad, just like siblings. You have this enormous range of common experience. We did all this stuff together. We traveled all over the place. We had so much amazing, indescribable, weird stuff that happened with us uniquely together. That creates a pretty deep bond.”

Hot Rize by Chris Stone

“I was 22 when I joined Hot Rize and in some ways it was my first serious bluegrass band. I grew up with those guys and I learned a lot about music from those guys,” continues Forster. “A lot of the sensibilities and the things I came to appreciate about truth in music and what’s real and what’s soulful and what’s moving in music came from my time in Hot Rize. It was a broad mix of music, it wasn’t just bluegrass. Charles made these amazing mix tapes that would have Blind Willie Johnson, and others, like a really cool radio show. We would listen to these cassette tapes for hours as we were traveling. We would all make these mix tapes for each other for the road trips, but the ones Charles made were the most memorable. I learned a lot about soulful music. It isn’t just about being fast, it isn’t just about speed, it isn’t just about energy. It’s about what’s behind the music and what’s behind the singing and what’s the emotional depth of a song and how can that be reflected in some way in the actual music.”

“Nick and Tim and I have these deep connections and we’re like family to each other. It’s really hard to imagine what my life would be like without either of those guys,” Wernick says. “The Hot Rize band made a huge amount possible for me. It’s helped me to achieve dreams that were beyond dreams that I had. I never dreamed I’d be a professional musician. Every time I’ve ever gotten on stage with Hot Rize that music is exhilarating to play. I have a huge amount of respect for the other band members as people as well as musicians. I’m very grateful to have the opportunity to do my part in what we’ve been able to make happen as a group. It’s so neat that we’ve inspired kids, we’ve inspired bluegrass professionals, we’ve inspired writers, DJs, people who don’t even speak English. I consider myself lucky, but not lucky like I drew a lucky lottery number because I worked really hard to make a lot of this stuff happen, so it’s not just pure luck. But I’m also lucky it worked out because a lot of people work really hard and it doesn’t work out.”

“We won Entertainer of the Year from IBMA for good reason, I think, which is we really put on a good show” reflects Forster. “We always thought about that – trying to make an entertaining program for everyone. That included a lot of great music. We had original songs. The music was the first priority, but we thought about how we looked on stage and we thought about pacing and timing and what the setlist should be and the whole evolution of the Trailblazers as an adjunct and a part of our show was a really wonderful kind of coincidence in that it enabled what we were allowed to present to an audience to grow and expand. It was really pretty unique. A good Hot Rize show was a pretty entertaining evening and we were proud of it.”

JamBase | Right In The Skillet
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Olivia Rosewood: Yoga Levels: Meat Eaters are More Spiritual than Vegetarians

Our world is made of different vibrations of pure energy and nothing else. How can it be better to eat one type of vibrating energy than to eat another type of vibrating energy?

The low-carbon wine baa

Winemaker deploys miniature sheep to cut fuel costs and keep grass short

Duncan Graham-Rowe

A New Zealand winemaker believes he has struck upon the solution to reducing the carbon footprint of wine – and the answer, which may come as no great surprise, lies in sheep. Miniature sheep, that is.

There are only 300 of them in the world and they were originally bred as cute miniature pets, but Peter Yealands believes that babydoll sheep could help him to reduce the environmental footprint of his wine.

By allowing the rare breed to graze on the grass between his vines, Yealands says he can dramatically reduce the energy his wine takes to make and ultimately enable the process to be more sustainable.

Wine producers often use sheep to keep grass short, such as in these Californian vineyards, left, but flocks must be removed when the vines bud because the animals will eat them too. So, to prevent the grass using up precious nutrients and water, and to prevent the spread of disease and fungus, growers normally use tractors to do the job.

With 1,000 hectares in his vineyard that means driving 3,500km for each of the 12 times a year the grass has to be mowed. As a result, for Yealands, diesel makes up about 60% of his energy costs.

To avoid using a tractor, last year Yealands experimented by letting loose giant guinea pigs. That worked initially, he said. “But once the hawks had a taste for them they were sitting prey. We were losing them by the hour. Besides, we would have needed 11 million of them to make it work.”

Now Yealands has turned his attention to babydolls, a rare breed of sheep which only reach about 60cm tall when fully grown. Because the grapes tend only to start growing from about 110cm off the ground the sheep can’t reach them. Yealands has tested 10 of the sheep on a 125-hectare patch of vines.

By selectively breeding them with another more common sheep, the Merino Saxon, which is favoured for its meat, Yealands now hopes to get his stock up to the 10,000 he needs within the next five years. If successful, the flock should save him NZ$1.5m (£600,000) a year in diesel alone, and he hopes to sell the sheep for meat too.

Marleen Stumpel, co-director of AdVintage Wines, a London-based supplier of carbon-neutral wines, said the babydolls are an unusual approach.

She said most wine makers reduce their carbon footprint by paying to offset their emissions. “There is a growing market for it, but the wine does tend to be a little bit more expensive,” she said.

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Fed sets sights on Grand Slam record

Had Rafael Nadal terrorised tennis stars of a bygone era, Roger Federer would probably list the Spaniard as one of his sporting heroes.   Instead, the Swiss grew up watching Boris Becker and Stefan Edberg battle it out on the grass courts of Wimbledon, before Pete Sampras rode into SW19 in theHad Rafael Nadal terrorised tennis stars of a bygone era, Roger Federer would probably list the Spaniard as one of his sporting heroes. Instead, the Swiss grew up watching Boris Becker and Stefan Edberg battle it out on the grass courts of Wimbledon, before Pete Sampras rode into SW19 in the