A Conversation with Altamesa

by Al Giesler

We had a chance to catch up with Evan Charles & Sean Faires of Altamesa before their single release party at the Mohawk last week in Austin. “Shadow On Your Heart” is the next installment in ‘From The Idol Frontier’ a collection of singles, narratives, and artifacts to be released in non sequential form.

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Luck: Singles -- it’s kinda old school right, that’s how music used to get out?

Sean Faires: There's two things happening here...the reality that we’re an unsigned band, you know, we’re an independent band so we don’t have a limitless budget to put out a record and then put the push behind it that we would like to. We don't have money to pay for publicity and things like that and you gotta, kinda, beat the streets a little more. So we decided we’d try to build our audience a little...give ‘em a little of the music that we’ve been putting together, bit by bit, and give them a little more stuff to sink their teeth into.

Luck: ‘Cause it’s all building up to something...

SF: Yeah, it’s building up to the release of the full record.

Luck: And that's slotted for the fall?

Evan Charles: Yeah...(for) fall or, at latest, February of next year.

SF: It’s hard to kinda scratch all your creative itches at once. [The project] is kind of an opportunity for us to show off some of the other stuff that we do and things like that.

EC: There’s a chance to show that the record can be taken as more of a heavily thematic piece than otherwise might be apparent; to create a cohesive narrative strand of a character throughout the songs. Not that it was necessarily crafted as a concept record or anything, but they were all written for the most part in the same batch of time...

SF:  It’s pretty highly stylized to invoke a certain feeling… a territory...

EC: The songs...music should explore different facets of the human personality, and we have a lot of different moods on the record. So it gives a chance to show the different elements of a person's psyche with the written word elements.

Luck: It’s really an art piece though. You’ve got the music, the words...

SF: Yeah, that's kinda what we want to present with this record. We are trying to do a little more than start a new band and churn out our first record and move on. We want to show that we are heavily invested in it.

The band started releasing the singles in February, and have recently been hitting iconic Austin venues; which also fits into the larger narrative of ‘Idol Frontier’:

Luck: Tonight you are playing a gig at the Mohawk to celebrate the release of the latest single “Shadow On Your Heart”,  and the first 100 people in the door are going home with the single?

EC: If they take it...I hope so.

SF: If we can convince them to take it out of the suitcase.

Luck: Well, that should be pretty easy I would think.

SF: We tried to choose the [venues] appropriately to be a good setting for the single. Our first one was “The New West” and so we did it at the biggest, best honky tonk we could find! [The White Horse]

EC: We did “Perfect Path” at [Hotel] Vegas. I guess we’ve gone down a few windy paths after Vegas.

SF: [For] “Minor Vice,”...the color scheme I chose, everything, was kinda inspired by the Continental Club. it was the place where people congregated back in the day and did some … stuff, so yeah it kinda fit our motiff for that song and this place. When I’m thinking about the Mohawk I always think of the times I had at the Mohawk, like being young and seeing concerts and this particular song is more about a romance, more of an upbeat whimsical thing which fit this room a bit better… It’s such a great place to see a show especially when they built the second tier. It got really fun to play on the outside stage, feels like the people are right there.

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Luck: So each single has a number, an order but…

EC: We released them 1, 4, 3 and now we are on number 2.

Luck: Is that to throw us all off?

SF: More of a nod to the collector geeks, to get the entire narrative, you won't be able to watch episodically, you've got to go one and then expect two right after… you got to go to all 6 of the shows to collect them all. That was kinda part of the incentive to give them a little value, if somebody they were so interested and I’m not sure if everyone is or who all wants to go seek out all 6 but for those people that might be, that's kinda why we did it that way.

Luck: As a collector I appreciate all that.

SF: Yeah that's good we were hoping there be a few people out there.

Luck: Sean, you are doing the covers for each single. Will you also do the full length cover or is that still TBD?

SF: To be determined, likely depending on... part of the reason harkens back to what I was saying earlier about being an independent band and doing our own art saves us a buck.

 

Luck: You recorded this series of songs over at Skeleton Farm Studio in Leander?

