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Alan Sculley

Alan Sculley has operated his music feature service, Last Word Features, for more than 25 years. His music features and reviews have appeared in more than 100 daily newspapers, alternative weeklies and entertainment publications.

Kitchen-Dwellers-Ed-Coyle

Kitchen Dwellers at the Commonwealth Room

By Arts & Culture, Music

The pandemic, for many touring musicians, was a rare chance to take an extended break and recharge their creative batteries. Not the Kitchen Dwellers, who are performing at Dec. 30 and 31 at the Commonwealth Room in Salt Lake City.

The Montana-based string band wanted to make a new album (which became the 2022 release “Wise River”) that made a statement about the group.

“We kind of took that route in just saying let’s use this time to our advantage. Let’s use this time to really come out of the end of this thing better than (when) we went into it,” said banjo player Torrin Daniels in a late-December phone interview. “So that was kind of the approach, I guess, going into recording ‘Wise River.’ We wanted the finished product to show that we had been putting the work in and that we didn’t take this (pandemic) time to rest.”

 The result was a year-plus period in which the four musicians – Daniels, mandolin player Shawn Swain, bassist Joe Funk and guitarist Max Davies – improved and grew more collaborative in their songwriting and emerged with what Daniels feels is the best representation yet of the band’s music and playing.

“The first couple of albums that we put together were really evidence of us still trying to figure out what exactly we are and how we fit together and how to play our instruments and write songs and things like that,” Daniels said. “This most recent one (“Wise River”), I guess, is just a more mature version of whatever we’ve found ourselves to be.”

That Daniels feels the Kitchen Dwellers are only now really beginning to hit their stride as a band is perfectly understandable. The band, after all, is still relatively new, having formed in 2010 while in college at Montana State University in Bozeman.

It was actually a markedly different outfit at the start. Early on, the group had a fiddle player as a fifth member, and most notably, a different guitarist in Kyle Shelstad, who wrote nearly all of the songs for the original Kitchen Dwellers. The original group released a self-titled album in 2013 and earned second-place honors in new band competitions at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival and the Northwest String Summit before Shelstad split with the Kitchen Dwellers in 2014.

This left Daniels, Swain, Funk and Davies (who replaced Shelstad) to find a way forward as the Kitchen Dwellers.

 “I think he really wanted to move back to the Midwest where he was from and the rest of us really had no interest in doing that,” Daniels said, starting to explain the split with Shelstad. “And part of it was creative differences. He’s much more of a folky type of songwriter and I guess maybe more of like the indie sort of feel to his writing. He has a band now that is much more fitting to that whole scene.   

“I think ultimately it (Shelstad’s departure) was really good for us because we were able to sort of really pursue the type of music that we wanted to play,” he added. “None of us were really contributing to the writing of songs when he was in that band because he’s a very prolific songwriter. I think it maybe intimidated the rest of us, or made the rest of us feel that wasn’t our part to play, like we weren’t the songwriters of the band. And I think him leaving and us going our separate ways really enabled everyone involved, it empowered us to all pursue our songwriting.”

The Kitchen Dwellers’ music is certainly informed by bluegrass, but other influences also figure into the music. For one thing, none of the musicians played bluegrass or were in acoustic string bands before meeting at Montana State University. Daniels was into punk and heavy metal. Swain shared an affinity for metal, as well as the Grateful Dead. Funk was into electronic music and Daniels favored classic rock.

Those backgrounds inform the music of the Kitchen Dwellers, even though Daniels, Swain, Funk and Davies play instruments commonly featured in bluegrass. But the song structures often borrow from rock and pop, while there’s an energy and edge to the playing that aligns with the rock influences of four band members.

 “It seems counter intuitive when you first look at it,” Daniels said of the transition from rock to bluegrass-rooted music. “I think it really translates well when you start playing bluegrass, especially if you grew up playing that punk style of music or metal style of music. You were already used to playing fast. And especially with metal, I’ve found metal guitarists and (players) like that have this dexterity and finesse to their technique because a lot of it is so technical and it involves so much thought and finesse while you’re playing, which translates well to bluegrass music. A lot of bluegrass instruments require the same level of finesse and attention to detail as far as your technique goes. So when you start to learn how to play acoustic instruments like that, a lot of the thought processes kind of translate over very well.”

