The Axeman Cometh: Adam Meisterhans on Shredding in the Mountain State

“If I ever need humbled, I can remember that I live in the same town that Vince Gill does [laughing]. If I ever feel like, ‘Oh man, I’m really sounding good on guitar,’ I can just remember that I’m probably not even the best guitar player on the block.”

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 West Virginian currently residing in Nashville who’s worked with artists right at home like Martinsburg’s Rozwell Kid and Morgantown’s William Matheny, and artists from afar like CoCo Hames and JP Harris. This is… Adam Meisterhans.

Rozwell Kid’s newest release is Precious Art. You can hear the band’s music on rozwellkid.com. 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 Facebook, Twitter 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 Cassie Lopez / cassielopez.info
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cassielopez.info
Adam Meisterhans in the studio.

On his start in music:

My mom was the church pianist at Washington United Methodist, so those were like my first memories of being around music. She was always rehearsing with the choir or practicing the piano.  Then my brother was I the band in middle school so I was kind of just always around that and I thought it was cool and interesting. Around 13, I got obsessed with the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix. I didn’t think I could do that but I thought maybe I could at least learn how to play their songs. I got a guitar around then and just gradually became more obsessed with it and now it’s what I do.

On starting The Demon Beat (one of West Virginia’s cult favorite alt rock bands) in Shepherdstown, WV:

Well, the Shepherdstown scene is more-or-less a combination of whoever is in college at that time and townies. So it’s an interesting scene, but it’s not necessarily a great place for a band to graduate from a band with your friends in college to a band that can actually get out and tour. It wasn’t hard to start it, and it wasn’t hard to be in The Demon Beat in this area, but it was hard to get to the next level where we could afford to keep the wheels on the road.

Credit Cassie Lopez / cassielopez.info
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cassielopez.info
Adam Meisterhans on-the-go.

On leaving West Virginia for Nashville:

I knew people in Nashville who were my age and who were touring a lot, so that was really attractive to me. So I decided to go there. And then after going there, Rozwell Kid became busier, so I was able to start a life there and start trying to meet people there, but also continue playing in a band with really close friends.

It wasn’t a culture shock [moving to Nashville]; it’s just hard to move anywhere. I had never lived in a city. I went from Washington Bottom to Shepherdstown, which is pretty similar in terms of number of people. This was the first time I lived in a city, I didn’t have a lot of money, I didn’t know that many people, so there are a lot of ways it sucked, but I was around world-class musicians for free there. Just whatever you want to tip them, essentially, which is crazy: you can go see Kenny Vaughn play for $3 and he’s obviously should get more. You can experience people playing at a level I had never really encountered before. It was a mix of the normal things that are hard about moving to a new place countered by an incredibly inspiring experience of being around people who could do things I’ve never seen before. As a guitar player and as a musician, it sharpens you and makes you want to go home and practice and try to better yourself in whatever way you can.

Credit Cassie Lopez / CassieLopez.info
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CassieLopez.info
Adam Meisterhans recording with Rozwell Kid in the studio

On making records:

If you’re around different people and you’re not a total jerk then eventually, maybe, they’ll call you to work on something. Any time somebody calls me, I appreciate it. So working on Coco Hames’ record: she was in a band called The Ettes, whose bass player was Jim Cohen. He got ahold of me to play on her record, and that meant a lot. Playing with people who I admire and are great musicians is a rewarding experience. And then for Tyler Childers to come down and make a record, that was a fun experience. It’s nice to make records with people you care about, with people you admire. It’s nice to be in those situations.

On working with West Virginia rocker William “Billy” Matheny:

I think I’ve known Billy for ten years. At the time with Tucker and Jordan, we were trying to figure out how to play with people who would make us better. Within the state, we thought Billy Matheny and Bud Carroll were doing things that were above our heads, so we should try to hang with them and try to figure out what they’re doing [laughing]. Billy played a lot of shows with Prison Book Club and The Demon Beat, and we had always known each other, and I was always a fan of his music. As we came closer friends, we talked about working on something.

