Suddenly, you had Ralph Stanley leading tours around the world and Country singers such as Ricky Skaggs, releasing traditional bluegrass music with commercial success to the surprise of record companies who never expected to make anything off the cottage industry that was bluegrass. It was a genre that barely left the American continent. Next thing you know, Steve Martin releases two traditional bluegrass albums with sizable sales for Rare Bird Alert (2011) and The Crow (2009) reinforcing the music's place in the mainstream. For Martin, who usually under-played his role as a leader and more of an enthusiast, remains a regular guest on national talk shows, such as David Letterman. His appearances must have roused interest in bluegrass as decent, well-played roots music.
Punch Brothers performing in San Francisco in 2011 (Photo by Michael Sharps) |
I love bluegrass because it doesn't sound like anything else in the genre. It requires technical virtuosity but only in the service of the music. Consequently, one hears some great playing because bluegrass is a combination of tradition and improvisation. The Punch Brothers have a combination of great Bluegrass chops, but their songs are entirely contemporary. Like their first two releases, Punch (2008) and Antifogmatic (2010), their new record features all original material, except for a sublime version of Radiohead's "Kid A." The Punch Brothers also do a song on the new Chieftains record and they make an appearance on Dierks Bentley's album Up On the Ridge, on a decidedly happy version of "Senor (Tales of Yankee Power)" by Bob Dylan. I'm not crazy about this version but it does reveal the mountain music occasionally disguised on some of Dylan's own recordings.
Who’s Feeling Young Now? is an exciting, energetic record because the playing matches the enthusiasm of the vocals. All of the elements of bluegrass can be heard here, including the quality of the harmonies often associated with bluegrass, particularly on the first track, “Movement and Location.” The songs are inspired and funny, especially the last track, “Don’t Get Married Without Me.” It’s about a relationship that’s gone sour and the narrator fears the worst during a “break” in the union. As Chris Thile sings “Let’s not fool ourselves/ Taking a break is dragging out a breakup too long/ Help yourself to whatever you like with whomever you like/ But don’t get married without me.”
George Bernard Shaw is attributed with saying that “youth is wasted on the young.” The Punch Brothers would beg to differ because they’re having the time of their lives, warts and all.
– John Corcelli is a musician and broadcaster. He's currently working on a radio documentary, with Kevin Courrier, for CBC Radio's Inside the Music called The Other Me: The Avant-Garde Music of Paul McCartney.
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