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10 November 2011

Grammy winner Jim Lauderdale to play Eric's Liverpool Monday 14 November

Jim Lauderdale to play Erics Liverpool November 2011

Jim Lauderdale plus support £10 adv £12.50 door
www.ticketweb.co.uk

On Monday November 14, there will be a special gig at from Grammy winner Jim Lauderdale.

Jim featured in the Gwyneth Paltrow film, Country Strong, as a member of her band and performed with her as band leader on rhythm guitar at the 2010 Country Music Awards. Recent  appearance  on Austin  City Limits  as a  member  of  Elvis Costello's  Sugarcanes band,  and  2010  performances  with  Willie Nelson.

When Jim Lauderdale was a North Carolina teenager back  in the 1970s, he had a straightforward  idea of what he wanted to be when he grew up: a tenorsinging, banjo-playing bluegrass musician.  As it turned out, the banjo playing fell by the wayside,  and so did much of the tenor singing.  But the bluegrass musician part?  For the answer, consult any of the half-dozen stellar bluegrass albums Lauderdale's made over the past  decade and a half, including 2003's Grammy for  Best  Bluegrass  Album  with Ralph  Stanley - or,  even  better, just spin  the  Americana  icon's  debut  for  Sugar  Hill  Records, Reason  And Rhyme.  It's the latest proof, if any were  still needed, that two time Bluegrass Grammy winner  Lauderdale's  a  master  - and  just  as  importantly,  it's  some mighty fine music.


Indeed, one of the joys of the new release is its reliance  on the magic made by the  songwriting team  of Lauderdale  and legendary Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter.  Building on  a  track record that goes back to 1997's  Grammy  nominated  Lauderdale-Ralph Stanley collaboration - "I sought him  out,"Jim says with a laugh - the pair got busy writing last autumn after Lauderdale finished  a European tour guesting with Elvis Costello.  "I got this idea to write a bluegrass record with Robert," Lauderdale recalls.  "And so I would send him melodies,  in an hour or two he would send back lyrics.  First off, we wrote a couple of gospel  songs, because we knew Ralph was recording a gospel album - we were too late, but 'Fields Of The Lord' came from that, and that was the catalyst for the rest of the project.  In 10 days we wrote about 18 songs."


With the songs in hand, Lauderdale wanted to move quickly, so he turned to Randy Kohrs, the sought after studio Dobro player and singer who'd produced his Grammy-winning  The  Bluegrass  Diaries in 2006.  "Randy's  instincts  were  so good,"  he notes, "And  it allowed me to make my record a lot quicker.  He got a dream team together, and we recorded the whole thing in a day.  The next day I went and fixed a few things, and over the next two days, Randy mixed it.  It was the fastest I've ever made a record, and it was a great experience.  I could never have done that on my own - it would have taken days, weeks, months."


But don't be fooled by the quick production of Reason And Rhyme.  Its easygoing spirit and spontaneous grooves are underpinned by a lifetime  of  bluegrass  involvement.  Indeed,  the  very first album  Lauderdale  ever recorded  was  with  bluegrass legend  Roland White, during  a brief  stay in Nashville  some  30 years  ago.  "If I had had my way,  that's the way my recording career  would have started," he says with a chuckle, but the album was never released, and he moved on to what eventually became a successful career as a writer of country hits - and much more.


Yet though  he's  become  known as a roots music Renaissance man,  hosting  a  popular country music variety  show, recording  and performing with an array of artists from Costello to jamgrass favorites Donna The Buffalo, playing George Jones in a musical play, writing hit songs, recording country and Americana albums and much more.


http://www.jimlauderdale.com/

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