Folk Alliance

Matt Harlan "Dresses"

There was a spooky sundown tonight, so compelling in its peach and turquoise blaze, that I had to follow it, though I shouldn't have been driving west, but south. As it faded, I headed home, looking in my rear view mirror to catch its last glorious rays. Only it no longer had that amazing glow, but had devolved into a gently cool mauve. You would have never known, had you just come outside. Here I am geeking out about the sunset, happy that I still look, and that I get excited by the beauty of something like that. And I still listen to music...yes, that includes new music.

I had a conversation with my brother Mitch today, talking about the sad state of radio. "Why don't they play new music?" he asked. Well, the answer to that is long and complicated. The best we can hope for is the divestiture of the giant corporate entities, and maybe when indies and Mom and Pop's can own radio again, there might come a new day of exploration on the dial. And there are still the occasional radio stations that defy the odds and bring it. Of course, in the meantime, there are myriad other sources of music: streaming, Pandora, Slacker, Satellite, and of course websites like ours. Did you know you can even launch 50 of our tunes in a row, kinda like radio, with our Music Fog Video Player? Look for it on the upper left hand corner, under our crew names. Why am I telling you all this? Oh yeah...when I listen to Matt Harlan, he brings me back to why I listened to folk music in the 60's. For the sake of the song as old as the hills, for the delivery as clean as a mountain stream. For the honesty and commitment to quality.

Matt Harlan's CD Tips and Compliments spent the month of March at #1 on the Euro Americana Charts. Patty Griffin's Downtown Church was #1 for February, and John Hiatt's The Open Road is #1 this month. Mighty fine company! Now ask yourself why our American music is so well embraced over there, and not here. But that is another age old story. Authenticity.

-Jessie Scott

Matt Harlan - Tips & Compliments - Dresses

Bob Livingston "Middle Ages Rockabilly Blues"

Bob Livingston is a home grown original with an amazing legacy, and an uncanny knack for being in the right place at the right time. His has been an incredible journey. From Austin singer/songwriter, to tours of folk clubs, house concerts and festivals, to a catalog of work that includes pit stops with the Lost Gonzo Band, Jerry Jeff Walker, Michael Martin Murphey, Ray Wylie Hubbard and many more. Then there's his production and session work, and not to forget International tours to India, Pakistan, the Middle East, Africa, Vietnam and 22 more countries sponsored by the State Department. And you must see his world tour videos, which chronicle his overseas adventures, while they position music as the ultimate communication, especially when there is a language barrier. We posted one when Music Fog was just being born. And speaking of birthing, add to that our congrats as Bob just became a Grandfather! Son Tucker and his wife Kari gave birth to a son in India on April 15!

Bob Livingston's new CD is coming out soon, here's an advance peak at one of the tunes from it, "Middle Ages Rockabilly Blues."

-Jessie Scott

Bob Livingston

Doug & Telisha Williams "Learning to Drink Whiskey"

Denise and I road tripped out of Austin yesterday, and the highways were draped in Texas Wildflowers as we headed west out of town. Bluebonnets, Indian Paintbrushes, Coreopsis, Daisy, Verbena. There were blankets of colors, and the palpable renewal of the season. As some music is, in touch with the ghosts of the past, the birds, the bees, the heartbreak or the happily ever after. Eternal.

Doug and Telisha brought it old school style when they came to the bus in Memphis during Folk Alliance. There was a gift of berries, delivered as a neighbor next door might, when they boarded the bus. Watching them, you get the echo of generations. They come from Martinsville, Virginia, and though they have a hipster sensibility, they have the classic looks of Americans of many eras gone by. Their latest CD, Ghost of the Knoxville Girl, tells the stories that populate the news today first hand, as if across the dinette table. The themes are as old as the hills, and yet have an au currant feel. Doug says, “We hope in some small way our songs not only document these times, but honor the people who are just doing the best they can to get by these days.” We render them here for you in black and white, as an homage to where they are coming from.

-Jessie Scott

Doug & Telisha Williams - Ghost of the Knoxville Girl - Learning to Drink Whiskey