Showing posts with label Mountain Heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mountain Heart. Show all posts

Friday, January 8, 2010

Mountain Heart veers off bluegrass's well-worn path


While firmly planted in its bluegrass roots, Mountain Heart likes to veer off the beaten path

by walter tunis Contributing Music Writer

The latest Mountain Heart lineup features Aaron Ramsey, left, Barry Abernathy, Josh Shilling, Clay Jones, Jason Moore and Jim VanCleve.

Mountain Heart

7 p.m. Jan. 9 at Meadowgreen Park Music Hall, 303 Bluegrass Lane, Clay City. $15. (606) 663-9008. www.kyfriends.com.
During the past decade, we have come to know Mountain Heart as an industrious bluegrass brigade full of familiar faces (including longtime Renfro Valley singer Steve Gulley and one-time Alison Krauss mandolinist Adam Steffey, both of whom have left the band), a feverish sense of traditionalism and a willingness to veer into uncharted musical territory.
So imagine the sense of surprise that came from viewing a 2009 performance clip on YouTube of today's Mountain Heart lineup, which adds — dare we say it — keyboards to its string band sound for a cover of Stevie Wonder's Superstition.
A sellout? Not by what the video revealed, although the true test won't come until we see a full performance of Mountain Heart's unexpected stylistic expansion. And son of a gun, we're in luck. The band plays this weekend as part of the Meadowgreen Park Music Hall's annual autumn-to-spring concert series in Clay City.
Actually, if you've heard Mountain Heart's fine 2007 concert album, Road That Never Ends, the stylistic leaps between the traditional and the contemporary seem natural. Cut after singer/guitarist/keyboardist Josh Shilling replaced Gulley but before Jason Moore took over for Steffey, Road That Never Ends cements Mountain Heart's tireless picking ingenuity on the warp speed Devil's Courthouse, a tune originally penned by fiddler Jim Van Cleve for his splendid 2006 solo recording, No Apologies. Ditto for the jubilant vocal inspirations propelling the a cappella Gospel Train.

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Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Mountain Heart is not your grandfather's bluegrass band


By Bill DeYoung

bill@connectsavannah.com

Smack in the middle of Mountain Heart’s most popular instrumental rave–up, “#6 Barn Dance,” the award–winning bluegrass sextet will veer into 4/4 time and start banging out some familiar–sounding chords ... and there it is, like it was meant to be part of an old–time breakdown: AC/DC’s “Back in Black.”

That’s the sort of thing to expect from this most progressive of progressive bluegrass groups: The unexpected. Ever since the band was formed, 10 years ago, by exiles from Alison Krauss’ and Doyle Lawson’s bands, Mountain Heart has been about adding surprise and showmanship to its certifiably brilliant brand of acoustic musicianship.

Full article.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Mountain Heart Brings Amazing Vocals To TUMS Fast Relief 500 National Anthem | Martinsville Daily


Mountain Heart Brings Amazing Vocals To TUMS Fast Relief 500 National Anthem
Sunday, October 11, 2009
By Bill Wyatt
Mountain Heart, the band that figured a way to combine bluegrass, rock, blues and jazz, will bring its amazing vocals to Martinsville Speedway to perform the National Anthem before the running of the TUMS Fast Relief 500 on October 25.
Mountain Heart is accustomed to large stages; the group has appeared on the Grand Ole Opry over 100 times and performed with acts ranging from Brad Paisley to Lynyrd Sknyrd to Montgomery Gentry to Alison Kraus.
In the decade since the group assembled, Mountain Heart, or members of the band, have either won or been nominated for multiple Grammys, ACM, CMA and IBMA awards.
The band’s musical ability and high energy produces a unique sound and stage show, which appeals to a wide variety of fans, in the United States and abroad.

Read full story.