Logan County's Tim Browning: 'Sometimes, You are All You've Got'

Since the show began almost two years ago, A Change of Tune has highlighted some of the best up-and-coming artists out of these West Virginia hills with podcast-y chats ranging from Tyler Childers to Ona, Bud Carroll to Coyotes in Boxes and beyond.

But those interviews have been a bit infrequent, and since West Virginia Day was this month (and with A Change of Tune’s second birthday on the horizon), we thought we’d do something special: 30 days, 30 brand new #WVmusic interviews that range from Morgantown alt-rockers and Parkersburg singer-songwriters to West Virginia music venues and regional artist management and beyond, all of which contribute to this state’s wild and wonderful music scene.

And today, we are chatting with Tim Browning, a Logan County singer-songwriter who’s been playing music 20 years and a has a number of stories to tell.

Tim Browning & the Widowmakers’ newest release Bad Intentions will be out later this fall. Hear more #WVmusic on A Change of Tune, airing Saturday nights at 10 on West Virginia Public Broadcasting. And for more #WVmusic chats, make sure to go to wvpublic.org/wvmusic and subscribe to our RSS / podcast feeds!

Credit Most Exalted
/
Tim Browning is a resilient singer-songwriter out of Logan County, West Virginia.

Interview Highlights

On getting into music at a young age:

When I was a kid, my parents both played Southern gospel music in church. That’s how they met. So music has always had a strong influence in life. When I was about 8, I got my first bass guitar, and I sat on a stool behind them and plucked away at the bass while they were singing. It’s kind of funny to call it touring, but we went all over the region playing music. So that’s where I got my start.

And then my cousin gave me an old electric Harmony guitar. And I had no amplifier. So I had to wait until it was late at night when everyone was asleep to start learning how to play guitar.

You know, you watch a lot of acts and a lot of bands and a lot of places do cover tunes. But I was just never good at that. I was uncomfortable, maybe a little intimidated, playing other people’s song. So I thought, “Maybe I should write my own.” And that was that.

On his relationship with country music:

[Despite moving to Nashville,] I don’t really sing country music. But it has a lot of the same ingredients [as what I play]: a lot of rough-neck, back alley thoughts and ideas, being in those hills and hollers, taking life as it comes, and trying to get up out of that hole you feel like you were born in.

With the current string of tunes that I’ve been doing with The Widowmakers, I always describe our music as “crimes of passion.”

Credit Most Exalted
/
Catch Tim Browning & the Widowmakers on tour throughout West Virginia.

On moving to Nashville at a young age to make music: 

With Nashville, it seemed just as mystical and just as far away as Hollywood. So at 18, I loaded up my little piece of crap car, and I drove to Nashville. At that point [in your life], you have these grandiose ideas of what you can be. And I think that’s where my love and local and independent music comes from: you walk in [to a local bar], and you may open up for a local group, and they’re amazing. And everything they do is just as quality and felt just as important as what you heard on the radio. And a lot of times, the acts that you saw were bits and pieces of what you heard on the radio, but were still doing local acts and shows because that’s where their hearts were. The guy that’s parking your car or the girl getting your coffee is the most amazing songwriter or most brilliant singer that you may never ever hear. I was captured by that. I don’t think I ever fell out of love with it.

On gaining musical inspiration from enlisting in the Army:

It was hard finding a chance to perform, but it was not hard to write. That experience provided me with the most time for reflection. The further I got away from home, the more I fell in love with home. That’s when I came to terms as a young man about where I was from and to be ok about where I was from. That’s been my hardest lot in life: accepting things as they come.

I got away from the grunge-y abstract ideas that were happening in a lot of the music that you would have listened to as a teenager. I really became comfortable with being very blunt, matter-of-fact, and honest with who I was and what I was writing about. I got away from writing what I thought people wanted to hear.

Credit Most Exalted
/
Tim Browning describes his band’s music as “a completely different brand of rock’n’roll.”

Music featured in this #WVmusic chat:

Tim Browning & the Widowmakers- “Gasoline”

Tim Browning & the Widowmakers- “One Horse Town”

Tim Browning & the Widowmakers- “Without You”

"A Change of Tune" Interviews The Harpoonist & The Axe Murderer

Every week, “A Change of Tune” host Joni Deutsch will have one-on-one conversations with emerging talents and give Spotify-like music recommendations in a new feature called “Recommended If You Like.” This week we’ll hear from Vancouver-based band The Harpoonist & The Axe Murderer’s Shawn Hull (aka “The Harpoonist) about the state of the music industry, fan experiences, and the band’s new record, “A Real Fine Mess.” If you like The Black Keys, this band and interview are recommended for you.

Joni: Congrats on the new record and also on your first U.S. tour!

Shawn: Thank you! Yeah, it was a tough one. We had six states, and we ended up doing the places that most bands probably wouldn’t play for their first tour. We found out that Kansas has absolutely butt-kicking storms, and Matt [Rogers, aka “The Axe Murderer] looked like he was in a Vidal Sassoon commercial in a wind tunnel during the show. But people didn’t flinch! They thought we were kitty cats. I guess that’s how they roll in Kansas.