Actually, when we started working on his record [William Matheny and his Strange Constellations], it was the weekend I moved to Nashville [laughing]. I had all the things that I owned in my car [laughing], and I went to Huntington, Bud and Billy and I started trying to hash out what would be that record, and then I went to Nashville. So it was a pretty interesting time in my life. We had to chip away at that record because of all of our schedules.

But I was just talking about people I admire and people I care about, and it would be hard to find two people I admire or care about more than Bud or Billy. So working on that project was kind of crazy because Bud and I love [Billy’s] songs and love being around him, so to be in a situation where you’re making a record with somebody you know that well, and you care that much about those songs, that’s a pretty unique thing.

Credit Cassie Lopez / cassielopez.info
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cassielopez.info
Rozwell Kid’s Jordan Hudkins and Adam Meisterhans

On playing Mountain Stage with William Matheny in June 2016 (with special guest host Joni Deutsch):

Rozwell Kid finished a month-long tour in New York City at the Music Hall at Williamsburg the night before Mountain Stage. So we loaded out and got out of New York at 1 in the morning. We drove back to Shepherdstown and got in around 6am. Then Jordan drove me down to Charleston [laughing], which was another five and a half hours, and I sort of slept in the car, and we sort of listened to some podcasts. He managed to stay awake, and we did our soundcheck. It was a little bit of a dumb idea, but it was worth it to play that show with those guys.

On the difference/comparison between Nashville and West Virginia’s music scenes:

The ratio of acts that have something to offer and are willing to do the work to put that out there is kind of the same no matter where you’re at. There are some people that have something really special to offer, whether it’s writing, singing or playing (sometimes a combination of all three of those things), and sometimes the people that have that are willing to do the work and build momentum to bring it to the people. I’ve been extremely lucky to be around people in West Virginia who have something to offer and are willing to do the damn thing.

Credit Cassie Lopez / CassieLopez.info
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CassieLopez.info
Adam Meisterhans recording with Roger Harvey in his Nashville studio.

In Nashville, there is no shortage of people in that situation, it’s just a higher concentration. It’s an incredibly dense music scene. But there are also people there who just want to wear a nice hat and sing about stuff that’s not as resonate. But the ratio is the same, and there are some incredibly talented people there with a lot to offer. I don’t think work ethic has to do with where you’re from. You either work your ass off or you don’t. And that can happen anywhere.

On the future of the #WVmusic scene:

With any scene I suppose, it’s people who are willing to actively be a part of it, whether that’s fans, songwriters, people who want to play guitar or people who want to book shows. It requires all of those things. Obviously, there are a lot of great artists around here who do a lot of work. It’s people like Ian Thornton, who is a wonderful bass player, works so hard promoting and booking the bands he works with and promoting a festival. Any one of those things could be a full-time job, and he does all four of them really well.

I just think it takes people who are actively invested in it, whether it’s through Mountain Stage or running the Empty Glass or being a band that’s trying to make it happen. It takes all of those parts. So I don’t know if I’m necessarily qualified to say what should happen; it’s just a matter of people throwing their hands on deck.

Credit Courtesy of the artist
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Yep. That’s Rozwell Kid, for ya.

On his self-described “do-it-your-damn-self” ethos:

You can either sit around and wait for somebody else to help you or hand you something, or you can do the best with what you have and the resources around you. If you do the latter, you are actively engaged in what you’re doing. Regardless of where you’re at or what your resources are, you’re at least making something out of whatever you have. Earlier in my life I was probably less actively engaged in my own success and well-being and life, and eventually you have to get out of that or else you beat your head against the wall and end up a bitter person asking, “Well, how come nothing ever happened for me?” At some point, either someone else has to kick you in the ass, or you have to kick your own ass.

Music featured in this #WVmusic chat:

The Demon Beat- “I Melted”

Rozwell Kid- “South By”

Rozwell Kid- “UHF on DVD”

Rozwell Kid- “I Wish”

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

So, What'd You Think of Our #WhyListen First Listen Music Party?

If you’re reading this right now, chances are you made it out to last Sunday’s #WhyListen First Listen Music Party at Shepherdstown’s Town Run Brewing with MiBurg. If you did, we have a new music playlist waiting for you.

But first things first: Thanks for coming out and talking music with meMountain Stage‘s Larry Groce and Rozwell Kid‘s Jordan Hudkins! Your support makes cool #wvpublic events like this happen.

