Listen: Aoife O'Donovan on NPR's Mountain Stage

 

Spellbinding folk with a captivating voice. It would only make sense for such a performance by Aoife O’Donovan to be titled “Magic Hour,” one of the many songs we’ll preview on this week’s Mountain Stage broadcast.

We’ll also hear performances by Old Crow Medicine Show crooner Willie Watson, Grammy-nominated country songwriter Brandy Clark, Chicago indie rockers Frances Luke Accord, and acclaimed Irish singer-songwriter John Doyle.

Like what you hear? Subscribe to the Mountain Stage podcast to hear Aoife O’Donovan’s full set in the coming weeks.

 

Preview New Music & Hang Out with WVPB at Huntington #WhyListen Party

Have you ever wondered what turns a new song into a great song? And do you want to discover an emerging West Virginia act from your neck of the woods? Then join West Virginia Public Broadcasting for a #WhyListen: First Listen Music Party on Sunday, September 3 from 6 to 8 p.m at Bahnhof WVrsthaus & Biergarten in Huntington.

The September 3 #WhyListen event will include a first listen of music near and far, including the premiere of new music from #WVmusic acts. In the past, we’ve given audiences a first listen to tunes from William Matheny, M. Ward, Mavis Staples, The Company Stores, Qiet and so many more. (Find out how you can get your music in the mix on our Facebook page.)

A #WhyListen selfie at our 2015 Huntington event.

September 3 guests can enjoy Bahnhof’s local brews and food for the night as they listen to new tunes, rate them with handy-dandy cards and have a lively music discussion with Mountain Stage host and artistic director Larry Groce, A Change of Tune and 30 Days of #WVmusic creator Joni Deutsch, Huntington producer Bud Carroll and Hello June rocker Sarah Rudy.

The event marks West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s seventh project with NPR Generation Listen, an initiative to bring young, intellectually curious minds into the public broadcasting community. In fact, the very first #WhyListen event took place back in 2015 in Huntington and received rave reviews from Dave Lavender at The Herald-Dispatch and Marshall University’s The Parthenon.

The September 3 #WhyListen event is free and open to the public! For more information on the listening party (and the full Huntington Music & Art Festival schedule), visit the Facebook event.

And if you’re a local artist with a demo or brand new tune for our listening party, hit us up! Comment on our post on Facebook.com/achangeoftune, and we might just include their new song at our September 3 listening party.

Listen: Lake Street Dive on NPR's Mountain Stage

Beloved dynamic pop band Lake Street Dive return to this week’s broadcast of Mountain Stage, with songs from their acclaimed album Side Pony. Here they perform “Call Off Your Dogs,” on a show that also features performances by Seratones, My Bubba, Royal Wood, and Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche.

Like what you hear? Download the entire show right now on the Mountain Stage podcast (just look for Ep. 872). While you’re at it, make sure to subscribe, leave us a rating/review and send us a tweet with your favorite song: we’re @mountainstage

9 Things You Need to Know about Wild, Wonderful #WVmusic

30 days, 30 brand new #WVmusic interviews. Without a doubt, June was a wild, wonderful month to remember.

From our June 1st kick-off interview with Rozwell Kid’s Adam Meisterhans to our season finale with Grammy winner Tim O’Brien, here’s what we learned about #WVmusic during our month-long series:

1.       West Virginia music is more than banjos and Brad Paisley (no offense to either of them).

You can find just about any genre in each part of our state, whether it’s hip-hop in Wayne County or apocalyptic folk-rock in Bluefield. Just look at Matt Jackfert, a Charleston native who splits his time between hosting classical music on West Virginia Public Broadcasting, composing scores for videogames and touring with eclectic soul band The Company Stores. Matt was also the composer of the 30 Days of #WVmusic theme song in each of our podcast-y chats, so we chatted with him about his role in #WVmusic and what he hopes will happen in the coming months.

Credit Rafael Barker
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Matt Jackfert plays the ivory(ish) keys as part of The Company Stores.

2.       It’s ok to leave…

Sometimes you need to gain a new perspective to fully appreciate past experiences. Just look at the successes of WVU alumni TeamMate (now residing in Los Angeles), Petersburg’s Kenny Tompkins (now in Maryland) or Mid-Ohio Valley’s Katelyn Read (now in North Carolina). But let it be known that if you were born, raised or loved the Mountain State, you will always be a part of our #WVmusic community.

3.       …and it’s definitely ok to stay.

