Americana Music Festival

John Brannen "Just Restless"

His early life reads like a Southern Gothic novel.  John Brannen’s parents met in China, when his mother was working for the American consulate.  His father was a cotton broker who died unexpectedly and under strange circumstances in Brazil just before John was born.  John’s mother moved them to the South Carolina coast.  It was through his maternal grandfather that he got turned on to classic poets like Tennyson and Longfellow.  And that kindled the flame for the words that were to be woven into John’s path as a singer/songwriter.  Coupled with that was a heavy dose of wanderlust.  By eighteen, he had already hitchhiked across the United States, surfed extensively in Hawaii, and sailed the West Indies.  Enter music, which bit him hard enough for him to only do a bit of college before he left to follow his heart.  

“Just Restless.” I relate. I know where I been, but I don’t know what is around the corner.  And I am willing to throw the dice and take the chance.  Something in John Brannen’s music lit me up a long time ago.  I didn’t know then that he was a fellow seeker, a traveler like me.  But now that I think about his lyrics, it is really no wonder.  The day he came to see us at the Americana Fest in September, he had had one of those days, which included blowing his voice out some.  The passion, the intensity, it is all there anyway.  This song can be found on the 2006 "Twilight Tattoo" CD. This here is the Music Fog solo take.

- Jessie Scott

Just Restless - Twilight Tattoo

Rodney Crowell "Moving Work of Art"

Monday morning.  Carmageddon fizzled like the Y2K scare.  Over the weekend on Facebook, my friend Peter Rodman posted a rewrite sung to the tune of “Carmelita,” with apologies to the late, great Warren Zevon.

"I hear demolition noises on the radio/and my cell phone glows, in the dark, This GPS says "Encinada"/but I haven't gone around the block! Carmageddon! (didn't happen)/I think it fizzled out...'cause everybody listened to the cable news/Now, nobody's goin' out..." 

I LOVE that.  It is actually amazing what we can do when we are paying attention.  And since our attention is focused out west, and we were holding on to this tune, here goes.  We taped Rodney Crowell, the multi-talented and eminently thoughtful and thought provoking singwriter (you heard me) at the Americana Fest in September of 2010.

By the way, this year’s Americana event has been pushed back a month, to October 12 through 15 in Nashville. They've started announcing who will be iplaying: The Civil Wars, Robert Plant & Band Of Joy, Foster & Lloyd, Gregg Allman, Justin Townes Earle, The Jayhawks and the North Mississippi All Stars, just to name a few.  Ticket prices are going up soon, so if you want to be there, here is the skinny for registration and wristbands.

But I digress....today Music Fog brings you a sweet, solo version of one of Rodney’s songs from the Sex & Gasoline album. “Moving Work Of Art.”  Catch him on The Chinaberry Sidewalks Tour named after his recently released memoir.

- Jessie Scott

Sex & Gasoline - Rodney Crowell

Susan Cowsill "Dragon Flys"

Instances of animals behaving weirdly are often reported after one has suffered the loss of a loved one. And if you have had something inexplicable happen to you in one of these circumstances, I know you will be affected by this song. Susan Cowsill lost her brother Barry in the flood waters of Katrina. When she was about to sing this song for us, last September at the Americana Music Festival in Nashville, she set it up by telling this tale. She said Barry always wanted to come back as something with a very long life, like a strong majestic oak tree. But instead, Susan said, he came to her as a dragon fly outside her car window. She was happy to have the visitation, in whatever form it took. When out of the ordinary things happens, you can thank the cosmos for slowing life down enough to make sure you take a look.

Susan has had some rough times and has poured the emotion into her work, into the Lighthouse album. She has been on the road a lot, and has added a new offshoot, as she has appeared on camera in HBO’s gritty series Treme. There is a lovely blog on HuffPo about Susan’s set during April's French Quarter Fest written by Karen Dalton Beninato. Susan and Russ Broussard are playing St. Louis tonight at Off Broadway. If you go, tell her we sent you. And here goes, Susan Cowsill with her band: Russ Broussard, Sam Craft, Jack Craft, and Mary Lasseigne. I predict there won’t be a dry eye in the house. This is the Music Fog version of “Dragon Flys.”

- Jessie Scott

Dragon Flys - Lighthouse