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Category Archives: Woodstock
Woodstock and NYC
this past weekend is the biggest weekend the guv’s have ever had. It was our second trip to new york. we played in the city on thursday then shot up to woodstock to open up for the levon helm band at a midnight ramble session. the wives came along so it was like a family vacation, it was cool. the murph was there too. tony d made us some spinach balls, cookies, and yogurt pretzels for our journey because we like snacks. we piled into the mule to start the first leg to hagerstown maryland. i could feel it was gonna be good weekend because william shatner hooked us up with some hotel rooms and i bought a nesquik double chocolate milk for the road.
some of you may have read my last blog about pulling into new york city while driving a 30 foot long airport shuttle. edgy times. i drove us in last time so james decided to take the pilot seat for this go around while i was the motivational copilot. we decided to implement a different strategy for this trip. instead of worrying about how horrible it was last time to get into the city we spoke blessings over the mule. the blessing was to pull straight in and park right next to the load in doors at the venue. statistically, judging by last time, there was a negative 21% chance of this happening but we believed that it was our time. we have a technological device called a gps that tells you what to do when you have no idea where you re going. sometimes it works well and sometimes it is full of lies. for this trip the gps was on point and according to the instructions we only had one turn to make once we entered the city to get to the venue. it was early afternoon so there was minimal traffic pulling in so it was a smooth arrival. we got in the city easily and sure enough the venue was about 50 yards ahead and the one turn was exactly where we were hoping to park. we made the turn and there was a huge parking space right in front of the load in doors. victorious. all the wives went to some science place called anthropology and we loaded into the venue for sound check.
we were excited to play new york again because last time it was an awesome turnout and we gained a lot of fans. we also had a ton more energy because we didn’t have to deal with driving our gear across the city. sound check felt really good as well so there was an easiness about this night that created a good chill for all of us as a band. we played with the northbound traveling minstrel jug band and the rozatones who are both really cool bands so check em out if you get a chance. it came time for us to come on so we hit the stage to bring the rock to the people of new york. the crowd doubled what was there last time and the wives were in the front row dancin and singin our songs. It was so inspiring to us to have all this support so we gave em a rock and roll sandwich to the faaayse. we love new york city.
the next day we woke up to 12 inches of snow on the ground but the roads were plowed so that didn’t stop us. we stayed a little ways north of the city so we could wake up and get on the road to woodstock for a chill day because the ramble wasn’t until saturday. last year we went to woodstock to record our album “youth is in our blood” at levon helm studios. we were there for two weeks so we decided to stay in bob clearmountain’s vacation home which is located in the byrdcliffe colony. it’s such an awesome house that we decided to stay there this time to maximize the chill. bob clearmountain is an award winning studio engineer who mixed songs as well as complete records for artists such as bruce springsteen, the rolling stones, bryan adams, as well as many others. as we got closer to woodstock we called our producer justin guip because we wanted to stop by to see him. we arrived at levon’s house and it was like we never left. levon was pulling out when we arrived and he was waving at us and giving us his signature “go get em boys” thumbs up. he just got out of the hopital so it was good to see him out and moving around. his dog muddy was in the passenger seat. it was really cool to see everyone, levon, guip, brendan, chris, barbara, walt, the whole team levon staff, it felt like we had only been gone for a few months. they run a very family oriented ship there so we felt really “at home”. one day i’m gonna purchase a vacation home in woodstock and it will be a glorious day. i will have many cookouts with tons of beer and steaks for my friends at my vacation home. we hung out at levon’s for a while and then i heard ashley say taco night. tha cozmo loves tacos. i got really happy and we gave each other a high five. our friend from ascap, robert filhart, was there with us and he offered to shuttle us all to the house so we could leave the mule at levon’s. thank you for being awesome robert. the wives made tacos and guac for us. it was delicious. i ate 2 burritos and three tacos, then later they made cookies for dessert. we built a fire and had family hang time where we sang songs and danced around the living room to celebrate the weekend. the next day we slept in for a little while then went into town to get some food. the first group shuttled in was me, the murph, the hoskins, and the doodys. we went to the oriole 9 cafe. me and the murph got the cuban sandwich which was scrumptious. i also got some bacon on the side with a classical coke that was in the old school eight ounce glass bottle. our lunch was awesome. when we finished we walked around to check out some of the shops in town then we had a rendezvous at the hot chocolate factory. shortly after, we went back to the house to relax til sound check. it was a good day.