Take it from one of West Virginia music’s leading figures (aka Mr. Tim O’Brien): living and playing in West Virginia can be a beautiful thing. Costs are relatively low, travel is a-plenty (to major cities like D.C., Pittsburgh, Louisville, etc.) and the mountains have plenty of inspiration for you.

4.       But either way, don’t let opportunities pass you by.

Seriously. If you do the work now, you’ll reap the rewards later. We chatted with Nathan Thomas (who helped transcribe and produce our 30 Days of #WVmusic series) about his work as a college radio DJ in Huntington and why local musicians need to be ready now given the highly-anticipated (and rapidly-approaching) release of Tyler Childers’ full-length debut.

Nathan Thomas poses in front of The V-Club in Huntington the night of WMUL’s College Radio Day celebration of local music.
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An interview with Nathan Thomas about #WVmusic.

5.       The future is female (and it’s most certainly rock’n).

From charismatic crooners to behind-the-scenes strummers, West Virginia women are a force to be reckoned with. We look forward to following the careers of The Company Stores‘ Casey Litz, The Dividends‘ Hannah Spurlock and sister duo Whiskey Victor, just to name a few.

6.       The future is also in the classroom.

Let’s pull a move from Sesame Street’s The Count and add up the ways music education is vital to  We felt equal parts “awwww” and “rock on” in our interview with the young rockers from PopShop up in Morgantown. And Alasha Al-Qudwah‘s chat about nurturing lil’ seeds so they grow into strong, beautiful and musically-inclined trees was inspiring. And were it not for his jazz education at Marshall University, Rod Elkins might not be the same drummer we know and love today.

7.      West Virginia folk history is full of punk rock.

Musicians like Mark Poole and J. Marinelli make West Virginia history fun. Wish you had them as part of your Golden Horseshoe exam, huh?

8.      Don’t be afraid to do something brand new.

West Virginia was literally formed out of the need to do something different. One could argue we are the best example of a DIY state. So if you feel like there is something missing in the state, whether that’s a genre of music or a decent performance venue, get your friends together and make that dream come to life. Look to our friends at Jerry Run Summer Theater, Porch Unplugged and Hot Cup for inspo, or even the analog-in-a-digital-world folks at Sullivan’s, Cheap Thrills and Admiral Analog’s.

9.      But whatever you do, support your scene.

Go see a show at a local venue. Purchase a digital download from a hometown act. Buy a CD from your favorite act and give it to someone you know will appreciate it. Tag your band on social media and let the world what they’re missing out on. 

And support #WVmusic on public radio. 30 Days of #WVmusic is made possible with the help of our local underwriters (shout-outs to Kin Ship Goods, Made in WV and Todd Burge) and the support from listeners/readers like you.

If you discovered a new artist from this series or fell in love with a new song, help others do the same by pledging your support to West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s A Change of Tune. We’re proud to amplify local music to NPR Music and beyond, and we hope to do even more in the future with your help.

In the meantime, you can relive each of our 30 Days of #WVmusic chats right over here. Let us know which #WVmusic act we should listen to next on social media: like, follow and tag us on FacebookTwitter and Instagram. And make sure to tune in to A Change of Tune Saturday nights at 10 and Friday nights at 11 for the rebroadcast.

'There’s a Mystery to West Virginia:' Tim O'Brien Unlocks the Magic of #WVmusic

“[West Virginia] affects everything about how I do my job and the way I live my life.”

From West Virginia Public Broadcasting and A Change of Tune, this is 30 Days of #WVmusic, the interview series celebrating the folks who make the West Virginia music scene wild and wonderful.  

And we conclude the second season of our 30 Days of #WVmusic series with a West Virginia music history lesson from a legend of bluegrass and, arguably, one of the Mountain State’s musical figureheads. This… is Tim O’Brien.

Tim O’Brien’s latest release is a tribute to West Virginia music and is titled Where the River Meets the Road. Hear more #WVmusic on A Change of Tune, airing Saturday nights at 10 on West Virginia Public Broadcasting. Connect with A Change of Tune on FacebookTwitter and Instagram. And for more #WVmusic chats, make sure to go to wvpublic.org/wvmusic and subscribe to our RSS / podcast feeds.

Interview Highlights

Credit Courtesy of the artist
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Mollie and Tim O’Brien performing back in 1969.

On starting in music in West Virginia and early inspiration:

My sister Mollie and I were the musical youngest of five in our family. We’d sing in harmony in church, which was kind of uncommon in the Catholic church. But we were into the British Invasion stuff and folk music. She started playing piano, and I started playing guitar. I kept doing it, and so did she.