If you walked away with a new favorite song and want to see more of these #WhyListen events around the state, become a member of West Virginia Public Broadcasting. A gift of $10 or more helps us keep these events free and helps promote new #WVmusic from acts like Christian Lopez, Carolyn Malachi, Tim Browning & the Widowmakers, and more.

Either way, we want to hear from you. What did we absolutely nail at Sunday’s #WhyListen? What could we have done better? Click here to give us your feedback.

While you’re giving us that feedback, kick back with our Shepherdstown #WhyListen new music playlist, including a handy-dandy Spotify playlist with most of the night’s music (where available). Happy listening!

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1.       The Avett Brothers– Ain’t No Man

2.       Gordi– Nothing’s As it Seems

3.       The Paranoid Style– The Ambassador’s Moring Lift

4.       Barry Adamson– Up in the Air

5.       Drive-By Truckers– Surrender Under Protest

6.       of Montreal– It’s Different for Girls

7.       Venus and the Moon– Marry Me

8.       Dinosaur Jr.– Tiny

9.       Gringo Star– Get Closer 

10.     Jake Bugg– Love, Hope and Misery

11.     Angel Olsen– Shut Up Kiss Me

12.    Foy Vance– She Burns (Psst… catch Foy Vance in West Virginia on October 16!)

13.    Field Mouse– Never Would Have Known

14.    Carolyn Malachi– Blowing Smoke

15.    Oh Pep!– The Race (Psst… catch Oh Pep! in West Virginia on October 16!)

16.    Chris Staples– Dog Blowing a Clarinet

17.    Bishops– Hookup (Demo)

18.    Rodrigo Amarante– Tuyo

19.    St. Paul & the Broken Bones– Flow with It (You Got Me Feeling Like)

20.    Christian Lopez– Swim the River (Demo)

21.    Tim Browning & the Widowmakers– Gasoline

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

Have you ever wondered what makes a new song into a good song? Or why West Virginia music sounds so different from the rest? Then join West Virginia Public Broadcasting for a #WhyListen: First Listen Music Party on Sunday, August 28 from 4 to 6 p.m at Town Run Brewing Company in Shepherdstown.

“Virginia may be for lovers, but West Virginia is most certainly for music lovers,” says West Virginia Public Broadcasting music host and #WhyListen event coordinator Joni Deutsch. “After successful music listening parties in Charleston, Huntington, and Fayetteville, we’re so excited to bring this #WhyListen event to Shepherdstown and help folks discover their next favorite tune.”

The August 28 #WhyListen event will include a first listen of music from West Virginia and beyond, including the premiere of new music from regional acts Tim Browning, Carolyn Malachi, Bishops, The 29ers, and Christian Lopez Band. Guests will enjoy Town Run Brewing’s local brews and food for the night as they “talk tunes” with Mountain Stage host and artistic director Larry Groce, West Virginia Public Broadcasting host Joni Deutsch, and Rozwell Kid frontman (and Martinsburg native) Jordan Hudkins.

The event marks West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s sixth project with NPR Generation Listen, an initiative to bring young, intellectually curious minds into the public broadcasting community. This event also marks the station’s first collaboration with Town Run Brewing and MiBurg, a media collective that seeks to cultivate community in the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia.

“We pounced on the chance to help bring #WhyListen to the Eastern Panhandle,” says MiBurg team leader April King. “The future of West Virginia depends on retaining younger people, and we support any initiative that attracts and engages audiences by promoting West Virginia’s unique culture.”

The August 28 #WhyListen event is free and open to the public, but space is limited. For more information on the event and to reserve a seat, visit whylistenwv.splashthat.com.

The Hills are Alive… with the Sound of Bookworm Effects' Pedals

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 False Pterodactyl to Rozwell Kid, Goodwolf and Teammate’s Scott Simons and beyond.

