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The SteelDrivers’ Self-Titled Debut Has Critics Raving!
7:36am on March 3, 2008

NAMED #1 BAND TO WATCH IN 2008 BY AMERICAN SONGWRITER

TOUR DATES ALSO ANNOUNCED

Burlington, MA - The SteelDrivers' self-titled debut on Rounder Records is getting everyone's attention! Currently the album is #4 on Billboard's Top Bluegrass Albums Chart, #13 on Amazon.com's Bestsellers in Music, and American Songwriter magazine has just named The SteelDrivers their #1 "Band to Watch in 2008." Upcoming tour dates are listed below with more to be added soon.

The SteelDrivers were recently featured on CMT's "Unplugged at Studio 330." Watch the session here: http://www.cmt.com/music/unplugged/performance/steel_drivers/1581801/performance.jhtml

"If you want to hear real country music -- the kind with just-short-of-reckless picking on acoustic instruments and naturally vivid vocal harmonies -- these days you turn to bluegrass. If you want to hear something different in bluegrass, you turn to the SteelDrivers...Varied, bright and as real as if the band were playing in your living room, The SteelDrivers should please fans of traditional bluegrass, country, folk and the acoustic ventures of Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead...There's not a dud on the disc...The SteelDrivers' music is organic and unsoiled by studio trickery, the kind that has plasticized contemporary country."
- Jim Fusilli, Wall Street Journal

"The SteelDrivers earn their name not only with Chris Stapleton's hard, hoarse shout but also with the relentless attack of Tammy Rogers' fiddle and Mike Henderson's mandolin...the group has galvanized into a force in bluegrass and beyond." - Brian Mansfield, USA Today

"...this debut album {is} brimming with both spirit and experienced chops."
"...when the strings are all buzzing and the harmonies take flight, there are plenty of reasons to grin."
- Steve Hochman, Los Angeles Times

"They bring a hint of rock and soul and give an exciting new edge and texture to the music."
- Nick Cristiano, Philadelphia Inquirer

"The SteelDrivers demonstrates the effortlessness with which their songwriting crosses genre boundaries."
- Country Weekly

"...different from anything else out there these days...has created praise and excitement."
- Peter Cooper, The Tennessean

"The SteelDrivers combine backwoods bluegrass with deep-fried soul. On this track, grassy banjo player Richard Bailey is front and center. But Chris Stapleton's voice blazes with blues abandon. This stuff is hot."
- Bob Oermann, Music Row

"... [An] iron-belted rhythm, combined with (Chris) Stapleton's gritty howl, instantly separates The SteelDrivers from the score of sharp-playing bluegrass bands that have stepped forward this decade...it's the strength of the band's songwriting that will make the music endure."
- Michael McCall, Nashville Scene

"...no hype, just pure talent..."
- Travis Tackett, Bluegrass Journal.com

"...new, unique and refreshing."
- Bob Cherry, Cybergrass
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Upcoming Tour Dates:
March 27 Bama Theatre Tuscaloosa, AL
March 29 The Station Inn Nashville, TN

April 11 Bluegrass Returns to its Roots Festival Owensboro, KY
April 25 The Station Inn Nashville, TN

May 24 Jammin at Hippy Jack's Americana Festival Crawford, TN

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Rounder Records Rules The Top Of The Billboard Bluegrass Chart!
12:25pm on February 27, 2008

Burlington, MA - Rounder Records is currently holding the top four slots on the Billboard bluegrass albums chart with Rhonda Vincent's Good Thing Going at #1, Blue Highway's Through The Window Of A Train at #2, and the self-titled albums from Dailey & Vincent and The SteelDrivers at #3 and #4 respectively. This is Rhonda Vincent's seventh week at #1, a position that she's held since the album's release on January 7. Blue Highway debuted at #2 last week, moving Dailey & Vincent to #3, while The SteelDrivers' release from January 15 has stayed within the top 10 over the past 6 weeks.

