Showing posts with label Jason & the Scorchers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason & the Scorchers. Show all posts

Friday, December 6, 2024

Archive Interview: Jack Emerson / E Squared Records

Jack Emerson with Jason & the Scorchers
Jack Emerson (center) with Jason & the Scorchers

Introduction:
Jack Emerson’s influence on late ‘80s southern rock is immeasurable. He formed Praxis International, an indie label and artist management company, at the age of 22 with friend and partner Andy McLenon. Praxis started with just one band – Jason & the Nashville Scorchers – but soon steered the careers of bands like the Georgia Satellites, the Questionnaires, and Tim Krekel & the Sluggers. Emerson later worked with John Hiatt, Sonny Landreth, and Steve Forbert and his support of mid-’80s “college rock” bands like R.E.M. and the dB’s would lead them to greater successes.

After the Scorchers broke up, Emerson moved Praxis further into the alt-country field with important early ‘90s releases from Billy Joe Shaver and Webb Wilder. By 1995, however, Praxis had run its course and Emerson formed E Squared Records with friend Steve Earle. In 1999, Emerson brokered a deal between the label and Artemis Records that largely removed him from running the business side, freeing him up to pursue other projects. Sadly, Emerson died in November 2003 at the young age of 43. This interview with Emerson took place in 1996 and originally appeared in
Nashville Business In Review.  
    
People who claim to know a lot about these sort of things use words like “dynamics” or “synergy” when describing the inner workings of a volatile industry like the music biz. Perhaps it’s time we added two new words to the industry lexicon – “experience” and “evolution,” or, if you will, E2.
    
It’s no coincidence that these two words pretty much sum up the careers of Jack Emerson and Steve Earle, the two “E’s” behind the newly formed E2 Records. Both are well-known in the local music community, Emerson as the former head of Praxis International and Earle as a critically-acclaimed performer and songwriter. Together they have created an indie label that may well rewrite the way that things are done on Music Row.        
    
Praxis was Nashville’s first independent rock ‘n’ roll record label, a vital part of the Music City’s early ‘80s non-country music scene. Home to Jason & the Nashville Scorchers, Praxis released the band’s early recordings and would act as their management through most of the decade. Along with friends and fellow Scorcher fans Andy McLenon and Kay Clary, Emerson would build a respected organization that was as professional as it was hard-working and creative.  
    
Although the Scorchers never received the kind of commercial acceptance that they deserved, another Praxis band, the Georgia Satellites, hit it big with their first album. The success of the Satellites gained Emerson and the gang at Praxis a reputation in the industry as ace talent scouts. A subsequent deal with BMG subsidiary Zoo Records led to Praxis developing artists like Webb Wilder, Mark Germino, Sonny Landreth, and Billy Joe Shaver.
    
Steve Earle came to Nashville in the early ‘70s at the age of nineteen, a talented but struggling songwriter. Influenced by writers like Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt, Earle developed a heady story-telling style that owed as much to rock as it did country music. Hits by several country artists with Earle-written songs led to a deal with MCA Records, Earle’s first album, Guitar Town, taking the industry by storm. Shooting to number one on the country charts, the album won critical acclaim from sources as diverse as Country Music magazine and Rolling Stone.
    
Subsequent releases would showcase Earle’s evolution as a songwriter, often drawing favorable comparisons with artists like Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen. As he incorporated heavier rock influences into his music, however, the country music establishment didn’t quite know what to do with an artist of Earle’s talents and vision. Earle moved to MCA’s Uni Records subsidiary in New York for the last albums of his contract, a move that weakened his local industry support. Problems with drugs and alcohol hastened the decline of his career, inevitably leading to an arrest and a prison sentence for possession.
    
The formation of E2 was to be part of a natural evolution for both Emerson and Earle. “After about 15 years of Praxis,” says Emerson, “when we ended our Bertelsman/Zoo agreement....things had gotten a little stale. Kay was real interested in starting her own company and working out of her house. I couldn’t imagine trying to run that place without her there. Andy was questioning what he wanted to do and I was questioning what I wanted to do. We were all a little burned out...so it was a natural time to close things down.”
    
With Praxis a part of the past, Emerson was open to new opportunities. “We’d all kept in touch with Steve, because we were all really big fans.” In the latter years, there “wasn’t that much to keep in touch with, musically,” says Emerson of Earle, “because he was going through the whole period of sobriety, working through the prison system.” After Earle’s release, says Emerson, “he knew that he had to stay busy...and he’s always been interested in the business side, always been a producer as well as a songwriter. The more that I talked with him, the more it made sense for us to try and do something together.”
    
After recording a well-received acoustic album for Nashville’s Winter Harvest label, Earle was ready to return to his former rocking style of playing for his next album. Clean and sober for almost two years, he had stared into the abyss and emerged a stronger artist than ever. “He was looking for a solid compadre who could represent his talent at the major label side,” says Emerson. “After investigating all of our possible alliances, Warner Brothers seemed to make the most sense.”
    
The newly formed E2 label signed a deal providing Warner Brothers the opportunity for worldwide distribution of their releases, with the exception of England, where they hooked up with Transatlantic/Castle. In return, Warner provided start-up funding for the label. Non-Warner releases will be distributed through the Alternative Distribution Alliance, a group of indie labels that works to place product in non-traditional, non-mainstream retail outlets.
    
E2 has received a lot of moral support from their major label sponsors. “In essence, we’ve got a deal that’s spread between the New York office, the L.A. office and the Nashville office,” Emerson explains, citing Warner executives like Joe McKuen, Bob Merlis and Nancy Stein as being advocates of the young label. “Jim Ed Norman deserves a lot of credit,” says Emerson, referring to the local label chief’s recognition of Nashville’s potential. “Warner Brothers understood what we wanted to do,” says Emerson, “not only with Steve’s records, but with the records that we wanted to make, whether Steve was producing or whatever.”
    
The pairing of Emerson and Earle has proven to be a marriage made in heaven. “We were able to sit down and work out a complex but functional situation where Steve could help make and produce records and I’d be in the office on a daily basis to kind of glue the thing together,” says Emerson. The first E2 release was Earle’s rocking I’m Alright, a wonderful return to form for this talented artist. The label has also signed two new acts, Knoxville’s V-Roys and Ross Rice, former member of the popular Memphis band Human Radio. Both have albums planned for August release.  
    
E2 has retained control over the entire A & R process. “We have total autonomy, creatively,” says Emerson, E2 shouldering the responsibility of discovering and signing new artists, and producing their recorded efforts. “Our attitude is that if Steve and I are both over the top about something, we’ll do it. If one of us is not thrilled, ready to climb over broken glass, then we won’t do it.” There’s no pressure on the pair from anybody to crank out product, so E2 will release fewer records than a lot of indie labels, but they’ll be  hand-picked by the combination management/creative team at the top of the label.
    
