New interview with Texas ace guitarist, singer and song writer Carolyn Wonderland
Carolyn Wonderland- The Soul Of The Blues
Interview with Down at the Crossroads
“Carolyn Wonderland is the real deal! She’s an amazing guitar player. And damn, can she sing” – Los Angeles Times
Texas singer-songwriter and ace guitarist Carolyn Wonderland, of whom Bob Dylan said, “Hey, have you heard Carolyn Wonderland? She’s something else”, has had a busy 2012. Her new album, Peace Meal, was described by one reviewer as “gritty, beautiful, smart and seriously cool” and she has toured incessantly, in Europe as well as all over the US. She is an accomplished multi-instrumentalist, proficient on guitar, mandolin, trumpet and piano. But it is her guitar chops that get her noticed – she is quite simply an outstanding blues guitarist. Add to that her fabulous bluesy vocals, which are in turn gritty and then silky smooth – but always with a raw edge – and you really do have the real deal. And then we could start talking about her peace activism and her fund-raising for local Austin charities, food banks, soup kitchens, homeless shelters…
But maybe better to get right to our recent conversation with Carolyn, who was catching her breath before her touring kicks in again later this month:
DATC: Carolyn – thanks for talking to downatthecrossroads. First of all, congratulations on the new album, Peace Meal – it’s terrific and it’s had great reviews. Fantastic guitar work by you and the singing is outstanding. Have you been pleased at the way it’s been received?
Carolyn: Thanks so much! It does a heart good to know after working on a collection of songs and pouring everything you’ve got into it that some folks were turned on to it and hopefully maybe even turned on by it! We had a great time piece-mealing the album (thus, partially, the name of the CD), working with Ray Benson and Mike Nesmith at Bismeaux Studios in Austin, TX and with Larry Campbell at Levon Helm Studios in Woodstock, NY. (plus we got to stay a little longer and play another Ramble with Levon & his amazing band!)
I feel like we got to pay homage to the shoulders upon which we are standing, covering some songs that either friends wrote like Vince Welnick/Robert Hunter’s Golden Stairs (Vince and I were in Jerry Lightfoot’s Band of Wonder a decade ago, before he and Jerry were bugled upstairs to make music with the angels) and songs that friends helped me to when I was starting off, like Little Screaming Kenny’s arrangement of Two Trains & I Can Tell (LSK is one of my favorite people in this world). We get to play for folks and I’m happy to say we just keep chugging along, picking up new songs along the way for the next one.
DATC: You cover songs by some of the greats on the album – Robert Johnson’s Dust my Broom, Janis Joplin’s What Good Can Drinking Do and Bob Dylan’s Meet Me in the Morning. All excellent treatments, by the way – are these some of your blues heroes? Who (else) has been a major influence on you along the way?
Carolyn: Growing up in Texas, young girls learn to only sing Janis’ songs in private. In public would be silly, as no one can do it better and few can do it justice. When I was asked in 2009 to play at the ‘s American Music Masters Tribute to Janis, I was floored, humbled and thrilled to be there. So many great artists doing cool and original twists with her songs. That night I decided that, even though I couldn’t do it better, I’d like to try to do justice to one of the songs she wrote.
So, the next night…in public…with no rehearsal…I pulled it out at our first Ramble at Levon Helm‘s with Guy Forsyth! I suppose I was listening to a lot of finger pickers the night before, as the arrangement has that kind of walking-thumb-bass-line feel. It really brought it around full circle when we got to record it that way at Levon’s for this recording.
Dust My Broom was recorded for Mike Nesmith’s book, The American Gene. We had so much fun recording it, he let us use it on Peace Meal, too!
We could have picked any number of Dylan’s songs we have covered over the years, I just felt this version of Meet Me in the Morning filled a space that was stylistically unoccupied on the CD. Ray just let us go wild in the studio after we had finished tracking for the day, proving to me one should ALWAYS have the record button engaged when in the studio!
Everyone I have mentioned thus far is a huge influence on my life and music. I’d add to that list my band – Cole El-Saleh (keys and key bass) and Robert Hooper (drums) – and everyone who has come through those doors. My heroes are often musicians and the people who take a chance on new music! (Seriously, without the love and support of an audience, we would still play music… but our cats would not be impressed unless the guitar solo opened a can of food!)
DATC: By the way, I’m a big Dylan fan myself and I loved the bluesy treatment you gave Meet me in the Morning.
Carolyn: I am blushing! I hope the songwriter likes it too, or at least isn’t offended by it!
DATC: What first drew you to the blues? And what do you think it is about the blues that is so engaging for you and your audiences?
Carolyn: When I was thrown out of school, it was the blues clubs that were most open arms – and less emphatic about ID checking! I loved the fact that anyone could get up on that stage and jam with anyone else with a basic understanding of blues forms. I love that it requires more soul and personality than intellect to inject yourself into the music. I love the people who let me stink up the place a few dozen times and am happy to back other folks while they go through that phase as well!
