Americana Music Festival

The V-Roys "Goodnight Loser"

From 1994 to 1999 The V-Roys, the seminal roots rock band from Knoxville barnstormed the south, ahead of the Americana movement that was shortly to follow. The V-Roys started life as the Viceroys, but had to shorten the name after threat of a lawsuit from a Jamaican band with that name. Their first album, Just Add Ice is a reference to the letters removed. They subsequently put out other somewhat tersely titled offerings. At the millennium’s end, the band broke up, and we have followed Scott Miller & The Commonwealth, and Mic Harrison & the High Score on their journeys for the last decade or so. When word came about release of the first-ever compilation from The V-Roys, I was stoked. You’ll find 18 tracks on Sooner or Later, with thirteen previously released and five unreleased, including covers of Tom T. Hall’s “That’s How I Got To Memphis,” Neil Young’s “Burned,” and Leiber and Stoller’s “Smokey Joe’s Café.”

The V-Roys played their last show on New Year’s Eve 1999 at the historic Tennessee Theatre in downtown Knoxville. It was time for Mic Harrison, Scott Miller, Jeff Bills and Paxton Sellers to do a reunion at the end of this year. After selling out the Bijou Theatre, the concert was moved to the glorious Tennessee Theatre, coming full circle. The title, is again somewhat terse, “One Show; Goodbye” The V-Roys New Year’s Eve blowout will find the band doing crowd pleasers and generally ripping it up. That will be a not-to-miss occasion if you are anywhere near the Knoxville area.

We jumped at the chance to film Scott Miller, and Mic Harrison at Marathon Recorders in Nashville during Americana Fest. We bring you the Music Fog version of “Goodnight Loser.”

-Jessie Scott

Goodnight Loser - Sooner or Later

Gary Nicholson "Fallin' & Flyin'"

Every year, as Music Fog heads into the great white north for MusicFest at Steamboat, Delbert McClinton takes a merry band of swashbucklers south for the Sandy Beaches Cruise. This year, they'll be sailing from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida on Sunday, January 8, 2012, with two stops to visit three ports: St. Barts, St. Kitts and Nevis. And the roster? Well hell, that would be Al Anderson, Marcia Ball, Bruce Channel, Nick Connolly, Bob DiPiero, Fred Eaglesmith, Joe Ely, Jimmy Hall, Tom Hambridge, Teresa James & the Rhythm Tramps, J.T. Lauritsen & the Buckshot Hunters, Colin Linden, Big Joe Maher, Raul Malo, Clay McClinton, The McCrary Sisters, Mingo Fishtrap, Jonell Mosser, Lee Roy Parnell, Jill Sobule, Paul Thorn, Wayne Toups & Zydecajun, Seth Walker, Kevin Welch, Mike Zito, Miles Zuniga, Chuck Cannon, Matraca Berg, Eric Lindell, Danny Myrick, Gretchen Peters, Lari White, and Delbert’s longtime friend and songwriting partner Gary Nicholson. For ticket information, check here.

Gary Nicholson came before the Music Fog cameras at Americana Fest last month in Nashville. We were honored to have him, and the added bonus was that he brought Colin Linden and David Roe along with him. His life is a chronicle of the American Music scene dating back decades.  It is an impressive array of sights and sounds, as Gary has explored the roles of performer, songwriter and producer in his illustrious career. The song we bring you today is a classic, and if you remember, was in the movie Crazy Heart, performed by Jeff Bridges and Colin Farrell. It was co-written by Gary and the late Stephen Bruton. You can find Gary’s version on the album Texas Songbook, which came out back in June. Here is the Music Fog recording.

- Jessie Scott

Texas Songbook - Gary Nicholson

Eric Brace & Peter Cooper "Grandma's Batman Tattoo"

Ugh, and yikes I am so full I can barely move. I am NOT shopping today, Black Friday or not. Actually, I am in New Orleans and a stroll down Bourbon Street might be just the thing to walk off the overeating of it all. I am appalled, because New Orleans is not a city that you want to be ‘too full’ in. There are $2 pancakes at City Diner- bigger than your face, there are hamburgers reminiscent of your youth at Bud’s Broiler for $3.65, there are beignets at any hour of the day or night. Po’ Boys and muffalettas, and gumbos and it goes on and on. But I am full, and I don’t want any more food! But I am in New Orleans, so maybe the music is the subtext. Last time I was here we posted a song that referenced NOLA, and so it is again today.

Eric Brace and Peter Cooper - I could fill the page with good things to say about them. I am so impressed with the projects they have taken on, they are following their hearts and making some music that will last, like the thing they did with Lloyd Green and Mike Auldridge called the Master Sessions, and the tribute album I Love: Tom T. Hall's Songs Of Fox Hollow. Today’s tune speaks to another kind of permanence, the tattoo. And Grandma, incongruous as that might be to ponder. Today’s grandmothers may have had a wild night on the gulf coast back in the day, and wound up with the Batman tattoo in question, somewhere where it doesn’t show. Oh hell, I’ll let them tell it. Eric Brace and Peter Cooper from the Music Fog Fall Marathon in Nashville with the opus, “Grandma’s Batman Tattoo.”

- Jessie Scott