But those interviews have been a bit infrequent, and since West Virginia Day is coming up (not to mention A Change of Tune’s second birthday), 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 Morgantown musician Brian Spragg, but he’s more than just a musician. Rather than focusing on his own accomplishments, Brian has given back to the West Virginia music scene by producing and selling guitar pedals and effects through his company Bookworm Effects. In addition to that, he teaches kids how to use those pedals and the basics of music through a Morgantown-based non-profit called PopShop. Without a doubt, Brian is a nontraditional, but very important part, of our growing music scene. And that’s why we’re talking to him today.

Brian Spragg is the founder of Bookworm Effects, a West Virginia-based company that produces guitar pedals and effects for musicians. You can check out the gear he makes on Facebook. And while you’re at it, go ahead and give A Change of Tune a rating and review on our Facebook so others can discover this chat. 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.

Interview Highlights

On growing up on the border of Ohio and West Virginia:

I’m originally from Martins Ferry, Ohio, which is right next to Wheeling, West Virginia. If you wanted to do anything in my hometown, you had to go to Wheeling because there was absolutely nothing going on in Martins Ferry, especially no music venues. Every once in a while, they would try to get something together, but it wouldn’t really go well. I remember when we had a Park Legion uptown, where people would go bowling. It had a big space, and [my band at the time] talked about possibly doing a show there, but the owner was against it. He said, “Kids will bring drugs.” [And we’re thinking,] “Well, the idea is, if we had a music place, they would come to this instead of turning to drugs. You’re actually ruining it for everyone else.” So yeah, stuff like that is just super dumb. Just people stuck in their ways.

On getting involved with music in Ohio:

It was around 1997 when I started noticing more about music, so I bought more CDs. I had random CD’s or cassettes before that, but I never really cared about music. I started getting into music more, and that Christmas I got a guitar.

When I was 17 or 18, I was in a band that was really bad. It was kind of a hardcore-ish band. It was dumb. It was a bad band. But it helped me.

After that, I graduated high school and went for a semester to Ohio University Eastern. I wasn’t really sure what I wanted to do with anything. Right after that, I went to five- or six-week recording workshop program in Chillicothe, Ohio, with my brother. As soon as I got out of that, I got a job in my hometown and started buying recording gear and learning about recording as I was doing it, recording friends’ bands. From there, I met a lot of the people I would be around more in Morgantown. I met more people in Morgantown who were into music, so it was easier for me to come here, play music, and record. So I moved to Morgantown about nine years ago.

I’ve been playing for nineteen years, which sounds so long. I’m old, and I should be a better guitar player, but I’m not.

On being in a “really, really bad” band in his teens:

It was called 77 and October. I don’t know if there’s anything online about us, but you can probably find it. There was this guy, I don’t know where he’s from, but he had a blog called Soft Rock Renegade, and it has a bunch of bands from around the time we were together. So if you’re listening to this interview… don’t listen to that band [laughing]. Please. I mean, I don’t hate it, but it was definitely my first band. I’m friends with all those guys [in the band] still, and they all say the same thing.

<a href=”http://softrockrenegade.bandcamp.com/album/77-in-october-sound-effects-added-to-lessen-tragic-impact”>77 in October – Sound Effects Added To Lessen Tragic Impact by 77 in October</a>

On getting into guitar pedals and effects:

I’ve really always been interested in pedals. My bad band had a ton of pedals whenever we played. But I didn’t have experience in producing them until two-and-a-half years ago, when I was finally sick of most of the overdrives and distortions I would buy. I would become disappointed and say, “Oh, I guess I’m stuck with this pedal now because I spent $100-$200 on it.” So I decided to look into it and first see how they worked. But as you’re learning more about what’s inside them, you think, “Well, it’s not that complicated (depending on the features).” So it started with that and snowballed. And now I’m obsessed with it, and I look at schematics all day.

Credit Jodi Hollingshead / As You Are Boudoir
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Deerjerk (aka Morgantown native Bryn Perrott) collaborated with Brian Spragg on this Malta Kano pedal.

On naming his company Bookworm Effects:

It was one of the first names that actually stuck. I remember thinking that I was going to put pedals into candy tins. But then I was like, “You know what, those are super flimsy and I really don’t want to do that.” I probably thought about that for, I don’t know, ten minutes.

But I was thinking of bookworm or bookmark, but bookworm just stuck. It’s kind of catchy, even though it’s kind of corny.