In making “Wise River,” the Kitchen Dwellers sought to grow and evolve as a band by stepping outside of their comfort zones in several ways. Where the current lineup’s first two albums, 2017’s “Ghost in the Bottle” and 2019’s “Muir Maid,” were produced by musicians from the string band/bluegrass world (Leftover Salmon’s Andy Thorn on “Ghost in the Bottle” and Chris Pandolfi of the Infamous Stringdusters on the latter album), the Kitchen Dwellers reached outside of their genre for “Wise River” by bringing in Cory Wong of the funk band Vulfpeck to produce.

“He connected with us because he had sort of had this interest in working with a string band and working with bluegrass music, which is something he doesn’t typically do,” Daniels said. “So it was kind of like, we were coming together sort of as these two different parties from two different musical worlds to try to put both of our best feet forward to record this album.”

The four band members also agreed with Wong’s suggestion to work with Nashville-based songwriter Elliot Blaufuss to hone the material for “Wise River.”

“I think it helped bring a lot of new songwriting ideas to the table,” Daniels said. “I think it made us all better songwriters just getting the opportunity to work with Elliot.”

The Kitchen Dwellers have done a good deal of touring in support of “Wise River” since the album was released in April. The band has a busy year of shows on deck for 2023. But first, Daniels is excited about finishing 2022 with a pair of blow-out performances on Dec. 30 and 31 at the Commonwealth Room in Salt Lake City.

“We have these folks that follow us around the full year and a lot of them are really good friends of ours now. We feel like we kind of go through the whole year with a lot of them and we have these shared experiences with them,” Daniels said. “I guess for this upcoming new year’s run in Salt Lake, we’ll probably throw some new stuff out there that maybe we haven’t ever played before, whether it’s a cover or an original (song) or what have you. We try to throw some new stuff out on New Year’s. It kind of fits the occasion. Everyone’s done with their year and ready to celebrate. So we try to throw some stuff out there that leans toward that feeling. 

“It feels like we’re sort of tying up the year and letting it all hang out on the last couple of nights,” he said. “So I’m really looking forward to that in Salt Lake. It’s going to be an awesome time.”


Josh-Groban-Andrew-Eccles

Josh Groban Will Be ‘Singing His Face Off’ at Vivint Arena

By Arts & Culture, Music

On July 27, Josh Groban will bring his Harmony Tour to Vivint Arena, returning to Utah for his first performance since 2018. The tour, which features music from his most recent album, is a culmination of a project that evolved over the course of multiple years, inspiring Groban to record music in ways he likely never anticipated.

In 2019, Groban had gotten a good start on making a type of album that had long been on his to-do list, recording his versions of some of his favorite classic songs from pop and other genres. Then the pandemic hit and the album he was going to call Harmony got shut down.

“I didn’t even know if Harmony would finish being made,” Groban said in an early June interview.

When the decision was made during the quarantine to resume recording this collection of cover songs, Groban discovered that the album needed to change with the unusual times.

“The songs we chose had changed,” he said. “Even though we knew we wanted this album to be mostly covers on this one, what you want to say and the kind of songs you want to sing—it changes as the world changes around you. So different songs started to rise to the top as we were going through this crazy thing together.”

One of the big issues that had to be overcome was how to record during a time when musicians had to be socially distanced and were unable to travel and be in the same studio to record their parts. In this case, Groban was in Los Angeles, his producer, Bernie Herms, was in Nashville and the orchestra that was a key part in the song arrangements was in London. But technology provided a solution with a plug-in called Audiomovers that links together multiple recording locations.

“[It gave us] the ability to connect with each other on a sonic level that is of the highest quality. It’s as if somebody is in the room next to you,” Groban explained. “And where you’re bouncing back and forth your audio files in real-time, it allows you to share the airwaves and to jam with each other from across oceans in real-time and for it to sound as good as it would be if you were in the same room. That’s not the way I love to make music. I like us all to be in the same place. But when you’re making an album or making a movie, sometimes you have to do what you have to do to get the final product and get the final message across.”