Good Thing Going is Rhonda Vincent's most personal album to date. With hope, resilience, and gratitude, Vincent presents a set of songs that range from timelessly straight-ahead bluegrass to effervescent swing and heartfelt ballads. The twelve tracks that make up Good Thing Going include five originals or co-writes, alongside a range of contemporary and classic cover tracks including a beautiful rendition of "The Water is Wide" with country superstar Keith Urban. The Boston Globe calls it a "...superb new effort...no messing up this ‘Good Thing.'"

Blue Highway's Through The Window Of A Train, the band's eighth album, was released on February 12 and features 12 songs, all written or co-written by Blue Highway's five accomplished songwriters whose songs have been recorded by bluegrass staples Ronnie Bowman, Mountain Heart, Ricky Skaggs, and others. Through The Window Of A Train showcases Blue Highway at their songwriting, instrumental, and vocal peak. With a nod to family, tradition, and travel on the album's title track, the account of a fading cowboy on "My Ropin' Days Are Done," the characterizations of wars past and current on "Homeless Man" and "Two Soldiers," and through the virtuosic picking on the instrumental "The North Cove," Blue Highway simultaneously deliver the past, present, and future of bluegrass.

Released January 29, the self-titled debut of new bluegrass duo Jamie Dailey and Darrin Vincent features a broad spectrum of traditional bluegrass, country, and gospel sounds, unified by the duo's breath-taking vocal strength and harmony as well as their virtuosic musicianship. While not related by blood, Dailey & Vincent invite favorable comparisons to the best in brother duo singing - the Stanley Brothers, the Osborne Brothers and Jim and Jesse. The power of Dailey & Vincent's duo singing is stunningly revealed in the David Rawlings/Gillian Welch gospel number "By the Mark," as well as the tender "My Savior Walks With Me Today," written by Dailey and former employer Doyle Lawson. Pure, rapid-fire bluegrass with fleet-fingered picking and high lonesome singing flows through the album, from the beginning notes of Al Wood's "Sweet Carrie," through Randall Hylton's "Cumberland River."

On their national debut album of all original material, The SteelDrivers' back-country high lonesome collides with Delta soul and is one of the most refreshing sounds to emerge from Nashville in a long time. Highly regarded behind the scenes as songsmiths and session players with innumerable hits, cuts and licks to their credit, this batch of seasoned pros has performed to sold out crowds from their inception almost two years ago. While offering new takes on classic themes of redemption and loss, and hope and home, their songs are equally informed by the mountain sound of Ralph Stanley and the rhythm and blues of Ray Charles. Stretching the boundaries of your typical bluegrass band, the rock/blues/soul vocals of guitarist Chris Stapleton put back-country

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Exclusive Interview: Mike Henderson of The SteelDrivers
11:19am on January 16, 2008

Rounder's Brad San Martin talked with Mike Henderson of The SteelDrivers about the making of their forthcoming self-titled debut album, due out 1/15 on Rounder Records.
Tell us how the SteelDrivers got together... Well, Chris Stapleton and I had been writing songs together for about four or five years, and we'd amassed quite a pile of songs. I was in the mood to play some bluegrass, and I thought "Here are these songs we could do." I asked Chris if he was interested, and he was, and then I said we need someone to sing high and sing low, so I called Tammy and Mike. And we need a banjo player, so I called Richard Bailey in. I thought we'd learn some songs, have a little fun, maybe get a regular gig somewhere here in Nashville so that we wouldn't have to rehearse too much. But after the first rehearsal, it became apparent that there was more to it than that. We figured that we had the potential to do more than just have a local gig once a week.
What was it that tipped you off to the band's potential? To tell you the truth, it came about because we recorded the rehearsals. We did that so everyone could have something to take home and work on...but after a couple of days, one by one, the calls came in saying "This really sounds good." First one person, then another. People were on board from the very beginning. We rehearsed quite a bit the first six months or so, and it became even more obvious that we had something cool going. Then pretty soon the industry started sniffing around, and one thing lead to another!
You guys definitely have your own sound...did that happen instantaneously? Did you have to refine this? It was just in there. The first time we got together, we wrote down tunes we all knew -- bluegrass standards, covers, those sort of things. But Chris kept pulling out things he and I had written. Soon it became apparent that we didn't need that outside stuff. There's a lot of great bands out there perfoming traditional bluegrass, and they are really good at it, so we figured "Why not do something special with something that no one else had?" Now we have more tunes than we can play over the course of a regular show, and we're learning more all the time.
This album has a pretty defiant, raw sound. How was it recorded? It was cut live in one big room. We had a few baffles around, but we were all pretty close together -- I'd say within ten feet of each other. I feel like Luke Wooten did a wonderful job of getting what "some air" on it, as i call it. He close mic'd all the instruments, but he also had ambient mics that were picking up more of what you'd hear if you were listening to a band acoustically and you walked ten feet away. He got the sound as the instruments got out into the room, and a lot of that is what's on the record.
Where the vocals cut live too? Yes. Tammy and Chris sang everything as it went down. If we made a mistake, we'd just stop and start over again, like what folks did before they had the capacity to overdub and punch-in. A lot of that too had to do with our rehearsal recordings sounding so good to us. We liked them and we liked the energy and the feel we were getting as we sat and learned the songs...and we recorded our gigs, too, and we liked the energy, the feel, the dynamics -- as opposed to putting everybody in a separate area using headphones so that each instrument is recorded to perfection. There's stuff that made it to the record that's not perfect, and we know that, but not too much music is perfect unless you contrive it and do each individual part again and again and make it perfect. Our feeling was that this is what we do on stage and people like it, so let's put that on the record.

