Wednesday, June 14, 2017

GRAMMY-Nominated Musician & Researcher Stephen Wade to Release 'Across the Amerikee'

Stephen Wade has spent nearly his entire life playing and studying American folk music, a rich history he mines on 'Across the Amerikee: Showpieces from Coal Camp to Cattle Trail,' out June 30 on Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. Wade's first entirely solo endeavor, 'Across the Amerikee' presents "solo and display music"--performances that are created for listening rather than to accompany working or dancing, and that are often designed to display instrumental prowess or imitate life sounds such as fox chases and steam locomotives. Pre-order the album thru B&T, today

Listen to selections from 'Across the Amerikee' via bit.ly/2rp4pSH

Grassroots singers and players throughout the United States have long cultivated their own varieties of recital music. A simple dance tune transforms into a concert masterpiece; a personal plaint becomes emblematic of an era. With the banjo and guitar, Wade deftly explores this music made for music's sake. His selections draw from Southern sources as well as Northern interpreters, centering on lyric folksongs and old-time instrumentals transmitted (as one of its older players memorably said) across the Amerikee.


Wade is as well known for his scholarly research and theatrical pieces as he is for his music. 'Across the Amerikee' is Wade's second album for Smithsonian Folkways, following 2012's GRAMMY-nominated 'Banjo Diary: Lessons from Tradition.' Wade's book, 'The Beautiful Music All Around Us: Field Recordings and the American Experience,' won a 2013 ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for excellence on the subject of music.

Wade recorded 'Across the Amerikee' between 2014 and 2016 as he was making appearances on behalf of 'The Beautiful Music All Around Us.' The music harks back to that of folk pioneers like Hobart Smith, Jean Ritchie, and Uncle Dave Macon. The tracks include "Come on Buddie, Don't You Want to Go," learned from a posthumously released Macon recording; "Goodbye, Old Paint," an homage to the trails of the Old West; and "Hard Head Hardy," a story spoken over banjo accompaniment.

"We worked live in a studio, without auto-tuning and overdubs, although exceptions to the latter arise in 'Hard Head Hardy' when I blow a wooden train whistle and clang an iron pipe to represent its bell," Wade writes in the accompanying 44-page liner notes. "Otherwise, 'Across the Amerikee' steers by an old-fashioned route, a method followed since the advent of recorded sound." Throughout the album, Wade continues the traditions established by his mentors and inspirations, as he gives new life to musical voices "bursting with a gumption and spunk that resound even now."

'Across the Amerikee' Track List:

1. Wild Horse

2. Come on Buddie, Don't You Want to Go

3. Chesley Chancey's Cumberland Gap

4. Swing and Turn, Jubilee

5. Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss

6. Diamond Joe

7. Puncheon Camps

8. Hard Head Hardy

9. KC Whistle

10. Willie Moore

11. Uncle Dave's Fandango

12. Goodbye, Old Paint

13. Tom Paley's John Henry

14. Trouble at the Coal Creek Mines

15. Gray Eagle

16. Lost John

17. Shortenin' Bread

18. Reno Factory / Brown Skin Blues

19. Sourwood Mountain

20. In the Pines

21. Cherry Blossom Waltz

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