it was time for the ramble. we were so excited to open for someone we really look up to as a musician as well as a person. levon is a legend and a huge inspiration to our band and we were pumped to be back to play with him once again. we also heard that jimmy vivino (leader of conan o brien’s basic cable band) randomly showed up to play with the levon helm band so we knew it would be a special night but we weren’t aware of how special. he was in town from l.a. to visit his son and decided to stop by to play the show. it came time for us to go on and we held nothing back. the crowd was so into the music that we got an encore. it felt really good, our set was rockin. we cleared off the stage for the intermission and went downstairs to do a cd signing then came back up for levon’s set. they were amazing, the energy was maxed out and the crowd was feelin it. about mid way through they’re show i looked down at the set list and noticed that the last song was “the weight”. i started thinkin to myself, “man that would be cool if they invited us on stage to play the weight with them.” slowly that thought consumed my brained and about 5 minutes rolled by where i drifted into a dream world and played that scenario out in my head. eventually i snapped back to reality to catch the remainder of the show. i started to have this rumblin feelin in my belly when they finished the last song before the weight. something was gonna happen but i didn’t know what. sure enough larry campbell (grammy award winning producer/arranger, virtuoso of multiple instruments, and front man of the levon helm band) started talking about us on the microphone. he was complimenting our music then he invited us all on stage for the last song. wuuuuuuuuuuuuurd. i couldn’t believe it, it really happened. i walked on stage and larry told me to grab the acoustic guitar that was sitting in the rack. i never play acoustic guitars but it was the only one that was available so i just had to roll with it. so there we were, a red-headed american rock and roll band from knoxville on stage with grammy award winning levon helm band. crazy. we started the song and james sang the first verse and killed it. levon had a full grin on his face the whole time. it was priceless. meanwhile i’m tucked in the back next to jimmy vivino trying not to do anything stupid. i figured i wasn’t going to do much on the song since there was 25 people on stage so i was in chill mode. next thing i know, larry looks at me and tells me to take a solo. i felt like i was gonna poop my diapers. as i mentioned earlier i was playing an acoustic so i felt like i was about to fight a dragon and my only weapon was a carton of eggs and a slingshot. i couldn’t let south knoxville down so i accepted the challenge. it was the longest solo i have ever played on an acoustic guitar in my life and it felt good and buttery. after the show was over we hung around with the band for a while then took off to the house to celebrate our epic night.
the next morning we woke up and the wives made us bacon and eggs. tha cozmo also loves bacon and eggs. before we left woodstock we wanted to stop by and check out “big pink” which is the legendary pink house where bob dylan and the band composed several huge songs, including “the weight”. they would rehearse in the basement. we started our journey to “big pink” following snowy back roads through woodstock. it was a slow trip because it started to get really “hilly” and we didn’t want to get stuck anywhere. finally we approached parnassus road where the house was supposedly located. the map told us to take a right but it looked a little sketchy because the road was really narrow and covered with snow. there was also no houses in sight. a few of us walked down the road to scope out the territory but there was no luck. it was getting late and we had to get back to tennessee so we were about to give up because the roads didn’t look friendly for the ol mule. after pondering for a moment we decided to take a left and drove in a huge circle. we couldn’t find the house on the left side of the street either. once we arrived back to the intersection we had a better angle to turn where the map was telling us to go so we decided to risk it. as soon as we turned onto the narrow, snowy road someone turned in behind us so we were stuck, there was no turning back. the mule was stopped in the middle of the road blocking everything when the people in the car walked up to the driver side of the mule. they knew who we were and why we were turning down into the woods. it turns out they were the people who owned “big pink” and we were right the first time but we didn’t go down far enough. pushing further we pulled up to the house. originally we were just going to take a picture out front and leave but the owners invited us to come inside. they gave us a tour and told us a bunch of cool stories about bob dylan and the band. i wanted to ask them if i could have a glass of kool aid but i figured that might be pushin it. we got to see the basement and everything. just think, we were about to give up, decided to go the opposite route, looped around right back to where we came then got trapped in by the owners. it worked out great because they were forced to talk to us because we were blocking the entire street. it was the greatest weekend in all the land. i also got to hang out with one of levon’s dogs. it’s gonna be a big year for the guv’s, thanx to everyone for your support.
