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Posts Tagged ‘Greg’

Nicki Bluhm: Stick With Me

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Andrew Quist

Nicki Bluhm by Andrew Quist

It doesn’t take but a few minutes listening to Nicki Bluhm to realize you’re in the presence of a real talent possessed of one of the most winning, emotionally textured voices to come along in some time, a singer that crawls inside the material with obvious passion and purpose. It’s nigh impossible to not think of ground breaking ladies like Linda Ronstadt, Tracy Nelson and Bonnie Raitt, and the quality, rootsy, oh-so-easy-to-dig music she and her band, The Gramblers, make only reinforces this impression. Rock, soul, pop, country and blues are grist for their mill, which recalls the egalitarian spirit of 1970s radio, where having a broad range and good ears for hooks and harmonies were virtues and not just a challenge to drones that try to compartmentalize music these days.

Bluhm’s diversity shines through very brightly on her sophomore album, Driftwood (released February 1 on Little Knickers), an addictively listenable, mature work that moves Nicki several steps along from her 2008 debut Toby’s Song (JamBase review). Starting with the cinematically rich hit single waiting to happen “Carousel,” the album moves seamlessly into classic country (“Stick With Me,” “Women’s Prison”), soaring pop (“Jetplane”), jelly rollin’ barroom fare (“Barbary Blues”), Karen Carpenter territory (“Figure You Out”), Janis Joplin-esque heat (“Kill You To Call”) and more, all of it delivered with sweet singing, artful arrangements and inviting production (courtesy of hubby Tim Bluhm of The Mother Hips and Bay Area studio secret weapon Dave Simon-Baker). The album also features well placed guest turns from Jackie Greene, Railroad Earth’s Tim Carbone and members of ALO.

new album

Driftwood is an album one leaves on repeat because one spin simply won’t do. It’s the kind of record one sings along to, perhaps a little too loudly for polite company, and pushes into the hands of friends because it’s so bloody satisfying. Driftwood puts the lie to folks that say they don’t make them like they used to; this is classic stuff delivered in a classic manner. And at the heart of it is a young lady who belts ‘em out with a wholly winning combination of sweetness and edge, the words ripping free from some place deep within her, a voice laying bare the soul that powers it.

JamBase: The first impression I had of you, right from the time I slipped on your debut, was here was an artist shooting for a more classic model of things than many of your peers.

Nicki Bluhm: That’s most certainly what I’m going for. A lot of the classic, timeless records I picked up from my parents and Tim – early Bonnie Raitt, Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt – all the music in this vein has this timelessness to it that you don’t really come by often in music today. And my goal is to make music that will last and stand the test of time. One thing about music that’s so amazing is how it lives on forever. It’s really important when you make music to do it honestly. It’s like a tattoo – it never goes away.

JamBase: Prior to the 20th century this wasn’t the case but after wax cylinders, vinyl and so on, it’s now possible for music to live on forever.

Nicki Bluhm: I was just listening to this Townes Van Zandt record from 1969 as I drove to L.A., and that was 10 years before I was born and I just love it. I think of him in his grave and how many people are listening to the records of dead people and how cool that is, how cool that legacy is.

It’s kind of cool that you get to make music with your partner. There’s something special to your relationship beyond being a married couple that emerges in the music you create together.

I’d agree with that. I really wouldn’t be doing any of this if I hadn’t met Tim and he hadn’t encouraged me. We do have a loving personal relationship but we also have a professional relationship as well. I’m really lucky to be close to someone I’ve admired for a really long time – creatively and musically. It’s been inspirational and intimidating at the same, which creates an interesting experience. Here I am writing songs in the living room and in the next room is one of my favorite songwriters. It can be intimidating but then he pops his head out of the office and says, “Hey, try that again! What was that?” It’s really encouraging, more than your mom or your friends saying that. It’s a very good double-edged sword [laughs].

Tim & Nicki Bluhm by Andrew Quist

I can imagine it’s sometimes nerve-wracking to have someone I consider one of the great songwriters of our time as your sounding board. Tim is as good as it gets. But on the plus side, you two get to collaborate on music, especially with Tim producing your albums.

Luckily, we have really similar tastes and we can communicate well what we want to hear in a song with very few words. I can just say a mood or reference someone or a record and he just understands what I’m saying. It’s a neat, intuitive thing we have, and I think Greg [Loiacono, Mother Hips] and Tim have that, too. It’s an unspoken understanding that can be expressed minimally and he captures it.

