Home is Where the Rock Is: A #WVmusic Chat with Jeff Ellis

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 for our final #WVmusic chat, we are chatting with Kanawha-by-way-of-Logan County multi-instrumentalist Jeff Ellis. After playing in a number of local bands over the years (including Harvest and Guinness Clarke’s Wine) and releasing more than a few solo records, Jeff is ready to show the world his new band and his new sound, but not before giving us an idea of the number of #WVmusic people who have helped him along the way.

Jeff Ellis and 40 Days’ new release is Modern Time Blues. 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.

Credit Melissa Stilwell Photography
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Jeff Ellis and 40 Days perform at The V Club in 2016.

Interview Highlights

On his love for music:

I always wanted to be a musician, since I was probably 11- or 12-years-old. I’ve played music, I’ve written songs, and I’ve always strived to be better. Ultimately, I would love to do that for a living and make enough to support a family on that. But as Ian Thornton and Todd Burge have said in earlier interviews, if music is the only thing you’re doing, you’re going to have a hard life. You’ll have a good time, but it might be short-lived and very stressful.

I made a decision early on, at 17 as a matter of fact, that I was going to have a dual career. It’s actually the only reason why I joined the Army Reserve instead of Active Duty. Army Reserve, I can do my one weekend enough, go do some Active Duty time, make enough money to where I could still make music, and still work a part-time job. And that worked out for a while. Time went by and, 18 years later, here I am.

On balancing his life with the Army and his career in music:

I’ve got to spend a year in Austin, Texas. I’ve got to spend a year in Fayetteville, North Carolina. I’ve spent too many years in Iraq and Kuwait and places like that. But each time I go do this, I’m able to save up a fairly good amount of money so when I come back, all the songs I’ve written during that time period, I’m able to go into a studio, I can fund it myself, and I can hire and pay the musicians. And it gives me a chance to play in those areas that I normally wouldn’t get to. So in that regard, it’s worked well. But there have been a lot of sacrifices.

In 2002, for example, I had a chance to go out and do a demo with Raine Maida from the band Our Lady Peace. I was stationed at Fort Bragg at the time, and I met him in Columbus, Ohio, and slipped him a demo a couple weeks before. The stars aligned, the dude calls me, and he was supportive of the songwriting. Then he shoots me an email and asks if I would want to go to California for a weekend and record a demo. So I go to my command at Fort Bragg and they’re like, “Our Lady who? No, we’re not going to give you a four-day pass to go out and make a demo with a rock star.” That sucked real bad [laughing].

On Active Duty, it was almost impossible to have a dual career. I would book these shows, but then at the last minute, they would tell me I couldn’t go.

Credit Melissa Stilwell Photography
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Bud Carroll and Jeff Ellis have known each other for quite some time.

On Jeff Ellis and 40 Days’ band name:

I didn’t want it to be The Jeff Ellis Band because we had done that before with different people, so I wanted this to be distinct. I told the band to come up with a band, and everyone started putting names in the hat. Someone threw in 40 Days, which is actually a song I had written years before. I was raised in a Baptist Church, and 40 Days is significant for times of trial and temptation throughout the Bible. That was always the one I tried to shoot down just because it had been the song title, and I didn’t want it to be the band name. I was thinking about The Heartbreakers, but that was already taken [laughing]. But everyone voted on their favorite band name, and I was outvoted.

Credit Jimbo Valentine
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Huntington-based artist Jimbo Valentine designed Jeff Ellis and 40 Days’ new album artwork.

On his new release Modern Time Blues:

A lot of the songs were written in a police cruiser, I’ll start with that [laughing]. I try to write songs that I think are interesting, and usually those come from real people who I’ve met that get turned into characters and real events that get somewhat fictionalized. A lot of the stuff on this record are real events, real people that I’ve come into contact through police work or military work that I just had to write about. Writing time is hard to find, by the way, when you have two kids, which is why I do most of it in a police cruiser [laughing]. I had a bunch of songs and took them to Bud Carroll. Thematically and sonically, this is probably the strongest record we have done.  

On his music career goals:

Two of my goals in life were to play Mountain Stage and to meet Bruce Springsteen, and I’ve knocked those two out. He has no idea that he met me, but he shook my hand at a concert, and I was like, “I’m not washing this hand for a week.” But I was fortunate enough to do Mountain Stage, and then I got to do it again, which was phenomenal. If I got to meet Tom Petty now, the trifecta would be complete.