EC: Our friend Jonas Wilson who’s kinda sort of got his hands in a lot of different things… he's the type of guy that can play any instrument. He's in a band called The Midnight Stroll with Aaron Behrens (Ghostland Observatory).  Aaron has a sidehouse on his property that's really tall room, great acoustics, Jonas was in between studios so he just moved all his gear over to Aaron's place. Jonas is kinda one of our true believer, type of friends. You know just no matter how he can, really wants to help us out and help us make music happen, he's really the whole reason the band even started.

Luck: I saw an interview, and it sounds like he told ya to get going, in simple terms.

EC:Basically, yeah. It was just was a really comfortable situation cause not a lot of bands record up there. It’s operating as a studio, but it’s also just a friends situation & not to mention it’s close enough... I prefer recording in the country, less distracting, quieter, more room to think.

Luck: When the band first came together, you two (Sean and Evan) took a trip to west Texas -

SF: Well we went all the way to California actually, we went on a few trips over a couple years and it was definitely that territory & that region that was fresh in our head when all this stuff was getting written.

EC:Yeah I definitely wrote a bulk of the songs after the first time I went to west Texas. it was to go play as a member of Nic Armstrong & The Thieves in 2012, we went to go play Trans Pecos Fest at El Cosmico (Marfa, TX) and that was just like a truly magical experience especially for my first time out there. I came back from that and kinda just like without really thinking about it...had the feels sink in, the feel of that place sink in. Driving to Marfa, driving to Monterey and back, just kinda soaked in that atmosphere.

Luck: Kinda that long lonely road?

SF: Yeah for sure.

EC: Absolutely

SF: You see a lot of different walks of life out there, especially people that are out there kinda hiding you know? And you happen to find em. We got some of those experience and things like that… It's a good bed or good foundation for creation of the band I think.

EC:For the concept if there is an overarching concept - the big open spots of land

Luck: What music is inspiring you currently?

SF: I’m the first to say I’m the worst at listening to new music. I’m stuck and still so satisfied and hungry for what I call the source. So most of my seeking is backwards.

EC: As far what’s influenced the sound of the band, our own points of reference of what we try to sound like are more backward, I kinda try and see what we're doing, between Sean and my guitar parts, we try to keep it really fluid and interlocking and loose, allowing for happy accidents to happen. So in that way it’s almost like a Crazy Horse type of deal but I also - at least for the initial first couple years of the band, and maybe this changes as time goes by but - I try to write tightly structured songs, just so that… you don't wanna feel like you’re wasting anyone's time, so I try to compose it as tightly as possible and play it loose.

I’ve been really getting into Daniel Romano and over SXSW I ended up having her dinner with Caroline Rose who just put out her record. After we ended up eating in my friends backyard with her and I got her record it’s pretty amazing. Beyond that keep an ear to stuff thats coming out like if Nikki Lane album comes out i'm gonna try to check out the songs. We have a guy in town named Ramsay Midwood who is fucking awesome -

Luck: You've done some gigs with him in the past?

EC: Yeah we played with him once and we've done a few more at Sam Town Point, his bar. He's kinda like the JJ Cale of our town, no one else really does that or does it as well. Beyond that people in town like Booher is amazing , (Otis) Taylor is amazing , Jesse Ebaugh who we did one with with. He's like the new Burrito Brothers. I find most of the new music that I get into is like local people and trying to hear what everyone is doing so I can kinda see what we are having to stack up against really.

SF:See what's relevant.

Luck: Yeah pound for pound in this town…

EC: It’s a high bar.

SF: Yeah and that's another thing too when I find myself watching new bands. I find myself going out to watching the guitar player dude that I know is in the band, see my guy kill it tonight… I'm guilty of spending too much attention watching the musicians around town, looking at the trees a lot and missing the forest a ton.

EC:  There's a lot to sink your teeth into.

SF:  It's so saturated, you walk into a building... there’s music there.

Luck: How do you feel about the artist community?

EC: Amazing, so supportive. As I was saying, on this single we are putting out tonight we did and going back to reference points, a huge reference point was the Jeff Lynne produced Tom Petty stuff. This one, we kinda tried to shoot for that airy 12 string vibe that they did on “Free Falling” and “Won't Back Down” and the way they accomplished that - have you seen that Tom Petty doc?

Luck: That 4 hour and change doc? Oh yeah!

