Giddens, Robinson combine forces on "Marching Jaybird"
The disc is out April 18 on Nonesuch Records). The pair were members of Carolina Chocolate Drops together. A video of the song alsow as released.
The new song revisits a recording by influential guitarist and singer Etta Baker, one of their musical heroes and a key inspiration for making this new album.
The instrumental track, with Giddens and Robinson both on banjo, was recorded at Baker's Morganton, N.C. home. The duo recorded Baker's version of "Marching Jaybird" in the living room, as shown in the video, with Baker's son listening.
"This was a magical moment for Justin and me," Giddens said. "Walking into Etta Baker's house, which is frozen in time, looking just like it did when she was alive, very much reminded us of women in our families; sitting in her living room and recording this piece we learned from her playing, was pretty profound."
Giddens also announced new dates on her Rhiannon Giddens & The Old-Time Revue tour featuring Robinson and four other string musicians, including multi-instrumentalist Dirk Powell. On June 18 they will headline the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles, joined by special guests Our Native Daughters – in their first performance since 2022 – as well as Steve Martin and Ed Helms. Additional shows in July were added to the schedule.
Giddens also shared more details about Biscuits & Banjos –– revealing the remaining artist performances and panel lineup –– her first festival, which takes place April 25-27 in downtown Durham, N.C.
Curated by Giddens, Biscuits & Banjos highlights Black music, art and culture.
The sold-out festival will feature a Carolina Chocolate Drops reunion, their first performance together in more than a decade. The newly unveiled additions include Amythyst Kiah, Angela Wellman, Bittersweet Brass Band, Buffalo Nichols, Charly Lowry, Dasan Ahanu, Gabrielle and Danielle Davenport, Hannah Mayree, Joseph Johnson, Dr. Lalenja Harrington, Michael Twitty, Niwel Tsumbu, Piedmont Blues Preservation Society, Shana Tucker, Shorlette Ammons, Sule Greg Wilson, Toni Tipton-Martin, Dr. Tressie McMillan Cottom and Yasmin Williams.
Panels include:
Black Voices in Country Music: A Conversation with Rhiannon Giddens, Rissi Palmer, and Alice Randall
Let the Church Say Amen!: Ritual, Storytelling, and the Oral Tradition with Dasan Ahanu and Dr. Lalenja Harrington
Intentional Community: Celebrating Black Voices in Festivals and Live Events with Holly G, Brandi Waller-Pace, Rissi Palmer, and Dr. Dena Ross Jennings
The Art of the Biscuit A Conversation with Michael Twitty and Toni Tipton-Martin, supported by Biscuitville
Produced by Giddens and Joseph "joebass" DeJarnette, "What Did the Blackbird Say to the Crow" finds Giddens and Robinson playing 18 of their favorite North Carolina tunes: a mix of instrumentals and tunes with words. Many were learned from their late mentor, the legendary North Carolina Piedmont musician Joe Thompson, one of the last musicians of his era and his community to carry on the southern Black string band tradition.
Giddens and Robinson also recorded outdoors at Thompson's Mebane, N.C. home, as well as the former plantation Mill Prong. They were accompanied by the sounds of nature, including two different broods of cicadas, which had not emerged simultaneously since 1803, creating a true once-in-a-lifetime soundscape.
"With the assaults on reality going on in the world today, we wanted to offer another kind of record, like walking back onto a gravel or dirt road while a stampede goes the other way," Giddens said. "With the cicada choir, this record could've only happened at a certain time in the last 120 years. We doubled down on place, time, realness, and old-fashioned front porch music. It's a reminder that another way exists, with music made for your community's enjoyment and for dancing–not solely for commercial purposes."