You show off a lot more colors on Driftwood than Toby’s Song. The music in your head is clearly evolving.

The first record was very raw and more a collection of songs. I’d never had any experience recording or even writing music before – “Toby’s Song” was the first song I’d ever written. Going back to the intimidation factor, I went into to record those songs and trusted Tim and did as I was told. That was fine but on the second record I sort of understood how the recording process worked and to really come prepared on how I wanted things arranged. I feel like the songs were a lot more well-crafted on the second record, and I was a lot more involved in shaping what I wanted. That said, a lot of other input contributed to the development of the record – obviously Tim and Dave Simon-Baker, but with a largely holistic approach from a number of people, with Tim and Dave being the ringleaders.

Another difference between Driftwood and your debut is your band, The Gramblers, get showcased on the new material.

One of the goals for this record was to have some common thread throughout the record as opposed to being just a collection of songs, and the musicians involved became that through line. Even though the songs are often very different styles, the players are so good that they imbue the vibe of the record, and that’s where the consistency lies.

Deren Ney by Andrew Quist

Your lead guitarist Deren Ney is a friendly ghost floating throughout Driftwood. That guy’s playing is always so tasty.

He’s really special, and he spends a lot of time on his own working on his parts. He definitely cares a lot. And he walks that fine line any guitar player does of playing enough and not too much, and he’s very tasteful and seems to know the boundaries and is always incredibly appropriate. He lends a lot to the band, not just playing guitar but writing songs – he wrote “Carousel” and “Barbary Blues” – and he’s an incredibly thoughtful person. Not only does he write songs and let me sing them but he writes songs with me in mind. He truly tries to write songs with my thinking and style in mind.

I don’t think he’ll be the only one to do that. It’s partially why I think Linda Ronstadt comes up as a primary touchstone for you. She didn’t write a lot of her songs but many tunes were written for her to sing or brought to her to do a version. She was loved by the likes of Neil Young and Lowell George because of her way with a song, and I think you have a lot of the same mojo.

There’s something to singing someone else’s song that’s just comfortable; I almost prefer it. It’s a little less vulnerable, and there’s a carelessness I have when I sing someone else’s song. I can interpret it the way I want to without feeling it’s about this particular experience, person or event that happened to me personally.

There’s something fun about putting on the garb of another songwriter without all the baggage.

I love listening to Linda Ronstadt records. Her voice is incredible and she’s someone I’ve studied. She’s so powerful and amazing. More than wanting to sing her songs or hit the same high-marks she did, I see her as the ultimate female vocalist. And I love the early Bonnie Raitt stuff, where she sounds so effortless and natural. And I like singing some of the songs she wrote and some of the old blues songs she covered.

Nicki Bluhm by Andrew Quist

Both Ronstadt and Raitt are cool examples to study because they managed to have this great combination of being feminine and vulnerable and being really strong and in charge in an industry that’s still harder for women to crack than men.

That’s something that definitely draws me to them, the fact that they can be strong, powerful women yet they’re still ladies. You can hear their vulnerability and their strength. There’s a realness in the way they sound that’s really appealing to me.

I feel incredibly lucky because I have this amazing group of friends and musicians that always seem to be available to play with me. I can’t express how much support I’ve felt from the San Francisco Bay Area community of musicians. The bottom line is I’ve felt very well taken care of by the musicians in the Bay Area. I couldn’t sing without a band, and they’ve been incredible. The collection of musicians that have allowed this to happen for me makes it feel easy. I have a long road ahead of me – that’s for certain – but I’m off to an incredibly good start because of this amazing support from all these wonderful musicians and friends.

I think musicians are drawn to the vibe in your music, which consistently feels honest and quite human.

There are a lot of emotions caught up in songs, and I think it’s important to allow room for people to relate to different aspects. I think a lot of people find solace in music. Music and songs have gotten me through a lot of tough times. I just hope my music does that for some people.

Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers Tour Dates :: Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers News :: Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers Concert Reviews


JamBase | Drifin’
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Greg Norman Marries for Third Time

Less than a year after finalizing his divorce from tennis champ Chris Evert, Greg Norman was quietly married on private Necker Island in the British Virgin Islands last weekend. It is the golfer’s third marriage. Norman, 55, wed Australian interior decorator Kristen Kutner, 41, before a small group of family and friends. His son Gregory, [...]