EC: It’s like Jeff Lynne, George Harrison, Petty, and Roy Orbison all with 12 string guitars around one mike strumming the same chord you know? We tried to do our own version of that with two 12 string and a 6 string. The only reason I was able to do that is I was able to call up Jonathan Terrell and Andy Bianculli who’s in Star parks and those guys graciously lent me their 12 string guitar so we could chase this idea. Just one instance of musical community being really supportive and interlocking. I think everyone does what they can to be a solid foundation for each other.

 

Luck: How was your Luck experience? You’ve been out a few times now.  

SF:It's probably the single event I look forward to the most every year. A large part of that is because of all the artists that are there and we’re all pretty much connected. Most of the people that have played Luck, when the new people get on to Luck they’ve come off the hot tips of musicians. It's all great to get everyone together and Luck is set up so everyone gets to mingle whether it be artist to artist or with the people, it's just a good scene.

Luck: You have called your music as “cosmic american and rock and roll.” We’ve been talking about Americana at Luck and what that really means in terms of genre.

SF:I think the kinda story that were telling is maybe more of the genre than the music were playing. I think that probably lends us more to being placed in that Amerciana realm. What I feel is we are a rock band and right now we are writing stories about the west. We take some of the sounds of the west and put them into rock n roll music. For the most part we are closer to a psych rock band than an Americana band.

Luck: I think if you put labels or limitations that curbs your…

SF:It really does and especially with the word Americana, I just have my own experience from growing up playing it, really kind of pigeon holes you... That's the cool thing with Luck, especially the last couple of years the lineups have definitely not been solely Americana.

The term alone is fitting because Americana as its own separate from music term implies story of America. Anything relative to the folklore, history of America. In that sense we can fit into it.

Like most conversations these days, we eventually drifted into politics .  

EC: It’s hard to take your eye of politics isn’t it?

SF: The things that are inspiring the most is just looking at the day to day heroes and I think you can't really say anything good comes out of terrible things but the situations we are dealing with now are raising awareness at least. I mean... shit, I get a little teary eyed over pro football players taking knees and things like that. It's a big thing to put yourself out there and risk your career, your neck, its right especially today.

That's the other inspiring, one good thing from the internet I gleen is, stumbling upon somebody doing the righteous work out there, using their creativity to drive positive changes.

But eventually we got back to the heart of things.

SF:There's just so much content out there that if you’re not willing to kinda play the social media game as it’s played today… we don’t mind taking pictures of ourselves but were not running around... We try to do our best to be present all the time but it's hard to cut through all the content even when you are doing that all the time. So what really wanted to do with this presentation is just do the most hard work that we could. The most genuine artists’ art and presentation that we could and hope that the effort sticks through.

EC: And just hope that its perceived as a unique approach. You know, because there's so much that you want to give anyone seeing it any little reason to turn their head, perk their ear up, well this is, their doing something different, even if its not musically different.

SF: At the end, if you know it doesnt turn into this larger mass of success thing, at least we have this stuff we created, you know we put our whole effort into something we’re gonna be pleased with.

Luck: I think the hard work brings the audience.

Let's hope so.

Luck: If not and you've enjoyed your ride…that’s really the goal. Still, it’s pretty courageous and big risk to do what you love, sometimes it pays off in spades and sometimes its a slow return but it’s your choice right?

EC: I’ve never seen it as a choice honestly, I’ve had the luxury to be able to still live and be able to do music, sometimes by a very thin margin but still be able to do it. But I’ve never gotten to the point where I was able to choose whether or not. It’s always been plotting ahead in whatever fashion was doable at the time.

Never giving it a second thought, I don’t want to claim the term courageous you know, I don’t see it that way. It's a way of operating in the world in a way that makes you feel that you are continually trying to discover yourself and shine new light on yourself and those around you, the world around you... that has made it not a choice, that has made it like a mandate or something.

SF: Yeah if my girlfriend ask me well are you gonna stop playing music, what's your plan b and I’m like plan b would be to paint pictures (chuckles) but I still got to learn how to draw.

Altamesa will circle back to The White Horse for the 5th single release on August 10th. Head to their Bandcampto download the 4 previous singles.

