Greencards Wiki Information
The Greencards
are a progressive bluegrass band that formed in Austin, Texas, and are currently based in Nashville, Tennessee. The band was founded in 2003 in Texas by Eamon McLoughlin, an Englishman, and Australians Kym Warner and Carol Young. The musicians originally performed in local Austin bars, and soon found increasing acclaim. They have released one independent album, Movin' On
, in 2003, and two albums, Weather and Water
, and Viridian
, on the Dualtone record label. Their fourth album, Fascination
, was released on Sugar Hill in 2009.
Their debut album, Movin' On
, was the recipient of local Texas awards and charted on Americana radio stations. Country Music Television named their follow-up Weather and Water
as one of the ten best bluegrass albums of 2005, and The Greencards were invited to tour with Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson in the same year. Viridian
would go on to take the number one position on the Billboard
magazine's Bluegrass Music Chart, making The Greencards the first international band to ever do so. Viridian
was a critically praised album, and was nominated for Best Country Album by the Australian Recording Industry Association. The track "Mucky the Duck" from Viridian
was nominated for a Grammy Award at the 50th Grammy Awards.
The Greencards are noted for their playing of American bluegrass with a worldly feel, and for their incorporation of other genres of music. Often labeled as part of, and said to be representative of, the "newgrass" movement, they draw from Irish folk music, Romani (gypsy) music, rock 'n' roll, folk balladry, and Latin American musical sources. The Greencards' sound has been compared to progressive American folk rock, and they have been credited with helping to expand bluegrass music.
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GREENCARDS TICKETS
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History
Formation
The Greencards were initially composed of two Australians, Kym Warner on
mandolin and Carol Young on
bass, and an Englishman, Eamon McLoughlin on
fiddle.
[1] Raised in
South London, McLoughlin began to perform country music shows with his family on weekends, influenced by
George Jones,
George Strait, and
Ricky Skaggs.
[2] Born to
Irish parents, McLoughlin's father was head of a London-based country band. At age nine, McLoughlin moved away from piano lessons to play fiddle, and performed with his father's band.
[3] McLoughlin had earlier relocated from Brighton to Austin in 1997, after leaving Sussex University with a degree in Politics and American Studies.
[4] Trained in London studying Royal Schools of Music Grades before emigrating, McLoughlin also toured with the Asylum Street Spankers,
Austin Lounge Lizards,Bruce Robison and Ray Wylie Hubbard after arriving in the United States.
Prior to the founding of The Greencards, Young won the Australian Independent Country Artist of the Year award in 2000, and had recorded two #1 Australian-charted country music singles.
Young was a singer in
Outback country bands and acts, including
Gina Jeffreys.
[5] [6] Young was previously nominated as "Best Female Vocalist" by the
Country Music Association of Australia, and won the Australian independent country artist of the year award in 2000 due in part to her #1 singles "True Blue Fool" and "Part of the Past".
[7]
Warner was an aspiring bluegrass musician (which was unusual in Australia) after inheriting the music from his father, an early Australian bluegrass pioneer.
The winner of the Australian National Bluegrass Mandolin Championship for four consecutive years, Warner had toured with country music artists including Gina Jeffreys, and with Young in
Kasey Chambers's band.
[8] [9] Young and Warner knew each other previously, and according to Warner, had been drawn to bluegrass and
American roots music through an appreciation of George Jones and Merle Haggard.
[10] Warner and Young made the decision to emigrate to America to pursue musical careers in that country, after they met. Young and Warner later lived together in Sydney while trying to find work in the moribund Australian bluegrass scene. After leaving Australia, they spent time in
West Texas before relocating to Austin.
On an early trip the pair took to Austin, Warner and Young met McLoughlin at a recording session.
Warner was producing an album for the recording artist Bill Atkins and found they needed a fiddle player, which led to the recruitment of McLoughlin.
Initially the immigrants came to know one another through their mutual love of
Monty Python,
Benny Hill, and
Fawlty Towers.