There are three things, says Emerson, that the label is looking for in an artist. “A lot of originality, which doesn’t mean they don’t have a good sense of the past,” he says, “but rather a good sense of what they want to do, a unique sound. The second element would be songs, and not necessarily in a classic sense. With Steve, he can he detect and help young writers with what they want to do, answer their questions. The third thing would be a certain timeless element. Most of the records that I listen to and that Steve listens to have been things that we enjoy as much now as when they were released.”
     
After a record is made, says Emerson, “we get Warner Brothers and the act together, sit down and decide whether or not something is better served going out through the independent system or going out through the Warner Brothers system. What this means is that sometimes a young band that we think has a great record may spend the first six months on ADA without Warner Brothers, the machine, getting involved. If everybody agrees that’s the best way to go, we may do it for two records, we may do it for three records, or we may go straight to Warner Brothers.”
    
“We’re trying to make productive use out of a strong multi-national company and still give the artist as much control as possible in terms of their own destiny,” concludes Emerson. For Steve Earle and Jack Emerson, the two sides of E2 Records, their own destinies will be built on both the sum of their previous experience and the result of their personal evolutions, a formula for success than may well become known in the future as simply E2.

Monday, October 14, 2024

Nashville Rock Memorabilia: Jason & the Scorchers' Halcyon Times tour poster

Jason & the Scorchers' Promotional Poster

Jason & the Scorchers' Halcyon Times promotional tour poster. Sent to clubs and other venues in PDF form, they could print out the poster, write in their show details at the bottom, and stick it in the window. Back in the old days, bands would have to have a couple hundred promotional posters printed up and mailed to clubs, often at their own expense. How things have changed!

Friday, October 11, 2024

Vintage Review: Jason & the Scorchers' Thunder and Fire (1989)

Jason & the Scorchers are, arguably, the best-known of Nashville’s brash young bands, an outfit with a critically-acclaimed past and an infinitely-open future. Thunder and Fire is their first album for A & M Records, and their first effort with the new band. Folks, they’ve never been better.

This is a mature and fully-realized work: Jason’s songwriting collaborations breathe new life into the Scorchers’ material; Warner’s guitar playing gets better and better; and the additions of bassist Ken Fox and skilled multi-instrumentalist Andy York round out the sound of the band, allowing them more diversity and providing a fuller, bigger feel to the songs. Drummer and co-writer Perry Baggz is like “Old Faithful,” an often (unfortunately) overlooked and underrated percussionist who manages to balance the entire chaotic crew.

The result is an album, Thunder and Fire, that is certain to become the band’s biggest. Artistically impressive, musically powerful, lyrically fresh and exciting, the Scorchers made the album that they wanted to, and it shows. The boys may have gotten older, but they’ve not gotten softer…if anything, they’ve become more passionate, more committed with age. (A&M Records)

Review originally published by The Metro, 1989

Monday, September 23, 2024

Vintage Review: Jason & the Scorchers' Wildfires + Misfires (2002)

Cowpunk pioneers Jason & the Scorchers enjoy a lofty standing within the indie rock ranks. They’ve received a minor degree of fame, with a series of critically-acclaimed albums and hundreds of dynamic live shows beneath their belts. They made the jump from their own indie label to a major label back when a band’s credibility wasn’t instantly in question, later going bankrupt due to excessive label expenses.

After a brief early ‘90s hiatus, the Scorchers returned to the indie world with a handful of brilliant, if underrated albums for Mammoth Records. Now they’ve come full-circle, releasing music on their own Courageous Chicken imprint through North Carolina indie Yep Roc Records. For these Nashville rock icons, it’s been a long strange trip, indeed.

This trip is partially documented by the recently released Wildfires + Misfires. The disc is a collection of Scorchers’ obscurities, demos and alternative versions that provides listeners with greater insight into the band’s creative process. It documents the Scorchers’ evolution from brash young punks into one of rock’s most talented, if overlooked bands. The set kicks off with the demo version of “Absolutely Sweet Marie” that won the band a major label contract and also includes red-hot unreleased live tracks like “Tear It Up” with legendary guitarist Link Wray and crowd favorite “Lost Highway.”

Rarities like “Too Much Too Young” and “Break Open the Sky” present the band in a different light while alternative takes of familiar songs like “If Money Talks” showcase the Scorchers’ range and abilities. Rather than a prurient look at a band’s past, Wildfires + Misfires is a vital collection of material that rewards loyal fans for their incredible dedication while presenting a living document of a work still in progress. (Courageous Chicken/Yep Roc Records)

Review originally published by the View From The Hill Community newspaper, Signal Hill CA

Friday, August 30, 2024

Bootleg Review: Jason & the Scorchers' Absolutely Mannheim (2000)

Jason & the Scorchers' Absolutely Mannheim
JASON & THE SCORCHERS
Absolutely Mannheim

(Massive Attack CD-R #990167, 67:56 min)

SOURCE: Tracks 1 – 16, Mannheim Germany, June 10, 1985. Tracks 17-19, Farm Aid II, Austin TX 1986.

SOUND QUALITY: German set is fair audience (5) with significant drop-outs, clicks, fade-aways and enough hollowness and echo to make one wonder what sort of cave they recorded the songs in. Nevertheless, Jason’s vocals are reasonably clear and Warner’s guitar is up front in the mix. Farm Aid tracks are fair audience (5) with tinny sound, abrasive top end and a bit of distortion.

COVER: Typical Massive Attack packaging, with a B & W shot of Jason Ringenberg on the front and a pretty cool “American Gothic” styled B & W shot of the entire band on the back along with tracklist and venue info.

TRACKLIST: Lost Highway/ Last Time Around/ Are You Ready For The Country?/ Can’t Help Myself/ If You’ve Got The Love (I’ve Got The Time)/ Shop It Around/ Broken Whiskey Glass/ Help! There’s A Fire - Hot Nights In Georgia/ Pray For Me Mama (I’m A Gypsy Now)(incorrectly listed as “Still Tied”)/ Travelin’ Band/ Change The Tune/ You Win Again (incorrectly listed as “This Heart Of Mine”)/ Harvest Moon/ Absolutely Sweet Marie - If Money Talks/ Amazing Grace/ Shotgun Blues (incorrectly listed as “Far Behind”)/ Are You Ready For The Country?/ Broken Whiskey Glass (incorrectly listed as “Harvest Moon”)/ White Lies       

COMMENTS: From the dank ambience of Cantrell’s and the beer-soaked stage at Phranc-n-Stein’s, Jason & the Scorchers broke out of the primal early ‘80s Nashville club scene to hit the world stage, their 1985 tour of Europe earning them a considerable fan base in England, Germany and points north. Although the band worked consistently throughout the ‘80s – in fact, demand for their live shows kept the wolves from the door when EMI bankrupted them – they never quite crossed over to the mainstream. A couple of spins of Absolutely Mannheim show why the Scorchers earned such a rabid cult following, however. Their audience is so loyal that a couple of years ago, the live recording sessions in Nashville for Midnight Roads and Stages Seen drew Scorchers fans from across the U.S., South America. and northern Europe to take part in the fun.
 