 

 

A Conversation with Luck and Buck Meek

by Elle Hussey

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In support of his new album, Buck Meek, Buck Meek played Rough Trade Records last week as a part of the Northside Festival (NYC’s own mini-SXSW) with Potted Plant, Katie Von Schleicher and Sam Evian. We walked down to East River State Park between soundcheck and the show and watched pickup soccer games as we chatted about his new self-titled release, his writing process, Luck, and his secret surf-punk band Pencil. Read and listen to the interview below.

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Luck: So this new album, it's your first solo release in three years?

Buck: Yeah, since..I guess so!

Luck: So what was the writing process like?

Buck: Well I've been, I'd say half the songs I wrote over the course of the last three years. on tour and for the moments in between tour. Just, you know, whenever I could find a quiet moment. I'm generally a really slow writer. The first seed may come really quickly and then it'll take me like a couple months to finish the song. Or often as I get to know someone I'll write...the just the song will unfold. Whether I'm getting to know someone or getting to know myself, it'll unfold slowly generally. But last year a group of my friends did a songwriting project where we had to write a song every day for a week, and then a song every week for a year. and it was a really incredible group of people.

Luck: And you stuck with it?

Buck: Yeah well I didn't make it the whole year but I made it the whole week and then I made it like four months, five months. and then Big Thief was so busy that I...I really have no excuse but I was on tour with Big Thief so...every day of the month. I dropped the ball but nonetheless it was really good for me because it forced me to let go of my self-judgement and just learn how to rely on my instincts more. And actually, like half the songs from this album came from that. Or at least half; a seed of them came and then I edited them really quickly after.

 

Luck: So do you have like an ideal writing environment? Like “this is where I feel most comfortable”?

 

Buck: Yeah. Probably the river. To be honest, it's probably the river in Texas. The Blanco River in Wimberly is my ideal writing environment.

 

Luck: What about recording? Do you have a space you always go or?

Buck: Well this record - I always record in different studios - this record was made in three different studios. Rivington 66, which is in the Lower East Side of New York; and then Figure 8 which is in Brooklyn; and the Leafy Lounge which is in Manhattan. And they're all really beautiful studios, but I think ideally I would like to work in a studio in the woods. I've never made a solo record out in the woods but Big Thief made a record at this studio called Outlier Music, which is up in upstate New York, and we're gonna record at this place called Sonic Ranch outside of El Paso this summer which is on 300,000 acres of pecan orchards - like on the Mexican border. I have yet to record there but I think it's gonna be my favorite studio on earth...like right on the Rio Grande.

Luck: That's so cool. You can pick pecans while you're out there...make some pecan pie. Where do you find yourself the most inspired?

Buck: Hmm..most inspired..I find myself most inspired in nature, with my friends generally. Like, swimming with my friends or walking through the woods.

Luck: What were your influences for this album? Was there anything you were constantly listening to?

Buck:Hmm...yeah, I would say Michael Hurleyand Dan Reeder. I discovered Dan Reeder about halfway through writing this record. He was a big influence. And I read a ton of David Foster Wallace during the writing process - I read Infinite Jest and a bunch of his short stories. My friends -- honestly, I think my friends, again, are my biggest inspiration -- and in every way, like, my friends in New York City like Twainand Adrianne Lenker, of course, of Big Thief and my friend Mikey Buishas who has a band called Really Big Pinecone- they’re incredible. And Sam Evian, who I'm playing with tonight, and Wilder Makerand Renata Zeiguerand Ian Davis of the band Relatives- Ian and Katie have a band called Relatives. My community here and then also my community from Texas. The Kerrville Folk Festival's been a big inspiration for me and often when I'm writing I have those people in mind. As an audience...as a projected audience almost, or a muse of sorts.

 

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Luck: Are there albums that you find yourself always coming back to?

Buck: Trying to think of one that I come back to after my whole life, since my childhood. In the last few years albums that I've come back to a lot are...John Prine's Souvenirsand let's see, Neil Young's Zuma. But again I mostly listen...to my friends more than anything. Like, all those records I just listed are the records I listen to every day.

Luck: That's so awesome. So, I've noticed that there's an ongoing theme in your albums of, like, specific names and characters - are those fictional? Are they people in your life, or is it different every time?