New “Little Fockers” Trailer

Here’s a new trailer for Little Fockers — now featuring Dustin Hoffman! The third edition of the Meet the Parents franchise will arrive in theaters Dec. 22, just in time for Christmas. Synopsis: “After ten years of clashing wills with his ex-CIA father-in-law Jack, Greg Focker has finally entered the man’s “circle of trust.” So [...]

Sat Eye Candy: Bad Religion

THREE DECADES OF FIGHTING THE GOOD FIGHT AND MAKING AMAZING MUSIC

For 30 years Bad Religion has been a standard bearer for intelligence and craftsmanship in punk rock. From the start, they made it cool to be smart AND pissed-off, but angry about the right things, things far beyond the naval gazing of so many suburban punks. They’ve actively pushed listeners to educate themselves and take action to better the world. And they also happen to have arguably the greatest singer in punk history, Greg Graffin, who turns 46 today. Riding high on one of the best albums of their career, The Dissent of Man (released September 24), Bad Religion is on a lengthy fall tour right now. Be sure to let Greg know you’re glad he’s stuck it out for three decades, using his VERY sharp mind to give a real boot to the jerk-waters that so richly deserve it. (Dennis Cook)


We kick off our lil’ salute to BR with a standout from their 2007 masterpiece New Maps of Hell.

Speaking of hell, here’s an early fan favorite that still gets folks riled up.

Not many bands could forge a classic that’s only about a minute long. But most bands aren’t Bad Religion.

Here’s a couple from the new album taken from BR’s recent Epicenter Festival performance.

And another killer off New Maps.

For many Bad Religion fans, 1990′s Against The Grain will always be the yardstick by which they judge the band’s best work. We conclude with two of that record’s finest moments.

Bad Religion Tour Dates :: Bad Religion News :: Bad Religion Concert Reviews


Ray LaMontagne: Like Rock & Roll And Radio

By: Dennis Cook

Ray LaMontagne and the Pariah Dogs

It’s always heartening when an artist opens an album with something that feels new, even as it gives us that hit of the familiar. God Willin’ & The Creek Don’t Rise (released August 17 on RCA), the fourth long-player from Ray LaMontagne, begins with “Repo Man,” a bumptious rocker with tangible groove & growl. This is not the teary-eyed, sensitive singer-songwriter that’s sadly become LaMontagne’s soundbite, but it is part of a complex artist who keeps moving past preconceptions with each successive release.

“It’s funny how the initial round of press has such staying power. It’s maddening for me,” observes LaMontagne. “This whole impression that I’m introverted to level of autism is so completely untrue. Writers will come to shows and build on that constantly. It’s very frustrating. I guess if you’re not swinging a guitar over your back and pointing & smiling at people in the audience, then somehow you don’t want to be there. That’s just not the case. I immerse myself in the music and the musicians I’m playing with. Obviously, if I didn’t want to be doing this I wouldn’t. I love making records and playing live, and I feel really lucky to be able to do both. But those early impressions sure stick around.”

For the first time on an album, LaMontagne shares top billing with his band, a stunning, critic sanctioned ensemble which includes top-gun guitar/stringed-things players Eric Heywood and Greg Leisz, as well as touring keyboardist Patrick Warren, an under-sung ace who’s worked with Michael Penn & Aimee Mann for years. The name of LaMontagne’s band, The Pariah Dogs, conveys a lot in a few words – a sense of foreboding, perhaps something apocalyptic – and finds its origins in India, where it refers to packs of feral hounds. “I just liked the sound of it,” says LaMontagne. “It rolls off the tongue.”

The core of the band has played together for years, but very rarely all together at once. The rhythm section of Jay Bellerose (drums) and Jennifer Condos (bass) have been with LaMontagne off & on since his second album, Till The Sun Turns Black.

“We’re all really close as friends but also I think we just communicate really well,” offers LaMontagne. “They’re all so great just as human beings, and as musicians they all have such unique voices. No one plays like Greg and the same goes for Jen and Jay. They all have such beautiful, individual voices. For people that really listen, these guys are insane. It’s a dream for me to play with these guys and get them on the record.”

LaMontagne’s music lends itself to this sort of empathetic, aware musicianship, where the subtlety of various components matters, small, intelligent choices adding the necessary texture and wow to his carefully honed compositions and thoughtful vocal style. And the shared intuition of this group also filters into their renditions of LaMontagne’s earlier catalog, which continues to evolve in their care as they’ve toured worldwide this year.