Although the sound on Absolutely Mannheim, quite frankly, sucks, the performance is typical high-energy, high-octane Jason & the Scorchers. Touring Europe for the first time, supporting their first full-length album Lost & Found, the setlist here is almost identical to that on the rare Rock On Germany LP, an album that writer Clint Heylin considers one of the best bootlegs ever made. I’ve got a tape of that album, smuggled out of Germany by band members, and I believe that Absolutely Mannheim is even better. The performances are both exciting, but by the time of the Mannheim show, the Scorchers had been in Europe for three weeks and the live sets had really jelled. The set is pretty much normal for 1985-vintage Scorchers, the band performing most of the Lost & Found album mixed with cuts from the band’s critically-acclaimed Fervor EP and a couple tunes from their original Praxis label 7” EP, Reckless Country Soul.

Jason & the Scorchers' Rock On Germany bootleg CD
With fifteen years of retrospection, original Scorchers songs like “Shop It Around,” “If Money Talks,” “Last Time Around,” and “Broken Whiskey Glass” are comfortable favorites; at the time they were precious cowpunk rave-ups that fused traditional country with punk energy and attitude, providing Nashville rockers with something to believe in. Inspired covers performed here include Hank Williams’ “Lost Highway” (which opened most every Scorchers set) and “You Win Again” (which would eventually be dropped from the set), Neil Young’s “Are You Ready For The Country?” and Dylan’s “Absolutely Sweet Marie.” A Scorchers signature tune, the video for “Absolutely Sweet Marie” would introduce the band to early-eighties MTV audiences.

An early version of “Shotgun Blues” from the Scorchers second album (incorrectly listed here as “Far Behind’) shows the band still fine-tuning the song while the rendition of CCR’s “Travelin’ Band,” sung by Scorchers guitarist Warner Hodges proves that Hodges should stick to his six-string wizardry. The Mannheim set presented here is probably a couple of songs shy of complete – missing is “White Lies,” the first single from Lost & Found and a staple of the band’s performances at the time. In a summer of high points, however, the Mannheim show stands as one of the highest, the 1985 European tour peaking with an appearance in front of 40,000 people at the Roskilde Festival in Denmark where Link Wray joined the band onstage.

Whoever put this disc together made a few glaring errors in terms of song titles. Who could ever confuse “Broken Whiskey Glass,” one of the band’s first songs and a signature tune, with “Harvest Moon,” a ballad from the Fervor EP (as they did here on the Farm Aid tracks)? Other songs are also misidentified, either by title or by confusing them with other Scorchers’ songs. There are also a couple of indexing errors where the band jumps from one song right into another, as with “Absolutely Sweet Marie” and “If Money Talks” with the producer/manufacturer missing it entirely. These ridiculous mistakes and generally aggravating sound quality aside, it’s nice to finally see a Scorchers show on disc. Absolutely Mannheim is an important document of one of rock’s most underrated bands. With the wealth of live Scorchers’ material circulating on tape, some of it of pretty decent quality, maybe we’ll see more of Jason & the Scorchers on CD in the future.

Review originally published by Live! Music Review zine, 2000

Friday, May 31, 2024

Nashville Rock Memorabilia: Jason & the Scorchers Photo Gallery

Jason & the Scorchers

Jason & the Scorchers: Warner Hodges, Perry Baggs, Jason Ringenberg, Jeff Johnson

Jason & the Scorchers w/Jack Emerson

Jason & the Scorchers with manager and Praxis International founder Jack Emerson

Jason & the Scorchers in Creem magazine

Jason & the Scorchers make the pages of Creem magazine!


 Jason & the Nashville Scorchers' 1982 Reckless Country Soul EP, the first shot...

Jason & the Nashville Scorchers' 1983 Fervor EP, later reissued by EMI Records

Jason & Warner
Jason & Warner in 2010

Jason & The Scorchers Metro magazine cover
Jason & the Scorchers make the cover of The Metro magazine circa 1985

Scorched Earth

Scorched Earth: A Jason & the Scorchers Scrapbook, a collection of the Reverend's writing on the band with photos, graphics & lay-out by Paul Needham

Friday, May 24, 2024

Vintage Review: Jason & the Scorchers’ Midnight Roads & Stages Seen (1988)

Jason & the Scorchers’ Midnight Roads & Stages Seen
Nashville’s favorite sons knocked a local audience on their collective backsides last November with the two nights of performances that make up Midnight Roads & Stages Seen, the Scorchers’ first, and long overdue, live set. The band has long been a favorite in tape trader’s circles for years, with classic vintage shows from the eighties swapped on a regular basis among an international audience. With the release of this double-disc set, Scorchers’ fans across the globe finally have an authorized live set to whet their musical appetites.

Jason & the Scorchers’ Midnight Roads & Stages Seen


For most of their career, Jason & the Scorchers have delivered solid studio albums, but it’s been their live shows that have won them a hard-earned and well-deserved following among even the most hard-core rockers. Lead vocalist Jason Ringenberg’s country-inflected drawl, boundless energy and manic on-stage gyrations are matched only by guitarist supreme Warner Hodges’ razor-sharp riffs, instrumental acrobatics, and dizzying dervish pirouettes. Drummer Perry Baggs has always been a steady keeper of the beats while the latest addition to the line-up, bassist Kenny Ames, has meshed nicely with the founding members of the band. Over fifteen years of performing across the United States, Canada, Europe and even “down under” have made the Scorchers a powerful live band. The chemistry enjoyed by the guys is such that, on any given night, they’re the best rock ‘n’ roll outfit playing anywhere – a claim not many bands could make.

If you’ve seen the Scorchers play live anytime during the past couple of years – or even during the past 15 years – then you’re probably aware of what the band is capable of on-stage. If not, then Midnight Roads & Stages Seen is the album for you. Recorded at Nashville’s famous Exit/In, the 23 songs chosen from two nights of shows are a veritable catalog of the Scorchers’ “greatest hits.” Classic cuts like “White Lies,” “Absolutely Sweet Marie,” “If Money Talks” or “Broken Whisky Glass” are provided an appropriate rave-up treatment. Other more understated songs, like “Somewhere Within” (from the A Blazing Grace album) or Jason’s collaboration with Todd Snider, “This Town Isn’t Keeping You Down,” are performed live here for the first time. The energy level displayed here is astounding, with every cut carefully crafted with equal parts of loving workmanship and reckless abandon.