The track list is:
1. Rain Crow
2. Brown's Dream
3. Hook and Line
4. Pumpkin Pie
5. Duck's Eyeball
6.Ryestraw
7. Little Brown Jug
8. Going to Raleigh
9. Country Waltz
10. Molly Put the Kettle On
11. Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss
12. John Henry
13.Love Somebody
14. Ebenezer
15. Old Joe Clark
16. Old Molly Hare
17. Marching Jaybird
18. Walkin' in the Parlor
Tour dates are:
April 25-27 - Durham, NC - Biscuits & Banjos
April 30 - Asheville, NC - The Orange Peel
May 2 - Miami, FL - Miami Beach Bandshell
May 3 - Atlanta, GA - The Eastern
May 4 - Birmingham, AL - Jemison Concert Hall @ Alys Robinson Stephens Center
May 7 - Nashville, TN - Ryman Auditorium
May 8 - Cincinnati, OH - Memorial Hall
May 9 - Chicago, IL - Thalia Hall
May 11 - Washington, DC - The Anthem
May 13 - Grand Rapids, MI - St. Cecilia Music Center
May 15-16 - Toronto, ON - Koerner Hall at The Royal Conservatory of Music
May 17 - Ottawa, ON - National Arts Centre, Southam Hall
June 15 - Napa, CA - Uptown Theatre
June 16 - Ventura, CA - Ventura Theater
June 18 - Los Angeles, CA - Hollywood Bowl (with Our Native Daughters, Steve Martin, Ed Helms, Leyla McCalla, Amythyst Kiah and Allison Brown)
June 19 - San Diego, CA - The Observatory North Park
June 21 - Berkeley, CA - Zellerbach
June 23 - Seattle, WA - The Moore Theater
June 26 - Montreal, QC - Theatre Maisonneuve @ Montreal Jazz Festival
July 11 - Tucson, AZ - Fox Tucson Theatre
July 12 - Flagstaff, AZ - Pepsi Amphitheater
July 14 - Santa Fe, NM - Lensic Performing Arts Center
July 18 - Sonoma, CA - Green Music Center
July 19 - Navarro, CA - Redwood Ramble
July 21 - Saratoga, CA - The Mountain Winery
July 25 - Boise, ID - Egyptian Theater
July 28 - Boulder, CO - Chautauqua Park
July 29 - Denver, CO - Ogden Theatre
July 31 - Vail, CO - Vilar Performing Arts Center
More news
- 03/06/25: Rascal Flatts refuels
- 05/02/24: "From Where I Stand: The Black Experience in Country Music" sees light of day
- 02/12/24: Beyonce goes country in new song
- 07/27/23: Giddens is "Yet to Be"
- 07/28/20: Giddens becomes Silk Road Ensemble artistic director
- 08/07/19: Giddens, Johnson receive new honor
- 02/15/18: Ordinary Elephant, Giddens take Folk Alliance honors
- 01/29/18: Giddens tours again
CD reviews
Rhiannon Gidden's "Freedom Highway" takes an expansive look at the Black experience in America. "Better Get It Right the First Time" utilizes a gospel-y call and response format to tell the tragic story of a Black life that mattered. However, Giddens goes all the way back to slavery days for the lyrics to "At the Purchaser's Option." In between, "Birmingham Sunday" hearkens back to the Civil Rights movement and that relatively recent fight for freedom. ...
As a follow up of sorts to her superb solo debut, "Tomorrow Is My Turn," "Factory Girl," a five song vinyl EP released for Record Store Day, doesn't exactly expand any parameters, but does showcase Rhiannon Giddens' remarkable dexterity as both an artist and interpreter of traditional melodies.
Like an earlier work, 2009's "All the Pretty Horses" (recorded with Roger Gold and Mara Shea), it finds her covering a series of mostly obscure folk tunes, but ...
Rhiannon Giddens is best known for her role in Carolina Chocolate Drops, and the album "Tomorrow Is My Turn" gives the soulful singer ample opportunity to stretch out on a wide range of cover songs. Produced by T Bone Burnett, a man that knows his way around Americana music, this album is a wonderful showcase for Giddens' talent.
To state the obvious, Giddens has a flexible singing voice. She shows this off by going from the soulful "Last Kind Words" to the thumping ...
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