High Country Press

Making the second trip to the High Country, recent WNCW darlings
Bucktown Kickback receives inevitable bluegrass comparisons because of
their instrumental capabilities, Adam Brooks Dudding’s humorous and
sometimes poignant songwriting enables the band to be far more eclectic.
David Brewer - High Country Press

BOOTLEG

Lost highwaymen

Bucktown Kickback mine alt-country gold

February 6, 2008
by Matt Wake - BOOTLEG

Bucktown Kickback was formed five years ago in Columbus, Ohio. According to Singer Adam Brooks Dudding, the multifaceted nature of the Columbus music scene is evident within his own band.

Somebody forgot to tell Adam Brooks Dudding backwards tracks don’t belong on bluegrass albums. There are rules. Purists could be offended.

Dudding — singer, songwriter and creative force behind Bucktown Kickback — produced much of the band’s 2007 disc “Lost In Your Hometown” to sound like prime Appalachia. The record effectively balances roots grit and country rock coherence. However, a pair of musical interludes on “Lost…” point to where the band might head next. On the fourth track, “Slow Train,” acoustic slide work tangles with electric guitar double-stops.

The instrumental transitions the album from a series of alt-country motifs into more ambitious compositions. There’s the aching ambience of “The Space Between,” with its cello flourishes. “Seven Number Blues” is an enlightened redneck tune that sounds like a “Basement Tapes” leftover.

Song 12, “Slow Train II,” reprises the wordless rustle of its predecessor. But this time, the guitars are mixed in the choppy, slurred context of backwards tracking. The studio technique was made famous on songs like Jimi Hendrix’s “Are You Experienced” and numerous late-period Beatles numbers.

“I enjoyed creating those soundscapes,” Dudding said. “That piece is supposed to ease the album from one place into another.”

“Lost...” concludes with two pivotal songs: “That’s Life” is a slow burn of honky-tonk molasses. A Neil Young-type rocker, “A Shooting Star,” closes the record. The album finale is also a highlight of Bucktown live shows.

“Shooting Star is set up to go in any direction and sometimes we do, “ Dudding said.

Bucktown recorded “Lost…” in a series of sessions at Tech Art, a private studio in Hilliard, Ohio. The record is not short on tonal color. Lap- and pedal-steel, French horn, accordion and saxophone augment the core instruments — acoustic and electric guitars, upright bass and traps.

But the heart of “Lost…” is Dudding’s songs and lived-in vocals. While the embellishments are tasteful, the material could stand up fine presented by Dudding and his Gibson J-50 acoustic.

The album opener, “Valley,” is a dose of double-time giddy-up. Dobro and harmonica drive the pace. A furious banjo break and hot chicken pickin’ cement the deal.

With its windows for improvisation, “Lost…” is built for the road. Although Dudding is proud of the record, the next Bucktown title is unlikely to be a rehash.

“It might be more focused on the songwriting,” Dudding said regarding a follow-up. “‘Lost In Your Hometown’ has many more open jam sections. The next album might also be more electric.”

Like many rural revivalists, Dudding worships Gram Parsons. Parsons is known for many things — being Keith Richard’s best friend, opening The Stones’ harrowing Altamont gig, overdosing on pills and tequila, and having his stolen corpse burned in the California desert. However music heads idolize Parsons for his palpable songs and cosmic cowboy fusion.

In addition to founding the Flying Burrito Brothers and cutting two remarkable solo albums, Parsons joined The Byrds for a brief period of time. Under Gram’s guidance, The Byrds dropped their jangling folk rock for more of a Southern feel.

“(The Byrds’) ‘Sweetheart of the Rodeo’ was a very changing album for me,” Dudding said. “Gram brings honesty and raw emotion. Being able to present that night after night…it’s amazing to do that. He was also so instrumental in originating the country rock thing. That’s something a bunch of bands are still trying to pull off, including us.”

As the man that stirs the drink in Bucktown, Dudding insists the rest of the band isn’t hired hands. Indeed, “Lost…” sounds nothing like a solo album. There’s sweat and telepathy involved.

“It’s a tricky thing being a musician and dealing with the delicate emotions that go with it,” Dudding said. “Sometimes everybody feels good about what you’re doing and sometimes everybody does not feel good. These songs wouldn’t sound the way they do without them. Everybody believes they are a big part of the sound being created — which they are. I feel they’ve been really lucky to find me and I feel the same way about them.”

Bucktown Kickback was formed five years ago in Columbus, Ohio. According to Dudding, the multifaceted nature of the Columbus music scene is evident within his own band.

Bass player James Donovan also plays with a Cream-like power trio. Although he’s equally adept at African hand percussion, drummer Dave Blankestyn is a bluegrass beast. Multi-instrumentalist Adam Schlenker adds flat-picking, mandolin and banjo bursts. Schlenker also engineers the band’s albums.

