Tag Archives: Acoustic Café Folk Series

Rodney Crowell, a founding father of Americana, comes to St. Cecilia Music Center’s Acoustic Café Series

Rodney Crowell’s “Triage” album cover. (Supplied)

By D.A. Reed, WKTV Contributing Writer

ken@wktv.org

If you know Rodney Crowell, who will be coming to St. Cecilia Music Center’s Royce Auditorium Nov. 12, you know how great a singer/songwriter he is. If you don’t, you have undoubtedly heard people that you do recognize sing his songs.

Crowell has won numerous awards, including two GRAMMYs and six Americana Music Association Awards as well as their Lifetime Achievement for Songwriter award. This last accolade resonates deeply with a man who has stacked up 15 number one hits including six of his own, and dozens of other chart-topping hits for an impressively diverse array of artists including Emmylou Harris, Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Keith Urban, Bob Seger, Etta James, and the Grateful Dead.

Some of Crowell’s written classics include “Bull Rider,” performed by Johnny Cash in 1979, and “She’s Crazy for Leavin’,” co-written with Guy Clark and performed by Guy Clark in 1981. More recently, Tim McGraw performed “Please Remember Me,” written by Crowell and Will Jennings.

Often described as Nashville royalty, Crowell will be of the St. Cecilia’s Acoustic Café Series with a live performance beginning at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are available at scmc-online.org or by calling 616-459-2224.

Crowell does not dwell in the past, however, and he has an impressive list of his own recordings.

With more than 40 years of American roots music under his belt, Crowell has 18 albums to his name, with his most recent album, Rodney Crowell: Triage, released in June of this year.

Rodney Crowell in concert. (Supplied)

“This new collection of songs was written during the great political, climate and economic upheaval that has marked recent years,” it states on Crowell’s website in reference to the new album. “The noise of that chaos encouraged the songwriter to go inside for solace and answers. The result is this series of songs that contend with these themes but approach them from a place of healing love and solution. That they are being released while we find ourselves walking through a global pandemic, is a gift of perfect timing.”

   

On song is particularly personal to Crowell, and yet “expansive enough for everyone to relate” — “Transient Global Amnesia Blues” — as he explains on his website.

“One morning after a long walk, I asked my wife, Claudia, the same question nine times before she loaded me into the car and sped off to the hospital. The next thing I remember is being shoved into an MRI machine. Transient Global Amnesia, a benign form of amnesia that in ninety-eight percent of cases never returns, was the diagnosis — an overnight stay in the hospital the prescribed treatment.

“The next morning my daughter texted a photograph of a sunflower growing on a piece of driftwood on the Thames River. I had most of the song written before leaving the hospital at noon. Four days later I had a finished recording.”

After the Rodney Crowell concert St. Cecilia Music Center’s Acoustic Café Series continues through the fall, winter and into spring 2022. This fall, Leo Kottke is scheduled for Friday, Nov. 19; the Milk Carton Kids on Thursday, Dec. 2; and Watkins Family Hour on Thursday, Dec. 16.

“It’s so exciting to have traveling artists and live audiences back in the building,” Cathy Holbrook, St. Cecilia Music Center executive & artistic director, said in supplied material.

Special pandemic policy

SCMC currently requires proof of fully vaccinated status, or a negative COVID test taken within 48 hours, to attend a concert at the SCMC venue. Attendees need to bring photo ID and proof of vaccination, or a negative test, the night of a concert.
 

In areas with substantial and high transmission, the CDC recommends that everyone (including fully vaccinated individuals) wear a mask in public indoor settings to help prevent the spread of COVID-19, especially the Delta variant, and to protect others. To that end, SCMC is requiring that all attendees wear a mask while in the building. They will continue to monitor the COVID environment and may change policies at any time if necessary.

If you have tickets to an upcoming performance and are unwilling or unable to abide by this policy, please contact the SCMC box office for a refund at kelly@scmc-online.org a minimum of 48 hours prior to the concert date.

For more information on all shows at St. Cecilia, visit SCMC-online.org.

WKTV’s K.D. Norris contributed to this story.