cozmo
Posted in Blog, Woodstock
Tagged big pink, bob clearmountain, canal room, conan o'brien, cozmo holloway, dirty guv'nahs, jimmy vivino, larry campbell, levon helm, midnight ramble, new york city, woodstock
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Stuck Inside of Hershey with the Knoxville Blues Again
The headline of the Philadelphia Inquirer reads SNOWPACALYPSE.
Interpretation: We are stuck at a Howard Johnson in Hershey, PA with about 10 inches of snow on the ground, and maybe a couple more by the morning. Hoping to make it to Knoxville by tomorrow night if it clears up…
It turns out that pulling a trailer with a 17 year old rear-wheel drive van through “the biggest single day snowfall in Pennsylvania history” is not such a fantastic idea. We actually had some incredible luck and got off of I-81at the perfect spot. The reason I know this is that we recently walked down the street for a gas station grab-bag dinner, and spoke with some locals who said the three surrounding counties have lost all their power and are dealing with 18 – 20 inches of snow on the ground right now. Anyway, we’re praying a snowplow comes and paves us a way out of the parking lot in the morning… we literally slid into the parking lot at 3pm and got immediately stuck…. kinda hilarious in a “this would be funny if it weren’t me” kind of way, but totally terrible in a “we are tired as crap and don’t want to sleep in a crappy hotel tonight” kind of way.
Onto the good news…
1) Justin has shaved an incredible mustache/chops beard and
2) Mitch has fashioned himself a mean mustache as well.
The best news is that last night we got personally invited by Levon Helm to come to his personal Christmas party. It was an intimate evening with about 35 guests (including 7 Guv’nahs) and it featured some truly fantastic moments. Highlights included: 1) chatting with Levon about his love of Gatlinburg woodworking artistry, 2) his hatred for truckers and his advice on how to dodge them when driving through the northeast, 3) watching Levon play the drumset with his 4 yr. old grandson in his lap…. Levon controlling the kick drum while his grandson played the cymbals and snare. Unbelievable. Lots of other highlights which included hearing wonderful stories from his friends about how they were all working with Levon to help preserve Americana music, and help raise money to pay for Levon’s medical bills. (he’s got throat cancer) The spirit in the room was unbelievable… but my favorite moment of the night had to come at about 10:45pm when the music stopped and people started discussing what record to put on next… someone in the room suggested that we listen to OUR new songs over the loudspeakers at the party. Our producer said “Heck yes,” and then proceeded to play 4 or 5 of the new tunes for the folks to check out. Positive reinforcement all around,… from a room full of musicians and a handful of legends. That was the icing on the cake… As we were walking out the door, a man walked up to us and said, “Hey, I’ve been the guitar player for the David Letterman show since 1986… love your tunes, please send me a disc when’s it’s finished and I’ll be sure to get it to our people at the station.”
Hmm… Yes, sir… we will absolutely do that. We followed him out the door and went to a bar in Saugerties to hang out for a couple more hours… celebrating our two weeks and relishing our final night in Woodstock. History shows us that some of the most profound breakthroughs in life come after deep struggles. Call it Karma, call it a spiritual battle, call it whatever you’d like. All I know is we’re on the edge of something really special and your thoughts and prayers over the past couple weeks have really helped pull us through.
Merry Christmas from Hershey, PA.
james
Posted in Blog, Woodstock
Tagged hershey, mustache, snowed in, snowpacalypse, woodstock
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Ramble On
Saturday night we had the great honor of performing at the famed “Midnight Ramble” which is hosted by the incredible Levon Helm at his home in Woodstock, NY. To say that it was a wonderful evening would be a huge understatement. It was a truly special experience for all of us, and something that none of us will never forget.
