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| Kevn Kinney |
| Photo © Frank Mullen |
"We've spent the better part of the last five years criss crossing the
deepest dirtiest beautiful American South. We are here to entertain. In
the bars, so filled with smoke you could hardly recognize a true fire.
People have come to see what you got. We show up for the show and wade
through a crowd as diverse as the music we're gonna play tonight.
There's a girl with a tattoo of Dale Earnharts number 3 on her neck.
Drifters, grifters, gonna be's and has beens. Country folk. City folk.
Workin' folk. 'Remember you can't be a folk singer if you got no folks
to sing to.' I said that... And these folks expect music all night
long... three sets... and requests...
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| Kevn Kinney, Dave V. Johnson and Bryan J. Howard |
| Photo © Frank Mullen |
This is where you learn your 'chops'... tried true and set. It's where
the legends begin. Jimi Hendrix with Little Richard at the Royal Peacock
on sweet Auburn Avenue, the Allman Brothers in underground Atlanta, The
Satellites at Hedgens. And if you want it, there it is, go get it and
you play all night till you can hardly breathe and fingers hurt and you
can hardly think through the heat and the there's ten drunk people
talkin' at you at the same time. Your grace is tested.
But there's always too, that couple in the back sitting quietly at a
booth and you can tell from their glances toward you they get it. This
is where this album comes from. And I love it.
One of the easiest records I ever made, just doing what you do. When in
doubt just be yourself.
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| Dave V. Johnson |
| Photo © Frank Mullen |
The opening track 'Comin' Round Again' is an observance of the Katrina
disaster on the Gulf Coast of America. A place the band and myself know
well. It, I think, echoes the frustration I felt on my visits on
conversations. Listen on to the end to feel the rumble of the hurricane
and the walls of water breaching the levees.
A lot of what I write is about how I think America is better than this.
I think people always look at their own communities and countries and
feel like it could always be a little better. These reflections can be
found in songs like 'Tell Him Something For Me' and 'Covered By An
Underground Umbrella'.
There are a few different styles on 'Comin Round Again' as will be
obvious on the second song, a country song entitled 'The Country Song'.
A song for those at home that wait. Lovers, miles from each other but
comforted by the fact that looking up to the night sky's stars, is
something they can see together. A song for soldiers, truckers and
circus folk.
'Kinda Like You' is a song about a writer who's trying to write the
perfect love song. A personal favorite featuring Bryan J Howard's
euphonium recording debut.
It is my hope that I've captured the feel of the Southern Appalacian
mountain range on '40 Miles Of Mountain Road' and 'Chattahoochie Coochie
Man'.
The Chattahoochie river begins at the foot of the Appalachians and runs
through Georgia and Alabama. The lyrics for 'Forty Miles' were written
by my older brother Mikel, who walked the Appalachian trail as a boy and
is now one of America's best kept secrets, now working on his second
album. He's kind of a cross between Hoagie Carmichael, Fats Waller,
Scott Joplin and Django and Stepan combined. An obvious mentor of mine.
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| Bryan J. Howard - Woody Guthrie Folk Festival 2005 |
| Photo © Melissa M. Bugg |
'I Thought By Now (That You'd Figure It Out)' is one of the audience
favorites, a simple dancable ditty with, as always, a conscience.
Inspired by a cross between The Who and The Allman Brothers.
'Sometimes I Wish I Didn't Care' and 'I Wonder' are acoustic
reflections, an example of songs I sing to myself, be it on the stage or
in the bed.
Another favorite at the live shows is a neo gospel rave up 'Blues On Top
Of Blues'. We get the whole crowd singing... ' got blues on top of blues
sometimes you feel like the whole world's comin' down around you, but
I've got LOVE on top of LOVE, it's gonna help me rise above from these
blues on top of blues, on top of blues, on top of blues...'
It is our hope that for 45 minutes we have brought into our world.
Music is our world and we love it. We see ourselves as a band influenced
by our personal idols such as The Who, The Kinks, the Memphis and
Detroit Stax Motown experience and as always throw in a little of the
staples like Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, and, yes, a little John
Denver.
We do it for the love of it and I think it shows.
GOD BLESS"