I think it is honest music that can survive many treatments and still feel familiar to folks listening and playing. The discovery is often mutual. I was lucky to be in Houston, too. I got to sit at the feet of (and occasionally jam with) Jerry Lightfoot, Joe “Guitar” Hughes, Little Screaming Kenny, Grady Gaines, Trudy Lynn, Lavelle White, Allison Fisher, Teri Greene, Big Al Betis, Johnny “Clyde” Copeland, Little Joe Washington, the Sheetrockers… lots of great touring bands, too. I’d have to say it’s the soul of the songs and the people who get it that drew me to, and keep me flirting with, the blues.
DATC: You give us some pretty cool guitar playing on the album – who would you say are the major influences on you as a guitar player?
Plus there are the folks I never got to witness live, but wore out the recordings of like: Freddie King, Rory Gallagher, Frank Zappa, Mance Lipscomb and Lightnin’ Hopkins.
Oh, and my Mom, for both teaching me my first three chords and for grounding me from using picks after I “Pete Townshended” her Martin! I may not have the style (or lack thereof) if I didn’t play bare-knuckled!
DATC: Tell us a bit about the guitars you play on the album and on tour.
Carolyn: My main girl is my Tele. She’s a 50th Anniversary re-issue of the ’69 Tele. I put Joe Bardens in place of the standard lipsticks, and bam! there’s a guitar that can keep up with a Les Paul and still be clean enough for fingerpicking (ed’s note: a lipstick guitar pickup is a form of single-coil magnetic guitar pickup having its electronics totally encased in a chrome-plated metal tube). I recorded almost exclusively with it, as well. Sometimes, I’ll bringPatty, my BluesHawk, or Leslie Pauline, the Goddess guitar (it says so on the headstock in flaming red letters).
For the lapsteel, I have a couple of nice vintage logs that I am too scared to tour with anymore, so I use a Morrell that you can paddle home with if you’re stuck upstream, and it fits with my Tele in one case for ease of flight travel! I borrowed Levon’s mandolin for the recording and Ray’s acoustic. I just got an Art & Lutherie for Christmas. So, I’ll be bumping into things on that this year, too!
DATC: One reviewer said that Peace Meal was a “sacramental feast for the soul”. That’s certainly true of the song Only God Knows When – there’s no more obvious sign of grace than peace. What prompted you to write such a song?
Carolyn: I had it rolling around in my head for over a year. I knew what I wanted to say, but it wasn’t as hopeful as I wanted and it was falling into my box of unthinking hand gestures on the guitar. When I finally got the lyrics to behave, it was Ray Benson who suggested I move it to another instrument to open it up. He was right, and now I have another song for the lapsteel!
DATC: You’ve done a number of songs with spiritual overtones or gospel content – like Judgement Day Blues, Bloodless Revolution, Jesus It’s Gonna Be You, Gospel Song, e.g. And I know you’ve sung a lot of gospel songs with the Imperial Golden Crown Harmonizers. So let me ask you two things – first, how important is that spiritual side of life to you and secondly, how important is it to you as an artist to make a critique of the way the world is – like you do on Only God Knows When and Bloodless Revolution?
Carolyn: I grew up in a church that I left at age 9 when my Sunday school teacher told me my Jewish friends were not going to heaven with me. I called b.s. and left. It took me many years to reach the conclusion that the fault lies with people’s ideas of God’s rules, not their actual God that surely loves them (and if so, why not everyone else?)
I think we all are trying to make sense of the world we share. Spirituality is a common thread of hope. I am saddened by the insistence of war between brothers based on a limited understanding of what is meant to sustain us through times of trouble and doubt. My favorite parable of this is the three blind men with the elephant parts. It’s a sail! It’s a rope! It’s a tree! We may none of us be able to recognise the elephant, but it is here to be interpreted and shared. I hold out hope for a day when we actually look into each other’s eyes and see our brethren and honor all ideas regarding our tiny scope of God and the universe. Making life “as it is in heaven” is the one constant I carry from my youth. I still pray. I am agnostic, searching for unifying theories of love eternal (which is why I so love the writings of Joseph Campbell). It is everyone’s place to point out wrongdoings and celebrate life’s beauty with their art. When you feel it, let it bloom!
DATC: You always seem to be working pretty hard. Any chance we’ll see you on this side of the Atlantic before too long?
Carolyn: Oh, YES! We’ll surely hit Norway, Netherlands, Belgium, and any other place that’ll have us again this year. I try to get us over the water at least 2 or 3 times a year. Updates to our touring can be found at www.carolynwonderland.com or www.facebook.com/wonderchicken If we’re anywhere near you, please do come say hello.