Tag Archives: cowboy junkies

The Best of 2008 – CD’s

here is my list, in alphabetical order…

alejandro escovedo – “real animal”
ben sollee – “learning to bend”
bob dylan – “tell tale signs – rare and unreleased 1989-2006”
carrie rodriguez – “she ain’t me”
cat power – “jukebox/dark end of the street”
cowboy junkies – “trinity revisited”
david byrne & brian eno – “everything that happens will happen today”
johnny cash – “johnny cash at folsom prison: legacy edition”
kathleen edwards – “asking for flowers”
kris delmhorst – “shotgun singer”
over the rhine – “live from nowhere volume 3”
ray lamontagne – “gossip in the grain”
rodney crowell – “sex and gasoline”
ryan adams and the cardinals – “cardinology”
shelby lynne – “just a little lovin’ ”
teddy thompson – “a piece of what you need”
tift merritt – “another country”
the waifs – “sundirtwater”

*and i’m combining cat power’s “dark end of the street” [ep] with “jukebox.” they are out of the same sessions and it is just like an extension of that project.

and here is “Rolling Stone’s” top 50 albums of 2008:

1 | TV on the Radio: Dear Science
2 | Bob Dylan: Tell Tale Signs — The Bootleg Series Vol. 8
3 | Lil Wayne: Tha Carter III
4 | My Morning Jacket: Evil Urges
5 | John Mellencamp: Life, Death, Love and Freedom
6 | Santogold: Santogold
7 | Coldplay: Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends
8 | Beck: Modern Guilt
9 | Metallica: Death Magnetic
10 | Vampire Weekend: Vampire Weekend
11 | Fleet Foxes: Fleet Foxes
12 | Guns n’ Roses: Chinese Democracy
13 | Blitzen Trapper: Furr
14 | Ryan Adams and the Cardinals: Cardinology
15 | The Black Keys: Attack & Release
16 | Randy Newman: Harps and Angels
17 | B.B. King: One Kind Favor
18 | Lucinda Williams: Little Honey
19 | Erykah Badu: New Amerykah: Part 1 (4th World War)
20 | Kings of Leon: Only by the Night
21 | Kaiser Chiefs: Off With Their Heads
22 | Jackson Browne: Time the Conquerer
23 | Conor Oberst: Conor Oberst
24 | Girl Talk: Feed the Animals
25 | The Magnetic Fields: Distortion
26 | Mudcrutch: Mudcrutch
27 | Brian Wilson: That Lucky Old Sun
28 | The Knux: Remind Me in Three Days…
29 | Bon Iver: For Emma, Forever Ago
30 | Duffy: Rockferry
31 | MGMT: Oracular Spectacular
32 | Jamey Johnson: The Lonesome Song
33 | Ne-Yo: Year of the Gentleman
34 | Stephen Malkmus: Real Emotional Trash
35 | Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds: Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!
36 | The Hold Steady: Stay Positive
37 | Nine Inch Nails: The Slip
38 | Ra Ra Riot: The Rhumb Line
39 | Taylor Swift: Fearless
40 | Jonas Brothers: A Little Bit Longer
41 | AC/DC: Black Ice
42 | David Byrne and Brian Eno: Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
43 | Nas: Untitled
44 | The Raconteurs: Consolers of the Lonely
45 | Be Your Own Pet: Get Awkward
46 | The Academy Is…: Fast Times at Barrington High
47 | Of Montreal: Skeletal Lamping
48 | Raphael Saadiq: The Way I See It
49 | Hot Chip: Made in the Dark
50 | No Age: Nouns

Newport Folk Festival (August 2nd & 3rd)

i was really hoping to make it up for this, my three current favorites; over the rhine, cat power and cowboy junkies are all playing the (arguably) most famed and prestigious ongoing festival in the history of music, the newport folk festival. plus sets by legends like levon helm, brian wilson* and richie havens along with sets by other greats like; gillian welch, steve earle/allison moorer, son volt, the black crowes and jakob dylan, playing where his father was booed off the stage 43 years ago for “going electric.” jakob, by the way, will be playing a solo acoustic set. it should be a great weekend and with jimmy buffet “headlining” and closing it out, there would be a great opportunity to slip out early and beat the traffic.

hopefully we will be getting a full report from friend and previous contributor, keith bergendorff who will be attending the festival along with several cowboy junkies and over the rhine shows in the region.


The Newport Folk Festival is a multi-day, multi-stage music festival held at the historic Fort Adams State Park in Newport, Rhode Island.

