|
||||||||
|
Above: Musician Dave Rawlings. Below: Rawlings and partner Gillian Welch perform together onstage at the 930 Club in Washington, D.C. Photos by Kate Gardiner In their latest project, the duo switch roles. As The Dave Rawlings Machine, Welch takes on a supporting role and Rawlings takes the lead. "Part of it was a change we felt in my voice...a couple years ago, my voice changed," says Rawlings, making a joke about late onset adolescence. The Grammy-nominated producer and writer had just never been very confident in his voice as a musical centerpiece. In the last few years, he finally became comfortable turning his mic up and others' down. The new project evolved over time, starting as a performance last summer when the Rawlings and Welch played at the Newport Folk Festival under the new moniker. "It was sort of a back-handed way to play some [new] material", he says. That gig led to more songs, which led to some recording sessions, which eventually produced enough material for an LP. "The moment we had 40-or-so minutes of material that we listened to and said, 'Unless we're mistaken, people might like this,'" explains Rawlings, was the moment when he and Welch decided to finish making what would become their 2009 album, "A Friend of a Friend."
"I didn't imagine I would ever in my life just play guitar and sing a song and have it turn up on a record," he says. Despite his modesty, the Dave Rawlings Machine has received some industry recognition. They're up for four Americana Music Association awards this fall. Art Beat caught up with Dave Rawlings outside 930 Club in Washington, D.C. earlier this month: |
Broadcast Reports
Search this Blog
Arts Correspondent
Correspondent Jeffrey Brown covers all things art and
culture in these online
exclusive reports. Best of the Beat
For Teachers
Lesson plans, student voices and a teacher community devoted to bringing arts coverage into the classroom. NewsHour Poetry Series
|
| |||||
|
|||||
| |||||
| Support the kind of journalism done by the NewsHour...Become a member of your local PBS station. | |||||