Buck: They're based on true events. Some of them are combinations of various people in my life...that I've combined into an archetype of sorts. People that are close to me, and people that I may have met in passing. And then some of them are literally based on people in my life.

Luck: Do they know?

Buck: Yeah, some of them do.

Luck: How did they take that? Do they like it?

Buck: Well, for instance - I've never told anyone this - but my song "Best Friend" on the record... it's from the perspective of one of my best friend's dog. I won't name him, but his dog ran away. Actually I'll tell you the whole story. We can go back a little bit. I first met my friend in Texas, we were pedi-cabbing a Dallas Cowboys game. We pedi-cabbed in Austin together and we went up to pedi-cab [the] game and we were staying at this hotel and he got a call from his grandmother that his dog had run away. We were kind of acquaintances and buds at this point, but that night he got the news that his dog ran away and he grieved really deeply with me. We shared a hotel room, and like that was the moment we really became friends. He grew up in Arkansas and his dog was with his grandmother in Northern Arkansas where he lived, and he had come into Texas to work and his dog ran away, probably looking for him. So that song is definitely inspired by that dog, and also what kind of led me to imagine the kind of impossible story of a dog running away to go back to nature.

Luck:  Yeah, to go back to their natural habitat. Did your friend love the tribute to his dog?

Buck: Oh yeah, that was your question. I think that he...I don't think he loved it, no. I think it makes him feel really sad. Or at least it makes him feel like really bittersweet.

 

Luck: Another song on the album, Flight 9525, I was actually living in Barcelona when that happened. So I like remember all that happening and it being on the news and everything. So what drew you to that story?

Buck: Well...

Luck: Dark turn, dark turn...

Buck: I didn't have any direct relationships with anyone on that plane or anything like that. But it was a time in my life where I was really coming to understand that humans often, of course, lash out from their own pain. You know, like, when we hurt someone just because we're hurting ourselves and...like, it was a time my life when in terms of that with my own relationships - coming to a point of acceptance and empathy with the people in my life and the people outside of my life - that hurt each other. you know? Of course that is an extremely tragic example that has no...there's no way out of that one - but in so many cases it's preventable with care. And I've learned a lot about how to respond when people, when anyone, acts out of aggression towards me. It’s my intention, at least...to receive it with love and try to diffuse it. I guess that song was kind of part of my process of understanding that.

Luck: Yeah, that makes sense. I feel like a lot of times in tragedy we learn more about ourselves, and how we react around other people. On a lighter note - let's talk about Texas. We established we both grew up there so how has that influenced your writing and your sound?

Buck: Well, I'm sure in so many ways beyond my understanding I think we're a product of our environment to a certain degree. But consciously I grew up -- like my dad took me to see a lot of music growing up and we’re in Houston -- so I grew up listening to tons of blues as a kid at the Big Easy, D’Anton’s Seafood...like, seeing Lightning Hopkins’s cousin play.

Luck: My dad plays in a blues band in Paris, TX.

Buck: Yeah, that music is just in the air down there. My first job was...when I was 15 I worked at a mexican restaurant in Wimberly, TX called Juan Enrique’s washing dishes and the bartender, this dude Brandon....was an incredible blues guitar player and he kinda took me under his wing. He was the first person to, you know, take me and really teach me how to play the blues in the shed behind his house. He taught me how to drink beer. He hired me for my first show in Wimberly. So that was a big influence for sure. And then, the Kerrville Folk Festival. I started going to Kerrville when I was 15. Have you ever been out there?

Luck: I haven’t.

Buck: Ah, it’s incredible. It’s this beautiful ranch three hours west of Austin and this festival’s been happening since 1972. It’s a gathering for songwriters. It’s called a folk festival but I really see it as a songwriting festival. There’s a stage and they have shows on the weekend but the campground is what I go for. It’s just this incredible collection of people from all over the state and some from all over the country that come just sit around the fire and sing their songs and catch up with each other through their songs every year. You know, some people have been going for like 50 years. They really just feel like a family, and I started going out there...before I’d ever written a song, and I think that was by far the biggest influence on me as a songwriter.

Luck:That’s cool. Did you feel a big change when you came to New York?

Buck: Yeah, definitely.

Luck: Everybody does, right?

