WATCH LIVE: Iron & Wine, Tift Merritt, Todd Burge, Andy Shauf & Paper Bird on Mountain Stage

Grab some snacks and a party hat! You’re invited to the 33rd anniversary celebration of NPR Music and West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Mountain Stage.

This Sunday, December 4, point your browser to MountainStage.org at 7pm ET to watch a LIVE recording of Mountain Stage via VuHaus.

Sunday’s sold out show at Charleston’s Culture Center Theater marks Mountain Stage’s 885th episode and features performances by Iron & Wine, Tift Merritt, Todd Burge, Andy Shauf, and Paper Bird. Our radio listeners will hear this episode on over 180 NPR stations via NPR Music starting January.

For those of you watching along online, make sure to share your listening/watching experience with us! Use #MountainStage and #gotowv.

Tag Mountain Stage on TwitterInstagram, and Facebook. Find VuHaus on TwitterInstagram, and Facebook.

Grab tickets to our first shows of 2017 featuring Men at Work’s Colin Hay, Andrew Bird, Pokey LaFarge, Pink Martini, and more.

Watch more Mountain Stage performances (including Wynonna & the Big Noise, Leftover Salmon, and Indigo Girls) on VuHaus.

Celebrate Mountain Stage's 33rd Birthday with Iron & Wine, Andy Shauf & Todd Burge

UPDATE: (Monday, October 25, 2016) Tickets are officially sold out to this December 4 show! Sign-up for the Mountain Stage newsletter and follow us @mountainstage for show updates.

Mountain Stage with Larry Groce has one more show up its sleeve before saying “goodbye” to the year 2016: a special show commemorating Mountain Stage’s 33 years of live performance radio.

Tickets are $30 in advance and $35 day of show, available today beginning at 10am on MountainStage.org, by phone at 877-987-6487, locally at Taylor Books in downtown Charleston and also at the upcoming live shows.

On Sunday, December 4, Mountain Stage will record episode #885 at the Culture Center Theater on the State Capitol Grounds, 1900 Kanawaha Blvd., Charleston. The show (which acts as Mountain Stage’s 33rd birthday celebration and will be heard on over 180 NPR Stations nationwide in early 2017) will include indie folk giant Iron & Wine, the one-man folk operation conducted by Sam Beam. This will mark the singer-songwriter’s first appearance on the Mountain Stage, following his recent collaborative releases with Band of Horses’ Ben Bridwell and California-born, Manchester-dwelling singer-songwriter Jesca Hoop, as well as his short film Dreamers and Makers are My Favorite People about the Jerry Run Summer Theater in Cleveland, West Virginia.

Also appearing on the December 4 show is up-and-coming Canadian multi-instrumentalist Andy Shauf, whose intricate songwriting and indie folk leanings have led to comparisons to Nick Drake, Elliot Smith, and Grizzly Bear. Appropriately enough, Shauf will make his Mountain Stage debut on our 33rd birthday show with a new record titled The Party in tow.

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6y5F4S1I1Q

West Virginia mainstay Todd Burge will also perform on this December 4 show. Often named one of West Virginia’s premier singer-songwriters, Burge has performed on Mountain Stage over ten times since the show began in 1983, leading to his new release of some of his favorite performances on Live on Mountain Stage: 2006-2015.

More acts for this December 4 show will be announced in the coming weeks, but we recommend grabbing those tickets now for this sure-to-sell-out show!

Can’t wait for the party to start? Check out the rest of our great shows we have coming up in 2016. Stay up to date on Mountain Stage show news and ticket deals by following us on FacebookTwitterInstagram Tumblr and signing up for our e-mail newsletter. And if you’re looking for a new soundtrack between now and then, subscribe to the Mountain Stage podcast on iTunes.

