The Travelin’ McCourys and Ronnie Bowman are taking the show underground Saturday, March 14 with a performance on Bluegrass Underground. The venue is 333 feet underground in the Volcano Room at Cumberland Caverns near McMinnville, Tenn. Tickets for the 2:00 pm show are $15 and available online at Bluegrass Underground’s web site.
The Bluegrass Underground is recorded for broadcast on WSM 650 AM and streamed online at WSMonline.com at 5:00 pm (central) time every Saturday.
About The Travelin’ McCourys
Ron McCoury on mandolin, Rob McCoury on banjo, Jason Carter on fiddle, and Alan Bartram on bass , with featured guests on guitar and vocals, is the latest incarnation of the most awarded band in the history of bluegrass -The Del McCoury Band. Known for their individual prowess on their instruments and their rapidly expanding reputation as collaborators with the members of numerous musical icons from Vince Gill to the Allman Brothers and Phish, this touring unit blends the best of the Appalachian tradition with the improvisational magic of jazz. Unique live collaborations are the hallmark of their performances, and demonstrates why critics and musicians across the country hail them as the best bluegrass band in the world.
About Ronnie Bowman
As a songwriter Ronnie Bowman has earned a great deal of respect not only among Bluegrass professionals, but also in Country Music. Both Brooks & Dunn, and Kenny Chesney have brought Ronnie Bowman originals to #1, and Lee Ann Womack also included a song by Ronnie on the multiplatinum selling album “I hope you Dance”. Ronnie Bowman has achieved remarkable heights in his musical career as an award-winning Bluegrass songwriter and vocalist, and a respected, successful writer in Country music. Continuing to play the festivals that endear him to the music he loves, (and has contributed so much to over the years) remains an important focal point for him.
via Travelin’ McCourys, Ronnie Bowman gear up for some spelunking | BluegrassJournal.com.
It was great to see Bluegrass Underground on the front page of the Tennessean on Saturday. Shelley Mays captured some wonderful images from the Cadillac Sky show. Check out her online slide show here http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?Category=SPECIAL0370.
All my favorite singers couldn’t sing. Now there’s one less of them still performing. We’ve seen musicians retire and unretire before, but unless David Berman is pulling our leg, Silver Jews are now no more. The band’s performance Saturday night at McMinnville, Tennessee’s Cumberland Caverns was their last, and included this emotional take on American Water’s indelible “We Are Real”. But first, Berman gives a brief introduction: “If you’re in a position in your life where you need to make a change, this is the best time,” he says, citing all the changes going on these days. One of the most recent historical changes, the inauguration of President Obama, flies in the face of the work of Berman’s father, whom the Silver Jews main guy recently revealed to be right-wing lobbyist Rick Berman. Strange victory, strange defeat.
Update: “Smith and Jones Forever” is now on YouTube as well.
Billed as a celebration/funeral for the band (introduced as “the late, great Silver Jews”), the Cumberland Caverns gig saw them perform just 15 songs — a de facto greatest-hits set — as selected by the notoriously stage-shy Berman himself. It was equal parts morose and exuberant, often somber, sometimes sweet and always self-effacing, not to mention a tad bit shambolic. Sort of like every moment of the Jews’ 20-year semi-career.
Decked out in matching ensembles — jet-black suits, blood-red shirts (though Berman’s was more gingham-y) — the Jews took the stage to the echoed whoops of the roughly 300 who managed to score tickets (and actually find the Cavern). Berman led off with a grateful speech that managed to incorporate his former job as a janitor, popcorn theft and the Loews movie theater chain. Then the band was off and galloping, plunking its way through “We Are Real,” a standout from 1998’s American Water.
via MTV Newsroom » Silver Jews Say Farewell 300 Feet Underground.
Say what you will about The Spin’s penchant for impunctuality; we know when to show up on time. Even after a near two-hour car ride to a dank hole in the ground in McMinnville, even when it involves being wrangled and herded down a path with confused-looking hipsters and families led by tour guides–all looking more than a bit like cattle–we know when to show up on time. And as we descended into the depths of the Cumberland Caverns, we overheard a preteen ask his father, “How long did it take ‘em to build this?” Damn. And we thought our generation was doomed. Keep an eye out for that one.
It was shortly before 3 p.m. Saturday afternoon as we made our way into Cumberland Caverns’ Volcano Room, a large chamber dimly lit and musty with cave stank. We quickly spotted a few dozen familiar faces–mostly those of Nashville show-goers and musicians, though Deerhunter’s Bradford Cox was also in the mix. We managed to share a few words with William Tyler, who, gleeful over the locale of his final show with the Jews, informed us that their performance was being shot on 16 mm film for a project that will hopefully be released sooner rather than later.
The marriage of natural wonder and modern ingenuity are unmistakably evident in Cumberland Caverns’ Volcano Room. Located an hour and a half southeast of Nashville in McMinnville, the caverns are breathtaking, and the Volcano Room, as Bluegrass Underground creator and producer Todd Mayo puts it, “could be the most unique venue around.”
via Nashville Music – Silver Jews take their swan song underground – page 1 – Nashville Scene.
Being that Tim O’Brien epitomizes roots music, it is only appropriate that he and some of his best pickin’ buddies could be found at the root of the Cumberland Plateau – literally – in early December.
Tim O’Brien and Friends – banjo deviant Danny Barnes, flatpicking guitar whiz Bryan Sutton, and much-in-demand bassist Dennis Crouch – put on a tremendous show in the Volcano Room, part of the series of caves that make up Cumberland Caverns near McMinnville, Tennessee, for the December installment of the Bluegrass Underground series.
The most unique concert hall in the Southeast—if not the world—rests some 300 feet below the Cumberland Plateau and just outside McMinnville, Tenn. Carved by millions of years of underground river flow, the Volcano Room, one of the caves that make up the labyrinth of Cumberland Caverns, has become home to the monthly concert series known as Bluegrass Underground.
Har, har, har, har, har! No, really though, that was pretty hilarious. See, the Bermans and their musical cohorts, all of whom put together make The Silver Jews, will be playing a show for a very famous radio station from right here in Nashville called WSM (home to the Grand Old Opry) – but wait, there’s a catch. The show will be played in a place called Cumberland Caverns, a place lots of us in the Tennessee area visited on field trips as children, and a place which happens to be a freaking cave.
Yes, the Jews will be playing Aloyisius, Bluegrass Drummer, among a bunch of bats and stuff. This is trippy, I know. The date is January 31st (bring a jacket, January+cave=cold) and the time is at 3pm. It’s a Saturday so you’ve no right to complain about the 3pm start time, well actually you have no right to complain about anything being inconvenient about a Silver Jews show in a natural wonder.
Original Post: It’s Hard to Find a Friend: The Silver Jews Are So Underground! .
Friends, if you haven’t already, you should check out some of Danny Barnes’ music at www.dannybarnes.com. He’s a really quirky, and, I think, brilliant, writer. His voice, not just as a singer, but also as a writer and player, is unique and highly valuable.
Yesterday we drove together to the Cumberland Caverns, near McMinnville TN, where we played a new concert series called "Bluegrass Underground." The show was recorded for rebroadcast on nearby radio outlets and on WSM in Nashville. I understand the WSM broadcast is set for midnight on Dec 26th, and you can listen online then as well from WSM’s website. You can find out more at www.bluegrassunderground.com. It was a one-off bluegrass set with Danny Barnes, Bryan Sutton, and Dennis Crouch.