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Longtime friends and musically kindred spirits, Caitlin
Cary and Thad Cockrell have achieved the near-impossible in modern-day
Nashville. Not only did they write and record an album's worth of easygoing,
70s-styled country duets, but they also made it look incredibly easy.
"It's
the first record I've made that I immediately wanted to come home and
listen to," Cary says. "This was really fast and furious and
exciting and, honest to God, I put it on while I'm washing dishes, which
I can't say about any of my other records."
"I really like it a lot too," says Cockrell, calling from
a visit to his parents' house in New York. "It just came out wonderfully.
I was listening to it for the first time in a month and a half this
weekend, because my parents and my brother listen to that thing nonstop.
She sings so amazingly on it."
The album, titled Begonias, has been in the planning stages for a little
while. When they were both living in Raleigh, N.C., Cary and Cockrell
would occasionally meet up on the weekends to write songs together.
Cockrell moved to Nashville in August, then suggested they record their
duets album there. A proud fan of Willie Nelson, Loretta Lynn, and the
George and Tammy duets -- "even the cheesiest of the cheesy ones"
-- Cary agreed.
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"I love her writing," Cockrell counters. "Her voice is
what it is. It's absolutely beautiful. I think her spirit comes through.
She has an amazing spirit about her. That doesn't always come through
people's music, but it does though Caitlin's."
Cary describes Begonias as "organic" and "by no means
some kind of Nashville patchwork record."
When the question is posed about why some alt.country musicians have
such a chip on their shoulder about making albums in Nashville, Cockrell
bristles. "I'm not alt.country, man. Just country, man," he
says. "I mean, there's not a distorted guitar on this whole damn
record. Yeah, they do. Alt.country musicians, they tend to bad-mouth
Nashville. I don't get that. Most of them would like to make music that's
a quarter as good as the stuff that comes out of Nashville."
He cites Bob Dylan, Neil Young and Johnny Cash as artists who recorded
their own style of music in Nashville without the gloss that the city
is known for. He also counts the Everly Brothers and the Louvin Brothers
among his favorite artists of all time.
"I'm all for people getting to make the music they want,"
he says. "Whatever they make, that's really cool. I make the music
I make, you make the music you make. I don't think it's an either/or
type of deal, which some of the artists do. That's why it's so hard
to get artists to help other artists because they always have this either/or
thing going on in their head. It never made any sense to me. But I've
got nothing bad to say about Nashville. I've loved it since I moved
there."
Well, maybe not from day one. "When I first moved there,"
Cockrell says, "I was a little freaked out, just because there's
so much amazing music that gets written, and has been written, there
and I felt the weight of it for the first couple months. I went through
a stage of insomnia for about two weeks. I woke up just about every
morning of those two weeks and wrote a song or two before 10 in the
morning. From then on, I've been fine."
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Though Cary has two solo albums to her credit, alt.country fans first
noticed her voice as a member of Whiskeytown. (Asked if she'll ever
collaborate with front man Ryan Adams again, she says she wouldn't turn
it down.) She's also in Tres Chicas, a folk-rock trio of female friends
who just finished recording their second album in London. She notes
that several of her musician friends, in addition to Cockrell, have
moved to Nashville over the last year and that the city now has a home-away-from-home
feel.
"Even though Whiskeytown made a record in Nashville, I've never
made a Nashville record," she says. "Somehow the idea of it
always sort of scared me and didn't appeal to me because of the whole
reputation of Nashville. But now, all of a sudden, I feel like I'm 'in
the know' about all these fantastic musicians that are waiting in the
wings there. It was a really, really great experience to make phone
calls, and we had a little budget to pay people and to be able to get
this amazing talent to walk through the door."
Begonias includes all the songs that Cary and Cockrell had written together,
although some were actually composed in the middle of recording the
album. They also harmonize on Percy Sledge's "Warm and Tender Love"
and the soothing "Waiting on June" -- as in Johnny Cash and
June Carter Cash -- written by friend Skip Matheny.
"Half the songs were old, and half the songs were new," Cary
says. "Half the band was familiar and old friends that we've all
played with before, and the other half was new guys astounding us with
their experience. It was a really good Nashville experience."
*download a begonias press kit in pdf format
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