They began to have jam sessions afterwards and there was evident chemistry between the trio, which led to their writing songs together.
They named themselves The Greencards in honor of the fact that all three band members carried
United States green cards.
[11] They eventually began to perform shows locally in Austin to finance the recording of what would become their debut album, 2003's
Movin' On
.
In the process, they became one of the most popular musical groups in Austin.
Representative of an emerging "newgrass" movement, The Greencards' acoustic sound was said to incorporate eclectic influences from Irish traditional, Romani gypsy, and Latin American musical sources.
[12]
Their first performance together as a band was at the Austin
Irish pub, Mother Egan's. Given a noon to 3 pm Central time slot, they surprisingly began to fill the pub with patrons week after week. Their fans at Mother Egan's soon began calling them the "Bluegrass Bunch". Several months later, The Greencards began performing an additional three to five times per week in Austin, in addition to their Mother Egan's Sunday show. Warner credited the frantic pace of their performance schedule during their Austin formation to their cohesion as a group and with driving them to create more new original music.
During their time performing locally in Austin, they toured with various local Texas musicians, including
Robert Earl Keen.
Warner said that during their early career performing together, audiences would always assume they were American musicians until they finally spoke between songs, revealing their English and Australian accents.
Mario Tarradell of
WFAA-TV news called the idea of an American bluegrass band composed of two Australians and an Englishman not as "outrageous" as it may seem. He quoted McLoughlin in an interview:
The ironic thing is that we grew up listening to primarily American music and fell in love with American music. I love country music. I grew up with George Jones and Charley Pride and Jim Reeves. All that stuff was playing in the house. That's what I wanted to seek out. That's what I wanted to play. Carol was into Tammy Wynette. Trev Warner is Kym's dad, and he was the first person to bring bluegrass music to Australia.
Movin' On
(2003–2004)
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In 2003, The Greencards recorded and self-released
Movin' On
, their debut album, which sold 10,000 copies at shows and online, and entered the top five on the Americana radio charts.
[13] Pat Flynn, one of the band members of the
New Grass Revival, guested on the recording of
Movin' On
as a session guitarist, and would return to do so again on
Weather and Water
.
[14] The album was said to break past traditional rules of bluegrass music by integrating a
jam-band mindset while blending classical folk balladry and
rock 'n' roll into the sound.
Contrasting with that appraisal, the album was also cited as a traditional and successful "
lo-fi" approach to bluegrass music.
[15] Critics noted the
virtuoso solos on mandolin, fiddle, and guitar on
Movin' On
.
[16]
The Greencards gained more fans and became known by name quickly after the release of
Movin' On
.
[17] The band was credited with performing the most energetic sets during the course of the 2004
Austin City Limits Music Festival, were said to bring a global sound to bluegrass, and—by drawing on influences such as Bob Dylan and
The Beatles—were pushing the genre's boundaries.
[18] Their live show during this period was ranked by the Houston Chronicle in the top five nights of live music for the year in 2004.
[19]
Movin' On
earned The Greencards the 2004 Austin Music Award for Best New Band.
[20] Several months after the awards the band was signed by Dualtone Records and began work on their next album,
Weather and Water
.
The label re-released
Movin' On
at the beginning of 2005, generating still more airplay and sales.
Weather and Water
(2005–2006)
Their second Dualtone album,
Weather and Water
, was released on June 28, 2005.
Warned stated that during the recording sessions, Dualtone Records let them record what they wanted, with no interference or changes requested.
In a review of
Weather and Water
in
The Washington Post
, it was noted that on this album, unlike their debut, the focus was on the music supporting lyrics, rather than the blues virtuosity of
Movin' On
.
[21] All three members of the band sang on
Weather and Water
, but Young's voice was noted for its "dreamy, haunting quality".
