Listen: Nick Lowe & Los Straitjackets have the Mountain Stage Song of the Week

Iconic musician, songwriter and producer Nick Lowe returned to Mountain Stage flanked by surf-rock legends Los Straitjackets last Fall. They performed a legendary set, including tunes from their latest EP “Love Starvation/Trombone,” and Lowe’s most timeless song, “(What’s So Funny About) Peace Love and Understanding.”

Lowe was producer on the early works of Elvis Costello, who popularized Lowe’s song “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace Love and Understanding.” Here the song is reprised by Lowe and the Straitjackets as the set-closer of the group’s appearance on this week’s episode of Mountain Stage.

Listeners will also be treated to a set of beautiful new songs from Patty Griffin, an amped up performance from alt-rock poet Craig Finn & Uptown Controllers, and the fresh sound of Shook Twins. Find a station that carries Mountain Stage here and be sure to tune in to this ‘can’t miss’ episode.

Be sure to follow along on social media and subscribe to our newsletter for periodic updates and more musical performances.

Credit Brian Blauser/ Mountain Stage
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Patty Griffin appears on this week’s episode of Mountain Stage hitting the airwaves nationwide starting November 8.

Live Show News: Bela Fleck & Abigail Washburn, Shawn Colvin, Nick Lowe and more

Mountain Stage continues it’s 36th season of live performance radio with three shows, just announced, for late Summer. All three shows are on sale now to Mountain Stage Members, who receive exclusive online pre-sale access to all Culture Center shows. Click here to browse the levels of support and sign-up for membership. Once your gift has been processed (2-3 business days), you’ll receive a code in your inbox to gain pre-sale access, and the reduced general admission ticket price of $25.

Already a member? Check your inbox!

Read on for dates and more details. All shows are at the Culture Center Theater on the State Capitol Grounds in Charleston, W.Va. The lobby opens at 5p.m. on show day. Doors to the theater open at 6:30p.m. and the show starts at 7p.m.

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Mountain Stage is pleased to announce the return of the first family of banjo- Bela Fleck and Abigail Washburn, and Canadian blues great Sue Foley, on Sunday, August 4. More artists will be announced in coming weeks.

Watch: Come All You Coal Miners/Take Me To Harlan

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Watch: Sue Foley – Ice Queen

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Beloved singer and songwriter Shawn Colvin will be celebrating the 30th Anniversary of her 1989 debut album “Steady On” as she returns for an intimate solo performance on Mountain Stage Sunday, September 15. That classic album featured vocals by long-time Mountain Stage favorite Lucy Kaplansky, who recently released her first new album in six years, Everyday Street That release features a guest-spot from, you guessed it, Shawn Colvin, so we couldn’t be happier to welcome these “https://youtu.be/xWUheGc2x-g”>Old Friends” back to West Virginia on the same show.

Adding to the excitement on September 15 is the first appearance by genre-bending songwriter Rebecca Loebe, whose latest release Give Up Your Ghosts features the single “Popular,” which you hear in the new video below.

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Venerable UK songwriter, producer and performer Nick Lowe, and Nashville based surf-rockers Los Straitjackets, have joined forces once again with their latest collaboration, the EP Love Starvation/Trombone. The combo will appear on Mountain Stage on Sunday, September 22.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SAzpRCxxC80

Also appearing on September 22 will be the incredible Patty Griffin. She just released her latest, self-titled album in March. The songs on Patty Griffin come from a deeply personal perspective as you can hear in her recent World Café session, a highly recommended listen.

Tickets for all three of these shows are available NOW to Mountain Stage Members. Already a member? Check your inbox!

Advance tickets will be available online and at Taylor Books in Downtown, Charleston starting Friday, May 31 at 10a.m.

Follow Mountain Stage on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter for updates, and be sure to sign-up for our e-mail newsletter here. We promise to only reach out often enough that you’ll always look forward to hearing from us.

These shows will be recorded for distribution by NPR Music later this Fall. See our upcoming Broadcast Schedule to see what will be hitting airwaves near you soon.

Mountain Stage Acts Nominated for 2016 Grammy Awards

The 2016 Grammy Awards Nominations are in! We’re proud to see so many of Mountain Stage’s guests on the list. Click on the artist’s name to hear their recent performances on Mountain Stage.