After guitarist Alex Anest departed following the “Lost…” sessions, Dudding brought in Anthony Papa to play lead and lap-steel. A devotee of Jimmy Page and bluesmen like Robert Johnson, Papa plays a Gibson Les Paul through a 1963 Fender Super Reverb. With his vintage gear and classic influences, Papa has pushed live Bucktown shows into more rollicking affairs. The “Lost…” tune “Turn Left Off the Exit” is a perfect vehicle for Papa’s bluesy licks.

“That song is almost Stones-esque and a great way to break up the alternative bluegrass street we usually go down,” Papa said. “With a Gibson, you’re still able to get country tones, but there’s also some blues and rock muscle behind it.”

When it comes time to write the next Bucktown record, Papa hopes his string bending will impact the material.

“I hope to bring a little bit more of a rock energy, an ‘Exile On Main St.’ vibe. But maybe you shouldn’t tell Adam that,” Papa said with a laugh.

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PROGRESSIVE BAND ADDS KICK TO BLUEGRASS
~Grant Britt

They took Bill Monroe's baby and rocked it.

Bucktown Kickback came out of the gate five years ago playing what they call progressive bluegrass.

"Some of the forms of the songs seem to be fairly traditional, but the instrumentation is more progressive," says Adam Dudding , founder and lead vocalist for the Columbus, Ohio-based band.

"My family is from West Virginia," says the 32-year-old Dudding. "My dad and I would listen to bluegrass radio shows Friday and Saturday night."

The singer grew up listening to classic bluegrass performers such as Monroe, The Osbourne Brothers and Ralph Stanley. But when he formed Bucktown Kickback, the instrumentation ruled out being labeled as bluegrass.

The band includes a drummer, who uses a small trap set and sometimes plays a hand drum, as well as an electric guitar player. But the band also incorporates acoustic instruments such as banjo, mandolin, guitar and upright bass.

The result is an eclectic mix of country, bluegrass and rock. "Turn Left Off The Exit," from the band's latest release, "Lost In Your Own Hometown," sounds more like Beatles than bluegrass. "Blackswamp Stomp (One Last Dance)" is laid-back country blues with a grass twinge and a considerable dollop of humor. ["She kept the beat of the bass drum twirled me like chewing gum," Dudding is pursued by a large, enthusiastic dancer: "She was 6-foot-10, 'bout 275/ built like a mountain but danced like a river … when she put her arms around me/my whole body shivered."]

Dudding says the band doesn't mind being called a blend.

"There's times when I feel it's been a little bit of a disservice to the reader when we're listed as just country or just bluegrass," the singer says.

"It's the songwriting that directs what kind of sound gets used."

On its current album as well as "Speakeasy" (2005), the band has done all originals. A few covers get tossed in on live shows, but even the covers get a Bucktown Kickback makeover. A bluegrass-style cover of The Beatles' "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" is a crowd pleaser, as is Hank Williams' "You Win Again." Williams' classic moaner is done as more of a country/folk version.

"It's not as twangy as Hank Sr., but comes from the same sentiment," Dudding says. "There's mandolin all over that song when we do it."

Although the band members come from vastly different backgrounds, Dudding says they're all bluegrass fans.

Multi-instrumentalist Adam Schlenker brings a traditional element with his flat picking and his mandolin technique. Bassist James Donovan is a rocker who also fronts an electric-bass power trio. Drummer David Blankestyn's first percussive love was hand drums and African drumming, but he loves bluegrass, too. Dudding says electric guitarist [Tony Papa] knows all the rock standards but lately has been focusing on Django Reinhardt's gypsy jazz acoustic guitar work, which sometimes crosses over into the bluegrass styles of artists such as David Grisman.

"When you get together with a bunch of musicians from all sorts of different backgrounds and their own catalogue of songs they've listened to over the years, sometimes you're all speaking the same language," Dudding says.

To boost his own musical language skills, when not out on the road with the band, Dudding is working with songwriters in his adopted hometown of Nashville. He's trying to write songs that are new versions of older country-music styles, attempting to bring back some Waylon and Willie…

"It's funny to see the stuff you see and hear when you go out and about in Nashville, the stuff people are calling country these days."

Dudding says that he has ready a dozen songs fit for outlaws.

"We're gonna try to go for that cycle when good old outlaw music comes back into fashion," he says.

That sounds like the voice of reason in any language.