West Virginia Music, Mountain Stage Staff Featured on NPR Music's Best of 2015 List

Public radio hosts from across the country came together this past month to pick their favorite songs of 2015. The result? An NPR Music Best Songs of 2015 playlist, of course!  Here’s a recap of that list and the music you heard this past year on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Mountain Stage host and artistic director Larry Groce was one of the 50 public radio music hosts selected for NPR Music’s year-end list. His favorite song of 2015 came from Darlingside, an indie folk group who performed on Mountain Stage this past fall and appeared on our own Inside Appalachia podcast. This is what Larry had to say about their music:

Darlingside, "God Of Loss" The instrumentals are just as meticulous as the harmonies, the harmonies just as haunting as the lyrics, and the lyrics a testament to the Boston quartet's success to come.

Mountain Stage assistant producer and “A Change of Tune” host Joni Deutsch had this to say about the emerging electro-R&B act who left an impression on her:

Unknown Mortal Orchestra, "Can't Keep Checking My Phone" From its Tarantino spaghetti western start to its groovy "Purple Rain" end, this single by the Portland-by-way-of-New Zealand band is a cinematic treat for our ears.

The NPR Music list includes other familiar faces, like singer-songwriter Sam Gleaves, whose song about an openly gay, West Virginia coal miner led to an interview with Roxy Todd for Inside Appalachia and Us & Them, as well as a guest appearance on Mountain Stage.

Morgantown native Dave Bello also chatted with “A Change of Tune” about his band The World is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die and their 2015 single “1/10/2014” long before it became an NPR Music pick, as did Beach House drummer and West Virginia native Graham Hill, The Carolina Chocolate Drops’ Rhiannon Giddens and Canadian crooner Andy Shauf.

And our locally-produced music programs Eclectopia, Lost Highways and Sidetracks spun more than a few NPR Music favorites from Jason Isbell, Courtney Barnett, Laura Marling, Hiatus Kaiyote, The McCrary Sisters, Turnpike Troubadours and more.

Listen to the complete list of NPR Music’s Best Songs of 2015 here and subscribe to West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s podcasts (including Mountain Stage, Inside Appalachia, Us & Them and more) here.

Want to keep emerging music and thoughtful stories alive on West Virginia airwaves? Make a contribution in any amount here.

'A Change of Tune' Interviews Andy Shauf

It’s taken two years for Canadian singer-songwriter Andy Shauf’s The Bearer of Bad News to reach the States, but now we can finally hear why this Saskatchewan crooner is being hailed as “the next Nick Drake.” Without a doubt, Shauf’s folk is the kind of folk that makes you pause. If you’re a fan of lush, contemplative songwriting, this interview and music are recommended for you.

Joni: So congrats on your new record [The Bearer of Bad News]! Or should I say “new-ish,” since it was actually released a couple years ago. I guess it is a re-release, since it was originally released in 2012?

Andy: [Laughing] “New-ish” is right. Yeah, it’s a re-release. The reason we decided to do that was because we didn’t officially release it in the States. I guess we really didn’t officially release it anywhere. We did the ol’ iTunes shuffle.

How did you start getting into music? Was it a 6-year-old Andy Shauf thing where your parents were playing Bob Dylan and Neil Young vinyls, or was it something were you didn’t want to become a musician but eventually go into it?

Yeah, my parents were really musical, or are really musical, I should say. I was always singing in church and doing all that stuff, but I never really liked to sing. I was kind of forced to sing, so I kind of started not liking it when I was a teenager. But then I got interested in girls and started writing songs on the guitar, using my great knowledge of the guitar and power chords.

Did you all ever consider making a family band out of it, like The Partridge Family or Brady Bunch kind of thing?

[Laughing] I think there’s an alternate universe where that actually happened.

So you started getting into music to meet girls. Did that work out for you? Did music help you get the girls?

[Laughing] No. No, it didn’t.

Is it working for you now?

[Laughing] No.

So what do you need to do to get females knocking on your door?