I’m from Wheeling in the Northern Panhandle. My dad was an attorney, and we lived in a middle class, Leave It to Beaver kind of neighborhood, a block and a half from the Catholic school where we went to grade school. My parents were into the big band-era of their youth, and I was into any kind of music, really. When I started showing interest in it, my parents were good at feeding the fire. They got me some guitar lessons and gave us student tickets to the Wheeling Symphony. There might be jazz, Count Bassey, Ray Charles, all kind of stuff. I got to see live music. The Wheeling Jamboree was going on and you could see people like Merle Haggard, Jerry Lee Lewis and Jerry Reed.

My girlfriend when I was 14, her father was into the music, and he collected some instruments. He had a nice mandolin and a nice guitar. A guy he knew was named Roger Bland, a great Earl Scruggs-style banjo player who ended up being a staff musician at the Wheeling Jamboree. He was the guy that all the bluegrassers in Wheeling learned from. He later took his own life, but he was a wonderful guy to learn from, and I got inspired to play stuff.

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Tim O’Brien waits to see Charlie Pride in 1970 at the Capitol Theater in Wheeling.

On becoming a professional musician:

I was 19. I went to college for a year, and I realized I was spending most of my time playing the guitar, and I started playing the fiddle. I went back the second year, and the band I had been playing with had hired somebody else over the summer. The wind went out of my sails, and I thought, “I don’t want to be here… I just want to play music.” I withdrew from college and thought maybe I’d learn how to make instruments, but I ended up going full bore and becoming a performer. I went out to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to be a ski bum and play in bars.

I wanted to get away from West Virginia. I couldn’t wait to get away. As soon as I left, if I would sing a country or bluegrass song, people would say, “Oh you’re good at this. You’re from West Virginia!” It became sort of a calling card. I was already interested in the music of West Virginia, but it became kind of an important thing commercially.

Credit Josh Saul
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Tim O’Brien performing on Mountain Stage in 2016.

On musical opportunities growing up in West Virginia:

The Wheeling Jamboree seemed out of my reach. I was playing at community events, and I was not of-age to play in bars. There wasn’t much to do. I was itching to do it, but I was too young. My parents weren’t stage parents. Brad Paisley, I think his grandfather and father made it possible for him to play as much as possible. I don’t think my parents wanted to promote the idea to me that I could be a musician because they didn’t see that as being a viable way of supporting one’s self and living one’s life. Over and over, people like me disprove them, and we decide we’re going to do it no matter what. I just decided I had to do this. I just love it. So I found ways I could play for people, mostly for free.

On winning a few Grammy Awards:

It means a lot. The Grammy win is a major endorsement by your peers, people from all over the country. When you win a Grammy, it’s not necessarily because you put out the best folk record of the year. It’s more like you’ve been doing your work, and people remember your name. It is a folk record even amongst your peers. They tend to view the quality as well, and it makes me feel like I’m doing something right.

Being from West Virginia, most of us that make a name as musicians or artists have to leave the state to make headway. When I was with Hot Rize a dozen years full-time out in Colorado, we were a Colorado band. I’m proud to be underlining with this new record now that I’m from West Virginia, and that it means a lot to how I play. It affects everything about how I do my job and the way I live my life.

There’s a mystery to West Virginia. The music is vulnerable, and it’s interesting.

Music featured in this #WVmusic chat:

Tim O’Brien- “When the River Meets the Road”

Tim O’Brien- “Grandma’s Hands” (Bill Withers cover)

Tim O’Brien- “Few Old Memories” (Hazel Dickens cover)

Tim O’Brien- “High Flying Bird” (Billy Ed Wheeler cover)

Tim O’Brien- “When the Mist Clears Away” (Larry Groce cover)

Support for 30 Days of #WVmusic is provided by Bunj Jam Music, Bunj Jam Music, featuring Todd Burge’s most recent studio album, Imitation Life, Produced by Tim O’Brien. information at toddburge.com.

Support for 30 Days of #WVmusic is provided by Kin Ship Goods, proud supporter of DIY music and the arts. Locally shipped worldwide at kinshipgoods.com.

Some Call Him Brian Wilson's Musical Offspring… but that's Mr. Husband to You!

“For better or worse, I can’t seem to do anything other than exactly what I feel compelled to do any given day, can’t seem to make a type of music just because I want to make that type of music.”

