Blitzen Trapper Return to West Virginia with "Straight-Up Guitar Rock"

After 5 years of being away from the Mountain State, Portland alt rock band Blitzen Trapper return to Mountain Stage in Morgantown this weekend with a new record in town.

We sat down with the band’s frontman Eric Earley to talk about their eighth studio release All Across this Land, their ties to David Bowie and Tom Petty, and what’s in a name (specifically, theirs).

Blitzen Trapper released their eighth full-length All Across this Land via Vagrant Records this past October. You can follow the band on social media and see them live on Mountain Stage in Morgantown this Sunday, January 17. To hear more of their music, tune in to ‘A Change of Tune,’ airing Saturdays at 10pm EST on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Interview Highlights

On David Bowie:

I definitely listened a lot to David Bowie when I was younger. I think the aesthetic that I pulled from David Bowie is similar to the aesthetic that I pulled from The Beatles when I was younger… Sort of the idea that the song is more than just a song. And Bowie especially brought this theatrical element to it which, I think early on in Blitzen Trapper, we had a little bit of those influences going on. And also I think David Bowie had this ability to have every record be vastly different, which I think Blitzen Trapper does quite a bit as well… [but] we’ve never dressed in full-body spandex.

On recent fan interactions:

There’s always weird interactions, like one fan was trying to steal my shirt… she offered me $200 for my shirt! I didn’t [take it], but in hindsight, I probably should have. I don’t think I paid anything for that shirt. It didn’t even have sleeves. It would have been like selling a shop rag or something. Well, I think she was pretty wasted. Her deal was probably flawed in certain ways. She was trying to get our drummer to steal it from me backstage and sell it to her… or give it to her or something.  That’s the stuff you remember though, the weird crap.

On their new release All Across this Land:

I was kind of looking back at all of our records and being like, “What’s the stuff that I like the most that I’ve gotten into? And what’s the thing that I can do the best (at least, in my mind)?” For me, I wanted to make a record that had all the things that I love about Blitzen Trapper, but also the things our fans are into when we’re on stage. So I feel like this record has a lot of guitar rock and guitar songs and storytelling. It’s all pretty simple and straightforward. There’s not a lot of effects, not a lot of bells and whistles. It’s just a straight-up guitar rock record.

On Tom Petty comparisons:

When you think of the platonic ideal of guitar rock, minus all the solos or any kind of flamboyant hair or spandex, you think of Tom Petty. He’s like the baseline. He’s not trying to do anything over the top, yet his songs are super solid. So sure, that’s a great compliment for any band that’s playing guitar rock like we are.

On their last Mountain Stage appearance in 2011 (which also featured Dawes, Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit, James McMurtry and Matthew Sweet)

That was a fun show. I was kind of stoked to see Matthew Sweet because when I was in high school, he was a big deal. It was so cool to see him play… I think that’s my most vivid memory of it, just watching him play guitar.

On being asked about doing a surprise cover at this weekend’s Mountain Stage (more specifically, a cover of Ariana Grande):

Ariana Grande? I don’t even know what that is… Oh, is that a singer? Sounds like a coffee beverage [laughing]. Well now that I know about it, maybe I will!

On the band’s original name Garmonbozia, which was inspired by Twin Peaks mythology:

We were really dumb and we watched a lot of Twin Peaks, because we were living in Oregon back in those days when things here were bleak and dark and no one wanted to move here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ax1ZIpyiY8

On the band’s current name Blitzen Trapper:

I’ve told so many lies about this over the years, I’m not sure which lie you’ve heard… It was back in those days when we were all really wasted all the time, and we were dumb. I honestly don’t even know where the name came from. I can’t remember much from my 20s. That memory is gone for me. 

Blitzen Trapper, Guster Announced for Mountain Stage

The 33rd season of Mountain Stage will begin on Sunday January 17 at the WVU Creative Arts Center in Morgantown, WV. As guests of WVU Arts & Entertainment, host Larry Groce will welcome indie rockers Blitzen Trapper, Nashville based singer Ruby Amanfu and Austin-based seven piece Wild Child. Tickets for the event will be available at 10am Monday, November 16. Visit our Live Show Schedule for details.

The show returns to its home base, The Culture Center Theater on the State Capitol Grounds, on Sunday January 24 to welcome back beloved pop-rockers Guster for the second time. The band’s latest album “Evermotion” was produced by Shins keyboardist/Black Keys bassist Richard Swift, who has also produced recordings with Foxygen and Damien Jurardo. Also scheduled to appear are The Westies, a group formed by Michael McDermott and Heather Horton, whose album “West Side Stories,” is a concept record about  the real life Westies, “a ruthless gang of Irish mob punks that ruled Hell’s Kitchen in the 60’s and 70′s”.

Tickets for January 24 go on sale Friday November 13 at noon, via MountainStage.org, by phone at 877.987.6487 or locally at Taylor Books in Downtown Charleston. More info on our Live Show Schedule.

Follow along on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, and sign up for our e-mail newsletter, where we sometimes send special deals and first-to-know announcements.

These episodes will be recorded for distribution in Spring 2016 via NPR Music.

The title track from Blitzen Trapper’s latest release “All Across This Land”

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Live performance clip of Austin-based band Wild Child.

“Endlessly” the latest single from Guster’s album “Evermotion.”

“Say It,” by The Westies

Mountain Stage After Midnight- February 21 & 22

Mountain Stage is all you need when it comes to music discovery. Actually the hipster in us wants to shout, “We had Jason Isbell and The Milk Carton Kids on the show before they were cool!” but why shout when you can just listen to these archived sets on “Mountain Stage After Midnight?” Broadcast from 1am-5am Saturday and Sunday mornings here on West Virginia Public Broadcasting, “Mountain Stage After Midnight” takes the best episodes from the show’s 31 year history and shares their memories and songs with our late-night listeners. 

Tune in Saturday February 21 and Sunday February 22 for country-infused folk and rock-a-cana on this week’s “Mountain Stage After Midnight.”

First up is a October 2011 show featuring folk rock group Dawes, Georgia power-popper Matthew Sweet, experimental country-folk group Blitzen Trapper, Americana legend James McMurtry and North Alabama rock outfit Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit.

Credit Brian Blauser / Mountain Stage
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The Milk Carton Kids made their Mountain Stage debut in 2011. They’ll make their second appearance this April in Charleston, WV.

Next up is another October 2011 show featuring sets from avant-jazz group The Travis Chandler Three-O, indie folk duo Milk Carton Kids (who are coming back to the Mountain Stage this spring), Appalachian crooner Sarah Siskind, American blues and roots group The Nighthawks and indie folk singer-songwriter Lucy Wainwright Roche.

Since it’s still so cold outside, why don’t you cozy up to Mountain Stage? Follow us on FacebookTwitterTumblr and Instagram, carry us on your favorite device with The Mountain Stage Podcast and be in the audience for our next live show.

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