The Reverend’s Bottom Line


If there was any justice in this world – which, as we all know, there’s not – Jason & the Scorchers would be superstars of the biggest kind. There’s seldom been a harder working group of guys in a band, nor an outfit that has managed to persevere through three record labels, bankruptcy, and a brief break-up to subsequently create some of the best music of their career, as have the Scorchers. The band’s influence on the current crop of alt-country hopefuls and young rockers is enormous. Midnight Roads & Stages Seen captures the band at the peak of their career, the Scorchers still making great rock ‘n’ roll almost two decades since the day they first played together. (Mammoth Records, released 1988)

Review originally published by Live! Music Review

Friday, May 17, 2024

Vintage Review: Jason & the Scorchers' A Blazing Grace (1995)

A Blazing Grace marks the return to record of Nashville’s own Jason and the Scorchers after a six year hiatus. From the first opening chords of “Cry By Night Operator,” a classic cry-in-your-beer tale of love lost set with a modern spin, the listener will recognize this as vintage Scorchers. Showcasing a trademark sound that is created of equal parts country roots and metal-edged, guitar-driven rock, A Blazing Grace nonetheless shows the band’s growth during their lengthy time off, as well. Cuts like “The Shadow of Night” and “Hell’s Gates” are reflections of the hard-earned collective wisdom and maturity that is the new Scorchers, whereas “One More Day of Weekend,” “Why Baby Why” or “200 Proof Lovin’” are hard rocking numbers with one foot firmly placed in the honky tonk. A Blazing Grace is a welcome homecoming for the Scorchers, one of the most critically-acclaimed bands in the history of rock and roll. (Mammoth Records, released 1995)

Review originally published in the T-Bone insert of The Tennessean newspaper

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Vintage Review: Jason & the Scorchers’ Clear Impetuous Morning (1996)

Jason & the Scorchers’ Clear Impetuous Morning
Seldom has a band received so much acclaim and developed such a loyal following as Jason & the Scorchers, yet never get any respect. Jason, Warner, Jeff and Perry have got to be the Rodney Dangerfields of the rock ‘n’ roll world. After a hiatus of several years, the original Scorchers’ line-up got back together a few years ago to record a solid collection of rock ‘n’ roll tunes called A Blazing Grace. It went nowhere outside of their hardcore circle of fans.

Now they’ve delivered what is arguably the finest album of their lengthy career in Clear Impetuous Morning and the signs are there for all to see that the effort is playing mostly to the choir, falling on those deaf ears who’d rather set down fifteen bucks for another Nirvana or Pearl Jam clone than actually grab something that would really get their adrenaline flowing. Even those nouveau country rockers over in  the alt.country scene, while recognizing the Scorchers’ place in their holy pantheon, don’t seem to be falling over themselves to pick up a new Scorchers disc or two...

Jason & the Scorchers’ Clear Impetuous Morning


Clear Impetuous Morning finds the Scorchers mining the same country-flavored, roots-rock vein that they pioneered almost fifteen years ago. In this aspect, the band has never sounded better. Warner Hodges is an exemplary guitarist, a legend-in-waiting on the level of Keith Richards who plays with great skill and flash. Hodges tears off chainsaw riffs like some kid playing air guitar in his bedroom, breathing life into each song. Jason’s energetic vocal delivery is part Hank Williams, part Johnny Rotten, crooning sweet country twang on cuts like “I’m Sticking With You,” kicking out the jams with reckless, joyful abandon on rockers like “Victory Road.” The rhythm section of bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer Perry Baggs provide a steady beat and a strong backbone for the Scorchers performances, playing conservative foils to Jason and Warner’s rock ‘n’ roll crazed wild men.

Lyrically, Clear Impetuous Morning distinguishes itself through its maturity and wisdom. This foursome clearly aren’t the idealistic youngsters that they were in 1982, and every scar that they’ve received through the years can be found in these songs. Jason Ringenberg, always the Scorchers main songwriter, collaborates here with some new partners. Most notable of these is Nashvillian Tommy Womack, formerly of Mid-South legends Government Cheese. Together they put together some of the album’s hottest songs, like the new Scorchers’ show-stopper, “Self-Sabotage” or “Cappuccino Rosie.” A duet between Jason and Emmylou Harris on “Everything Has A Cost” proves to be a natural pairing, the two creating a haunting musical moment that is underlined by some strong six-string work from Hodges.

The Reverend’s Bottom Line


Sadly, the Scorchers seem doomed to be one of those bands who never receive a break, who never find themselves in the “right place at the right time.” If the masses refuse to pick up on an album as solid as Clear Impetuous Morning, what’s left for the band to try? As one of a handful who can truthfully say that I’ve been a fan of the band since the beginning, I marvel at the Scorchers ability to keep going in the face of adversity. They’ve suffered breaking up, getting back together again, three record labels, industry indifference, constant touring and mediocre sales for over a decade and a half. Yet they keep on rocking, cranking out some of the greatest music in the history of the genre, delivering night after night with great live performances. Like Rodney, they get nowhere near the respect they rightfully deserve. (Mammoth Records, released 1996)

Review originally published by R Squared zine

Thursday, April 27, 2023

Vintage Review: Jason Ringenberg’s Best Tracks and Side Tracks 1979-2007 (2008)

Jason Ringenberg is one of the nicest guys, if not the nicest guy, that you’ll ever meet. A devout family man, Ringenberg is polite to a fault, intelligent, and yet maddeningly humble. Yup, Jason meets the definition of “salt of the Earth” if anyone ever did. When I first met the man, back in ‘82, we sat in Jason’s West Nashville apartment with Scorchers’ guitarist Warner Hodges, talking and listening to music on a little record player.

The interview that came out of that night was published by CMJ’s Progressive Media magazine, possibly the first article on the Scorchers published on a national level. When we wrapped things up and Warner had driven off, Jason haltingly and embarrassingly asked me if I minded giving him a ride down to Kroger’s; I seem to even remember loaning him a couple of bucks to buy some fish sticks. Considering the great music and entertainment that Jason has provided since that night, it might have been the smartest investment of my life.

Jason’s all-around good nature makes his survival in the notoriously cutthroat music biz – an industry populated by sharks and sinners, snake-oil salesmen, bullies and thieves – all the more amazing. But survive Jason has, for some 30 years now, and he’s not only gotten by, he’s actually thrived in a business known for broken dreams and discarded souls. Amazingly, Jason actually seems to get nicer as the years fall off the calendar.  

Ringenberg came to Nashville in 1981 with the goal of finding like-minded musicians to pursue a shared musical vision. With a little help from the visionary Jack Emerson (R.I.P.), Jason was introduced to the guys that he’d spend the next decade playing alongside. Jason & the Nashville Scorchers unwittingly gave form to an entirely new genre of music. They didn’t set out to do so, but somewhere down the line, the Scorchers begat Uncle Tupelo, which in turn begat Son Volt and Wilco, which begat a glut of raving twang-bangers and roots-rock revivalists dubbed forever as the alt-country (a/k/a Americana) movement.

Jason Ringenberg’s Best Tracks and Side Tracks 1979-2007


Jason Ringenberg's A Pocketful of Soul
When the Scorchers went on hiatus, Ringenberg launched his solo career in earnest with 2000’s A Pocketful of Soul. A folkish country-rock collection that Jason released independently, the album stripped the Scorchers’ high-octane sound down to a simple, elegant buzz (courtesy of guitarist George Bradfute and fiddle player Fats Kaplin). With more emphasis on his vocals and words than on the incendiary music that typically accompanied his lyrics with the Scorchers, Jason honed his already stiletto-sharp songwriting skills to a dangerous edge.