Buck: Yeah well, first I went to Boston. I went to school in Boston to study music.

Luck: At Berklee?

Buck: Yeah I went to Berklee cause after Brandon I met this dude Django Porter in Texas who was ironically incredible at Manouche jazz which is the politically correct term. And he took me under his wing as a Manouche jazz pompe rhythm player. And I kinda went to Berklee as an extension of that, to pursue jazz. And I got there and, like, wasn’t interested in modern jazz as much - kinda sidetracked into songwriting and playing rock n roll and that brought me to New York. And New York just like blew my mind. ‘Cause coming from a place like Texas where there’s so many great songwriters...most of my heroes down there are more in an older tradition. And then coming here and seeing all these younger kids writing songs with no traditional structure and just really like breaking the rules -- breaking every rule musically -- and that was really exciting for me. I think that’s been a really big part of my writing process evolving: taking that root from Texas and then bending it and like molding it to, you know, some unknown place.

Luck: So do you stay here most often?

Buck: Well, I lived here for six years, and three years ago I started touring full time with Big Thief. First with my duo with Adrianne which became Big Thief, and then the last year both with Big Thief and my solo project. So, I haven’t had an apartment for three years. My stuff’s been in a storage unit since like 2015, 2016.

Luck: There’s no stopping that in the foreseeable future, huh?

Buck:No, we’re only gonna get busier. I kinda, I spend my time off between New York and Austin mostly. Or Wimberly. I go home.

Luck: Yeah, that’s good. So what was it like for you coming to Luck? You’ve been twice right?

Buck: Yeah, the first year with Big Thief and then the second with my solo project. You know, it really did feel like home because...

Luck: It’s right there.

Buck:It’s the land I grew up in. It’s like 30 minutes from the house I grew up in. And Krause Springs - have you ever been out there?

Luck: Yeah

Buck: Krause springs is my favorite swimming hole in the world. So we actually swam there the day before and I felt very comfortable there. And it’s such a beautiful festival. I felt at home like in the environment and also as a songwriter there, you know? It’s such a killer bill.

Luck: We love to hear that. It’s what we want for everybody.

Buck: Yeah it’s one of my favorites, Luck Reunion and Pickathon.

Luck: Yeah, Pickathon is great too.

Buck: Those are my two favorites. Well, so far.

Luck: That’s awesome.

Buck: Very different, but...

Luck: Yeah, for sure. So, Luck is often perceived as an Americana festival, though we don’t necessarily describe ourselves as such -- and I’m sure you have experience being associated with that genre as well. So what does “Americana” mean to you?

Buck: Well, I have a pretty tough time with genre tags to be honest.

Luck: Yeah, that was my next question.

Buck: Yeah I don’t like anything.

Luck: How do you feel being genre-associated shapes music for better or for worse?

Buck: Well, I see that it’s necessary. I think...I guess it’s necessary. For marketing and for...promotion. But I feel like its really destructive in people’s perception of music, though. Like, it’s really volatile. Especially when music journalists rely on it to...you know, for their own writing. Yeah, one of my favorite quotes is an old Louis Armstrong quote. Something like: “All music is folk music unless it’s horse music.” Yeah I try to live by that one.

Luck: Yeah, that’s kind of our outlook, as well... like everything is Americana. You know? Like anything that’s an American story is Americana.

Buck: Exactly. Anything that came out of America is American music I guess.

Luck: Right

Buck: But also America is like an imaginary place.

Luck: It’s all just uh, just a mystery.

Buck: I mean I feel...here, I’ll be more specific. I disagree with general genre tags. I’m okay with really specific intelligent genre tags. Like, for instance, Texas is a much smaller region in America of course and and there is a distinction I hear in Texas songwriters coming from that place. Like, if they’re writing about Texas and they really come from that place, I’m okay. I’m okay with myself being called...having Texas in the tag somewhere because I really am influenced by my life there. But America is such a huge place and there’s so many different kinds of people here. It’s too general.

Luck: Yeah, I definitely agree. What’s the last thing you read/saw/listened to, whether that’s art or a podcast or music, that moved you?

Buck: Hmm whoa. The last thing? The last song I listened to in the car on the way here was Connie Converse’s “Playboy of the Western World”. That always moves me. I go back to that record a lot. And the last podcast I listened to, yesterday, was “Cocaine and Rhinestones”

Luck: Ohh yeah.