Saturday, August 2
Doors: 10:00 AM – Show: 11:30 AM to 7:00 PM

Cowboy Junkies 11:30 – 12:20
Young @ Heart Chorus 11:30 – 12:10
Sydney Wayser 11:30 – 12:00
Red Rooster 12:25 – 1:15
Jakob Dylan 12:30 – 1:20
Richie Havens 12:40 – 1:30
Jesca Hoop 1:35 – 2:15
Steve Earle & Allison Moorer 1:40 – 2:30
Trey Anastasio 2:00 – 3:00
American Babies 2:35 – 3:05
She & Him (feat. Zooey Deschanel & M. Ward) 2:50 – 3:40
Willy Mason 3:30 – 4:10
Stephen & Damian Marley 3:30 – 4:45
Jim James (of My Morning Jacket) 4:00 – 5:00
The Felice Brothers 4:35 – 5:35
The Black Crowes 5:15 – 6:45
Cat Power 5:30 – 6:30

Sunday, August 3rd
Doors: 10:00 AM – Show: 11:30 AM to 7:00 PM

Ryan Fitzsimmons 11:30 – 11:50
The Honors (OurStage Winners) 12:10 – 12:55
Brandi Carlile 12:15 – 1:00
Over The Rhine 1:15 – 2:10
Richard Julian 1:20 – 2:10
Calexico 1:20 – 2:20
Kaki King 2:30 – 3:20
Jake Shimabukuro 2:30 – 3:30
Gillian Welch 2:40 – 3:40
Son Volt 3:40 – 4:40
One Flew South 4:00 – 5:00
Levon Helm 4:10 – 5:10
The Avett Brothers 5:00 – 6:00
Jimmy Buffett 5:40 – 7:15

Schedule subject to change
* “official” postings/articles note brian wilson as a performer, i have yet to find his name/time slot on a schedule.

featured artist – cowboy junkies

written and submitted by jason lent

margo timmins

“This song I’d like to dedicate to the young girl in Utah, and her family.” Margo Timmins – “This Street, That Man, This Life”, Petaluma, CA, 2002

Simple words spoken quietly by singer Margo Timmins of Cowboy Junkies deep into the band’s set on the final night of a grueling five night run up the California coast. The young girl in Utah was Elizabeth Smart and the song, written a decade earlier, tells a story hauntingly too familiar to anybody who read the newspaper that spring. The real life story ended happily but really, how happy can such a story end? Somewhere between the polar tips of sadness and happiness is a place swathed in a mixture of the two colors. This place is called life. Few bands write and perform in this place as consistently as Cowboy Junkies.

As the influence of MTV started to fade from my life in the late 80’s, one of the last bands to register on my musical radar was Cowboy Junkies. I picked up the seminal Trinity Session as high school began and set it aside for a few years. Rock and roll might have been ready for the revolutionary lo-fi recording of Trinity but I was still taking the Duran Duran pins off my Member’s Only jacket. A few years later, our paths would cross again on television.

In anticipation of the follow-up release Caution Horses, VH-1 aired a short special on Cowboy Junkies (seriously, this happened, I have a copy) and the video for the first single, “Sun Comes Up, It’s Tuesday Morning.” With my musical tastes having moved from Thompson Twins to Eric Clapton and the early delta blues artists, the time was right for me to revisit Cowboy Junkies. Twenty years later, I still haven’t left.

Two things everybody seems to know about the band is that they recorded a cover of the Velvet Underground’s “Sweet Jane” and they’re depressing. Both of these facts are slivers of truth with far more depth than most listeners will ever notice. As a band, singer Margo Timmins with brothers Michael (guitar/songwriter) and Pete (drums) and Alan Anton (bass), they are constantly challenging the listener by adapting a diverse range of songs from The Cure to Townes Van Zandt. Sheryl Crow singing “Sweet Child Of Mine” is a cover, and a terrible example of one. Cowboy Junkies exploring an acoustically bare, first person reading of Bruce Springsteen’s “You’re Missing” works on a different artistic plane.

Yes, the stories found in Cowboy Junkies songs are dark but happy endings are relatively subjective in life, something that Hollywood and Miley Cyrus would prefer you forget. Many of the early narratives that Michael passed to Margo were filled with the Southern Gothic traditions of writers like Flannery O’Connor. As years pass and the realities of family life creep into the business of being a band, the tone of the writing and the pace of the music often flows through the speakers like the words of a Richard Ford novel float across the page. Happiness and sadness twist together to form a frail tempest of hope that refuses to stop living.