New Album

“I kind of live it and breath it, so I can’t really see the changes. It just happens naturally. I don’t consciously think about it. We just play the songs,” says LaMontagne. “Dylan, I guess, is kind of a grotesque extreme to this idea [of song evolution]. If you see him now, the melodies to the early songs have just sort of disappeared. It’s really bizarre. That’s just drastic and not enjoyable for the listener. You have to remember there’s a listener on the other side, and they want to hear something familiar, a melody that’s familiar. As a vocalist, I want it to be fresh for myself. I try to approach it and sing it effectively every night. You don’t want to change it up so much that people don’t recognize it or enjoy it anymore.”

Melody is central to LaMontagne’s work, something evident in the more meditative pieces on God Willin’ & The Creek Don’t Rise. His songs linger, even the sad ones, because they provide a tuneful companion. Where some songs bum-rush one, LaMontagne’s saunter in and take a seat nearby and wait for us to join them.

“That’s what I love about songs, and I’m always trying to get better at it. I’m always trying to open myself up more when a song comes knocking, to be patient with it and allow the melody to reveal itself. And even in the revision process, I strive to be open to hearing what it wants to be,” says LaMontagne. “Songs reveal themselves to you. You can’t sit down and make a song happen. If you do that, the song is going to suck.”

“I have good instincts about, well, everything, I think, just in life. I’m not saying that in an egotistical way. I’ve just found that to be the case in my life,” says LaMontagne, whose music requires listeners to focus and open up if they’re to fully experience it. Sure, his music could be background noise at a Starbuck’s but that’s not why it was created. “I’m proud of that. That’s what I love about music. That’s what the albums that mean the most to me, and most great albums, are about – listening. You’ve got to spend time with them and get to know them if you want to hear the nuances.”

Ray LaMontagne by Adam McCullough

“To take my own stuff, on my new record there’s a song called ‘New York City’s Killing Me,’ and you can hear Eric working out his part. He did it so quick, and the whole record was done so quickly. What you’re hearing are really instantaneous responses to the material, which the band hadn’t heard prior to the sessions. We recorded it in five days, which meant two tracks per day,” says LaMontagne. “It made me realize just how amazing these guys are. I always knew they were incredible but then when I listened to the album, knowing they’d just heard these songs, maybe in the car about an hour and a half before the take, it’s pretty astounding. By the last chorus of ‘New York City’s Killing Me,’ he gets a little melodic hook he plays on pedal steel. If there were a quote/unquote producer in the room besides me, they would have undoubtedly made us do it again and had Eric play that hook throughout the song. What I love about it is how you can hear him finding that hook.”

Moments like this – which can’t be premeditated but are happily captured for perpetuity – are often the cores of great albums. Happenstance and lightning inspiration should never be discounted, something LaMontagne understands full well.

“For the near future at least, it’s how I plan to make albums,” says LaMontagne. “The control freak in me likes to be in control [laughs]. I certainly wouldn’t rule out working with a producer, but it would have to be an inspired thing. I’d have to go in feeling it was gonna work. Like I said, I have good instincts and I trust myself. Right now, [self-producing my latest album] was an important step for me, to make a record in my own space. I don’t really have a studio. I just have a big, beautiful room that’s just amazing. And Ryan Freeland (Aimee Mann, Crowded House, Son Volt) brought his remote gear in and expertly engineered the sessions. He’s got this great rig with all these tube amps. All he’d seen was some photographs of the space and he just rolled in and made it look really effortless. He was set up in a few hours and immediately started getting beautiful sounds.”

In many respects, God Willin’ & The Creek Don’t Rise is Ray LaMontagne’s most unforced song cycle. This is simply the next chapter in the story of a serious singer, songwriter and musician smart enough to surround himself with the best players around and then let nature take its course. While the gentle sway of “Are We Really Through” and “For The Summer” will appeal to fans still hoping he’ll remake Trouble one day, but more open-minded ears will find a good deal of bounce in cuts like “Like Rock & Roll And Radio” and “Devil’s In The Jukebox.” LaMontagne’s empathy for his fellow humans remains strong, but it’s now joined by a sly caustic edge that’s terrific and just as human as all the sighs and handholding that’s made him so beloved. In short, today’s Ray LaMontagne is more well rounded than ever and the music’s nothing but better for it.