Two more Jason solo efforts followed A Pocketful of Soul – 2002’s All Over Creation and 2004’s Empire Builders, along with a pair of children’s records that Ringenberg recorded under his “Farmer Jason” nom de plume, as well as a Scorchers retrospective, Wildfires & Misfires. When the dust had settled and 2008 loomed on the horizon, Jason Ringenberg had survived three decades in the most dangerous bloodsport of them all – the music biz – and did so with talent and integrity both intact. With that in mind, Jason and his buddies over at Yep Roc put together Best Tracks and Side Tracks, a collection of Ringenberg solo material, outtakes, collaborations and rarities from 1979 to 2007. This two-CD compilation is divided into two parts: “Best Tracks,” featuring 20 songs culled from Jason’s three solo and two Farmer Jason albums, including a trio of new recordings; and “Side Tracks,” offering 10 rare, obscure songs and a couple of surprises that’ll have the hardcore fans running down to their local music vendor to procure a copy, pronto.  

The “Best Tracks” side of things kicks off with a pair of new recordings. A re-written version of the Scorchers’ gem “Shop It Around” suffers little from its reworking; if anything, the lyrics are more wistful, more pointed that previously. Featuring the always-reliable George Bradfute on guitar and Webb Wilder on backing vocals, this is Jason’s equivalent of Dylan’s “Positively Fourth Street.” It’s not as raucous, perhaps, as the original Scorchers’ version, but it has lost none of its power.

One Foot In the Honky Tonk


Jason Ringenberg's Empire Builders
“The Life of the Party” is a similar love-gone-bad song, rescued from Jason’s lone major label album, 1992’s One Foot in the Honky Tonk. Re-recorded here because the original wasn’t available due to licensing problems, this harder-rocking version suits the song’s spirit better, with Bradfute holding down one end and drummer Fenner Castner making a big, beautiful noise at the other end. Jason’s duet with Steve Earle on Earle’s “Bible and A Gun,” from All Over Creation, is hauntingly sparse, with a high lonesome Fats Kaplin fiddle line punctuating the dark clouds of the lyrics.

“One Less Heartache,” a musical collaboration with England’s unpredictable Wildhearts, reminds me of the Del Lords or the Long Ryders, a solid roots-rockin’ tune with just enough twang to remind you that it’s Jason singing. In a good and just world, this could have been a big radio hit ‘cause it hits all the right chords and sounds great no matter what speakers that it’s blasting out of at the moment. “The Price of Progress,” from A Pocketful of Soul, is a favorite of mine, a mournful folk tale of a lone farmer versus the forces of profit, the song’s chilling lyrics supported by appropriately eerie fiddle and guitar tones.

“Prosperity Train,” a song by Illinois singer/songwriter Stace England with vocals by Jason and guitar by Bradfute, was pulled from England’s excellent 2005 album, Greetings From Cairo, Illinois. A rockabilly rave-up in Scorchers’ finery, it’s a fine way to familiarize oneself with the considerable lyrical talents of Mr. England. Offering a truly inspired vocal turn from Mr. Ringenberg, the song is part of a larger conceptual song cycle. A couple of socially-conscious songs from Empire Builders, “Tuskegee Pride” and “Chief Joseph’s Last Dream,” tackle sordid stories from America’s past with intelligence and emotion. Bradfute’s inspired guitarwork on “Tuskegee Pride” highlights Jason’s passionate vocals with an atmospheric tone. Ringenberg’s simple finger-picking on the latter song sets the stage for this tragic tale as Bradfute, Kaplin and drummer Steve Ebe create a moody thunderstorm behind Jason’s sorrowful vocals. A new recording of another Scorchers’ favorite, “Broken Whiskey Glass,” is performed by Jason and Illinois band the Woodbox Gang, the song transformed into a hillbilly romp with Appalachian instrumentation and dueling vocals from JR and the Gang’s Alex Kirt.  

The Sailor’s Eyes


Although there are several shining moments among the first disc’s 20 tracks, the second disc, “Side Tracks,” is the sort of hambone that brings flavor to the soup, if you know what I mean. “Lovely Christmas,” an odd duet with the lovely Kristi Rose is, as Jason readily admits, the most eccentric song that he’s ever put to tape. A country-punk mashup that alternates between Rose’s silky honky-tonk drawl and Jason’s manic, hurried vox, it’s a fun song that insightfully tramples over the holiday’s frenzied consumerism.

A new, unreleased song “The Sailor’s Eyes” may or may not be about Jason’s tenure with the Scorchers; it’s a fine lyrical metaphor nevertheless, with wistful vocals and a great Bradfute guitar line. With musician friend Arty Hill, Jason re-creates the Scorchers’ rockin’ “Cappuccino Rosie” live onstage as an acoustic country tearjerker complete with weeping fiddle. Years before the Scorchers, Jason fronted a band called Shakespeare’s Riot (great name!) in Carbondale, Illinois; that band’s original recording of what would become a Scorchers’ live fave, “Help There’s A Fire,” is a hoot – a sparse ‘50s throwback with a Duane Eddy beat and, as Jason describes it, a “cornpone Elvis rockabilly vocal.”

Another very cool Jason rarity here is a cover of John Prine’s classic “Paradise,” taken from a radio broadcast. A group effort, including R.B. Morris, Tom Roznowski and Janas Hoyt, the four vocalists do the song proud with a soulful, reverent reading. The set closes, appropriately, with another performance by Jason and the Wildhearts, a previously unreleased rave-up on “Jimmie Rodger’s Last Blue Yodel.” Evoking the Scorchers at their sweatiest, most raucous Exit/In performance, Mr. Ringenberg and the Wildhearts drive the train right off the tracks, smiling and rocking all the way into the abyss that lies below...

The Reverend’s Bottom Line


...and that, folks, is why Jason has remained so damn nice all these years. No matter the ups and downs, the hard knocks and career disappointments, the music is what has pulled him through. Jason has always sounded like he is sincerely happy and honored to be playing his music for us. His attitude is infectious, and it’s all over the 30 songs that you’ll find on Best Tracks and Side Tracks. (Yep Roc Records, released November 12, 2007)

Review originally published by Cashville411.com

Vintage Review: Jason & the Scorchers' Halcyon Days (2010)

Jason & the Scorchers' Halcyon Days
The Reverend remembers watching…no, witnessing Jason & the Nashville Scorchers tear apart a local club – Cantrell’s, maybe the Exit/In – no matter, ‘cause those ol’ boys ripped it up like Link Wray and took that building apart brick by (figurative) brick. Nobody, and I mean nobody could take over a stage like Jason, Warner, Jeff, and Perry back in the day, and if you had the cajones and the stamina, they’d keep on rockin’ until every last punter had dropped to the floor…

Anarchy In The Music City


Yup, back during the early ‘80s in the Music City, rock ‘n’ roll was a man’s (and a few choice women’s) game, with bands fiercely rejecting the country music establishment that had hung the albatross of the cornpone Hee Haw image around the necks of we young soul rebels. Giants walked the dark streets and back alleys of Elliston Place and Eighth Avenue and East Nashville those days, outlaws like Raging Fire, the Dusters, Shadow 15, Webb Wilder, the Bunnies, and many more who took the stage each night determined not to quit rockin’ until the stinking cowtown corpse was permanently buried.