We have been up here for the past week working on our new album and we played a short opening set consisting of some of the new material. It was a great feeling to play the new songs and have a positive response from the Ramble crowd. James, who has been battling the flu all week, fought through the set and sounded great. Afterwards, during Levon’s set, it was surreal to hear him and Larry Campbell give us a shout out. They were very gracious hosts, and their set was amazing. Levon sang for the first time since the summer due to some throat issues, and it was pretty surreal to be in attendance for this particular show. Also making the night amazing was having so many of our closest friends and family members up here with us. A huge thanks to all who made the journey up here to join us, we really appreciate you. The whole night was very special.
Our time in the studio is also going well. As James documented earlier, our time up here in New York started a little bit on the rough side, but I think we have turned a corner and are hitting our stride. We have all the basic tracks done and will be focusing on the overdubs and vocals this week. The songs are all turning out great, and I think that these tracks are a huge step forward for us. We can’t wait for you to hear them.
So thanks to everyone for all the messages of support, and thanks to all the great people at the Ramble for making us feel right at home. We are having a blast up here and are looking forward to another great week. Please keep James in your thoughts and let’s hope his voice can fully recover soon. We will be checking in periodically and posting some studio pics, so stay tuned.
Justin
Posted in Blog, Woodstock
Tagged levon helm, midnight ramble, ramble, woodstock, youth is in our blood
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The Battle of Woodstock
Friday afternoon in Woodstock. We’ve gotten the rhythm tracks down for 9 songs. The fellas are in the other room working on another one as I sit here and type by fireside. Everything is sounding REALLY GOOD. It’s hard to believe that we’re getting to record here. Pictures of legends are on all the walls. The entire studio made of wood. It feels more like a getaway cabin than a studio. Everyday we see Levon Helm walk out his back door to go play with his dogs for a few minutes. The temperature outside right now is 26 degrees, and we’ve had about 10 inches of snow since we’ve been here. As some of you might have heard, I came down with the flu on the day we got to Woodstock and was sidelined to the bed for 2 straight days. The good news is that I finally got some antibiotics and I am on the road to health. Today, I can talk… but I’m hoping that I’ll able to sing by tomorrow night for our performance in Woodstock. I won’t be recording any vocal tracks until next week, so yall can just pray that I fully recover by then.
The first couple days in the studio were tough. We had serious trouble finding our mojo and were really discouraged… wondering if we were actually ready to record this album or if we needed to go home and rehearse for a couple months before making it happen. At the end of the day on Tuesday, our producer took me to the side and told me that we really needed to get it together or we should just cancel the second week in the studio and go home and work on our songs some more… to say we were feeling down would be an understatement.
We woke up Wednesday morning, hoping that our tune would change… but then we looked out the window to 8 inches of snow. Bad news. This was a problem because:
a) Our house is at the bottom of a 500 foot downhill drive way. Angle of decline, approximately 40 degrees (according to Cozmo)
b) Our van is 17 years old, has fairly bald tires, and is rear wheel drive.
The good news is that Cozmo is a total beast and led the hour-long snow shovel enslaught that ensued. For a full 60 minutes, Guv’nahs were filing in and out the front door… doing 10 minute shifts with snow shovels and then coming in to warm their fingers before returning to the shoveling… but Cozmo remained, for the full 60 minutes. We finally got the van to the top of the hill and rejoiced in our victory. We started down the mountainside to the studio, and just when we thought we had finally defeated the evil spirit that was upon us… our van started smoking. Dark black smoke. Really freaking bad smoke. Smoke was billowing both inside and outside of the van. Everybody was freaking out, lots of yelling, Chris said we should bail out the windows, and Justin suggested just slamming the brakes and leaving the van on the side of the road and just walking to the studio. Well, the smoke wagon finally got to the bottom of the mountain and pulled into a gas station to check out the situation. We all got out to survey the scene and were quickly greeted by an old woman in the parking lot who said, “Something is really wrong with your van!” Thanks, genius.