On guitar effects and the reason for using them:

You could play music all your life and never use a single pedal, but pedals (or any effects at all) are like different colors to paint with. So you can change something. It doesn’t have to be a drastic change; it can be something really subtle. But it can give a song or some piece of music a different feeling. It’s good to have different options for sound.

On which #WVmusic bands use Bookworm Effects products:

Bishops‘ Tucker Riggleman uses a couple different pedals of mine.

I don’t think they were really a band when I sold a pedal to Sara Rudy of Hello June. I don’t know if she uses it live now, but I sold it to here right at the beginning of the company.

Just recently, I sold one to Derrick Shanholtzer-Dvorak of The World is a Beautiful Place & I am No Longer Afraid to Die. That just happened. I just ironed that one out.

On collaborating with West Virginia artists on pedals:

I sent messages pretty far in advance saying, “Hey, I want to do this pedal, and I would like you to do the artwork for it.” This was probably eight months before I even launched the Kickstarter, so I didn’t want to rush anyone with the designs. I said, “Here’s the name of the pedal, and you can do whatever you want.”

I met Haypeep (or Sage Perrott) before that. We had a mutual friend before I moved to Morgantown, so we knew each other through them. But pretty much everyone else I met coming into Morgantown.

Credit Brian Spragg
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Brian Spragg’s first pedal was the Billy Pilgrim Overdrive, which gets its name from Kurt Vonnegut’s 1959 novel Slaughterhouse-Five.

On building his first pedal:

The first one was real basic. I kept it really simple with just one knob of volume control. It was the very first Billy Pilgrim Overdrive. It didn’t take too long to do. It’s based off of an old design for a guitar effect called the electra distortion. There were these guitars in the ‘60s called electra guitars, and they had a bunch of effects built into them, and the electra distortion was built into a switch on the guitar itself. It’s based off of that, it’s not exactly that, but it was a good stepping stone learning about that because it’s a pretty basic overdrive circuit that responds to playing. There’s a ton of boutique pedal companies with effects based off of that.

On his favorite pedal:

I think my favorite is the Atticus Finch. I always wanted to build a pedal that was an overdrive that colored my sound in a good way and not a bad way. The term is overused in the pedal industry, but transparent overdrive means your guitar should sound the same going through the pedal and hits the amp. That’s why I like the pedal so much: it doesn’t change your sound too much; it changes just enough for a difference.

On future pedal designs:

I pretty much have a tremolo ready to be made, but I’m terrible at figuring out a name for it. I was thinking about something that would go along with tremolo, and there’s a J.D. Salinger story called “The Laughing Man.” [There could be an audio connection between] laughing and tremolo, which is when the sound cuts out, so that might be cool. But the thing about The Laughing Man is that it’s based on a short story, and I love the story, but it’s a hard to get an idea of what the pedal would look like. There’s not much of a description of the character of The Laughing Man, and if I base it off of what’s in there, it’s not a very good-looking image in my head.

Credit Jodi Hollinshead / As You Are Boudoir
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Can you name the seven literary references in this photo? Artwork credit from left to right: Deerjerk (Bryn Perrott), Karri Rose Roberts, Josh Mason, Jordan Hudkins, Haypeep (Sage Perrott), Deerjerk and Brian Pickens.

On working with other West Virginia artists:

I have maybe five to ten West Virginia artists who want to design a pedal, and that’s great! [Laughing] I just have to design more pedals first.

Dylan Balliet, who also plays in The World is a Beautiful Place & I am No Longer Afraid to Die and does a solo thing called Spirit Night, expressed interest, and I want him to design a pedal. I’m just not sure which pedal yet.

And in Charleston, Dan Davis from Kin Ship Goods. I need to talk to him again, because I think we were talking about doing a limited run. So I have to get a hold of them soon. When I started the Kickstarter, he printed the first run of shirts for me. Kin Ship Goods doesn’t print other people’s shirts, so that was really sweet of them.

On the #WVmusic scene:

There are a ton of awesome bands and performers from West Virginia, and I’m happy to share the city and state with them. It’s great. It’s such a huge, weird music culture that no one really knows about. I really like how vast it is, with tons of different genres and things. It’s not like West Virginia only does one thing well; everything has something really good.