Their music through the
Weather and Water
album had been called Celtic-influenced and bluegrass-flavored by John Lehndorff of the
Rocky Mountain News
, but he noted that the band had a distinctly American sound despite their overseas origins.
[22] In the spring of 2005, The Greencards performed at
South by Southwest in Austin for the first time, and afterwards made their debut at the prestigious
MerleFest.
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Jason Gonulsen of
Glide Magazine
noted that The Greencards' debut
Movin' On
didn't capture the band's live energy, but that
Weather and Water
overcame this, and was one of 2005's best bluegrass albums.
[23] The
music video for the band's single "Time" from
Weather and Water
received heavy airplay and rotation on Country Music Television.
"Time" was described as the centerpiece track of
Weather and Water
.
Weather and Water
was also cited as expanding the boundaries of the bluegrass genre.
Country Music Television named
Weather and Water
one of its ten favorite bluegrass albums of the year, saying, "At the nexus of bluegrass, country and pop, this charming trio immediately win over such diverse audiences in concert. Luckily, their winning personality translates to this disc—even with several melancholy, yet melodic, songs. Not for nothing did Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson choose them to open their summer tour of
minor league ballparks."
[24] The Greencards were the opening act for Dylan and Nelson on their 2005 summer tour.
Kym Warner credits Gary Paczosa, an engineer who worked on
Weather and Water
, with helping them get the opportunity to tour with Dylan and Nelson. Paczosa had previously served as an engineer on recordings for
Alison Krauss, Nickel Creek and
Dolly Parton. "He makes the best-sounding acoustic records in the world", according to Warner.
Throughout 2005 they toured extensively with Dylan and Nelson, and afterwards toured with
Tommy Emmanuel.
[25] During the summer segment of the 2005 tour with Nelson and Dylan, Kym Warner wanted to have the opportunity to pick Dylan's brain about music and performing. However, Warner did not get to spend much time alone with Dylan during their time on the road together. Dylan later told Warner at the end of the tour, “You’ll be fine from now on.”
[26]
At the end of 2005, The Greencards relocated from Austin to Nashville, Tennessee to be closer to their production company and its staff.
[27] Coinciding with their move to Nashville and work on their sophomore album
Weather and Water
, the changes in location and sound were observed by critics to be a deliberate move from the jam-style of their debut album
Movin' On
to instead concentrate on
Americana-focused music.
By 2006, The Greencards had an annual slot at Merlefest, held yearly in
Wilkesboro, North Carolina.
The band was nominated in the Americana Music Association Awards for 2006 in the category of New/Emerging Artist of the Year, winning the award.
[28] In December 2006, their tour van rolled over on a patch of ice after leaving a performance in
Bryan, Texas, on the way back to Austin, but with no serious injuries.
Viridian
(2007-2008)
On their previous albums, The Greencards had individually recorded their musical tracks separately in isolation booths of recording studios. For
Viridian
, however, the bandmembers recorded their album together in real time in an open room, which was said to be a factor in creating a spontaneous feel for some of the album.
Most of the songs on
Viridian
are sung by Young, and all of the tracks on
Viridian
were written by The Greencards, with the exception of "Travel On", which was penned by
Kim Richey of Nashville.
[29] Their sound, through
Viridian
, was likened to the Canadian
alternative country band
The Duhks.
After its release,
Viridian
claimed the #1 position on
Billboard
magazine's Bluegrass Music Chart.
[30] Doug Lancio, a producer who had previously worked with
Patty Griffin, was said to have been a positive factor in the success of
Viridian
. Prior to the 2007 album, Lancio had not previously worked with The Greencards.
The Greencards are the first international musical act to ever reach #1 on the Bluegrass Music Chart.
[31]
In a review of
Viridian
, Embo Blake of
Hybrid Magazine
noted Carol Young's vocal skill, as she "effortlessly
diphthongs cadence" on the track "Waiting On The Night".
[32] According to
ABC News in
Dallas/Fort Worth, the album has a traditional bluegrass core, with a worldly flavor.