From West Virginia Public Broadcasting and A Change of Tune, this is 30 Days of #WVmusic, the interview series celebrating the folks who make the West Virginia music scene wild and wonderful.  

And today’s interview is with a musician and independent label head that is helping other indie artists make waves. This… is Mr. Husband.

Mr. Husband’s debut release is Plaid on Plaid, out now on Yellow K Records. Hear more #WVmusic on A Change of Tune, airing Saturday nights at 10 on West Virginia Public Broadcasting. Connect with A Change of Tune on FacebookTwitter and Instagram. And for more #WVmusic chats, make sure to go to wvpublic.org/wvmusic and subscribe to our RSS / podcast feeds.

Interview Highlights

Credit Courtesy of the artist
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Yellow K Records founders back in the golden days of Petersburg music. (Listen to the chat for the full story on the shirt.)

On his upbringing:

I was raised in Petersburg, in the Eastern Panhandle. I had a good time living there. I could smell and hear the Potomac River the entire time I grew up. I’ve always made music with my brother Kurt, and we started a band called New God which got attention for our first two records. A lot of people compared us to the Beach Boys since our music was a bright and sunny thing. It was our own take on pop music sung by two brothers from Petersburg, West Virginia. 

I think all of my music would have to be influenced by my upbringing. I felt very alone being a creative person, which isn’t a bad thing. When I was kid, I thought all of my songs were fantastic, and then when I went to college and met other people who were also trying to write songs, I thought, “I might have to try a little harder. These guys are good.” It was because the solitude of [West Virginia’s music] culture. I didn’t grow up with a lot of punk rock bands or people setting an example of what a band or artist should be, so I grew like a wildflower in that way. But for better or worse, I can’t seem to do anything other than exactly what I feel compelled to do any given day, can’t seem to make a type of music just because I want to make that type of music.

But I know some people who make pop music in West Virginia now, and I’ve been around long enough to get to meet souls in the music scene. But at the time, I felt alone with that.

Credit Courtesy of the artist
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Mr. Husband and his Mr. Friends.

On leaving West Virginia:

In the time and place we live in, I think if you’re trying to promote your music, you have to leave wherever you are. Just like any place that’s not metropolitan or doesn’t have a lot of tourist activity, it’s hard to sustain original music scenes, not to mention the economy of keeping a venue running, employing people, keeping bands interested. It’s the same things we talk about outside of West Virginia about how to keep these little scenes going with so little money going into the scenes.

West Virginia had its own unique challenges culturally. Like as a kid, I was scared to be an artist because I didn’t have examples set for that around me. I felt like I was stepping into a vulnerable place playing in front of people, maybe even more so than a kid from somewhere with a lot of bands.

Credit Kayleigh Montgomery
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Mr. Husband

On his indie music label Yellow K Records:

Over time having done so much for yourself as a musician, you start to say, “Well, I guess I don’t need anybody else involved so long as we can keep the organization of it all.” And we still want to get people involved with our music outside of Yellow K Records. There are tons of doors we can’t open for ourselves. It does have to do with my music, but it also has to do with a shared love of music between me, my brother, and Josh Grapes (our kind of adopted brother). It’s just a lifelong thing we’ve had with sharing music.

[When it comes to Yellow K Records’] Eskimeaux, they were playing keyboards with Frankie Cosmos, which Josh, Kurt and I really thought was awesome and just nerding out we found out about Eskimeaux. We reached out to them and talked to them and thought they were cool. [Another Yellow K Records artist] Japanese Breakfast is a different story. We were going to Philadelphia all the time and made different circles of friends, so that’s how that happened, just knowing friends of friends. We don’t usually go hunting for bands too much; we listen to everything that gets sent to us, and every artist that’s been signed to us has been recommended or friends of friends.

Each of us are sort of independent project managers at any given time. There’s a lot of little busy work you wouldn’t guess would be there. On any given day my role is like, “I have this project. Its release is three months from now.” And I am the person who is keeping the band, the PR people, the label, the manufacturing and booking help all looped together in the same conversation to keep working together, not against each other.

Music featured in this #WVmusic chat:

Mr. Husband- “Riding a Lightning Bolt”

Mr. Husband- “Shake That Dream”

Mr. Husband- “Cookie Pie”

Support for 30 Days of #WVmusic is provided by Kin Ship Goods, proud supporter of DIY music and the arts. Locally shipped worldwide at kinshipgoods.com.

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