Laura Cantrell: Nashville-born, New York-based, Acclaimed Country Singer-Songwriter & DJ (& Kitty Wells Fanatic)
This post is a near- transcript of the Broken Buttons: Buried Treasure Music podcast (episode 2, side B). Here youâll find the narration from the segment featuring the pioneering rock band Fanny, along with links, videos, photos and references for the episode.
Listen to the full episode on Spotify, Anchor or Mixcloud.
Music blog Stereogum used to have a running feature called âQuit Your Day Jobâ where they interviewed indie musicians about their current or former jobs. There was one with Marty and Drew from the band Blitzen Trapper. The two discussed being torn about walking away from teaching as their third album, Wild Mountain Nation, was starting to blow up. There was another where the lead singer of War on Drugs detailed some of the disgusting things he had to clean up while working as an apartment property manager. Mostly dead rats and clogged toilet stuff, but he did walk into an apartment that had been converted into a porno set. I remembered this discontinued âmusician day jobâ feature while reading up on my next featured artist and it got me thinking.Â
How many professional musicians do you think have a full time day job? How many juggle multiple side gigs and still manage to tour and put out records regularly? How many have really successful careers all while trying to make it as a musician?Â
I donât actually know. I did some research and there arenât any reliable stats that I could find. There is a lot of anecdotal discussion on the topic. The consensus seems to be that most musicians are not getting by with music as their only, or even their primary source of income. I donât think anyone is surprised by that.Â
One Reddit user said less than 5% of musicians derive all or most of their income from music. He didnât offer a source or anything, but he seemed very authoritative in his post. And then after a few more Google searches I lost interest and listened to more Laura Cantrell.Â
Laura Cantrellâs story is what got me pondering how indie musicians go about juggling making art with the necessity of, you know, making a living to survive. In 2003, after two critically acclaimed albums, including a tour opening for Elvis Costello all across the United States and Europe, Cantrell was at a similar crossroads. Laura had risen to the position of Vice President of Equity Research at Bank of America in New York. Yes, you heard me right. Laura Cantrell was working as a corporate executive and touring with Elvis Costello at the same time. She actively worked on the road during the day and then performed for thousands of people each night.
Before we get further into what led up to this point and what came after, letâs hear a song from Laura Cantrellâs debut album, Not the Tremblinâ Kind. Hereâs the title track.
That was Not the Tremblinâ Kind from Laura Cantrellâs first album back in the year 2000.
Laura grew up in Nashville. She played a little bit of piano and sang in the church choir, but did not get into performing music and playing out until her college years. As a teenager she worked at the Country Music Hall of Fame as a tour guide. This job, in addition to the influence of the diverse musical tastes of her parents, sparked an interest in traditional music, particularly classic country. She also became somewhat of an aficionado in this area.Â
This love and knowledge of the early days of country music would help differentiate Laura as she honed her sound and selected her songs while developing as a performer down the road. Before that, however, it would make her an excellent college radio DJ and later an even more excellent DJ at WFMU, one of the best and longest running free-form radio stations in the country. Out of the New Jersey/New York area, WFMU is awesome to this day, with a wide array of programming where DJs still get to play whatever they want.Â
Laura is my favorite kind of DJ, and the kind that has been dwindling in numbers since the rise of music downloads, which then gave way to streaming and endless algorithms. First off, sheâs knows her stuff. She carefully curates each shows, and thoughtfully sequences each set within every episode. She packs in history, context and story to create something that transcends your typical weekend-afternoon-background-radio-soundtrack. I know this show is about under appreciated bands and artists, but Laura Cantrellâs contributions to radio deserve to be heard by more people. You can find her past WFMU shows, called The Radio Thrift Shop, archived on the WFMU website. You can hear her present day on her âStates of Countryâ radio show on the Gimmie Country radio app, or on her SiriusXM George Harrison themed show âDark House Radio,â on The Beatles station.
This concludes the part of the show where I babble my enthusiastic endorsement of Laura Cantrellâs past and present radio career.
Laura began playing music with others in college at Columbia University. Her jam pals included Andrew Webster, future member of Tsunami Bomb and Mac McCaughan, who would go on to form Superchunk and Portastatic + found Merge Records. The friends would call their band Bricks. A lo-fi, mostly apartment recording projects that played sporadic gigs over the years.Â
Hereâs the Brickâs song, The Girl with the Carrot Skin.
