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Arts Culture

Chamomile and Whiskey’s latest, Red Clay Heart, lands with some fanfare 

Ken Coomer seems to have a crush on Charlottesville bands.

The former Wilco and Uncle Tupelo drummer produced Sons of Bill’s 2014 Love and Logic, and his latest local connection is to the new LP from Chamomile and Whiskey, the rock-country band that Nelson County natives Koda Kerl and Marie Borgman founded in 2011.

“I liked Koda on the phone pretty instantly,” Coomer says. “He’s this lovable, goofy guy like me. He sent some demos, and I was like, ‘Okay, yeah, let’s do this.’”

Coomer produced and mixed Red Clay Heart out of his rustic East Nashville studio, and the record, which drops on October 30 alongside a release party at Blue Toad Hard Cider, portends to be the most ambitious effort yet by Chamomile and Whiskey.  


Watch Chamomile and Whiskey’s new video for their song “Best Of The Worst.” 
 

 
“As Chamomile and Whiskey became more established in the area, we started to gain a reputation for our rowdy live shows, and while most people seemed to like it there were some detractors. There were people who didn’t like how wild the crowd would get and other musicians who thought we didn’t take it seriously enough. A lot of this seemed to stem from some of our hometown folks from Nelson County. I was talking with my friend Pete one night after a run–in with a particularly pretentious local musician and we came up with the idea that maybe we were “the best of the worst.” When I got to Ken’s studio, I saw a picture of James Booker hanging on the door entering the room with the keys and knew I was in the right place. It’s one of the earliest songs I wrote for this record and I always kind of imagined it as a sequel to ‘Nelson County,’ which was on our last album.” – Koda Kerl  

The band is currently a five piece, with guitarist Drew Kimball, bassist Marsh Mahon, and drummer Stuart Gunter joining Borgman’s fiddle and vocals and Kerl’s guitars, keys, and vocals. Steeped in the Americana singer-songwriter tradition and the blues, Chamomile and Whiskey features a more plugged-in vibe since adding Kimball and Gunter to the mix. Kerl offers John Prine and Bob Dylan as his primary influences; Borgman swings toward The Band and Tom Petty. 

Speaking over the phone about Red Clay Heart in early October, Borgman and Kerl called their new album more Southern rock-inflected than previous efforts—a take-no-prisoners style matching the emotionally wrought substance making its way to the tracklist.

“Most of the songs ended up being heavier, so it kind of worked out well,” Borgman says. “Ken did choose some of the songs, and he was drawn to the ones that were a little heavier.”

The album, which the band recorded last year but held due to the COVID-19 pandemic, takes on our heady times in a direct way. There’s “Another Wake,” Kerl’s faithless rumination in the aftermath of the Unite the Right Rally and Heather Heyer’s death: “Shaken by the violence now I’m longing for a sound / I don’t know the sidewalks of my town.”

There’s “Triumph,” a bleak take on hard drinking and its mortal toll: “I used to dream in color / I used to think I had a soul.”

And there’s “Heartbreak (Luke’s Song),” a chilling eulogy for lost friend and local musician Luke Smith: ”I’ve come to know through the pain and the fun / Life is a slow, beautiful heartbreak.”

In that last track, Kerl recalls Coomer making a suggestion before laying down the vocals. The first take was solid, the producer said, but why not have a shot of whiskey and try it again? The result is a stripped down vocals-and-strumming number recalling Chamomile and Whiskey’s songwriting roots.

The rest of the record, though, draws as much on the present as the past. The band has historically worked many of its arrangements out on the road, playing shows around Charlottesville and regionally. For Red Clay Heart, the novel coronavirus had other plans.

“I had never arranged and recorded in the studio,” Kerl says. “We did this song, ‘Never Live Up,’ that the band had never played. We cut it that day, and it’s one of our favorite things on the record. It was something new—just creating in there with everyone together.”

The released record will have modern alt-country fans thinking of Jason Isbell’s more rocking numbers and maybe even Josh Ritter, whose recent LP Fever Breaks is a near dead ringer for Red Clay Heart. (“I haven’t heard it, so you know we didn’t steal it,” Kerl says.)

So just how did Coomer, who’s worked on albums by Steve Earle, Will Hoge, Jars of Clay, and Emmylou Harris, get hooked up with another somewhat obscure Charlottesville act? He remembers it as a direct Sons of Bill referral, but at any rate, he was taken enough with Chamomile and Whiskey’s sound to take on the project.

“To me, my favorite songwriters are storytellers,” Coomer says. “I heard the song about Charlottesville, and when we tracked it, I was like, ‘This is why I do what I do.’ I am a firm believer [Kerl] could do this in a coffeehouse or be playing for 2,000 people. That’s what I gravitate toward—songs and someone being open-minded enough to say, ‘Hey, let’s push ourselves and make a difference.’”