As for the music itself, Groban pointed to two songs that weren’t originally under consideration for the Harmony album until the pandemic put a new backdrop on the project.

“There are a couple of songs that spring to mind that…I might have been a little intimidated or skeptical of doing, that felt absolutely right after everything we had gone through,” Groban said. “The Impossible Dream,” from Man of La Mancha, is a song Groban said he was reserving “for maybe another musical theater album or something along those lines.” “I hadn’t really sat and truly listened to the lyrics, and that was my bad,” he said. “But in my head, I just always thought of it as a kind of big, brash ballad and I didn’t really give it the thought that it deserved.” In the context of the pandemic’s difficulties, Groban reexamined the lyrics and connected with them more deeply. “I found myself getting really emotional while I was singing it,” he said. There were so many things that happened over the course of that year and a half, two years, that suddenly those lyrics made even more sense to me.

Another late addition to the album, Joni Mitchell’s Both Sides Now” is one Groban admitted he was “just scared to sing.” I’d always wanted to sing it, but you always feel like you kind of have to have the stuff behind it before you tackle anything by Joni. I called my friend Sara Bareilles and said I know we both love her and love this song. I didn’t know if it was the right time, but now I kind of feel like it’s the right time. And she said ‘Yes, it’s the right time. Let’s do it.’

Another change with the album was Groban’s decision to include a pair of original songs, “Your Face” and “The Fullest,” the latter of which takes on a gospel influence with Kirk Franklin guesting on the track.

Overall, “Harmony” brings a sense of comfort and optimism in a time when the world suddenly became a lot more uncertain and scary. In addition to the aforementioned songs, Harmony includes Groban’s versions of such contemporary pop standards as “Celebrate Me Home” (by Kenny Loggins), Sting’s “Shape of My Heart” (a duet with Leslie Odom Jr.) and “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” (a hit for Roberta Flack) while reaching back further for “It’s Now or Never” (the Elvis Presley hit) and also dipping into the Frank Sinatra catalog for “The World We Knew (Over and Over).”

What makes the songs stand out, besides Groban’s exceptional singing, are the orchestral arrangements. They bring a different musical element to many of the songs and also put the Harmony album squarely within the classical crossover/pop realm that Groban has occupied since he came on the scene with a 2001 self-titled debut album that sold more than four million copies worldwide. That album was followed by an even more popular outing, the 2003 release Closer, which featured the smash hit “You Raise Me Up.”

Now 41, Groban has largely maintained his popularity since, releasing seven more studio albums, while also making an impact as an actor on television (The Office, The Crazy Ones and The Good Cop), in movies (Crazy Stupid Love and Muppets Most Wanted) and on Broadway, where he was nominated for the 2017 Best Actor in a Musical Tony Award for his lead role as Pierre Bezukhov in Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812.

Having been off the road since the pandemic hit, Groban is beyond grateful and excited to be back on tour. He promised a show that will balance songs from Harmony with back catalog material, plus a visual presentation that was designed expressly for the outdoor amphitheaters that will host the concerts.

“When you’re playing outdoors, so much of your environment is setting the tone already for you,” he said. “I made this mistake when I was younger trying to force feed a big arena set into a bunch of outdoor sheds and I’m thinking ‘Oh my God, we’re wasting all this natural beauty trying to put all of these bells and whistles up here.’ So we’re really excited about the design for the summer tour because it’s classic, it’s going to be beautiful, it’s also going to let a lot of the natural beauty of these venues do the talking, as well as the music, of course.

The evening will also feature performances from the venerable Preservation Hall Jazz Band and emerging singer/songwriter Eleri Ward, as well as violinist Lucia Micarelli.

“It’s going to be a night of gratitude, of really just us singing our faces off for people again,” Groban said.

  • Who: Josh Groban
  • What: Covers of classic pop and Broadway songs, along with original material
  • Where: Vivint Arena
  • When: July 27, 2022 at 7 p.m.
  • Tickets: vivintarena.com