I think I need to add stability to my life. [Laughing]

<a data-cke-saved-href=”http://andyshauf.bandcamp.com/album/the-bearer-of-bad-news” href=”http://andyshauf.bandcamp.com/album/the-bearer-of-bad-news”>The Bearer of Bad News by Andy Shauf</a>

Tell me about The Bearer of Bad News. How did it come about?

The Bearer of Bad News is a collection of songs that I wrote over a period of four or five years, and then I recorded them in my parent’s basement over a period of about a year. So it was probably the longest time I’ve ever taken on one single project. Some of the songs are story songs, which are mostly pretty dark. Some of them are personal songs, and they’re not so dark, although they might seem like pretty sad songs. I actually wrote that record from a pretty happy place.

Is there a reason why you chose to record in your parent’s basement? Was it because of simplicity, was it cheap, was it because of good acoustic vibes?

I did that because I ran out of money and moved back in with my parents. And they let me do it. [Laughing] They let me move back into their basement, so that’s what I did. It was out of necessity, really.

I assume in the liner notes it’ll say, “Thanks Ma’ and Pa’?”

I think they got a shout-out. They definitely got a shout-out on the old pressing, but I hope they got a shout-out on the new pressing. I can write their names on the new records, just Sharpie them in. [Laughing] Actually, if you listen to the record super closely, you might hear them walking around upstairs. I had one song way back where my dad had to sneeze, so his sneeze was caught on my song.

The AV Club had this to say about you: “Andy Shauf is really cute, but that’s not what makes him such a captivating performer. Think of him as Canada’s modern answer to Nick Drake.” Kudos on being called cute, but how does it feel to be named “Canada’s next Nick Drake?”

Um, that’s nice. [Laughing] That’s a nice thing. That’s quite the compliment. I’m not going to claim I was a huge fan of his in high school, but I listened to the Pink Moon album a little bit, and he’s pretty good. [Laughing]

What are you listening to right now?

I’ve really been into the band Alvvays, with that “Archie, Marry Me” song. That’s been stuck in my head recently. Also give a little shout-out to Zachary Lucky. He’s a country guy from Saskatchewan.

What about the Canadian music scene? What’s one good thing and one bad thing about it?

It’s small, and everybody really knows it each. We’re all kind of pals. Playing Canadian festivals is kind of like a high school reunion or something. You see all your buds. I don’t know what I would change about it, but I guess there is a pretty big gap in Canada, just geographically, from the West side to the East side. There’s not a lot of people in the middle, so those are the main groups that bands get associated with, I guess. That’s kind of a bummer, since I don’t know as many people in the East as I do in the West. I’m working to change that for myself.

You just released a new music video for one of the record’s tracks, “I’m Not Falling Asleep,” and the video features old stock footage of Canada in the 1920’s. Where did that inspiration come from?

My manager lives in Ottawa, the capital of Canada, which has archives, and he suggested we look into film archives based on Saskatchewan. I thought it was a pretty interesting idea, so we went through tons of footage and picked some of the more interesting parts of the history of Saskatchewan. It was a little bit of farming, some Ukrainian history of Saskatchewan and its tuberculosis institute, which is abandoned now and supposedly haunted.

What’s next for you?

I’ve been rehearsing with the band to get ready for the tour. What’s next immediately on my schedule is sleeping ‘cause I’m exhausted. [Laughing] But yeah, the tour starts now and goes until South by Southwest. There’s a new record in the works, and it’s almost done.

What’s something that people might not know about you or your music?

I own all ten seasons of Friends on DVD, and Netflix just added all of those, so it made my DVD’s useless. You can’t even sell them! [Laughing]

Andy Shauf’s “new-ish” record, The Bearer of Bad News, comes out February 3. For more emerging artist news (and even some ticket giveaways), follow ‘A Change of Tune’ on Facebook, Twitter and Insta. Hear new music from Andy Shauf on ‘A Change of Tune’ this Saturday at 10pm EST on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

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