Buck: The Ernest Tubb story really, that moved me.

Luck: So obviously you’re gonna get the Adrianne question a lot - but what is the process for you with her and how do you tell the difference between what’s for Big Thief and what’s for you?

Buck: Well at this point, to go back, we met each other in 2012. And we started collaborating as a duo, mixing our material. And she would play lead guitar for me, for my songs... and vice versa, and we sang harmony on everything, and we toured like that for a couple years. And then we started hearing, like, a real distinction in our writing styles so we separated our projects. So technically Big Thief is her writing project and Buck Meek is mine. That’s really it, and at this point she doesn’t play in my band. So that’s the distinction - is that they’re my songs and I think they’re very different.

Luck: Yeah, they are.

Buck: And she does, she collaborates with me as much as she can but she’s got a lot on her plate. And so from this record she sings on one song and she usually sits in. If she’s in the audience she’ll jump up on stage for a few songs. But we realized that there’s certain little compromises we were making. Which it wasn’t a negative thing, it was just we felt like we both wanted to fully empower our writing and build a band around our writing style that was completely appropriate for it - you know? And, like, for instance, my songs are a little more - to use a genre tag - Texas outlaw country...whatever you wanna call it.

Luck: Right, with the steel and...

Buck: Right. And like having pedal steel and having a telecaster in the band is more appropriate even though I break those rules a lot too, I think. But for her, she just needed...she just needed, like, a rock-n-roll band - not like a pure...yeah. But the lines get blurred all the time. It’s very often that I’ll write a song that feels like it could fit in Big Thief or vice versa. And I’m sure over time we’ll have so many bands together. We have a band called Pencil, actually. Our little surf punk band.

Luck: Oh, that’s awesome.

Buck: For the songs that don’t make sense.

Luck: Have you released anything?

Buck: There’s two records on bandcamp. Pencil Number 1 and Pencil Number 2.

Luck: Amazing.

Buck: Nobody knows. Very few people have heard it.

Luck: I was like, wait, should I know about this already?

Buck: No nobody knows about it. But check it out - it’s really fun.

Luck: Yeah, for sure. Well awesome, that’s all I’ve got unless you have anything you wanna add.

Buck: I think that’s it. Those were great questions.

Luck: Thank you!

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On Phil Cook by M.C. Taylor

Somehow it has all

added up to song—

earth, air, rain and light,

the labor and the heat,

the mortality of the young.

I will go free of other

singing, I will go

into the silence

of my songs, to hear

this song clearly.

—Wendell Berry

Phil and M.C. at Luck Reunion 2018, photo by Jentri Colello 

Phil and M.C. at Luck Reunion 2018, photo by Jentri Colello 

 

by M.C. Taylor

My friend Phil Cook's album People Are My Drugis out today, and I would like to take a moment to testify about him. I met Phil on Saturday, December 10th, 2011; I know this because it's the date that I played an album release show for Poor Moonat a club called The Nightlight in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. I had heard of Phil through his music in Megafaun, a band that he had with his brother Brad and their friend Joe Westerlund, but I had never met him until he and Brad came through the door of the club while we were soundchecking. They were there to say hello to our mutual friend William Tyler, who was playing in Hiss Golden Messenger that night. After this first encounter, our orbits came into sync and I began to hang out with both of the Cook brothers regularly. They became two of the most important people in my universe.

Sometimes we meet people that we feel like we've known our whole lives. Phil—and his brother Brad, who produced People Are My Drugas well as the Hiss albums Heart Like a Leveeand Hallelujah Anyhow—were like that for me. They understood what I was trying to do with Hiss Golden Messenger. We were kindred spirits and we spoke the same language.

When Hiss is on the road—which is quite often—Phil and I share a hotel room. We know each others' rhythms. On planes, Phil and I always sit together. I sit in the window seat—I have a phobia of flying and sitting next to the window gives me some illusion of control—and Phil sits in the aisle. Before we take off, he always—always—switches seats with the stranger in the middle so he can be next to me. Last summer, we were on a particularly turbulent flight from a gig we played with Bon Iver in Maryland to San Francisco, where we were due at a festival, and Phil held my hand and gave me murmurs of assurance until I calmed down. Over the years I've been all over the world with him—from the dusty gypsy alleys of Lisbon to a dim closet-sized green room on an anonymous, snowy night in Bellingham, Washington—and he always talks about how glad he is to be wherever we are. I've never heard him complain, not once.