Well, after about 2 minutes Mitch noticed that the parking brake had been on for the entire descent from the mountaintop. I won’t name who drove 4 miles down the mountain with the parking brake engaged. Immediately, Justin rejoiced in the backseat with a loud shout…. throwing his hands in the air… as if he had just found the fountain of youth…
This was the moment that turned our week around. It literally felt as if the clouds had opened and the sunny skies had flooded in.
Immediately all of our attitudes changed and good music started to flow close behind.
I’ll check in again with yall sometime really soon. You’re only allowed to laugh at this blog post because it has a happy ending. Ha. We appreciate all your thoughts and prayers. Good things are happening my friends.
james
Bound for Woodstock
The weather keeps getting colder as we keep driving north. The temperature outside fell below East Tennessee’s standard of acceptability somewhere around Washington D.C. The van has proven its reliability, motoring without incident through overpriced New England toll booths that are apparently necessary every 15 miles. Despite spending a small fortune on donations to the great states of this region, our spirits are high. We’re about one hour from Woodstock.
Tomorrow morning we’ll begin the two week process of trying to create the best album of our careers. I can’t think of a better place to do it. I’m looking outside the van window right now, watching the Catskill Mountains in the distance. They’re snow covered and still, far removed from the bustle of big city life that exists just 80 miles southwest of here. Woodstock is a musician’s sanctuary, and we definitely aren’t the first band to seek refuge here. In the late 1960’s, before a rock n’ roll festival occurred that would change the world and put the small town of Woodstock NY on the map forever, this place was an escape for famous artists of the time. Bob Dylan lived here, right down the street from Van Morrison, just a couple of blocks away from The Band. This is where The Band’s relationship with Bob Dylan started. Without the quiet allure of Woodstock, it’s possible we never would have heard Levon Helm sing “I pulled into Nazareth, I was feeling bout half past dead”. (I always thought this was a vague biblical reference until I looked at our travel map and realized that Nazareth, NY is just down the road from Woodstock). This historical place is where we’ll live and work for the next 2 weeks.
We are excited and hopeful about our time here. The studio is supposed to be amazing, and I can’t wait to lay eyes on it. Personally, I’m looking forward to playing a studio-owned Hammond B3 organ that so many great hands have played in the past, including The Band’s Garth Hudson. I know Aaron is looking forward to laying down rhythm tracks on a set of drums that were a gift to Levon from the Beatle’s Ringo Starr. Cozmo and Michael will play through amps that donated their tones to Grammy-Award winning albums. The story of this place humbles and amazes us.
As I write this, it seems somehow arrogant to entertain the hope of great expectations for our time here. After all, so many inspirational musicians have made their pilgrimage to Levon’s small home and barn / recording studio during their careers. I’m not sure where we rank on the list of visitors here, but I’m quite sure it’s somewhere near the bottom. Regardless, we’ve gotten this far, and as always, I feel compelled to remind each and every reader that this would not be possible without all of you. From me and from the band, again we say thank you for your love and support.
We’ll keep checking in with you guys every day or so. Tomorrow we start laying down live tracks to build our recordings from. Thus begins our musical journey. We’re not sure where it all goes from here. We just know it’s going somewhere, and we embrace the hope that it’s somewhere good.
Chris
Building the Woodstock Album
We’ve got a deadline. December 7th. That’s the first day that we’ll be in the studio. The plan is to have around 10 new songs for our new CD which will be released sometime in early 2010. Right now we’re working with pieces of about 16 different (and NEW) songs. Trying to hammer out melodies that drive the music, and outline themes that we want to touch on. It’s really important that we not only make good music, but that we say something with our words. That we reflect a piece of ourselves in the music and in the lyrics and melodies. This all sounds pretty vague I’m sure, and alot of people have been asking me, “So, how do yall write your songs?” Well, here’s the brief outline.
80 – 90% of the time, Michael will come to me with a piece of recorded music that he has written and will say, “Listen to this for a couple weeks and let me know what you think.” Sometimes the music is just a guitar part, and maybe an explanation for what he’s feeling about the song, but many times it’s a full-on 3 to 5 minute musical recording with piano, bass, and drums already put in there. After I listen to it for a good while, I start trying to come up with a melody. Usually the initial lyrics that fill the melody are completely meaningless and often times cliche… just place holders for the melody that is developing. Then after a melody gets established, I retreat to my running pad of lyrics and themes that are important to me… and I try to decide which ones make sense for the feel of the song…. for example, i’m not gonna throw some happy words in with some angry music, or vice versa.