High Country Press 10.4.07 Boone, NC

Americana + Jamgrass + Classic Country = Bucktown Kickback
"...Fans of artists such as The Gourds, Yonder Mountain String Band, the Grateful Dead and Whiskeytown will find plenty to cheer about in the songs and eclectic-but-focused style of Bucktown Kickback...The recipe for Bucktown Kickback sports heavy doses of bluegrass drive and fleet-fingered chops, plenty of tear jerking honky-tonk, a sprinkle of rock swagger and singer-songwriter flair, and Dudding’s love of narrative songwriting and easygoing melodies...Blurring the lines between Americana, jamgrass, honky-tonk and roots rock..."
David Brewer - High Country Press - October 4, 2007

Metro Spirit 10.9.07 Augusta, GA

"With a name like Bucktown Kickback, you may as well not even show up to the venue if you can’t throw down with some good old-fashioned, fiery, oh-mama-that’s-what-I-like roots tunes. Luckily for you, these dudes can do that and more, touching perfectly on everything from country slide blues to creepy, creek-bed-at-night Americana. I dare you to miss this."
By Josh Ruffin, Metro Spirit, Augusta, GA (picks for the week)
Issue 19.11::10/09/2007 – 10/15/2007

CiN Weekly 10.17.07

"Rollicking Good Time Alert! Nashville band Bucktown Kickback adds upbeat bluegrass and country to its laid-back roots music background."

CityBeat

“BTKB slide easily from Bluegrass to Country to a rootsy Americana at the drop of a wide-brimmed hat...The Country palette of the Grateful Dead, the Roots Pop spark of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.”


Sentinel Tribune 4.5.07

Writer scripts musical tales

Adam Brooks Dudding always knew that his degree in creative writing from Bowling Green State University would come in handy someday.
But, instead of penning a script in sorrowful free-verse poetry or working on the next Oprah Book Club novel, he’s doing what he does best, writing lyrically mellifluous songs with colorful images that jump right out of the CD player.

Picture this. A rustic old honky-tonk. A slow-moving blues band on the stage. A crowd of worn-out old country boys around the bar with their beer in one hand and their chin in the other. And, a young man hoping for a chance with a nice young waitress. Pair that vocal imagery with the instrumental prowess of a talented quartet of laid-back musicians and you have a nice introduction to Dudding’s bluegrass, jam band, alt-country and rock-and-roll project, Bucktown Kickback.

“It is not jam band just like it is not bluegrass,” Dudding said in a recent telephone interview. “Lately a word that has been used a lot is Americana, but Americana is a difficult thing to use because it is so broad.”
Dudding, who is currently living and working in Nashville as a singer, songwriter and guitarist, will return to Bowling Green with his genre-eschewing Bucktown Kickback bandmates on April 14 for a free concert at Grounds For Thought at 8 p.m.

Joining him will be former BGSU students Alex Anest on guitar and Dave Blankestyn on drums and percussion, as well as upright bassist Jay Donovan and multi-instrumentalist Adam Schlenker, ready to kick up a storm of bluegrass-laced, acoustic and electric good vibrations.

Since their inception in Columbus in 2002, and the success of their debut CD, “Speakeasy” in 2005, Bucktown Kickback has continued to build a loyal following of crossover music fans who are eager for more banjo breaks, more lap-steel guitar licks and more rhythm-packed lyrics regardless of what style it comes packaged in.

“Sometimes…I will be a little bit leery because a true bluegrass aficionado would see the drum set and the guitar amplifier and say ‘that is not bluegrass,’” Dudding said. “A lot of people are pointing to a surge in the bluegrass art form and acoustic music, and there is a jam band crowd who has a place in their heart for bluegrass because a lot of creators of that type of music also played bluegrass.”

He highlights artists like Grateful Dead front man Jerry Garcia, who perfected the banjo long before his band pioneered the jam music scene, or modern groups like Yonder Mountain String Band, who bring it all back again, with lengthy jams on traditional bluegrass instruments at the forefront of this crossover.

Somewhere between the lines finds the Bucktown Kickback sound as a whole. Not really pushing the bluegrass envelope or riding the up and down jam-rock wave, but carving out a pleasant space for themselves somewhere in the middle.

Their upcoming sophomore release, “Lost In Your Own Hometown” (due out this fall) pushes up the tempo a bit more than their laid-back debut release, with a little more percussion, a little more soloing and a lot more of Dudding’s songwriting. But the images are still there, sometimes haunting, sometimes playful and sometimes self-effacing, working to paint a portrait on a lyrical canvas that is only enhanced with a delicate guitar strum or a cooking banjo lick.

“I have been blessed with being able to have so many friends and peers that are great musicians who also enjoy playing songs that I write.”

Kickin’ back
Bucktown Kickback will
perform a free concert
April 14 at 8 p.m. at
Grounds for Thought, 174 S. Main St., Bowling Green.


By COLE CHRISTENSEN
Sentinel Staff Writer
4/5/07