Congratulations to the performers who performed this past year on the show, including Chris Stapleton (for Album of the Year, Best Country Solo Performance, Best Country Song and Best Country Album), Lee Ann Womack (Best Country Solo Performance, Best Country Song), The Fairfield Four (Best Roots Gospel Album), The Milk Carton Kids (Best American Roots Performance), The Mavericks (Best American Roots Song, Best Americana Album), The Steeldrivers (Best Bluegrass Album) and Rhiannon Giddens (Best Folk Album).

Another shout-out to Mountain Stage alumni who have racked up 2016 Grammy nominations, including Little Big Town and Lori McKenna, Bill Frisell, Jim James of My Morning Jacket, Keith Urban, Wilco, Dierks Bentley, Joey & RoryAshley Monroe, Hayes Carll, Joshua Redman, John Scorfield, Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn, Buddy Guy, Punch Brothers, Mavis Staples, Cory Chisel, Rodney Crowell & Emmylou Harris, Jason Isbell, Brandi Carlile, Dale Ann Bradley, Rob IckesDoyle Lawson & Quicksilver, Ralph Stanley & Friends, Shemekia Copeland, Buddy Guy, Bettye LaVette, Norman Blake, Patty Griffin, Angelique Kidjo, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Janis Ian, Michael CerverisAsleep at the Wheel and Blake Mills.

Missed hearing these talented folks on Mountain Stage? Make sure to subscribe (and rate/review) the Mountain Stage podcast on iTunes and sign-up for our email newsletter for future show announcements! You might just hear/see the next big artist before they start grabbin’ Grammys.

Good luck to all the nominees! And if you haven’t already, go out and see some live music wherever you are just as soon as you can.

Tune in This Saturday for Patty Griffin, The Head and the Heart, and More on Mountain Stage

Mountain Stage returns to your radio this weekend with the first premiere broadcast of our fall season. You’ll hear from singer-songwriter Patty Griffin, with songs from her long-unreleased classic Silver Bell. 90’s hitmakers Toad the Wet Sprocket play some of their best-know songs (including “All I Want” and “Walk on the Ocean”) and a few new classics. Indie acoustic darlings The Head and The Heart make their first Mountain Stage appearance, along with newcomer and instant crowd favorite Parker Millsap.

Tune in this Saturday at 8pm on West Virginia Public Radio, and all this weekend on more than 130 public radio stations across America.

Ginger Power: Redheads on Mountain Stage

Between Brett Dennen, Joy Kills Sorrow singer Emma Beaton, and retro-inspired diva Dominique Pruitt, it’s safe to say that redheads run this week’s broadcast of Mountain Stage. With that in mind, we thought this was a great excuse to take a look back at powerful performances by redheads on Mountain Stage. First though, two from this week’s broadcast.

First up, Brett Dennen. His songs often range from thoughtful folk to big, loud, pop fun. And what we like in particular about this performance is the way he strips his song “When We Were Young” of its lush, bouncy studio treatment to reveal the strength of the writing underneath. In the same way that not just any singer-songwriter is capable of writing a pop song that has the potential to connect with the masses, not just any pop song works when reduced to a guitar an voice.

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Joy Kills Sorrow – Such Great Heights – Live on Mountain Stage
Credit Josh Saul
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Joy Kills Sorrow on Mountain Stage

Next up is progressive bluegrass group Joy Kills Sorrow. The band’s name is a play on the call letters of the Indiana radio station that first broadcast Bill Monroe in the 1930s, but Joy Kills Sorrow draw influence from the worlds of jazz, pop, and rock in their innovative arrangements and song choices. Their cover of The Postal Service’s electro-pop classic “Such Great Heights” is handled with a mastery that makes it sound as if the song belonged to Joy Kills Sorrow all along.

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Paul Brady – The World is What You Make It – Live on Mountain Stage
Credit Maria Sellas
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Paul Brady on Mountain Stage

Irish singer and folk-music great Paul Brady grew up listening to R&B and soul, playing in rock bands throughout his early 20s. Later, when Brady began making a name for himself as a folk and traditional singer, that background in soul and rock added a unique dimension to his sound. Brady told host Larry Groce that, coming from an Irish background, it’s not considered out of the ordinary for a pop musician to whip out a traditional song, whereas in America, playing traditional music is “something of a lifestyle choice.” Here he plays his high-energy tribute to the can-do spirit, “The World is What You Make It.” It’s also worth mentioning that Brady wrote the title track of notable redhead Bonnie Raitt’s classic album “The Luck of the Draw.”