Living in New York, Laura began playing guitar and writing her own songs. She also plucked some choice classic country finds and incorporated them into her own performance catalog. One day she met a guy named John who asked her to sing on a song that would appear on his bandâs next major label release for Elektra.Â
Thatâs The Guitar from They Might Be Giantâs 1992 album, Apollo 18. John Flansburgh asked Laura to sing on that recording. It was the first time Laura recorded in a professional studio. John Flansburgh became a fan of Lauraâs music and released her first recorded material as part of his Hello CD of the Month Club, an EP called The Hello Recordings in 1996.Â
Letâs hear another Laura Cantrell song. This time one that she wrote with Amy Allison. From Laura Cantrellâs 2014 album, No Way There From Here, this is All the Girls are Complicated.Â
That was Laura Cantrell with All the Girls Are Complicated from her last full length release, No Way There From Here. Actually, that was her last full album of new material, but Laura did release an album a few years back of her BBC recordings on John Peelâs radio show. That album is called At the BBC: On Air Performances and Recordings 2000-2005.Â
I mentioned earlier that Peel was a big fan. Again, hereâs John Peelâs full quote about Lauraâs first album, Not the Tremblinâ Kind: "[It is] my favourite record of the last ten years and possibly my life.â Having the endorsement of the legendary English disc jockey was enough to give Cantrell wider exposer throughout the UK. She developed a loyal fanbase through regular appearances on Peelâs show, as well as US and European tours, including the opening slot for Elvis Costello. Which brings us back to Lauraâs fork in the road. Before her third album, Laura decided to walk away from the corporate gig. She was excited to focus on music full time, but a little worried about walking away from the security of a successful career she liked and position she was good at.
From a spotlight CNN Business did on Cantrell in 2004:
âFor several months until she finally quit, Cantrell balanced her day job with a growing schedule of rehearsals, gigs, recordings and publicity. On the day she appeared on the Conan O'Brien show she was at her desk until lunchtime.â
âAnd while life as a professional musician is a dream come true, Cantrell still looks back with fondness on more than a decade on Wall Street.â
ââI came into Wall Street with a very typical kind of stereotype that it was all going to be people just obsessed with money. What I found was that there were just loads of interesting people who were a lot like myself, just doing it as a job and who had lives that were full of other things.â
âSo I miss some of the contact with people I met. Ironically it was a very supportive environment for me as an artist.ââ
Lauraâs first two albums were released on the the indie label Diesel Only, which was founded by her husband, Jeremey Tepper. Her third album was released by Matador Records, also an indie label, but with an impressive roster that included Liz Phair, Modest Mouse, Pavement and Sleater-Kinney. Released in 2005, Humming By the Flowered Vine continues Cantrellâs classic country sound, but with some evolved production and arrangements. Lauraâs mastery as a song selector gets more and more impressive. This album includes a cover of a rare, unreleased Lucinda Williams song form 1975 called, âLetters.âÂ
In fact, Lucinda Williams herself was thoroughly impressed with Lauraâs cover of âLetters.â She attributes the cover to bolstering her confidence to go back through her earlier material and look for her own buried treasures.Â
From Blurt Magazine:Â
âThe inspiration for her journey through the past struck when she heard Laura Cantrellâs version of her song âLetters,â which Williams wrote around 1975 and recorded on a demo but never officially released. Explains Williams, âShe got a copy from a mutual friend and did a beautiful, really sweet version of it that made me think wow, she brought this early song back to life, maybe I should go back and review some of my old stuff. Iâve got all these tapes of old little songs, but I never thought they were good enough to do anything with.ââ
You know youâre an ace at finding under appreciated gems when you surprise Lucinda Williams by helping her discover one of her own songs. Letâs hear Laura Cantrellâs version of Letters.
That was Laura Cantrell with Letters from her 2005 release Humming by the Flowered Vine.
In 2008, Laura returned with an EP called, Trains and Boats and Planes with 9 songs about⊠trains, and boats and planes. Itâs very good and it includes a fun cover of New Orderâs Love Vigilantes.Â
Throughout this time, Laura continued her radio show. She also started a family and became co-owner and co-operator of Diesel Only Records.Â
In this clip from an interview with Face Culture, you can really hear Lauraâs passion for country music and its roots. She talks about the importance of countryâs influence on rock nâ roll, and how each artist is inspired by something great that came before.Â
And Laura continuously pays tribute to the greats that came before through her radio show and on her own records. In 2011, Laura released a tribute to Kitty Wells called âKitty Wells Dresses: Songs of the Queen of Country Music.â The collection includes nine Kitty Wells covers and one original, the title track, Kitty Wells Dresses.
