Grateful Web Western Sun Release on May 29th
Article contributed by IVPR | Published on Saturday May 9, 2020
Nell Robinson and Jim Nunally have been melding genres their entire careers—bluegrass, folk, country, jazz, swing, alt-roots, folkbilly, you-name-it—but when it came time to put together Western Sun, their third album as the Nell & Jim Band, Robinson and Nunally wed their passion for songwriting and storytelling, using their vocabulary of way-back influences; a story told from the roots of roots music. Available everywhere May 29th, Western Sun features Robinson and Nunally as well as their stellar band—bass fiddle player Jim Kerwin (Grisman, Jerry Garcia, Yo Yo Ma), drummer/percussionist Alex Aspinall (Chris O’Connell & the Smart Alecks, Silvestre Martinez) and accordionist/keyboard player Rob Reich (Gaucho, Circus Bella)—writing and creating with a particular point of view in mind. “The original songwriting on Western Sun is tied together with a thread, our visceral response to the backlash about immigrants in this country,” says Robinson. “It’s profoundly disturbing to us. Our families are immigrants, and particularly being West Coast people with roots in the South, we believe so strongly in the beauty of diversity and culture.”
Western Sun feels drenched in history, in both music and story. “The virtuosity of the band, the depth and breadth of their talent, gives us free rein in creating interesting arrangements,” says Nunally. The band has emulsified in the bottom of the great melting pot—a roux of American music—in a way that only a group of musicians with years of experience can pull off; a perfect unit whose sum is always greater than its parts, and that’s what really makes this album shine. The songwriting and composition both serve the storytelling in a way that allows listeners to immerse themselves in the history that’s being depicted.
Western Sun opens with “By Stars and Sunrise,” a tale of an immigrant who fell in love with a Tejana named Luisa on an Emigrant Trail through what is now called Texas. Co-written with Chris Wadsworth, “By Stars and Sunrise” aims to capture the feels of the Trail and immigrant experiences while studying the Gold Rush era. Nell, the band’s primary lyricist, penned the lyrics while envisioning the song’s protagonist having two children with Luisa before heading west out of necessity, seeking fortune to support their family. The songwriting trio and soaring three-part harmonies on the chorus ring triumphant when the subject returns home; healthy with a pack full of riches.
Deeper into Western Sun, we get to “Travelin’ the Road West,” a lively bluegrass number featuring instrumental breaks from Nunallys flat-picked guitar and Robinson’s signature flute. Written by Nunally about his family, “Travelin’ the Road West” follows southern and midwestern farmers during the Great Migration West of the 1930s. “I can remember my Dad said he had been called an Okie. But he was from Arkansas, his Dad was a sharecropper there. And he, his parents, and sisters moved out west looking for work and a better life in the ‘Golden State’,” recalls Nunally. “Reading The Grapes of Wrath inspired me to write about my own family’s history.”
In addition to literature and North American history, Nunally and Robinson also draw inspiration from European culture and folklore. Take “Limonaia,” one of the album’s lush ballads, that was inspired by the true story of Princess Ghyka in 19th century Italy, who lived just outside of Florence at Villa Gamberaia. According to local legend, Ghyka, a renowned beauty, veiled her face at 19 due to what she perceived as the flaws of aging, and continued to live at the Villa with her American companion Florence Blood before passing away at age 24. Robinson explains, “I had in mind not only the story of Ghyka but also the idea that she and her ‘companion’ may have been in love. ‘Companion’ was a term sometimes used for same-sex couples at the turn of the 20th century. Also raising my daughter in this society that still drives women to great lengths to fit a strange view of beauty, I was very aware that the story of Princess Ghyka still plays out today.”
“Sequoia Gold” is another Wadsworth-Robinson-Nunally co-write, closely resembling what it would’ve been like around Caspar Creek, CA, during the Gold Rush when the small city grew to a town of a half-million people, most of whom looked towards the redwoods and lumber business after not finding gold. “Chris’ lyrics on this are spectacular, capturing the jargon of the time and place,” say Nell and Jim. “We added a verse at the end and worked together on the chorus. The three of us had a ball playing with the harmonies.”
“The songs are really stories. Some of them historical, some from our families or how we’re reacting to what’s happening in the world,” says Robinson. “So a number of the songs on the album—most of them, really—reflect the diverse heritage and ever-changing world in which our music is created.”
For more information, please visit https://www.nellandjim.com.
More about the Nell & Jim Band: Jim Nunally—guitarist and vocalist with the David Grisman Bluegrass Experience for a decade and a half—is a third-generation roots musician. During the Dust Bowl era, his grandfather, a sharecrop farmer, emigrated from Arkansas to California, where he taught Jim’s dad how to play guitar, and Jim has expertly and passionately carried on the family tradition from his father. Jim is a certified Grammy Award participant and IBMA award winner.
Nell Robinson, born Hilary Perkins in rural Alabama, honored her own family tradition, taking her grandmother’s name when she began performing in the Bay Area at the age of 46, belatedly but ecstatically embracing the musical strains that had beguiled her during her youth.
Robinson and Nunally’s combined experiences and vast knowledge of a range of traditional idioms are further enriched and expanded by those of their virtuosic bandmates: string-bass player Jim Kerwin (Grisman, Jerry Garcia, Yo Yo Ma), drummer/percussionist Alex Aspinall (Chris O’Connell & the Smart Alecks, Silvestre Martinez) and accordionist/keyboard player Rob Reich (Gaucho, Circus Bella).
The quintet made its recording debut with 2017’s Baby Let’s Take the Long Way Home and followed it up two years later with Steel. On top of their studio work, Robinson and Nunally wrangled crews of all-star musicians for live performances based on The Rose of No-Man’s Land in 2015 and Baby Let’s Take the Long Way Home two year later, both filmed for the PBS concert series Music Gone Public.
Touring extensively, they have performed at the Kennedy Center, Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival, Kate Wolf Music Festival, Strawberry Music Festival, and on Garrison Keillor’s Prairie Home Companion, as well as festivals and concerts in Canada and Europe.