This isn’t the only way we write new tunes. Sometimes Chris or I will have en entire song hammered out and then we’ll present it to the band. Other times Justin or Aaron will have pieces of a song and we’ll try to carve the rest of it out as a band. Every song we write gets refined about 10 times before it’s ever played in front of folks.
Writing music with a band is a journey. One filled with vulnerability of spirit and exploration of emotion. The best songs come from the times when we collectively share in the vulnerability and the exploration, bump up against each other, create some uncomfortable friction, and then come out with something different and far more excellent than what we had planned on making in the beginning.
Feel free to check out the lyrics to some of the new tunes in the works at our lyric pad blogsite: http://thedirtyguvnahs.wordpress.com/ We’ve got 4 songs up there right now, more to come as we work them out.
james
WE ARE HEADING NORTH: Guv’nahs to record at Levon Helm Studio in December and Open the Ramble
Levon Helm Studios in Woodstock, NY
For those who haven’t heard, we have just confirmed that we will be recording our next album in December at Levon Helm Studios in Woodstock, NY. We also have the incredible honor of opening for Levon at the Midnight Ramble on December 12th. To say that we are excited would be an incredibly huge understatement.
Simply put, Levon Helm is a national treasure. To be able to record our next album at his home studio up in Woodstock is an absolute dream. We are honored beyond words to get this incredible opportunity.
When we first got together and started this crazy idea for forming a band, we were heavily inspired (and still are) by the timeless music of The Band. Not that we sound anything like the legendary group, but we just loved everything about them. We loved that they made it ok to play whatever kind of music you wanted and not be afraid of fitting nicely into any categories. Our music is definitely a melting pot, one full of rock, country, soul, blues, and who knows what else. Artists like The Band broke down barriers and made that type of thing possible.
The Band just had that vibe of five guys who loved to play music. They didn’t care to have any one of them in the spotlight. In their heyday, they gave a real sense of community, a “we’re all in this together” mentality, which is something that we strive for today. They continue to have a huge impact on us, as we are just six guys who love to play music together. We have an incredible time doing it and we know that every one of us is a vital part of the puzzle.
In particular, we have always had a deep admiration for Levon. The guy was just so cool, no matter who you were. The only southerner (or American) in one of the most Americana bands of all time, we had a natural affinity for the man behind the kit. He was just a boy from our neighboring state of Arkansas who turned out to be one of the greatest musicians of all time. He was the bearded singing drummer belting out some of the most memorable lyrics of the 20th century, yet he still had that southern drawl, charm, and wit – the kind of guy you’d love to sit and have a drink with while he told you stories. He was it for us.
When Levon beat the cancer that threatened to take his voice (and life), the inspiration level for us went through the roof. We went to see one of his “Rambles on the Road” last year and when I left I smiled for days. The man has still got it. He just beat cancer and at his age still put on one of the best shows I had seen in a long time. His playing was great. His voice was great. He was still the man.
So, this December we will make the journey up to Levon’s home in Woodstock. Levon Helm Studios is a place we have wanted to be for a long time now, and we are ready to go up there and try to channel some of his energy in recording the best album possible. Recording in a studio that has seen such legends as The Band, Eric Clapton, and Keith Richards as well as some of our favorite contemporaries like The Black Crowes and My Morning Jacket is the definition of a dream come true for us, and we cannot wait to be there.
We cannot thank you all enough for your support of this crazy path we have been on for over three years now. We can’t do it without you, and you are every bit a part of all the great things that are beginning to happen for us. We hope to see you on the road this fall, and can’t wait for you all to hear this new record as soon as possible. We would have never thought this could be a reality a few years ago, but here we are, still pursuing this sound we have in our heads and still trying to create a feeling of community at all our shows. We are having a great time, and we hope that this is the beginning of a long and joyful ride. We are glad to have your company along the way.
Justin