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Kathleen Edwards – Change the Sheets – Live on Mountain Stage
Credit Josh Saul
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Kathleen Edwards on Mountain Stage

The daughter of a Canadian diplomat, Edwards was born in Ottawa but grew up traveling the world. Removed from the influence of mainstream North American pop, Edwards immersed herself in her older brother’s record collection, which included fellow Canadian Neil Young, along with Bob Dylan and Tom Petty. After high school, she landed back in Ottawa, where she fell under the influence of the exploding American scene, and most notably, Lucinda Williams. Her performance of “Change the Sheets” was recorded on Super Bowl Sunday, 2013.

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The Spring Standards – Goodbye Midnight – Live on Mountain Stage
Credit Brain Blauser
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The Spring Standards on Mountain Stage

If you think that the dual redhead attack of The Spring Standards provides an unfair musical advantage, you may be correct. They were mostly unknown to Culture Center audience when they took to the stage in fall of 2010, but won the crowd over in mere seconds with their song “Goodbye Midnight.” All three members of the group — James Cleare, James Smith, and Heather Robb — began playing together as high school students, then later found themselves living within a few blocks of one another in New York City. They picked up right where they left off, finding their infectious harmonies still intact.

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Patty Griffin – Heavenly Day – Live on Mountain Stage
Credit Brian Blauser
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Patty Griffin on Mountain Stage

Finally, returning champion Patty Griffin needs no introduction to Mountain Stage listeners. Known for her gutsy lyrics and powerful vocals, Griffin emerged in 1996 with her confessional Living With Ghosts, and has since been covered by The Dixie Chicks, Martina McBride, and Emmylou Harris and more. She has released seven more albums since, including  Silver Bell  just last year. Originally recorded in 2000, Silver Bell managed to reach mythical status with Nashville insiders in spite of being shelved by various record companies for nearly 15 years. Here she performs “Heavenly Day,” recorded on Mountain Stage 2007. Her latest appearance, which includes songs from Silver Bell hits the airwaves this September.

New Live Shows Announced for Mountain Stage

Mountain Stage w/ Larry Groce announces four new events scheduled at the Culture Center Theater in Charleston. Tickets for all four events go on sale Thursday, March 20 at 8 a.m.

Sunday, May 18 – Mountain Stage welcomes acclaimed songwriter Rodney Crowell featuring renowned guitarist Steuart Smith (the Eagles) and Friends. Crowell and Emmylou Harris brought home the “Best Americana Album” at this year’s Grammy Award for their duet release “Old Yellow Moon.” Also appearing May 18 is Virginia based modern string band The Infamous Stringdusters and up-and-coming alternative folk rockers Elephant Revival.

Sunday, June 1 — Mountain Stage welcomes back critically acclaimed Austin, Texas based singer and songwriter Patty Griffin, whose latest “Silver Bells” was recorded in 2000 but only recently released. Also featured on this show will be the reunited 90s-pop hit makers Toad the Wet Sprocket, who released “New Constellation” last year to wide acclaim. Their hits include “Walk on the Ocean” and “Good Intentions.” Parker Milsap, who is currently touring with Griffin, will make his first Mountain Stage appearance.

On Sunday, June 8, Mountain Stage will welcome for the first time Twin Forks, a band that includes former Dashboard Confessional front man Chris Carrabba, and The Autumn Defense, featuring Pat Sansone and John Stirratt of Wilco. Their latest,”Fifth,” has a wonderful jangle-pop sound as you’ll hear below.

FestivALL Charleston is June 20-29, 2014.

Finally, on Sunday, June 29 Mountain Stage will be a part of the 10th annual FestivALL Charleston, a city-wide arts and entertainment event that runs from June 20-29. The final FestivALL event will be a Mountain Stage performance featuring St. Paul and the Broken Bones from Birmingham, Ala. The group of young soul musicians features the vocals of Paul Janeway and recently released their full-length debut album “Half The City”. Most recently the band was listed by Rolling Stone Magazine as one of “48 Best Things We Saw at South By Southwest.”

Tickets for all four of these shows will be available Thursday, March 20 at 8 a.m. Advance Tickets are $15, Day of Show $25, available at MountainStage.org, by phone at 800.594.TIXX(8499) or locally at Taylor Books, 222 Capitol St., Charleston.  All four Mountain Stage events will be at the Culture Center Theater, 1900 Kanawha Blvd. in Charleston. Doors open at 6:30 p.m., Show starts at 7  p.m. Visit our Live Show Schedule for a complete list of upcoming events.

Mountain Stage is produced by West Virginia Public Broadcasting and distributed by NPR Music. The show recently celebrated its 30th year.

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