Last dance: An end of the world party primer
Storm Rhum Bar & Bistro (125 S. Lexington Ave.) holds its End of the World Decadence Party on Thursday, Dec. 20. The event includes food and drink specials and live music. http://www.stormrhumbar.com.
Peddle to the apocalypse with the End of the World Bike Ride. Though not a beginner’s ride, the group trip promises to be “be fun and easy with no one left behind.” Make sure your bike is in good working order, with lights. Bring a helmet, glove and warm clothes. Meet at Bent Creek at the Rice pinnacle parking lot at 5:45 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 21; the ride starts at 6 p.m. http://avl.mx/o5.
Straightaway Cafe (1722 NC Hwy 9, Black Mountain) wraps up its season with an End of the World Party on Friday, Dec. 21. (Following that show, the cafe will close until Jan. 2.) Entertainment begins at 6 p.m. with music from Coping Stone and Wilhelm McKay. http://www.thestraightaway.com.
Joshua Spiceland closes his current art exhibit at One Stop (55 College St.) on Friday, Dec. 21. View more than 50 large and small works which, according to Spiceland, include “pieces about life, death, time, creation, sex, hallucination, abbreviation, culmination, facial expression, hip hop, jazz, chocolate, and Los Angeles.” Electric Blanket (a 9 year-old producer from Prague by way of Tibet) makes his US debut at the reception/End of the World Party. 8-10 p.m., free http://ashevillemusichall.com.
See the world off in style at Broadways (120 N. Lexington Ave.) on Friday, Dec. 21. Asheville's own country-noir act Drunken Prayer headlines. Ouroboros Boys and DJ Lil Lorruh also perform. More info at http://avl.mx/nz.
Birth 2012: A New Beginning has events planned in 26 countries and will unite as many as 100 million people worldwide in an "historic day of global unity that will birth a new era for humankind: a global rite of passage filled with celebration, prayer, cultural expression and acts of generosity." The Asheville event is held on Saturday, Dec. 22 at the Center for Spiritual Living (2 Science of Mind Way, West Asheville). Live performances by LUMINA, music by Richard Shulman, indigenous wisdom and a Pachakuti Mesa by Kim Hughes and “Embracing the Elements” by MS Toltec wisdom teacher Michele Laub are set to take place. 7-9:30 p.m., $8 in advance or $10 at the door. http://www.cslasheville.org.
David Wilcox’s Concert for the End of the World takes place at The Grey Eagle on Saturday, Dec. 22. Read more about the show, along with an interview with the local singer-songwriter, at http://avl.mx/o0. 8 p.m. $20 advance or $25 day of show. http://www.thegreyeagle.com.
— A.M.
Image 1. Town and country: Asheville’s Town Mountain embraces classic country themes like love, loss, heartache and hardship. Photo by Jason Beverly
Image 2. Morgan Geer of Drunken Prayer leads a country-noise send off to the world as we know it at Broadway’s.
In case the Mayans weren’t joking, Town Mountain prepares to play us out in style
who: Town Mountain with The Shawn Camp Band
where: The Grey Eagle
when: Friday, Dec. 21 (9 p.m. $10 advance or $12 day of show. http://www.thegreyeagle.com)
It’s been a preternaturally warm December, so far. And the news about the polar ice caps isn’t good. Add to that the impending end of the Mayan Calendar (Friday, Dec. 21), which may or may not spell out the final farewell for life on earth.
So, why not throw a party?
“We’ve probably played The Grey Eagle in December for the last two or three years, and it just happened that the 21st was open,” says Jesse Langlais, banjo player/founding member of Asheville-based bluegrass outfit Town Mountain. “It made sense to bill it as ‘the end of the world bluegrass bash.’ If the end of the world is going to get some more people out to the show, that’s great.”
Actually, Friday would be an inconvenient time for the world to end, as far as Town Mountain is concerned. This year has been an especially good one on the band’s steady upward trajectory. In May, their song “Diggin’ on the Mountain Side” was included on world music label Putumayo’s first-ever Bluegrass compilation. Their newest effort, Leave the Bottle, debuted in September at No. 4 on the Bluegrass Today Radio Chart; it was sitting at No. 8 on the Roots Music Report top 50 bluegrass chart at press time.
But Town Mountain didn’t have that sort of success in its sights at the start. The first iteration of the band (born out of jam sessions) was Langlais and lead singer Robert Greer, with Barrett Smith (Shannon Whitworth) and Jed Willis (Wooden Toothe). “The four of us came together by chance. We all knew each other and then we booked a tour,” Langlais remembers.
A year later, mandolin player Phil Barker joined, and then fiddler Bobby Britt signed on full time. Langlais says that Town Mountain used “upwards of 15 or 16 fiddle players” before Britt came along. With the solidified lineup, the group found a common goal and a sound to call its own. “Three years ago was when we were like, ‘OK, there’s something here,’” says Langlais. “Three years ago was when I stopped working my full-time job.”
Part of what defines Town Mountain’s particular brand of old-school-meets-contemporary bluegrass is its variety of voices. Bottle’s songs run the gamut from serious to silly. String parts are a sturdy backbone to tear-jerkers like "Away from Home" and fast-paced feats of picking like "You Weighed Heavy on my Heart." "Lawdog" opens a cappella, with Barker's vocal hitting notes that border on yodel territory. Opener "Lookin’ in the Mirror," is all sinuous fiddle and bouncy banjo, along with plenty of cheek: "Time can take its toll in so many different ways. I get more distinguished, you grow old and gray," goes the verse.
“It wasn’t a pre-calculated thing,” says Langlais. The tracks on Bottle comprise the final cut from songs brought to the table over the past two years. But Town Mountain’s sound is more than the sum of its parts. The band is interested in the roots of country music — songs with “a little grit and a little rough around the edges,” as Langlais puts it.
“The thing about country music is it’s been around since the 1930s, and a lot of the content is basically the same: love, loss, heartache and hardship,” Langlais says. Town Mountain is interested in that genesis of the genre: “Rural Americans struggling and telling their story through song.”
One ally they’ve found for that mission: Mike Bub (Del McCoury Band member, producer of Steep Canyon Rangers’ One Dime at a Time) who helmed both Bottle and its predecessor, Steady Operator. Langlais describes Bub as “a country music and bluegrass historian,” and “a pleasure to be around.” Luckily, Town Mountain will get to be around Bub some more: The producer plays in the Shawn Camp Band, who shares the Grey Eagle bill.
As for Dec. 21’s end-of-the-world forecast, Langlais speculates, “My prediction is we’ll play a great show and then on Dec. 22, we’ll all still be here.”
Alli Marshall can be reached at amarshall@mountainx.com.