None of the musical giants of that era strode taller or played faster and louder than Jason & the Nashville Scorchers (the “Nashville” part was later dropped at the recommendation of some recordco dunce). They were not only the most popular band in town for a long time, one could make the argument that, for much of the world outside of Middle Tennessee, they were the only band that mattered.

The Scorchers were quite a spectacle, no matter what stage they conquered: while Jason yelped and danced and spun around like a dervish with pants on fire, Warner Hodges would play Keef to Jason’s Mick, tearing otherworldly sounds out of his guitar that had been previously unheard by human ears. Bassist Jeff Johnson was the epitome of cool, holding down the rhythm, while drummer Perry Baggs was a madman on the skins, bashing the cans like Tennessee’s own John Bonham while providing angelic harmony vocals behind Jason’s farm-bred Illinois twang.

More importantly, at least to us on the street, the drones on Music Row and the Nashville cultural establishment hated the Scorchers with a passion, viewing them as either the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, or as the end of everything good and green and holy about the city. Legend has it that famed Nashville deejay Ralph Emery turned his nose up at the Byrds when they played the Grand Ol’ Opry in 1967; a couple of decades later, the Scorchers damn near gave the poor man a heart attack. Back on Elliston Place, however, we knew the future of rock ‘n’ roll when we heard it, and as the band began to expand its circle to the Southeast, and then Europe with one fine record after another, it looked for a moment like our predictions of Scorchers world dominance might come true…

Jason & the Scorchers’ Halcyon Days


Sadly, Jason & the Scorchers never got the respect that they deserved; their records were under-promoted by the labels, or ignored in the hope that the band might just go away. Tensions grew dire within the band, members came and went, and by the time that grunge and the Seattle scene had wiped the slate clean, the Scorchers had fallen by the wayside. Although a mid-1990s Scorchers reunion would result in a pair of perfectly good studio albums and a live set that came as close as technology would allow to capturing the band’s anarchic onstage energy, it seemed as if stardom just wasn’t in the cards for Jason & the Scorchers.

Flash forward to 2010…the Kings of Leon are the new cocks on the walk, the first Nashville rockers to afford million-dollar homes, and it all seems so damn wrong. Sure, the local music scene still exists on some level, but every young new band seems to have its eye on the dollars and not the music, which is probably why old ‘80s warhorses like Royal Court of China, Shadow 15, the Bunnies, et al are drawing club crowds like it’s 1985 all over again, ‘cause the young ‘uns wanna rock, dammit! They want none of this TMZ bullshit and celebrity band status, just rock ‘n’ roll to feed the soul!

Into this vacuum step a reunited Jason & the Scorchers with Halcyon Times, the band’s first studio album in 14 years. Messrs. Ringenberg and Hodges still captain the ship, new guys Al Collins (bass) and Pontus Snibb (drums) are on board to man the rhythm section, and various musical contributions come from fellow travelers like former Georgia Satellites frontman Dan Baird, Brit-rocker Ginger of the Wildhearts, beloved Nashville icon Tommy Womack, and former Scorchers bandmate Perry Baggs, who provides his lively harmonies to several songs.

Somewhere on his Tennessee farm ol’ Jason must be hiding a damn time machine, because Halcyon Times sounds more like 1985 than 2010, the new album re-capturing the joyous abandon of early Scorchers’ discs like Reckless Country Soul or Fervor than anything they’ve done since. Sure, it may not have been recorded in Jack Emerson’s living room (R.I.P. Brother Jack), but Halcyon Times, produced by Hodges and Nashville pop-rock wunderkind Brad Jones, offers an energy and immediacy lacking in most modern recordings.

Moonshine Guy


The reasons behind the crackling livewire sound of the album comes from the presence of an audience watching the band record from behind glass, and the unlikely strategy of putting Jason live in the studio, singing along with the band…something seldom done with today’s Pro Tools dominated recording techniques. The result is an album that rocks like it was recorded in somebody’s living room, but sounds like a well-made studio creation.

The songs on Halcyon Times are among the best the Scorchers have ever delivered. The breakneck rocker “Moonshine Guy” is a paean to a certain kind of individual that, while not restricted to the South, is nevertheless a particularly Dixie-fried sort of character. With a punkish pace and intensity, Jason sings of the guy that “loves the Stones, hates the Doors/thinks the Beatles sing for girls/he’s a moonshine guy in a six-pack world,” his rapidfire vocals telling of the sort of last-century diehard who still yells “play Freebird” at any show he attends. A Celtic-flavored instrumental interlude in the middle, titled “Releasing Celtic Prisoners,” provides just enough relief for the band to charge back in to conclude the song.

Although “Moonshine Guy” could be dismissed by some slackjaw critics as a novelty, it’s really just a comic intro to a serious, joyful, and reckless set of songs that show why the Scorchers, 25 years after their debut, retain a fiercely loyal following from Lawrence, Kansas to London, England and points beyond. The collaborative songwriting efforts on Halcyon Times have produced some stellar results. Despite the contemporary production values, the raging “Mona Lee” sounds like vintage Scorchers with Hodges’ six-string gymnastics and Jason’s country soul vocals accompanied by fluid bass lines and crashing drumbeats.  

The folkish “Mother of Greed” features some of Jason’s best vocals, the song possessing an ethereal quality as the lyrics recount the passage of time and cash-grab progress. The Hodges/Dan Baird guitarwork here is simply gorgeous, their instruments intertwined in a beautiful melody until Hodges cuts loose with a magnificent solo. The vocal harmonies provide a gauzy, otherworldly quality to the mix. The album-closing “We’ve Got It Goin’ On” is the sort of song that the Scorchers based their rep on, only writ large for the 21st century. With shotgun lyrics delivered at 100mph above chaotic instrumentation that echoes 1960s garage-rock intensity, Jason spits out almost stream-of-consciousness lyrics that are nevertheless intriguing: “does an empire falling ever make a sound?”; “diggin’ down in the here and now ‘til tomorrow is yesterday”; “blacking out on a rush of pain kind of felt like home to me.” I’m not sure what it all means, but it rocks and that’s good enough for me!  

Twang Town Blues


For all the band’s protestations that they wanted to make a record that was forward-looking, the past casts a long shadow across Halcyon Times. The Scorchers, after all, were the great white hopes of cowpunk; the critical darlings with a cult following that were one song away from mainstream mega-stardom. Although Ringenberg and Hodges have certainly come to grips with their near-brush with infamy, somewhere deep inside them it has to chafe just a bit…on many nights, the Scorchers were the best rock ‘n’ roll band in the land, the Replacements and other pretenders to the throne be damned.