From the Washington Post:
Hereâs Laura talking about the inspiration for the album.Â
âKitty wore very typical stage clothes for women who performed at barn dances and in early country music shows,â says Cantrell, a Nashville-born, New York-based country singer and host of an old-time music show on the legendary radio station WFMU.
âThey were these frilly gingham dresses, non-threatening and cutesy. It became this uniform that all the women of the era wore, and I always thought it was a great metaphor for how you can underestimate the strength of the person or the value of the artist underneath.â
That was the song Kitty Wells Dresses from Laura Cantrellâs tribute album of the same name, released in 2011. Wells was the oldest living member of the Country Music Hall of Fame upon its release. She was also the first woman inducted into the hall. Cantrell met and talked to Kitty about her album. She said that Kitty asked which songs were selected and as Laura began calling them out, Kitty would sing each one.Â
Iâve mentioned all of Lauraâs past and present DJ efforts, all of which Iâll link to on my website, brokenbuttons.com. Laura also continues to release music. She had planned a host of special activities for the 20th anniversary of Not the Tremblinâ Kind, which had to be put on hold due to all things 2020.Â
You can contribute to Lauraâs IndigGoGo campaign to help fund her new digital singles collection that sheâs already started releasing. The plan is to release six singles with an A and a B side, all working with different musicians and producers. Iâd recommend the $50 Kitty Wells Dresses Pack, which gets you access to the digital singles as their released, a signed CD copy of both the singles collection and the Kitty Wells Dresses album, as well as a copy of Laura's essay on Kitty and Patsy Cline from the book "Rock and Roll Cage Match: Music's Greatest Rivalries"
Laura Cantrell is the rare performer whose work is deeply rooted in its original source material while still feeling fresh and exciting. Lauraâs radio shows can be described the same way. A buried treasure unearthing buried treasure and taking the old and classic and making it new and lasting and so much sweeter. Laura Cantrell.
References and other stuff to check out:
Lauraâs Indiegogo campaign for her digital singles series
The Radio Thrift Shop - Lauraâs prior radio show. You can stream past episodes and check out her playlists
Gimmie Country, where Laura hosts her current show States of Country. New episodes air 3:00 Monday EST. Laura chats during the show with listeners in the app.
Darkhorse Radio on Sirius XM. Lauraâs other show dedicated to George Harrison. New episodes air Thursday at 3:00.
John Peel wiki entry about Laura
TMBG wiki entry about Laura
A Wall Street journal feature on Laura
An NPR feature on Laura
A CNN Business Week feature on Laura
Stereogum archive of the Quit Your Day Job feature
OLIVIA HARRISON: Weâd been watching Bing Crosby and Grace Kelly. Weâd been watching that movie, and they do a duet, and just that little harmony thing they do â I guess she wasnât known as really a singer â heâd play and then weâd sing it, and it just would get in his head. It would go around and around. I guess a lot of people get loops in their head about songs, and the natural progression was to go in the studio and record it. He didnât care if it was punk rock. He was putting out âTrue Loveâ. [laughs]
LAURA CANTRELL: But I love that that shows a real genuine musical enthusiasm. Thereâs nothing jaded about putting out a cover of âTrue Loveâ, you know? Or calculated, you know, it just sort of shows this â
OLIVIA: Yeah, maybe he was feeling true love, after all!
Cantrell has returned to radio with a regular gig, hosting "Dark Horse Radio," a weekly show on SiriusXM satellite radio's Beatles Channel. On her show, which airs on Thursdays, Cantrell plays music by George Harrison, along with songs that inspired him.
The Beatles channel started in August, with input from Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and the estates of Harrison and John Lennon. One thing Olivia Harrison, George's widow, wanted was a show about her husband's music, and she wanted the host to be a woman.
"She really was adamant, she wanted a female-hosted show about George," Cantrell says. "She wanted it to focus on the breadth of his artistry and all the passions he had for different kinds of music that began during his time in the Beatles as well as his career after the Beatles. It's been a great education for me. I know a lot of the music by osmosis, by having listened to it as a kid, but I never sat down and thought about what George Harrison did when the Beatles ended, and what was he interested in and what did he do next."
Faith In Her Country: Laura Cantrell's concert in Hopewell will feature music from across America and some of her newest songs. By Anthony Stoeckert. Centraljersey.com 29/11/2017