Music featured in this #WVmusic chat:

Jeff Ellis and 40 Days- “On the Right Road Now”

Jeff Ellis and 40 Days- “Poor Penny”

Jeff Ellis and 40 Days- “Never Enough”

Jeff Ellis and 40 Days- “So. Charleston City Beat Blues”

June 9, 1957: Pastor T. D. Jakes Born in South Charleston

On June 9, 1957, pastor T. D. Jakes was born in South Charleston. He developed an avid interest in the ministry as a young boy, preaching to imaginary congregations. 

After graduating from West Virginia State College, he started his first church. The Greater Emmanuel Temple of Faith opened in a Montgomery storefront in 1980 with a congregation of 10. Two years later, the Union Carbide plant where Jakes worked closed, and he pursued the ministry full time.

Word of his uplifting sermons spread, and his congregation, notable for its racial diversity, grew swiftly. He moved first to a refurbished theater in Smithers, then to South Charleston, then to Cross Lanes. By 1996, his congregation had surpassed 1,000 members. That year, Jakes relocated his ministry to Texas and founded the Potter’s House in Dallas.

The church’s services include ministries to homeless people, prisoners, prostitutes, and people with AIDS, as well as treatment for drug and alcohol abusers, and adult education. T. D. Jakes Ministries, the non-profit company that sells his videos and audiotapes, grossed $19 million just in 2000 alone. His ministry now has more than 30,000 members.

Injured Motorcyclist Awarded over $500K in Lumber Spill Suit

A jury has awarded more than $500,000 to a South Charleston motorcyclist who was injured in a lumber spill wreck.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports jurors reached the verdict last week in Larry Keeling Jr.’s case.

Keeling’s attorney Ben Salango says his client was riding his motorcycle on Corridor G in August 2014 when lumber that had spilled across the roadway caused him to crash.

Salango says Keeling, who was injured, had to retire from his job after undergoing two surgeries.

He filed a lawsuit against Kevin Hanson, who was driving the truck pulling the trailer full of lumber, and Hanson’s insurance company, Travelers.

Keeling’s lawyer says Travelers refused to accept responsibility for the accident.

Attorneys for Hanson and Travelers couldn’t be reached for comment by the newspaper.

Marshall to Offer Undergrad Classes in South Charleston

Marshall University will start offering undergraduate classes at its South Charleston campus beginning this fall.The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports this…

Marshall University will start offering undergraduate classes at its South Charleston campus beginning this fall.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports this will be the first time undergraduates will be enrolled at the satellite campus, which has been used for graduate classes for years.

University president Jerome Gilbert says he hopes the move will attract new students and that the campus will grow over the years.

Course offerings will likely include general education and classes for engineering, biology, chemistry, nursing and athletic training students.

University spokeswoman Ginny Painter says the final course list will depend on student interest after registration later this spring.

Gilbert said students can start classes in South Charleston and finish their degrees in Huntington.

The university will begin advertising classes at the campus starting in March.

Amateur Engineers Compete to Build Best Bridge

Teams of high school and middle school students gathered in South Charleston over the weekend to compete to design the best virtual bridge.

BridgeValley Community and Technical College hosted the West Virginia Design Contest at the Advanced Technology Center in South Charleston. Thirty-nine high school and middle school teams entered the competition for a chance to win nearly $7,000.  

It’s really fun to be innovative and be put on the spot to do what you can and see how well you perform under pressure and to compete against other intellectuals that enjoy designing and the whole aspect and concept of engineering and it’s really fun to be in that environment with people that like the same thing as you. – Thomas Meadows, 12th Grader, Princeton

Thomas Meadows and his partner were just two of the more than 400 middle and high school students who submitted more than two hundred fifty virtual bridge designs. From those 39 different teams competed in the state finals.

Using computer software the teams were presented with different real life scenarios, each lasting around an hour. Using the software, they were to build a virtual bridge they thought would hold up in the given scenario. The teams were charged with building the most economical bridge possible. 

The students were updated of their scoring progress throughout the time session. Each teamm had detailed instruction what they could do to build the bridge. 

Six of the high school teams from West Virginia and three middle school teams will go on to compete in the national finals in July. 

DNR to Conduct Tests for Police Officers

The West Virginia Division of Natural Resources will conduct physical agility tests next month for natural resources police officer candidates.The DNR…

The West Virginia Division of Natural Resources will conduct physical agility tests next month for natural resources police officer candidates.
The DNR says applicants should report to the lobby of the South Charleston Community Center either on Dec. 5 at 8 a.m. or Dec. 6 at 9 a.m.

Walk-on candidates will be accepted.
 
The three-part test includes a 37.5-yard swim, push-ups and sit-ups, and a 1.5-mile run.
 
Candidates also must pass a written examination. The written examination will be administered at the DNR’s headquarters by the West Virginia Department of Personnel after the physicial agility test.
 

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