The endurance of Cowboy Junkies both artistically and commercially lies in the honesty of the band. There are few bands more open with their fans, both in person and in cyberspace. Everything from rough, first take recordings to hand written lyrics are available for the listener to explore through the band’s website. Singer Margo Timmins still comes out after every show to talk and take countless pictures with fans. On stage, the sonic clouds of dark mystery swirl from the amps without disengaging the audience. Cowboy Junkies are a shared experience.

Before the show in Petaluma that night in 2002, the band invited in five or six fans to watch a tired sound check. One fan had his wife and daughter with him, something he had mentioned to Margo the night before when he requested a song that had impacted their family in a meaningful way. Remembering this and despite not having played the song in years, the band dedicated it to the daughter and played it for the family, unrehearsed, in an empty concert hall. Watching the moment unfold, I realized that the most important moments in life are the small, all too fleeting times when life comes into focus. The moments when sadness and happiness both make sense and have equal importance to our souls. It is these moments that come alive in Cowboy Junkies.

find out more about cowboy junkies @ cowboyjunkies.com

read more from jason @ essential junk

photo by bill ivester

submit you own story about your favorite band or artist to bivester@gmail.com

low pining – an interview with “monahans”

submitted by: Jason Lent

Low Pining

On a recent trip through California to see a handful of Cowboy Junkies shows, I stumbled head first into a new sonic landscape. At once, it was a place of familiar echoes but new furniture. This new place was Monahans (actually just two members) who were opening up select shows along the tour. Their slow burning sound sliced into my temporal lobes and provided a soundtrack to the late night driving along empty highways.

Monahans are born from Milton Mapes, a highly regarded Austin, TX outfit who critics liken to everyone from Neil Young to Uncle Tupelo. They first caught my attention when they covered a little known Junkies song for a label compilation. The Junkies were also paying attention and Milton Mapes were soon opening shows for the indie veterans from Canada. On their first album, Low Pining, Monahans step outside the Americana honky tonk and start walking into a dark Texas night until the sun begins to peer over the empty sand hills from which they take their name. Out here the silence resonates with meaning.

Matching the punch of the new music is the honesty of the live performances. Singer Greg Vanderpool and guitarist/percussionist Roberto Sanchez weave and loop a droning pulse around each song that hint at what Sigur Ros might sound like if Iceland was a lonely truck stop floating out in West Texas. Their stage presence is refreshingly unassuming and a perfect compliment to a Cowboy Junkies set. Together, the two bands make for an incredible night of music. On the last night of the California tour, Monahans exited with a cover of the Junkies lament “Now I Know” that swirled the original into a musical tendril of heartache and hope. Is it too early to name it my live music highlight of the year? Probably not.

According to their website, the duo will be joining the Cowboy Junkies tour in Colorado next month before the entire band reassembles for shows in Texas this August. Greg was kind enough to spend a little time answering questions this week and I posted one of the album tracks to give all these words some context. So, take a listen to Monahans and then head over to i-Tunes or here to buy the rest of the mesmerizing Low Pining.

JL: On the Milton Mapes record Westernaire, there is an instrumental track named “Monahans” that hints at the road the current album travels. Was that a point of departure for the current project when you decided to pursue the sound further? When did you realize that the new sound would be a whole new band?

GV: I think our main intention when we started recording Low Pining was to just let the music happen, instead of trying to manufacture a new Milton Mapes record. We kept telling ourselves that this didn’t have to be a release of any kind, but rather experimentation for our own amusement. The instrumental track “Monahans” was done many years before, but in a similar way, and so we referenced that recording when talking about the new stuff. It wasn’t until we were close to completing the album when we got serious about releasing it under a different name. And we still could have released it as Milton Mapes, but we wanted to keep that spirit of starting fresh and treat it as something new.

JL: With Milton Mapes, there is a lot happening in the songs while Monahans embrace silence and space within each song. Is this similar to the Texas experience with the activity in towns like Austin and Dallas being surrounded by oceans of open space and small towns that rarely change?

GV: Yeah, I think that’s exactly it. You know I love a lot of the country music people associate with Texas (Willie, Ray Wylie Hubbard, etc.) That and Tejano are really our state’s signature style of folk music. But Texas, to me feels bigger than that particular brand, which is sort of what that has become. I’m still inspired by the expansiveness, and the highways and the romance of the land and sky—all those Texas cliches— I just want to explore that feeling in a different way, musically. It’s real easy around here to get tagged as another Texas balladeer, and that becomes the extent of what you do in people’s minds. But I feel ambiance and rhythms can describe that scenery just as powerfully, if not better, than words can. So one of our goals, as Monahans, is to let the negative space do most of the heavy lifting. The lyrics on Low Pining are mostly fragments, simply planted as little road signs you pass along the way.