On teaching music classes at the Morgantown non-profit PopShop:

Credit PopShop
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Brian Spragg donates his time to PopShop, a Morgantown-based non-profit devoted to music education and the local arts.

I teach a music program in Morgantown at a place called PopShop. Starting last summer, we had classes where you could learn what goes into a guitar pedal and then make-and-take your own pedal home. It’s a four-week class, and we have that every session every four months. I actually wouldn’t have gotten into learning about and making pedals were it not for PopShop and Chris Russell (who started PopShop).

Sometimes when we’re teaching kids and playing music, they won’t notice the difference if there’s distortion or no distortion. So I wanted to teach a pedals class to show what effects are and how they work and how to use them in a certain manner.

PopShop is so much fun. Kids, even adults, are getting together and learning to play as a band and learning how to work as a team. It sounds cheesy, but it’s super important as a band because you can’t have four people doing their own thing. That’s super rewarding, and knowing what these bands are capable of is super awesome.

Music featured in this #WVmusic chat:

Comprehensive demo of Bookworm Effects’ Malta Kano Distorted Reverb

Comprehensive demo of Bookworm Effects’ new version of the Atticus Finch Overdrive

Comprehensive demo of Bookworm Effects’ BigWig Bass Driver V2

Morgantown's High-Flying Alt Band False Pterodactyl

It’s hard “making it” in the music biz, especially if you’re a great band out of Morgantown, West Virginia.

After seven self-releases and minor media coverage, False Pterodactyl’s John “Jake” Jacob and Josh Ratliff have come to the realization that they may never break into mainstream music, but at least they’re making the eclectic music that they want to make.

We sat down with the alt rock duo to talk about their new release Lo, what it means to be a “DIY band” and the West Virginia music that should be on your radar.

False Pterodactyl released Lo this past December through their Bandcamp. You can follow the band on Twitter and Facebook. To hear more of their music, tune in to ‘A Change of Tune,’ airing Saturdays at 10pm EST on West Virginia Public Broadcasting. And if like these #WVmusic features, support them by becoming a member of West Virginia Public Broadcasting!

Interview Highlights

On the beginning of False Pterodactyl:

Jake: I was living in Braxton County and was having these weekend jams in my dad’s garage. And my little sister was like, “My friend Josh plays drums.” So I told her, “Well, have him to come up and play.” And we jammed, and it was really fun, and it sounded pretty cool. And he lived up here at the time, so I was like, “Well, I’m going to move to Morgantown and start a band.” Because we’ve known each other since we were little kids. We were on the same little league team back in the 90s [laughs].

Josh: Yeah, I was a horrible baseball player. Music was a little… I’m not saying I’m not terrible [at playing music], but it’s not as bad as baseball.

On calling themselves a Morgantown band:

Josh: Well, I came to school here [in Morgantown], so I graduated in 2011 from WVU. I’ve just been kicking it around up here ever since.  We’re both originally from the Flatwoods area: we grew up there, it’s where the band started jamming… So we’re kind of back and forth [between Morgantown and Flatwoods]. We’re very proud of our West Virginia heritage.

Jake: Yeah, we’re a Morgantown band. We can’t say we’re from Flatwoods because no one knows where Flatwoods is.

On the Braxton County music scene:

Josh: There’s bluegrass that goes down. As far as rock or anything like that, there’s not much of that going on.

Jake: Some friends of mine, they have a [Braxton County] band called Electric Green Machine. It’s like a sludge metal band. They’re actually guys I used to jam with, too. Their drummer was the drummer of my first band in high school.

On False Pterodactyl’s name:

Josh: Obviously we like Jurassic Park [laughs].

Jake: It was weird. After we started the band, we started writing songs. It took a month or two to pick out a name, and it got to the point that it just became frustrating. So we were having a really random conversation in my dad’s driveway one evening with friends, and got stuck on this idea of a guy wearing a pterodactyl costume.

Josh: I think we were originally going to be John Brown Pterodactyl..

Jake: But the guy who we were going to name it after was wild and was worried he might…

Josh: Yeah, it wasn’t the historical John Brown [laughs].

