Jump to Content

Town and Country - Shorter Artist Feature from Issue #64 July-Aug 2006

Earl Brothers

Nowhere near the old mainstream

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA

“Bluegrass now is like rock in the ’70s. It’s produced. It’s predictable.” Bobby Earl Davis sits in a San Francisco coffee shop, his right shoulder cocked and hunched. An angular, tense, Picasso blue-period Ralph Stanley, he’ll assume the same posture onstage the following night when he plays banjo and sings with the Earl Brothers. “We’re like the Ramones. We leave it jagged, punky. Mainstream festivals won’t have anything to do with us.”

The Earl Brothers (John McKelvy on guitar, Larry Hughes on mandolin, and Josh Sidman on bass, round out the ensemble) rehearse to a drum machine set to midtempo rhythms. “We use the instruments as percussion,” Davis explains. They wear all black onstage. The two contributing songwriters, Davis and McKelvy, both hold degrees in fine art and fronted punk bands. They write duet-style yelping modal banjo music of death and drinking and women. They don’t do covers. They’ve been overlooked by the bluegrass media despite releasing two albums (2004′s Whiskey, Women, And Death and this year’s Troubles To Blame) to regional acclaim.

But their outsider status is hard-earned and they embrace it. Rarely since Tony Trischka and Andy Statman’s crazed deconstructiongrass of the 1970s has anybody exercised the creative latitude that is the true legacy of first-generation “traditional” groups — the same latitude Bill Monroe so enjoyed in his experiments with electric guitar and accordion. It’s boldly different, and also completely essential.

The Earls’ myspace profile names only two influences: “the Stanley Brothers, the Ramones.” They are not simply being clever about their work, which forcefully mixes the punk intensity of the latter with the spooky howling narrative yarns of the former. It is even possible to sense amongst their mantric, harmonically spare incantations a debt to the discordant noisy fuzz of the Melvins. Davis corroborates, citing their popularity amongst “stocking-cap, Northwest grunge people.” If he had his druthers, McKelvy says, he’d open for King Buzzo, not Ricky Skaggs.

And why not? Their infusion of borderline dissonant punk inflection into hillbilly melodies jibes with the primal scream of the group that inspired Kurt Cobain more than it resembles the layered vocals of a typical Skaggs Family release. Unwilling to use genre references as a crutch, the Earl Brothers don’t beg that oft-addressed question, “What have they done to the old home place?” There’s no room for nostalgia, there’s no hope for moving on.

There is very centrally, however, an acknowledgment of decay and the inevitability of change, and a desperate crying out in the face of it. As McKelvy’s pierced, nasal yawl leans hard and quavers atop Davis’s world-worn baritone, they mingle with the early Stanleys’ mountain mystic sound. Add an extra dose of the instinctual edge that is the mark of passionate conduits like Cobain and Robert Johnson, for whom musical expression was a painful catharsis. The Earl Brothers are the present avatars of this rare intensity; they happen to hang it on bluegrassy instrumentation.

One or two instrumentals conjure images of an ebullient Monroe buck-dancing, but notes are chosen wisely. With some understated Ralph-esque perma-rolling banjo underneath tasteful, sparse bluegrass mandolin lickage (no fiddle), you’ve got a new focus of sound to match that of theme. It’s eerie the way these two musics collide and swarm in their shared value of repetition, melancholy, and the examination (and re-examination) of personal and societal decay. Theirs is a mournful ululation bailed out into the emptiness fit to shake us from complacency. Pensive, ragged, and melodicized to channel the best and most listenable of the genres they claim: It’s Rich-R-Tone meets the Ramones, and it’s just lovely.

Enjoy the ND archives? Consider making a donation. Advertising helps defray our basic expenses, but doesn’t touch the over $150,000 invested to get this content online. Just $10 (or more!) from 15,000 of our fans and we will reach our goal. Thanks for your support.

Or send a check to: No Depression, PO Box 31332, Seattle, WA 98103

Discuss

Did you enjoy this article? Start a discussion about it, or find out what others are saying in the No Depression Community forum.

Join the Discussion »

Find out what's going on in roots music. Share concert photos and videos, learn about new artists, blog about the music you love.

Join the No Depression Community »

Originally Featured in Issue #64 July-Aug 2006

Buy our history before it’s gone!

Each issue is artfully designed and packed full of great photos that you don‘t get online. Visit the No Depression store to own a piece of history.

Visit the No Depression Store »


From the Blogs

  • Stackridge, Farncombe Music Club (UK, 5/18/12)
    I first started going to live gigs in my early teens. I was underage. I lied about my date of birth so that I could become a member of Friars, a music club based in Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire. Life membership was 25p. I still have my member’s card. Wild Turkey in June 1971 was the first live band I saw and some forty one years later I am still occupyin […]
  • Bonnie Raitt, John Prine & Tom Waits at Opryland (circa '74)
    Bonnie, Johnny & Tom Visit Opryland, USA — an interview-article by W. Conrad for Buddy Magazine (March, 1976)

 
 
Backstage and on stage at Nashville's Opryland, Ben Fong-Torres, rock journalist from 
Rolling Stone, was shadowing Bonnie Raitt, the star of the evening's attraction. In the shadows, lurking inside his cheap suit and a cloud of to […]
  • The Last Time I Saw Gram Parsons
    By Bill Conrad (His Prep School Pal)

 Summer of 1969, I was in London when I saw a flyer advertising the Byrds at Royal Albert Hall. Melody Maker, the local music news, suggested that a few Beatles and Stones might attend. That was incentive enough for me.
  The Byrds took the stage and launched into "Turn, Turn, Turn."  Other than band leader Rog […]
  • Davina and the Vagabonds at Newcastle Cluny II
    The Cluny, Newcastle Thursday 17th May 2012 Alan Harrison One of my greatest pleasures is discovering new music any of its shapes and forms and tonight was a bit of a revelation as I had only ventured out of the house because there was nothing on TV. As the support act finished there were only about 30 people scattered around The Cluny and perhaps 75 were sc […]
  • Lee Ann Womack Helps Houston's Homeless
    As founder and president of Healthcare for the Homeless -- Houston (HHH), Dr. David Buck (left with country star Lee Ann Womack at First Lady's Luncheon, Washington, D.C) is a busy man. So busy, in fact, he was taken aback when his office got a voice message from U.S. Representative Gene Green's wife Helen saying that she would like Dr. Buck to att […]
  • TPR#88 Addam Scott - Interview and Music
    On episode 88 of the Taproot Music Show, Addam Scott, the musician, not the actor, talks to Calvin about his latest CD, San Diablo. He discusses the concept of conflict that runs through the CD and how he likes ““I like to move forward that contradiction and show the best of who we are as people and the worst of who we are as people.” He discusses his musica […]

Shop Amazon by clicking through this logo to support NoDepression.com. We get a percentage of every purchase you make!


Subscribe To the No Depression Newsletter

Subscribe to the No Depression Newsletter