Phil showed me the basic chord shapes for a guitar tuned to open D. With those chords, I wrote “Saturday's Song,” “Biloxi,” “Caledonia,” “Jenny of the Roses,” and many others. Together, we've pillaged damn near every used gospel bin in America and he's taught me everything important about that musical world. I remember listening to The Consolers and Brother Joe May with him for the first time—I was driving, he was in the passenger seat—on the way to a gig in York, Pennsylvania. Those moments are important.

Phil and I have tripped on mushrooms and drank cold Dixie beer on the porch of Vaughan's in the Bywater—one of the great bars in the world—and we've sung with the Blind Boys of Alabama together. We've sat in the backyard or around kitchen tables laughing, sometimes crying, while our kids—we both have two—wrestled and laughed and fussed. When I'm stuck in the shadows and wrestling with my demons, Phil Cook is one of my great sources of light. When I'm inscrutable and indecisive, Phil seems to know my intentions and is gentle with me. I'm so thankful for that. I've never had to ask him to keep up; he's always right there with me, wide-open, ready to step into the breach. When I'm tired, Phil will drive.

I hope that you'll listen to Phil's new record,People Are My Drug, because it's deep and joyful and contains everything I know about Phil, all the things he loves. But mostly, I hope that you all will have a friend like Phil has been to me.

Phil, I'm looking at you and saying: I love you so much, brother. I'm proud of you. Thank you for being so good.

—M.C. Taylor, Durham, NC

Exclusive: Backstage at the Ryman with Margo Price

We first got to know Margo Price in 2015 right before she signed with Third Man Records. We knew the moment she and her band walked on stage that they would be joining us at the 2016 Luck Reunion. 2016 happened to be the year of the "big storm" in Luck. After Texas thunderstorm cells converged over the ranch for over 3 hours, we had to temporarily evacuate and take shelter. Afterwards, as the setting sun peeked through the clouds, we rallied to try and figure out how to still pull off an amazing end to the night. While we scrambled to get someone on stage as soon as possible, Margo came jumping out of the bushes behind the stage shouting, "My band and I can be on that stage and playing in under 10 minutes!" It was in that moment we knew we were witnessing a star being born.

She also joined us out at Luck for our very firstLuck Chapel Sessionsin 2016. At times just Margo, unplugged, filling that sacred room with her own hallowed hymns. Margo has since graced the main stage for our 2017 Reunion and was our special guest at this year's event, returning to the Chapel for an intimate set to a surprised and spellbound crowd.

Margo has not only become part of our Luck family, but she has become a beacon for the hard working and honest musicians that we are so proud and honored to work with. In the past two years, it seems like her feet haven't even touched the ground. This past week she returned to her now hometown of Nashville, TN to play three sold-out shows at the historic Ryman Auditorium.

The Luck Journal enlisted Chris Phelps, long-time tour photographer and friend of Price to tell the exclusive behind the scenes story:

"As I sit here the morning after the finale of Margo Price’s sold-out three night stand at the Ryman Auditorium, I’m going through photos and still cant quite come up with the right words to describe the whole experience. Running on little to no sleep throughout this entire journey, I admittedly haven’t entirely processed it yet. The closest description I can come up with is “magic.” Not magic in the illusionary card trick, pull a rabbit out of the hat sense, but a perfect storm kind of magic that develops after years of hard work, dedication, and a lot of blood, sweat, and tears. I’ve had the pleasure of joining Margo and her band on this Road to the Ryman this year and have captured a lot of special moments on various mediums. Polaroids have a unique ability to capture not only the real and raw moments and emotions of a situation, but they manage to do it in a nostalgic and tangible way. People tend to let their guard down when you hold up a polaroid camera and then patiently wait around while they watch their image appears moments later. Again, magic. Until I can fully process this experience into words, I’ll let the images speak for themselves." - Chris Phelps 

 

All photos by Chris Phelps