Ray LaMontagne Tour Dates :: Ray LaMontagne News :: Ray LaMontagne Concert Reviews

JamBase | Hounded
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Greg Allman: Winter Tour Dates

TOUR INCLUDES NEW YEARS EVE IN WESTHAMPTON BEACH, NEW YORK


Gregg Allman

After wrapping up a tour with The Allman
Brothers Band
this fall, Gregg
Allman
will hit the road with his own band for a tour starting in late December. Check out all the dates
below.

Gregg Allman 2010/2011 Winter Tour Dates

12/28/10 Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania Penn’s Peak
12/29/10 Stamford, Connecticut Palace Theatre
12/31/10 Westhampton Beach, New York Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center

01/1/11 Tarrytown, New York Music Hall
01/4/11 Richmond, Virginia The National
01/5/11 Annapolis, Maryland Rams Head On Stage
01/7/11 Morristown, New Jersey Mayo Center for the Performing Arts
01/8/11 Kingston, New York Ulster Performing Arts Center
01/11/11 Red Bank, New Jersey Count Basie Theatre

01/12/11 Engelwood, New Jersey Bergen Performing Arts Center
01/14/11 Burlington, Vermont Flynn Center for the Performing Arts – Main Stage
01/15/11 New Bedford, Massachusetts Zeiterion Performing Arts Center

Visit www.GregAllman.com for further information and
click-throughs to ticket sales.

Gregg Allman
Tour Dates

::
Gregg Allman News
::
Gregg Allman
Concert
Reviews


Greg Giraldo Dead Following Weekend Overdose

Sad News, ‘Crunchers: Comedian Greg Giraldo died on Wednesday.The Queens native — who tickled our funny bones as a staple on The Howard Stern Show, judge on Last Comic Standing, and a regular at Comedy Central Roasts — passed away at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, NJ this afternoon. Greg’s death [...]

If you are reading this, then it’s all over

For me, this is a sad post to write, but the good news is that if I ever hit the publish button, then I am probably enjoying an adult beverage and watching the sunset with a smile on my face. … Continue reading

Open Source Consultants: Your Off Site Information Technology Department Posted By : Greg Soper

In today’s competitive business environment, it is the responsibility of business owners and managers to find the best possible way to service their customers and do so with as little expense as possible.

SugarCRM Software Development is Key in the Success of the Product Posted By : Greg Soper

Todays business world is more competitive than ever, and your customers can easily go across the street to your competitor if they are not satisfied that they are receiving the best possible service from you.

SugarCRM Consultants: A Valuable Element in the Software Product Posted By : Greg Soper

Whether a licensed proprietary software package or an open source product, a software system is only as good as the support behind it. SugarCRM consultants are committed to supporting your business and its software needs from start to finish.

SugarCRM: Premier Open Source Software for Your Business Posted By : Greg Soper

SugarCRM is the worlds leading open source customer relationship management system. A team of consultants and developers work together to create a system of software codes that will give your company the tools you need to create and personalize your own system of tracking customer information and offering superior customer service.

Open Source CRM: Your Answer to Improved Customer Service Posted By : Greg Soper

It is widely known that an effective customer relationship management system builds ultimately leads to higher levels of customer retention and more profit in the long run.

Open Source Methodology as it Relates to Software Posted By : Greg Soper

Open source is a theory or method in business that makes a companys sources and materials known and accessible in addition to its end product. This has become a prominent concept since the dawn of the internet and its information highway.

5 Podcasts that I never miss – 2010 Edition

In spite of the fact that Podcasting is dead, there are some interesting things to listen to out there. When the craze began I was stuck in my car at least 3 hours a day so I listened to all kinds of stuff. Now that I have been forced to pare down my list, these [...]

“Atlanta Housewife” NeNe Leakes Walks Out On TV Appearance With FOX

“NeNe don’t do FOX!”
NeNe Leakes, the saucy star of Bravo’s The Real Housewives of Atlanta, scrapped a scheduled appearance on the Big Apple’s Good Day New York Friday after realizing that the AM show airs on a FOX News affiliate.

According to reports, the outspoken Southern belle was set to promote her autobiography Never Make the [...]

Joanna Martin Explains How She Did A $60K Launch With A Tiny Email List

Press play to begin streaming the audio or right click the text link and choose save as or save link.

Download the MP3 [ 40 Minutes - 55 MB ]
Dr Joanna Martin used to be a practicing medical doctor in Tasmania, then left that role to become an aspiring actor. Today she is a professional speaker [...]