Milk Carton Kids new-release support tour includes stop at St. Cecilia Music Center

“The Kids”, an American indie folk duo consisting of Joey Ryan and Kenneth Pattengale, are from California, have been performing since 2011 and are what one reviewer called “absolute geniuses in close-harmony.” (Supplied)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

When St. Cecilia Music Center announced last week the addition of The Milk Carton Kids to its 2018-19 folk series concert lineup, I remembered the duo’s brief appearance on the concert film “Another Day, Another Time: Celebrating the Music of Inside Llewyn Davis” but, embarrassingly, realized I knew practically nothing about the duo.

 

Then, in researching the group’s latest release —  All the Things That I Did and All the Things That I Didn’t Do, which came out June 29 — I found out the new music was produced by Joe Henry.

 

That was all I needed to know.

 

The Milk Carton Kids will appear as part of St. Cecilia’s impressive and not-done-yet Acoustic Café Folk Series on Feb. 28, 2019.

 

“The Kids”, an American indie folk duo consisting of Joey Ryan and Kenneth Pattengale, are from California, have been performing since 2011 and are what one reviewer called “absolute geniuses in close-harmony.”

 

Nominated in 2015 for a Grammy for Best American Roots Performance, Best Folk Album of the year in 2013, and winner of The Americana Music Association for Best Duo/Group of the year in 2014, the Kids have just started touring in support of All the Things That I Did and All the Things That I Didn’t Do.

 

“Musically we knew we were going to make the record with a bigger sonic palette,” Ryan said in supplied material. “It was liberating to know we didn’t have to be able to carry every song with just our two guitars.”

 

And if you want to change our sonic palette, whether your a musician or a listener, there may be no better producer than Henry — in the last 10 years he has worked with the likes of the Madonna, Rosanne Cash, the Carolina Chocolate Drops (Rhiannon Giddens one-time band), Over the Rhine, Bonnie Raitt and Billy Bragg (one-time with Wilco); to just scratch the surface.

 

And Henry’s own musical work is not shabby either, as evidenced by last year’s Thrum. (Although my favorite is 1999’s Fuse.)

 

But we were talking about the Milk Carton Kids …

 

The Kids have proven in-demand collaborators, including musical partnerships with Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, Dar Williams, and Chris Hillman, as well as teaming with T-Bone Burnett and the Coen Brothers for the acclaimed concert documentary “Another Day, Another Time: Celebrating the Music of Inside Llewyn Davis” — the concert documentary derived from the final Coen Brothers film “Insider Llewyn Davis”. In 2016, the band joined forces with Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, Patty Griffin, Buddy Miller, and Robert Plant for the sold out Lampedusa: Concerts for Refugees tour.

 

The new project marks the first time that the acoustic duo, Ryan and Pattengale, have brought a band into the studio with them.

 

“We wanted to do something new,” Pattengale said in supplied material. “We had been going around the country yet another time to do the duo show, going to the places we’d been before. There arose some sort of need for change.”

 

The Kids’ trademark two-part harmonies “ride acoustic guitars high above the haunting landscape created by the presence of the band, as if Americana went searching for a lost America,” according to supplied material.

 

Produced by Henry, All the Things … was recorded in October 2017 in the Sun Room at House of Blues Studio in Nashville. Musicians who joined them there included Brittany Haas on violin and mandolin, Paul Kowert and Dennis Crouch on bass, Jay Bellerose on drums, Levon Henry on clarinet and saxophone, Nat Smith on cello, Pat Sansone on piano, mellotron, and Hammond organ, Russ Pahl on pedal steel and other guitars and Lindsay Lou and Logan Ledger as additional singers.

 

“By extending that language to a band and reimagining the boundaries around what acoustic-centered two-part harmony can sound like, All The Things That I Did and All The Things That I Didn’t Do carries listeners down a river and out into the open sea,” Pattengale said.

 

Can’t wait to catch up with the Kids, but, must admit, that title sounds like a line from one of Henry’s trademark unfathomable songs.

 

The new announcement of The Milk Carton Kids brings the St. Cecilia folk series to four concerts, with more to be announced: Pokey LaFarge on Oct. 4, The Lone Bellow on Nov. 29, and Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn Feb. 9, 2019.

 

Tickets for The Milk Carton Kids are $40 and $45. All tickets can be purchased by calling St. Cecilia Music Center at 616-459-2224 or visiting the box office at 24 Ransom Ave. NE. Tickets can also be purchased online at scmc-online.org.