Jake: But we settled on False Pterodactyl because it’s really easy to Google, which you have to have that nowadays if you want someone to find you. It was just weird, and what’s nice about it is that it doesn’t really imply a certain kind of music, so we can keep changing and doing different kinds of music and not worry too much if it fits the image of the band or whatever. I don’t really think we have an image, and if we did, it keeps changing.

Josh: If anything, we work a little bit at not intentionally projecting a certain image of the band. It seems contrived, and we worry about that. We don’t want to seem contrived.

Credit Courtesy of False Pterodactyl
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False Pterodactyl’s rock’n duo Josh Ratliff and John “Jake” Jacob.

On their evolving sound:

Josh: When we first started, we had that two-piece bluesy rock thing going, so I got real into these two-piece bands like Flat Duo Jets and The White Stripes. But I’ve never really been hardcore into any particular kind of music. [For example,] I like Nicki Minaj! She just does some cool things vocally; it’s interesting, and I cannot get bored listening to it

Jake: For a lot of our songs, I think the lyrics are definitely hip hop-influenced, which I think is cool as far as trying to stay away from being contrived, staying away from being just a punk band or a two-piece blues rock band.

Josh: Which really works against you because… I wouldn’t say people want to pigeonhole you, but they definitely want a sound bite that can describe you.

Jake: I feel if someone takes the time to listen to us, they can do it on a song-by-song basis. Because we don’t just have one song where everyone’s like, “Aw, we love that one song.” Everyone has a different song that they like. And I like that because it just means that…

Josh: We don’t have to play that one song over and over [laughs].

On their newest release Lo:

Jake: I tried to make this one a little more psychedelic, just because that’s what I’ve been into lately. I got really into Six Organs of Admittance and that really lo-fi sound… I just wanted to make it different, not super accessible.

Josh: I was in a car accident on November 1 [in 2015] and broke my legs, so that kind of put this album on hold. It kind of forced us to do some non-traditional things with the percussion too. I don’t think there’s any traditional drum set kick snare, cymbals, that sort of thing on the songs. We just tried to mix it up. We used chimes, we used hand claps, we hit weights with a stick…

Jake: All the stuff we had laying around in our practice spot. Just trying to not do things we’d done before.

Josh: As we were working on it, we had this feeling that this is going to be something that people are either really into or they’re really not into. It’s going to elicit some response from people, whether positive or negative.

<a data-cke-saved-href=”http://falsepterodactyl.bandcamp.com/album/lo” href=”http://falsepterodactyl.bandcamp.com/album/lo”>LO by False Pterodactyl</a>

On international response to their music:

Jake: We have a fan in Vancouver. We’ve sent some CD’s to Australia.

Josh: We’re on all these random Russian torrent sites, so we have people that’ll download our stuff from Russia or Eastern Europe [laughing]. It’s wild. It’s not a ton of them, but they’re out there.

On being a DIY band:

Josh: It’s nice having complete creative control over everything and book where we want to tour. [But] that is difficult to do on your own because you got to get used to being told no. It’s tough… because you feel like it’s a part of you that’s being put out there.

On “making it” as a WV band:

Jake: I feel like if we were a country band and doing good, it would fall together. Because that’s what people listen to around here.  

On being a dynamic duo:

Josh: [Jake’s] the James Taylor, and I’m the John Bonham. Except I don’t want to say that, that’s very…

Jake: No, you’re better than John Bonham.

Josh: [Laughing] Yeah, he sucked.

Parkersburg Indie Rocker on TWIABP, WV and TAL

If you take a second to look around, you can find hardworking West Virginians in the coolest places.

Case in point, Parkersburg native Dave Bello fronting the popular indie rock band The World is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die (also known as TWIABP). We sat down with the pepperoni roll-loving frontman to talk about TWIABP’s new record, his thoughts on the Mountain State (specifically his bromance with Martinsburg’s Rozwell Kid) and whether This American Life actually influenced his songwriting.

  The World is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die will release their new LP Harmlessness September 25 via Epitaph and will be on tour this fall. Keep up with the band on Facebook and Twitter. To hear more of their music, tune in to ‘A Change of Tune,’ airing Saturdays at 10pm EST on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

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