Greg Oden Nude Photos

Greg Oden in a picture probably wishing he were naked
Greg Oden has never seemed like the nude photo type, but here we are. As an Ohio State fan Oden struck me as being pretty soft spoken, and while pictures over the years have shown the Greg having a good time I’m still shocked to see [...]

Greg Norman, Chris Evert finalise divorce in secret

Australian golfer Greg Norman and wife of 18 months, former tennis champion Chris Evert, have reportedly made their split official with a secret divorce filed in an obscure Florida courthouse. The pair, who split last September, claimed in a court document that their brief 18-month

Great American Taxi To Release Reckless Habits On 03/02

GREAT AMERICAN TAXI’S SECOND ALBUM, RECKLESS HABITS

DUE OUT MARCH 2 THROUGH THIRTY TIGERS

Great American Taxi

In the past five years, Great American Taxi has become one of the best-known headliners on the jam band circuit; their uninhibited sound a swinging concoction of swampy blues, progressive bluegrass, funky New Orleans strut, Southern boogie, honky-tonk, gospel, and good old fashioned rock ‘n’ roll. That loose, anything-can-happen feel is the hallmark of Reckless Habits, the band’s second album set to be released March 2, 2010, which was recorded in Loveland, CO with producer Tim Carbone (Railroad Earth).

When banjo player Mark Vann of Leftover Salmon died of cancer in 2002, the band lost momentum. Salmon singer/guitarist/mandolinist Vince Herman had a few rough years before joining keyboardist Chad Staehly for a superstar jam to benefit the Rainforest Action Group in Boulder in March 2005. “We put together a dream band of the best local musicians for a one-off gig,” Herman recalls. “It worked so well we had to do it again, and again, and again.” Thus, Great American Taxi was born. The band’s current lineup includes Herman, Staehly, guitarists Jeff Hamer and Jim Lewin, bassist Brian Adams, and drummer Chris Sheldon.

Great American Taxi has been compared with roots rockers like New Riders of The Purple Sage, Grateful Dead, Wilco, Uncle Tupelo, The Byrds, and Little Feat. Herman finds the comparisons flattering. “We’re definitely connected to all the acts in the country/rock spectrum, as well as the spirit of Gram Parsons and Woody Guthrie,” he says. “We want to address the issues appropriate to our times, while making music that gets people up and moving.”

“The band is a true democracy,” Staehly adds. “We tinkered with the tunes on the road, with everybody having input. In the studio, Tim would suggest ideas to make them sound bigger and brighter.” Carbone brought in the Black Swan Singers — Sheryl Renee, CoCo Brown and Shelly Lindsey — to add gospel flavored backing vocals. He also brought the Peak to Freak Horns — Justin Jones, sax; Nathan Peoples, sax; Dan Sears, trumpet; and Dave Stamps, trombone — for some New Orleans-style brass accents, as well as pedal steel player Barry Sless (Dane Nelson Band, Moonalice) and banjo man Matt Flinner.

The 13 tracks on Reckless Habits gleefully stretch the boundaries of American roots music with a nod to both tradition and the future. The title track, for instance — Staehly’s salute to Gram Parsons — is as country as it is rock, a rousing honky-tonk tune with Carbone’s fiddle and Sless’ pedal steel kicking up the sawdust on a Saturday night dance floor. The titles of several other Parsons songs appear in the lyrics, and there’s a definite Cosmic Cowboy vibe to the band’s expansive playing.

Staehly’s “American Beauty” tips its hat to the Grateful Dead, and features an extended jam. Herman’s “Cold Lonely Town” is a slow R&B tune that describes life during long Colorado winters. The Black Swan Singers add smoky doo-wop asides to Herman’s poignant vocals. Carbone has described its swampy laid-back vibe as “‘A Day in the Life’ meets Gram Parsons in the high desert.”

The CD will be housed in a die-cut package designed by artist Greg Carr, who designed Steve Martin‘s The Crow. “Greg has a picture of nuns smoking on the cover, wearing Reckless Habits,” Herman explains. “We want to give people something unique, so they won’t just burn it and pass it on.”

And finally, the band’s cryptic name refers to Herman’s unique skiing style. “A friend of mine once said I came downhill looking like a great American taxi — a large, lumbering object that’s totally out of control and coming downhill towards you faster and faster. It seemed to fit the band’s m.o., so we adopted it.”

Great American Taxi is currently on tour; dates available here.