Bruce Elder of the
Sydney Morning Herald
called
Viridian
a "
tour de force".
In the wake of
Viridian
, The Greencards have been internationally referred to as one of the most popular Americana musical acts in the United States.
Bruce Elder went on to say that the band may, after
Viridian
, be the best country music performers to ever come out of Australia.
In 2007, they were nominated for Best Country Album at the 21st
Australian Recording Industry Association awards, ultimately losing out to
Keith Urban.
[33] In December 2007, it was announced that their song "Mucky the Duck" from
Viridian
was nominated for the
Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance at the 50th Grammy Awards, but
ultimately lost to
Brad Paisley's "Throttleneck". Written by Warner, "Mucky the Duck" was inspired by one of the band's favorite Austin musical venues, The Mucky Duck.
[34] Eamon McLoughlin is a regular blogger for Country Music Television.
[35] After the Grammy Awards, he wrote about the band's experience at the event, noting that despite not winning, the bar had been raised for their next album.
[36]
The Greencards announced on their website in August 2008 that they had returned to the studio to record their fourth album with producer Jay Joyce. In September 2008, again via their website, they announced that they signed with Sugar Hill Records for their fourth album, to be released in spring 2009.
[37]
Fascination
(from 2009)
On April 21, 2009, The Greencards released their fourth studio album,
Fascination
. Warner describes the album as "their most focused" work. On their previous albums, the three band members had individually put forward ideas for the music, until enough cohered into the finished work. For
Fascination
, he says they put aside their individual pride to create a stronger work. The years of touring experience The Greencards have accumulated since their earliest work has helped them, as well. Referring to when they formed the band, he said, "We just played in Austin. We just wrote probably anything, which was the only stuff we knew, which was more of a traditional thing. But since then, we've had five or six years of touring, all of the experiences, all of the people you meet. We've been so fortunate to play at all of these festivals which have a really eclectic form of music styles."
[38]
According to Young, the music on
Fascination
was a progression for the band, and a challenge for them. Comparing their prior work to the new album, she said, "They’re probably a bit more bluegrass-influenced than this one here. While we still have the bluegrass and roots music influences, we really wanted to push ourselves harder on this one, something a bit more challenging to play live." She described their music through their fourth album as having evolved, explaining that it began as traditional roots and bluegrass, but after six years is "our own little sound".
[39]
In 2009, The Greencards will continue to tour, performing again at MerleFest, the Strawberry Park Bluegrass Festival in California, and will be on the bill for
Lollapalooza.
Musical style and influences
Considered by critics to be part of the
progressive bluegrass ("newgrass") musical school, The Greencards draw from a wide variety of musical influences, ranging from Bob Dylan and the Beatles to the Celtic tone of Irish traditional music, gypsy themes, and Latin sounds.
Despite the wide array of influences that shape their music, The Greencards have always maintained a distinctively Americana sound.
While the various sounds that influence their work are always detectable, none ever dominate the band's music.
[40] Jim Abbott, of the
Tribune News Service
, described The Greencards as polished, "earthy, charming roots music with a sophisticated sheen", but noted that some bluegrass purists may miss the vocal idiosyncrasies that can be found on other acts such as the
Del McCoury Band.
[41] Their appeal has been attributed to both their "instrumental dexterity" as well as the manner in which they both revere and flaunt bluegrass conventions.
The progressive nature of The Greencards' bluegrass sound has been compared to
Nickel Creek and
Alison Krauss & Union Station.
The Greencards' work on
Movin' On
had a looser, jam-based feeling to it, which they later firmed into a more polished sound after relocating to Nashville from Austin for
Weather and Water
.
John T. Davis in
No Depression Magazine
stated The Greencards' best work on
Weather and Water
contained a "stillness", which he felt contrasted with the speed and "frantic" pace of some of the songs on
Movin' On
.