For those looking for some live music in our socially estranged times, Chamomile and Whiskey has expanded the Blue Toad record release show to two nights—October 30 and 31—and is hoping for respiratory droplet-safe outdoor fun, rain or shine. The venue is selling tickets in groups of two to six, and plans to seat parties at picnic tables.

If there’s an upside to the way music has changed in the COVID era, Borgman says it’s about creativity and community.

“In our free time, we’ve been writing. We probably already have another album,” she says. “For our fellow musicians, bandmates, and other bands, we’re all watching each others’ livestreams and helping spread the word. And outside that, everyone’s been trying to support local.”

Apparently, supporting C’ville’s locals even goes for Nashville-based alt-country legends.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Wilco

Been there: Regardless of which collaborative era in Jeff Tweedy’s career got you on board—Jay Farrar, Jay Bennett, Billy Bragg, Nels Cline—you’ve likely heard the frontman of the revered alt-country, punk-leaning, folk-forward, American rock band Wilco at his best—because Tweedy does not disappoint. Twenty-five years after the band’s formation, Wilco’s poetic authenticity continues to thrive while challenging fans on the quiet, stripped down new album Ode to Joy, which NPR music calls “a deliberately small record by a group of musicians who aren’t trying to impress anyone or expand an audience.”

Friday, November 8. $39-82, 7pm. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 877-CPAV-TIX.

Categories
Arts

Joan Shelley masters the art of fret finger work

Singer-songwriter Joan Shelley describes her latest self-titled album as being like an oil painting with minimal brush strokes. “I think of it as doing the most with the least,” says Shelley. “It’s trying to do something subtly, but by being able to see the gestures. I don’t like to overwork it.”

The album, released in May, is a follow-up to 2015’s Over and Even. It is also an exploration of new musical terrain for Shelley, who performs at the Southern on October 7.

Following a 2014 tour with the quirky folk singer Michael Hurley, and after many listens to the song “Hog of the Forsaken” from his Long Journey album, Shelley decided to pick up the fiddle. She wanted her voice to cling to the fiddle the way Hurley’s does. The alternative to her usual guitar medium required her to take a week’s worth of fiddle classes. But in the end, Shelley went back to her comfort zone.

Joan Shelley
October 7
The Southern Cafe and Music Hall

“I had to perform a few times with the fiddle and it was so new and so hard. Also, the more nervous you are, the worse it is,” she says.- “When I picked up the guitar again it was a huge liberation just to be familiar with it again.”

To shake things up, Shelley pushed herself to tinker with new tuning techniques, and continued to pursue complementary elements between her voice and the guitar.

She and longtime collaborator/guitarist Nathan Salsburg approached Jeff Tweedy, frontman for Wilco, to see if he’d be interested in producing the album. Along with guitarist James Elkington, they headed to The Loft, Wilco’s studio in Chicago, to begin recording in December of last year.

During that time, Tweedy’s son, Spencer, was introduced to the group and offered to play drums on some of the songs. All of the songs on the album that contain drums, with the exception of “Pull Me Up One More Time,” were recorded on the first take—partly due to limited time and partly due to luck.

“The first take where everyone was a little bit unfamiliar was the most magical because everyone was on the edge of their seat,” says Shelley, who was both captivated and challenged while working with a producer for the first time.


Studio guru

Jeff Tweedy, best known as Wilco’s frontman and the co-founder of Uncle Tupelo, has put his studio expertise behind several successful acts including Mavis Staples, Richard Thompson, White Denim and Bob Dylan. Tweedy won a Best Americana Grammy for You Are Not Alone, his 2010 collaboration with Staples.


“I’m used to working with an immediate circle of friends, but for this I was in a new city and a new environment, working with new professionals,” says Shelley, admitting she had to face her vulnerabilities. “Sometimes it felt like a pop quiz and I didn’t want to mess up.”

The album opens with “We’d Be Home,” a solemn track that sets the scene with subtle acoustics that glisten on the folk canvas. Much of the album addresses love, relationships and expectations.

“It’s about new love and watching yourself in that moment when you feel like you can change everything about yourself, but suddenly being self-aware of that chemical dose of love.” Shelley says.

But there’s a different influence on the album’s final track, “Isn’t That Enough.” For this song, Shelley, who grew up in Louisville, Kentucky, with a mother who cared for several horses, looked to her childhood backyard. She sings “I’ve watched the foal roll in clover and steam in cold.”

“[That line] is about seeing an animal come into life and leave,” says Shelley. “It’s a blessing for me being raised that way because it helps you understand the world. We only get one shot at it. Horses are so beautiful and such noble creatures.”

On the same song she also addresses the pageantry of the Kentucky Derby. “Getting ready is more intense and more about identity and presentation,” says Shelley. “The meaning comes in getting ready for this thing because the actual race is 60 seconds or whatever and then it’s finished.” Shelley, by contrast, is just getting started.