|
We always had music around the house when I was growing
up. My mom played piano but it was the music on the record player that
grabed my ears. I was exposed to pop, folk, country, jazz, and rock and
roll. Growing up in Mississippi I listened to a lot of soul music and
country was pretty popular too. Our family moved to Southeast Missouri about
the time I started High School. After graduation I moved to California to
live with my dad in L.A. and started to learn to play guitar. It was blues
that really made me want to learn to play and I was really into that for a
couple of years. My dad and I moved to Austin, TX in 98. I was continuing
College and hanging out. I met some folks that were way into the Dead and I
learned some improvisational skills playing with those folks. We had a dead
cover band in Austin in the early 90’s, although “band” may not be the best
way to describe what that was. Me and one of the guys from that group did a
duo thing later where we played some original songs. I had been writing
songs since before I could really even play. That segued into a couple
different garage bands where we made up a lot of the music too. Singing
wasn’t a big priority, but I liked writing songs.
I ended up moving up to Colorado where I had been
working summers and in the early 90’s went to the Telluride Bluegrass
Festival. I loved the music and it took a while but bluegrass ended up being
the music I was most drawn to. I had been in lots of bands where there never
was real focus on songs- things were mostly jams. I discovered a love of
playing bluegrass at a time when I was frustrated with various aspects of
playing electric music. I was drawn to the tight arrangements and
succinctness of the tunes. I had come full circle from my dead days.
Sweet Sunny South started as a group of avid listeners
of bluegrass—a few of us were DJs as well on public radio KVNF in Paonia. We
started learning to play the music together and eventually turned down the
road to Old-Time music. Along the way I had been writing songs or adapting
older ones to what our group was doing. When we first started Sweet Sunny
South I switched to playing mandolin (which has become my instrument of
choice, and when we started playing more old time music I picked up the
banjo and that’s where I am now. Writing songs and singing them, and playing
mandolin and banjo in a Bluegrass/Old-Time group. Playing this old music
has stirred up a life long interest in history which has been making its way
into my writing lately. I love all kinds of music.
I should also mention that I have two awesome young
boys ages two and a half and five and they are the coolest. (Rowan and Jobim)
Our bass player Laura Ingalls Wilder-n-Swingin (aka Shelley Gray) is my
partner of 10 years and I’m really excited to be playing music with her. She
puts the “Sweet” in Sweet Sunny South!
I play left handed. I had a lefty mandolin made for me
by Johann Brentrup
from Minneapolis Mn. It’s a wonderful instrument and just keeps getting
better. Check his work out sometime at
www.brentrup.com
The banjo I play belongs to a good friend, Ted Moniak.
It’s a Stelling Plectrum “Sunflower” model and it is also a wonderful
sounding instrument. I turned it upside down and restrung it. I tune it like
a mandolin and pick it with a pick. I get some interest in what I’m doing
with it—certainly not traditional but it seems to be becoming a definite
part of our sound. I do aspire to learn to frail some day.
|