As such, Halcyon Times includes many subtle, and some not-so-so subtle references to days gone by, such as the inclusion of the nearly-subliminal line from “Hot Nights In Georgia” that serves as a kick-off to the second part of “Moonshine Guy.” The rockabilly-tinged “Getting’ Nowhere Fast” could be the band’s theme song, a runaway instrumental freight train with Jason singing “we’re getting nowhere fast faster than we’ve ever been, we’re getting nowhere fast put the pedal to the metal again.” In many ways, the song is a statement of defiance, and a gleeful one at that.

“Golden Days,” from which the album takes its name, is a look backwards that charts the progress of a fictional protagonist through the years, meaningful lyrics matched by another solid vocal performance and a timeless pop-rock soundtrack with an infectious chorus. The darkly humorous “Twang Town Blues” is the story of the Scorchers and every other wild-eyed dreamer that landed in Nashville, or L.A., or New York in search of fame and fortune. Telling the story of several such hopefuls with talking blues vocals resting above a menacing swamp-rock theme, the line “tonight he’ll kill a six-pack just to watch it die” shouts out to Johnny Cash and Nashville’s checkered musical history with eerie effect.   

Co-written by Dan Baird with an eye specifically towards the Scorchers, “Days of Wine and Roses” is the story of Jason and Warner and their often complicated relationship. In many ways the song is the heart of Halcyon Times, Jason singing “like a soldier that doesn’t know that it’s time to go home, and if there’s no one else to hoist the flag, well I’ll go it alone” with a world-weariness that only 25 years in the music biz can bring. Warner’s guitar tones are mesmerizing, bringing a bright, emotional edge to the lyrics as Jason sings “the days of wine and roses they are long dead and gone, carry on, carry on…” The song positions the Scorchers – and specifically Jason and Warner – as the veterans they are, old soldiers that refuse to go quietly into that good night.

If “Days of Wine and Roses” is the heart of Halcyon Times, then the pop-tinged rocker “Better Than This” serves as the album’s soul. With Warner singing in a voice that is as distinctively hard rock in nature as Jason’s is earthy country twang, the song delights in the unbridled joy of making music. Above a raucous soundtrack with some red-hot guitarwork, Warner sings “someday you just might find/as you’re looking back in time/it gets good but it don’t get better than this.” No matter the band’s trials and tribulations, minor successes, and failures, it all fades away once they hit the stage.

The Reverend’s Bottom Line


Released independently by the band, Halcyon Times is unlikely to set the charts on fire, although it’s certainly one of the best rock albums that will be released in 2010. Sensing that it might be the band’s last stand – or at least their last physical CD in an increasingly digital world – the Scorchers have put together a beautiful CD package that includes great graphics, and a thick booklet full of lyrics, photos, and liner notes sure to thrill the hardcore faithful.

It’s the music that counts, though, and here Jason & the Scorchers and friends have delivered in spades. The album combines the reckless energy and enthusiasm of their youth with the cautious optimism and mature talent of veteran musicians. With Halcyon Times, the band rocks harder and sounds better than they ever have. The Scorchers may be going nowhere fast, but they’re having a hell of a time doing so… (Courageous Chicken/NashVegas Flash, released February 19th, 2010)

Review originally published by Blurt magazine, 2010

Friday, October 14, 2022

Vintage Review: Jason & the Scorchers’ Still Standing (2002)

I’ve been a rabid Jason & the Scorchers fan for a full two decades now, the band celebrating their twentieth anniversary this year. As such, it is only fitting that Capitol/EMI saw fit to reissue the band’s excellent 1986 sophomore album, Still Standing on CD for the first time. While listening to this album for the thousandth time, however, I came to a conclusion, maybe even a mini-epiphany. Like a lot of rock ‘n’ roll visionaries, listeners understood where the Scorchers were coming from or they didn’t; you got ‘em or you ignored them.

The Scorchers’ unique blend of country twang, roots-rock, and punk fury didn’t play well on MTV in the mid-‘80s and it didn’t sell many records, but it sure garnered a fair bit of critical acclaim. When the going got tough, though – as it often did during the Reagan ‘80s – there was nobody better at getting on stage and blowing away thoughts of your overdue car payment or impending rent than Jason & the Nashville Scorchers. Any night, in any venue, the Scorchers gave such cult-fave heavyweights as the Replacements a run for their money as the best damn rock ‘n’ roll band in the land.
 

Jason & the Scorchers’ Still Standing


Although they were, perhaps, the most dynamic and consistent live band playing the rock ‘n’ roll circuit during the mid-to-late 1980s, the Scorchers’ label wasn’t pleased with the exposure and acclaim afforded the band’s debut, Lost & Found. Rather than wait for the band’s live performances to create word-of-mouth excitement (and sell records), the label recruited hard rock producer Tom Werman (Motley Crue) to helm the all-important second album. The resulting production and the accompanying image “make-over” provided the band with a glossy sound and glam appearance that dismayed long-time fans. Even Werman’s slick, metal-tinged production couldn’t hide the Scorchers’ cowtown roots, however. If Still Standing polished a few of the band’s rough edges, it by turns emphasized Jason’s manic vocals, Warner Hodges’ raging fretwork, and the big beat rhythms of bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer Perry Baggs.

After all these years, Still Standing sounds like a revelation. Jason’s songwriting skills had matured nicely between the early Fervor EP and this second full-length LP, his masterful wordplay weaving wonderful story songs fraught with emotion and power. Rough-and-ready rockers like “Golden Ball & Chain”, “Shotgun Blues”, and a wild Scorchers reading of the Stones’ “19th Nervous Breakdown” emphasize the band’s punk mindset, Hodges whirling like a dervish, his axework underlining Jason’s growing confidence in his vocal abilities. What made the band’s approach work as well as it did is that the members never thought of themselves as punk rockers, not in the classic British sense of the word, at least. They were country punks, possessing all of the piss and vinegar of their big city counterparts; Jason, Warner, Jeff and Perry making their bones playing to hostile crowds in crappy honky-tonks and dangerous roadhouses.

Jason & the Scorchers

Country Roots & Punk Attitude


To this punk attitude, the Scorchers added a country traditionalism that was as firmly rooted in Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, and George Jones as any alt-country band today can claim. Jason was the son of a midwestern farmer; the remaining Scorchers were brought up in the Nashville area, Hodges playing with his parent’s gospel band. When punk hit Nashville in the late 1970s, though, it hit hard, offering a stark alternative to the “countrypolitan” sound of “Music Row” in the 1960s and early ‘70s. The Ramones’ first appearance in the Music City, at the legendary Exit/Inn in 1979, would change the rules forever. Only a hundred or so people attended this mythical show, but all of them started bands, it would seem. Early ‘80s Nashville shows by folks like Black Flag, the Replacements, and X would spur further creativity and evolution of the growing local music scene.

