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Alison Brown achieved an international reputation
as a banjo player by pushing the instrument out of
its familiar Appalachian settings and into new musical
territory. Through four albums on the renowned Vanguard
Records label and one on her own Compass Records, Brown
composed and played her way into the affections of fans
of jazz-hued acoustic music with a unique voice on a relatively
unexplored instrument. On her newest record, however,
Brown brings her banjo back to its bluegrass roots and
to her own musical beginnings.
Many bluegrass fans are aware that Brown's first marks
on the national scene came when she was asked by Alison
Krauss to join her band Union Station in 1989. Fewer
are aware that Brown honed her chops as a teenager in
Southern California with some of the best pickers and
singers to emerge in the subsequent decades. She met fiddler
Stuart Duncan as a 12-year-old. They performed extensively
together and sometimes sat in with country superstar Vince
Gill and Gene Libbea, now bass player with
the Nashville Bluegrass Band. "The San Diego Bluegrass
Club used to meet once a month at the Shakey's Pizza Palace,"
she recalls. "They had a stage, and people would
jam out in the parking lot. And that's where I started
getting to play with other people."
In the summer of 1978, she traveled the country with
Duncan and his father, playing festivals and contests.
A first place finish at the Canadian National Banjo Championship
helped her land a one-night gig at the Grand Ole Opry.
And around the time Brown graduated from high school,
she and Duncan recorded a duo album entitled Pre-Sequel
for Ridge Runner Records.
Brown's journey to a professional music career then took
a detour. She attended Harvard, studying history
and literature, then UCLA, where she secured an MBA. That
led to two years with the public finance division of Smith
Barney in San Francisco. After taking a hiatus to return
to composing and recording music, Brown assembled the
material for her solo debut. While it heralded a new voice
on the banjo, Simple Pleasures, also owed much to the
California-based jazz/bluegrass hybrid sound pioneered
by mandolinist David Grisman, who produced the album.
Around the same time, Brown joined Krauss for a successful
three-year run that included a place on Krauss' Grammy-winning
I've Got That Old Feeling album, as well as bluegrass
music's highest accolade for an instrumentalist: the International
Bluegrass Music Association Banjo Player of the Year in
1991.
Simple Pleasures earned a Grammy nomination,
and Brown went on to make a total of four records for
Vanguard as a bandleader and composer. Her most recent
jazz-tinged release, Out of the Blue on Compass,
featured the smooth sound of her custom electric nylon-string
banjo; together, her five solo projects represent a substantial
musical evolution. On the strength of these projects,
Brown has been featured on CBS Sunday Morning,
National Public Radio's All Things Considered and
Weekend Edition and BET's Jazz Central, as well as in
The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Dirty
Linen and Acoustic Musician.
"Alison Brown has raised the
art of banjo playing
to a higher calling."
- Stereo Review -
"...unique sonic signature and
inescapable beauty."
- Billboard Magazine -
In the early 1990s, while touring as band leader for
Michelle Shocked, she and her quartet's bass player
Garry West found themselves in Australia, where an opportunity
arose to act as North American distributors for Natural
Symphonies, a world music label. Brown and West had been
looking for a way to start a record company, and their
initial company, Small World Music, ultimately built the
business foundation for Compass Records, launched
in 1995 in Nashville.
Compass has been widely praised for its eclectic and
high quality catalog of singer/songwriter, pop, jazz,
and world music. The label has been less emphatic to this
point in the arena of bluegrass, but now that changes
with the release of Brown's Fair Weather,
a multi-hued collection of neo-classic songs and original
instrumentals. Anchored by Brown's technically rich but
also highly musical banjo, the album pays equivalent homage
to the Flatt & Scruggs tradition and to the
modern Dawg music of David Grisman. The instrumentation
features some of the best bluegrass instrumentalists and
singers working today, including Sam Bush, Bela
Fleck, Jerry Douglas, David Grier, Vince
Gill, Tony Rice and Missy Raines. Also
in this esteemed company are Compass recording artists
Matt Flinner, Todd Phillips, Mike Marshall and Darol Anger.
Brown wrote eight instrumental numbers for Fair Weather,
including the speedy opening cut, Late On Arrival and
the tasty Deep Gap, which features Brown in a rare appearance
on flatpicked guitar. Brown also invited vocalist friends
for a creative selection of bluegrass song adaptations.
Bush sings Elvis Costello's Every Day I Write the Book.
Claire Lynch borrows doubly from the Compass catalog,
singing Hummingbird, a song by Boo Hewerdine and performed
by label-mate Eddi Reader on a recent album. And the mellifluous
Tim O'Brien sings Everybody's Talkin', an old favorite
from the Midnight Cowboy soundtrack. That track, incidentally,
features nearly the same lineup as Brown's most recent
band effort, a new-acoustic ensemble called NewGrange,
with Anger, Marshall, and Phillips.
For the many fans first introduced to Brown through her
work with Alison Krauss, Fair Weather will mark a welcome
opportunity to hear Brown as both bandleader and instrumental
virtuoso in a bluegrass setting. Moreover, by bringing
together great songs, great players, and a spirit of generous
collaboration, the album embodies the values that have
driven Brown in her career and that have cultivated wide
respect for Compass as a leader among independent record
labels.
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