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June 2008 Archives

June 2, 2008

Ardent Sessions: John Paul Keith and the One Four Fives

On this month's edition of the Ardent Sessions we check in with John Paul Keith and his new band The One Four Fives. JPK, formerly of The Nevers, Stateside and Ryan Adam's Pink Hearts, has spent the last year playing with Harlan T. Bobo, Jack Yarber and most recently the legendary Jim Dickinson - now he's teamed up with some of Memphis' finest to showcase his own songwriting chops and bring you a real gem of a show!


Listen Here!


Setlist:
01:50 Smoke in a Bottle
05:53 Pure Cane Sugar
09:07 Second Hand Heart
12:58 Lookin' for a Thrill
16:03 Otherwise
18:21 Drinking for Two
22:37 If I Were You
27:55 Too Hip
33:10 She'll Dance to Anything
37:44 Phonograph
41:48 Baby's Got a New Tattoo





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June 5, 2008

Ardent Studios in The Nashville Scene

Nashville State of Mind

This year’s CMA lineup exemplifies the myriad strains of modern country—with Dwight Yoakam on top



CMA Festival performances run Thursday, 5th through Sunday, 8th in downtown Nashville


In its quest to be all things to a carefully dissected slice of the American listening demographic, country music appeals to some of the people all of the time without losing sight of its main quarry—everybody, or a statistical shadow of that elusive number. But who’s counting? Everyone involved, that’s who. And this year’s CMA Festival—four days, hundreds of artists and thousands of fans spanning the nation—comes at a fraught moment in music-business history. Along with superstars of the magnitude of Alan Jackson and Dwight Yoakam, the fan-frenzied event features up-and-comers and niche artists along with a smattering of Americana acts and the spookily named McDonald’s-Dr. Pepper Family Zone, which appears to be an area designed for relaxation.


These days, all new country acts pay tribute to bands critics have generally dismissed and fans have continued to love, such as The Eagles and Jimmy Buffett. Take, for example, the Georgia singer and songwriter Zac Brown, who is taking his music to country fans with his first CMA appearance. He says he grew up on a diet of James Taylor and Southern rock, and discovered soul music at college. The Zac Brown Band’s debut, The Foundation, is so genial it nearly wafts away in its evocation of Buffett’s pleasantries, but songs such as “It’s Not Okay” and “Toes” display flair and humor.


Like any number of ambitious young country artists, Brown speaks the industry’s preferred language of rugged individualism in all matters except one—the sacred song itself. “We try our songs out in the field, we play live, and our actual records are how we perform live,” Brown says. “I really believe in the song more than I believe in a label that tells you what kind it is.”

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Bucking the Trends Dwight Yoakam


That’s touching, but part of modern country’s shuffle is to feign indifference to marketing labels while thinking of nothing else. Just like the late alt-country magazine No Depression, which covered mainstream country in a serious manner, country is obsessed with its notion of authenticity. For No Depression, roots meant country-rock as humanist text; for mainstream country, roots mean country-rock as well, but humanism doesn’t enter into the equation. (Disclosure: this writer contributed to No Depression.) Country has a habit of applauding the sort of superficial innovation that would have barely registered in any number of pop-music scenes, past and present.


For example, CMA veterans Montgomery Gentry—a big-selling duo whose music is an updated version of bar-band Southern boogie—decided they needed a break from Nashville, and went to Memphis to make the new Back When I Knew It All. They recorded at one of the most famous locations in the world, Ardent Studios, where ZZ Top, Led Zeppelin and Big Star made hugely influential records.


“We wanted to go to a historic studio, something not too far away,” Troy Gentry says. “We were either gonna go to Florida, Atlanta or Memphis, and Memphis just had so much history. Ironically, a lot of the guys we grew up listening to recorded some great albums there—Steve Earle, the Allman Brothers and ZZ Top.”

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MySpace Cadet Taylor Swift


Back When I Knew It All sounds unlike any previous Montgomery Gentry record. Gentry says they took their usual session players to the Bluff City. “With all the not-so-up-to-date pieces of equipment in there, we were trying to get that live-band sound,” he explains. They got it: The title track features an introduction that could pass for one of Ardent’s celebrated British Invasion homages, as if the ghost of Big Star’s Chris Bell had put on a duster and hunkered down in the studio.


Read the rest Here.

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June 10, 2008

Fig & Mint Reviews Grace Askew's Wasted Lipstick EP

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Local artist Grace Askew recorded her debut EP Wasted Lipstick here at Ardent with producer/engineer Pete Matthews earlier this year. Fig & Mint, a popular music blog, had some great things to say about Ardent and the EP:

...After seeing all on display I contented myself with a glass of wine and began listenening to the girl singing airily in the background (local gal Grace Askew). She played good covers, with a simple, yet strong conviction. Afterwards I discovered she just recorded an EP at Ardent, a great midtown studio with a history of well-produced albums (Pete Matthews, Big Star’s Jodie Stephens, John Fry, et al. know what they’re doing).

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June 15, 2008

Ardent Studios featured on DailyMotion

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June 18, 2008

Christian Arena Continues Work at Ardent

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L to R: Jason Gillespie, Christian Arena, and Mike Wilson.

Christian Arena was back in the studio this week with engineers Mike Wilson and Jason Gillespie, working on vocals for a new, as-of-yet untitled release. The album will feature keys by Rick Steff (Cat Power), horn arrangements by Willie Mitchell, as well as a slew of other surprises. Stay tuned for more details on release.

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Jacqueline Nassar in Studio C with Pete Matthews and Nick Redmond

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Clockwise, from top left: Toni Gooch, Jacqueline Nassar, engineer Pete Matthews, assistant Nick Redmond, and guitarist Walt Busby.

Jacqueline Nassar has returned to Ardent to work on some new demos with engineer/producer Pete Matthews and assistant Nick Redmond. They've been in Studio C for a couple of weeks.

Jacqueline is a remarkable young artist who, at the ripe old age of 16, has already worked with the likes of Scott Bomar and Karyn Rachtman, among many others. Keep an eye out for more on Jacqueline here, or check out her myspace at http://www.myspace.com/jacquelinenassar.

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June 25, 2008

Ardent Sessions Video - Bad Veins - "Fake Baby"

Check out this video: Ardent Sessions: Bad Veins "Fake Baby"



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Listen to the Full Performance by clicking HERE!


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