J: Tell me more about 2014 for you all. What’s been the most exciting thing, aside from the first U.S. tour and your newest record, “A Real Fine Mess?”

S: We were really honored to play at the Continental Club in Austin, Texas, during South by Southwest. That was incredible, and we got to play right up there with heavy hitters like Luther Dickinson from the North Mississippi Allstars, Rich Robinson from the Black Crowes, and one of The Neville Brothers’ children. And going to New York City was cool. We played in the smallest club we have ever played in our lives.

J: Was it the size of a closet or something?

S: It was ridiculous. Only New Yorkers would get away with this stuff and then say, “What? What are you complaining about? This is New York. This is how it is.” It probably held 20 to 24 people, and when you finished playing, the next band came in and you had to get out onto the street to pack up your gear, even if it was raining. At first I thought, “I can’t believe we flew across the continent to play in the smallest place ever,” but the experience was incredibly intimate.

J: So what do you think makes your music Canadian, if anything?

S: Watching similar bands doing swampy funk rhythm and blues in the States, we feel like being Canadian gives us a perspective where we’re not in that melting pot. We’re able to pick and choice a little bit differently because we’re not born into the same demographics and don’t have to be cookie-cuttered into genres. Since we’re not born in Chicago or raised in a strict, conservative culture of Chicago blues, we don’t have to completely immerse ourselves in one particular thing just because that was what we were born into.

J: Tell me a little bit about the cover art for “A Real Fine Mess.” From what I saw, it was a PSA about the dangers of drinking and tightrope walking over the ocean.

S: That could work. I actually think it looks a little Monty Python-esque to show the bizarre contrast of this glamorous, almost circus type-like life against normal day-to-day functions. For us, it’s a balance between the type of life and energy attached to our wild, rock and roll world and the straight reality of having a mortgage and being a parent. I’m not sure if the kid and mortgage are meant to be the shark and octopus, but it’s that kind of dichotomous life that we’re trying to project.

J: So is there a certain message or theme attached to “A Real Fine Mess?”

S: [Laughing] You won’t find any parenting themes on the record. There’s no great heartache, but there are themes of relationships thinning out, longing for the past, and looking back at those lustful romantic days and ignition starters at the beginning of relationships. It’s not like a particularly themed record where we’re going down and exploring the 1955 crisis in Cuba… even though I don’t think there was a crisis in ’55.

J: In my mind, your record was similar to The Black Keys’ style, but you went all out with a kind of “blues that gets you in the crotch,” as one reviewer put it.

S: [Laughing] That came from a journalist in the Yukon from a couple years ago. People are obviously going to draw parallels to bands like The Black Keys because they’re doing blues-esque rock, but when you look at our songwriting and melodic approach, it’s just so different from that style of band and those instruments. It’s a great parallel to make because it’s a nice to have a point of reference to bands like that.

J: What would be a dream collaboration for you all?

S: You know what would be a great collaboration because we haven’t seen it yet? Questlove. Danger Mouse’s sound is all over the last decade of music, and he’s been doing his thing and doing it incredibly well. But if we want to bring our music into a new rhythmic realm, someone like Questlove would be a huge addition.

J: So outside of your own music, what are you listening to right now?

S: Straight up, we’re listening to The Greyhounds, an indie soul blues band by J.J. Grey. Austin-based singer-songwriter Hayes Carll is on the playlist. We’re really digging Dr. Dog right now. Royal Canoe, which is almost like Canada’s version of Frank Ocean, is on the list, so are Sam Cooke and obscure Robert Palmer from the ‘70s.

J: On another note, I really like the band’s name, and I love how The Harpoonist & The Axe Murderer’s acronym is “HAM.” You could develop meat-based products to give out at shows.

S: And if we ever develop a “Deadhead” fanbase, I guess they would be HAM-sters? [Laughing] You would be the first to put that down. I don’t think it’s up to bands to decide fanbase names, so you would need to make it up for us.

J: That is an absolutely brilliant exclusive. Thanks! So what’s next for you all?

S: We are going to Disneyland! No, but we do have a music video that is being made by Matt’s brother [Ben Rogers] for our new single, “Don’t Make’em Like They Used To,” and he’s going to put together an incredible story of a world that used to be. It might be stop-motion animation, and that’s going to be one of the neater, creative things to come out of the band. We’re a very family-based operation, and Matt’s brother does all of the band’s illustrations and has helped pen a few of the band’s songs, including “Don’t Make’em Like They Used To.”

The Harpoonist & The Axe Murderer are currently finishing their summer tour for “A Real Fine Mess.” You can follow their musical hijinks on http://www.harpoonistaxemurderer.com. To get a sneak peak of their record, tune in to Joni Deutsch’s “A Change of Tune” this Saturday at 10 PM EST on West Virginia Public Radio.

Exit mobile version