  What are, for you, the moments on the album where your hair stands on end? I really don't have a favorite too much, but I never listen to stuff I'm a part of once it's finished. I haven't played it in several months! I couldn't tell you for sure all the tunes that made it, we cut a lot more tunes than what you hear on the record.
Songwriting plays such a huge role in the SteelDrivers sound. When you and Chris write a song, do you say to yourself "Let's write a bluegrass song"? Not really -- we would just write the songs with a couple of acoustic guitars. when it came time to make demos, we'd get a full band, drums, keyboards, and demo 'em up in the Nashville way, to try to get them recorded, which is what you do when you're a staff songwriter. But there seemed to be a kind of underlying thread -- something about a lot of the songs that made them playable in a bluegrass fashion, just by changing the feel of it just a little bit. Chris's singing ability has a lot to do with that, his ability to say "Well, when we do it with drums and B-3, it goes like this. When we do it with a banjo, it goes like this." He's really good at being able to get inside the song and steer it different ways. Were you surprised with the way these songs were reborn as bluegrass?
I was surprised with a few of them, because I was so used to hearing them the other way. Once you make a batch of demos and they are in a finished form, you tend to think of them that way. A lot of them had heavy drums and such, and I would think, "That would be a good song for country artist x or country artist y." But Chris would say "Let's try it like this," and we'd mess with it and it worked just fine -- we surprised ourselves on a lot of it!
Any specific examples come to mind? "Sticks That Made Thunder" is a good example. The demo on it is pretty heavy, drums are really prominent on it, it had B-3, two or three electric guitar parts...I was just so used to thinking of it that way. Plus it was one of my favorite songs, and I thought "Well, this one just isn't gonna work acoustically, it isn't gonna be powerfull enough." But after we played it two or three times, it really did work. It's about having an open mind. If you go back to what Bill Monroe was doing in the 1950s, he was borrowing from popular songs of the day, twisting them around and putting his own stamp on things. He was just like everybody else -- trying to have a hit. People hold him up as a staunch traditionalist, but his records had electric guitar, accordion, drums....stuff you couldn't get away with at a bluegrass festival these days -- people would say you're crazy!
A lot of folks know you from your Dead Reckoning albums...but this is entirely different. What is your relationship with bluegrass? How and when did you first start playing it? I started playing bluegrass when I was eighteen or nineteen years old. I did that for quite a while, and I did it professionally for seven or eight years back in the '70s, playing mandolin as well as fiddle and guitar. It was just really hard to make a living at it at that time, unless you were in one of the upper echelon groups, but as far as the band I was in -- which was with [future SteelDriver bassist] Mike Fleming on banjo -- we were working clubs and a few festivals, and it was just really tough. Bluegrass wasn't as popular. It had a small renaissance sparked by the movie Deliverence, but that wore off.

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