The Scorchers absorbed these changing musical currents, mostly through the contributions of Johnson and Baggs, but would remain truer to their country roots than many of their west coast-based “cowpunk” counterparts. Still Standing manages to retain a fair share of the twang, especially on slower songs like “Good Things Come To Those Who Wait” and “Take Me To Your Promised Land”. These were not so much “power ballads,” like those delivered by hair metal bands, but rather country torch songs, tortured with emotion, Jason’s image-filled lyrics and potent vocal phrasing backed by a classic honky-tonk shuffle. On stage, these slower-paced songs would provide a counterpoint to the band's balls-out rockers, allowing the audience time to catch its breath. Tunes like “My Heart Still Stands With You” have aged well with time and sound as fresh today as fifteen years ago.

To the remastered reissue of Still Standing, the label has added three bonus songs. The gem “Greetings From Nashville”, penned by former Nashville resident Tim Krekel, is a longtime Scorchers favorite (and perhaps the only lyrical snapshot of the Southern underground of the 1980s). The previously unreleased “Route 66”, a live staple of the band, is provided a typical raucous treatment while “The Last Ride”, an unreleased instrumental, proves for once and for all that Warner Hodges was one of the greatest six-string madmen of the 1980s.

The Reverend’s Bottom Line


Still Standing should have broken the Scorchers through to the mainstream, with three or four potentially big singles deserving more than the nonexistent airplay they received. Johnson would subsequently leave the band to join Nashville Goth-rockers Guilt on their sojourn to L.A. and the Scorchers would slightly alter their sound again with their third album, Thunder & Fire.

The band broke-up at the end of the ‘80s and got back together in 1995 for another run at the brass ring. Core members Jason Ringenberg and Warner Hodges still perform as the Scorchers today and through all of the band’s trials and tribulations, they have retained an enormously loyal fan base throughout the past twenty years. If the Scorchers are, indeed, the ultimate cult band, Still Standing is quintessential Jason & the Scorchers. Get it and find out what all the fuss is about… (EMI America, reissued September 5th, 2002)

Review originally published by Alt.Culture.Guide™, 2002 

Find the CD on Discogs: Jason & the Scorchers’ Still Standing

Friday, June 10, 2022

Vintage Review: Jason Ringenberg’s A Pocketful of Soul (2001)

Jason Ringenberg’s A Pocketful of Soul
Soul is an intangible concept – some folks has got it, some ain’t – but anybody who thinks that an old country boy can’t have soul is just plain mistaken. Take Jason Ringenberg, for instance. Grew up on a hog farm in Illinois, been plying his trade these past twenty years or so as frontman/songwriter/bottlewasher for the finest posse of rockin’ cowpunks that this humble critic has been proud to make acquaintance with. Not for nothing did Jason & the Scorchers name their first basement-brewed recording Reckless Country Soul and now Jason steps out on his own in the year “Y2J” with a fine solo effort called A Pocketful of Soul.


To resubmit my original theory, if you think that a country boy can’t have soul then you’ve never heard Mr. Ringenberg’s delightful twang wrap around a set of lyrics. Technical singers are a dime a dozen down on “Music Row,” and I’m looking for the guy supplying the dimes. Jason, on the other hand, is a soulful singer – technically proficient, but with too much honky-tonk in him to mimic the bland pop styling demanded by Nashville’s major label establishment. As raw as an icy wind blowing across a barren wheat field, Jason imparts every song on A Pocketful of Soul with a delightful country soul that is as authentic as it is unique. To hear Ringenberg sing “For Addie Rose,” for instance, written for his young daughter, is to stare into the heart of the artist. Any damn singer can entertain your ears, but it takes soul to hit you in the gut.

There are no pretensions to be found on A Pocketful of Soul, no delusions of grandeur or multi-platinum fantasies. This is a homegrown musical project, a wonderful aside from Jason’s work with the Scorchers. This is country music as it used to be, created by the artist instead of committee, committed to excellence rather than demographics. Jason’s critically acclaimed songwriting skills have never been questioned, tho’ he’s reserved some of his most personal observations for A Pocketful of Soul. The aforementioned “For Addie Rose” is for every father who has ever watched his daughter grow up. The chilling “The Price of Progress” is certainly influenced by one of the greatest tragedies of the modern age, the loss of the family farm. “The Last of the Neon Cowboys” is a thinly-veiled tale of too many nights on the stage while Jason’s cover of the long-lost Guadacanal Diary gem “Trail of Tears” is afforded a, well, soulful reading.

Jason Ringenberg’s A Pocketful of Soul
Although there are some electric instruments hereabouts, A Pocketful of Soul is an acoustic-oriented collection of songs, performances captured by an analog 16 track recorder and sent out into the world with no heavy production, bells or whistles. Ringenberg rounded up talented former Webb Wilder sideman George Bradfute and multi-instrumentalist Fats Kaplin to help him pick on an assortment of guitars, mandolin, dobro, steel guitar, accordion and violin. The focus here is on Jason’s vocals, however, and the damn fine songs that this talented wordsmith still manages to crank out after two decades of writing.

A Pocketful of Soul is a rarity – a strong solo effort from an artist known primarily for his work with a band. It is also an anomaly, a country record that is true to the spirit of the ghosts of Hank, Ernest and Lefty, living proof that Jason R. still has a few tricks up his sleeve. (Courageous Chicken Music, released 2001)

Find the CD on Discogs: Jason Ringenberg’s A Pocketful of Soul

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Anarchy In The Music City! The Other Side of Nashville's Musical Pioneers

Since the early 1960s, Nashville has been known worldwide as the "Music City" for its robust country and gospel music industries. For over 40 years now, Nashville has also been home to a thriving hotbed of rock, blues, rap, and Americana music. "The Other Side of Nashville" has grown from a few makeshift bands playing original songs and scraping for gigs into an internationally-respected scene that has attracted creative immigrants from across the globe.

Anarchy In The Music City! is an oral history of the origins and evolution of Nashville's alternative music scene as told by the pioneers that made the music. Using artist interviews culled from the pages of Rev. Keith A. Gordon's critically-acclaimed book The Other Side of Nashville, this illustrated volume includes conversations with both well-known music-makers like Jason & the Scorchers, Webb Wilder, Tony Gerber, David Olney, and Chagall Guevara as well as regional cult rockers like Tommy Womack, the Dusters, Donna Frost, and Aashid Himons, among many others.  

The “Reverend of Rock ‘n’ Roll,” Rev. Gordon has been writing about rock and blues music for 50 years. A former contributor to the All Music Guide books and website, and the former Blues Expert for About.com, Rev. Gordon has written or edited 25 previous music-related books and eBooks, including Blues Deluxe: The Joe Bonamassa Buying Guide, Planet of Sound, The Other Side of Nashville, and Scorched Earth: A Jason & the Scorchers Scrapbook.

Buy an autographed copy for $14.99 directly from the Reverend:

Rather buy from Amazon.com? Here are some links to do so!

Print Version $14.99

eBook Version $3.99