[42] While other critics had mentioned The Greencards in the context of jam bands, Davis went on to say that he felt the band was not one, and that they favored a leaner and "clean" sound driven more by Celtic roots.
During their 2005 tour with Dylan and Nelson, Buzz McClain of
The Washington Post
believed that The Greencards play traditional American music better than some Americans do, because of their deep respect for bluegrass and the Americana sound.
[43] According to David McPherson in
Bluegrass Unlimited
magazine, the band's three-part harmonies evoke the soul sounds of
Gospel music.
[44] Kym Warner has said that Robert Earl Keen,
Kelly Willis, and Patty Griffin were key influences musically in The Greencards's sound during their time in Austin, with the previously unreleased Griffin song "What You Are" being covered on their album
Weather and Water
.
The recordings on
Viridian
, in particular the songs "River of Sand", "Waiting on the Night" and "When I Was in Love With You", were said to evoke the sounds of progressive folk rock that emerged in the 1960s.
[45] In
Nashville Scene
, Edd Hurt noted the eclectic tone of the band's overall body of recordings, and believed that their albums belonged to the tradition of
singer-songwriter musicians.
[46]
Their musical appeal to fans has been attributed to both their "instrumental dexterity" as well as the manner in which they both revere and flaunt bluegrass conventions.
Naila Francis described The Greencards's sound as having a mellow tone, with "tender ballards and yarns" in their songs, but punctuated by bursts of energetic musical restlessness.
Country Music Television in particular noted their melancholy but melodic sound.
The Greencards have described their sound as "high energy acoustic music".
[47]
Discography
| Year
| Album
| Chart Position
| Label
|
| 2003
| Movin' On
| 10
| Dualtone
|
| 2005
| Weather and Water
| 3
|
| 2007
| Viridian
| 1
|
| 2009
| Fascination
| -
| Sugar Hill
|
See also
- Australian country music
- Foggy Mountain Boys
- Rank Strangers
- Traditional bluegrass
References
- The Greencards
- 2005: What a Year for The Greencards
- The Greencards' musical meanderings tend to influences from far and wide, with an eye always toward tradition.
- The Greencards: New Folk in Concert
- Band beats Americans at own game
- Greencards Meet Bob Dylan
- CMT.com: The Greencards biography
- Waiting On The Night
- Viridian
- Greencards drawn to American roots music
- The Greencards: Viridian
- Who the hell are? The Greencards.
- Trio is going places: The Greencards are headed for Club Passim
- Musical pilgrims find acoustic music mecca in U.S.
- Phases & Stages
- The Greencards - Movin' On
- The Greencards: High Energy Acoustic
- The Greencards, an American Composer, Prairie Winds open festival
- The Greencards
- 2003-04 Austin Music Awards
- The Greencards "Weather and Water" Dualtone
- Tried-and-true Telluride dares to fill the air with new talents
- The Greencards: Weather and Water
- Ten Favorite Bluegrass Albums of 2005
- Telluride Turns Thirty-Three
- The Greencards, The Lucas School House, St. Louis, MO
- The Greencards "Viridian" Dualtone
- 5th Annual Americana Honors & Awards Nominees
- The Greencards - Viridian
- The Greencards blend bluegrass, country and pop in Bayboro
- Bluegrass chart toppers perform at Southgate House
- The Greencards Viridian
- ARIA Awards History 2007
- International musicians unite with ‘Greencards'
- Country Music Blog: Eamon McLoughlin
- Grammy Nomination Raises the Bar
- The Greencards Sign With Sugar Hill - New Album Due Spring 2009
- The Greencards Hope to Charm Listeners With Fascinaion
- The Greencards expand their rootsy musical palette
- The Greencards
- The Greencards have a sound as unique as their members
- ROOTS Across Oceans — The Greencards find a home between Oz and the US
- The Greencards' Down-Home Customs
- The Greencards — An Unlikely Combination
- Greencards: Bluegrass With Varied Accents
- Immigrant Songs
- The Greencards on the roof