JL: Art is almost always informed by where you’re from. How has the Deep Ellum and Austin scenes influenced your work?

GV: I grew up in Dallas and was playing in a band around Deep Ellum in high school. The Deep Ellum scene was still in its infancy, so we were more likely to play in a warehouse than an actual established club/bar. Like most young bands, we wanted to be just like our influences at the time. The Police, U2, Peter Gabriel, REM… But we had a lot to learn. There was a point along the way when we started examining who were were and where we came from. We always felt like we were on the outside looking in on the music scene there, although we played at just about every club that ever came and went. I think that ignited the process of figuring out where we fit in, what Texas sounds like, and trying to express that through music. We’re still in the process of doing that I suppose.

JL: When you mentioned Cowboy Junkies’ The Caution Horses on the Milton Mapes song “Lubbock” did you ever imagine a scenario where you would tour and record with a band that appears to have been a major influence on your music?

GV: I can’t even describe how cool of a thing that is. It took a little restraint at first to hang out with those guys and not launch into personal accounts of how deeply their songs and recordings have moved me and influenced me. But it’s so great to listen to them every night when we’re touring. When Jeff Bird plays the mandolin—that’s it! That’s the sound on the record that I listened to when I was 18 years old. So for them and their audience to listen to us and appreciate what we do is extremely gratifying.

JL: At a recent show in Santa Cruz, I noticed that you guys were sitting to the side of the stage watching Cowboy Junkies and you seemed as excited as the fans to be watching them. Earlier in their career, they often mentioned the impact touring with Townes Van Zandt had on how they approached live shows and life on the road. Have you gleaned any nuggets of wisdom from Junkies (who have been touring for over two decades now) in the same way?

GV: It must resemble, to some degree the feeling of getting called up to the big leagues and taking the field alongside Nolan Ryan or something. When we’ve toured with Cowboy Junkies, we’ve usually played on larger stages in nice theaters vs. the small rock clubs we play on our own tours. I think what I notice most is how they have mastered the art of presenting their music in a way that is both mysterious and intimate at the same time. They stay behind the curtain just enough to give the audience a sort of magical transcendental experience, but they also know when to let loose and improvise just enough to make it feel as if you are sitting in their living room. So they command the audience’s attention in that respect. It’s difficult to take that approach into a rock club setting, but it’s certainly something we strive for.

JL: How far along are you with the next Monahans album and where are you writing it?

GV: Well, we have been recording at a studio called Ramble Creek in Austin where we made Low Pining. Currently, we have enough material recorded to warrant an album in the traditional sense. Sometimes it feels close to finished, but then we take a step back and realize we still have a ways to go. I’d like to think we could release something this year, but we also don’t want to rush it. So far I would say the songs have a bit more structure than on Low Pining, but there is still plenty of negative space to explore.

the listening station: Monahans – “Undiscovered” (from the album “Low Pining”)

read more from jason @ his blog: “essential junk”

the best of 2008 (so far)…

submitted by: bill ivester

the best of 2008 (so far)…
as i’m sure you’ve noticed, the year is now, incredibly, half over. so i thought i’d list some of my favorites through the first six months of 2008.

so here they are…

CD’s (top ten, roughly in order*)
teddy thompson – “a piece of what you need”
cat power – “jukebox”
shelby lynne – “just a little lovin’ “
kathleen edwards – “asking for flowers”
cowboy junkies – “trinity revisited”
alejandro escovedo – “real animal”
tift merritt – “another country”
ben sollee – “learning to bend”
r.e.m. – “accelerate”
kris delmhorst – “shotgun singer”
honorable mention
steve winwood – “nine lives”

*(order subject to change depending on what i just finished listening to)

CONCERTS
02.10 – cat power @ the vic (chicago)
05.25 – over the rhine / ohio: in concert (cincinnati)
06.11 – alejandro escovedo (w/ben sollee) @ headliner’s (louisville)
04.26 – over the rhine (w/julie lee) @ canal street tavern (dayton)
04.17 – kathleen edwards @ headliner’s (louisville)
03.11 – grace potter and the nocturnals @ headliner’s (louisville)
*03.14 – over the rhine @ the ryman, opening for ani difranco would have to be my top concert experience and had it been a full set, would have unquestionably topped this list.

if you are unfamiliar with any of these artists, i highly recommend checking out their music and seeing them live if they are anywhere in your general area.

do yourself a favor and give them a listen.

and enjoy.