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Music Music Features

Drew Holcomb’s Homecoming

It’s a hopeful tale for any aspiring singer-songwriters out there, one that starts as any typical troubadour’s would: “I was doing a lot of shows at the P&H Cafe, and those Flying Saucer songwriter nights.” A couple of decades ago, that was Drew Holcomb’s life, pounding the pavement, chasing gigs, and honing his craft. Soon, this being Memphis, he was rubbing shoulders with like-minded artists. “Cory Branan was incredibly gracious to me,” Holcomb says, “and sort of invited me into his world a little bit and let me open up a bunch of his shows. Then later the Hi Tone was kind of my home for a lot of years.”

As he recruited bands to perform his songs, Holcomb hit it off with one local player in particular. “His name is Nathan Dugger. He was in his senior year at Houston High School when he started playing with me,” Holcomb recalls. “Then he moved to Nashville to go to Belmont and stayed with me on the weekends when he was playing around town.”

The fact that Dugger is still playing with Holcomb over 20 years later is proof positive that they had stumbled onto some great musical chemistry. So is the musical legacy of Holcomb, Dugger, and Rich Brinsfield, the core of the band that eventually coalesced as Holcomb too made the leap to Nashville. 

Holcomb’s mixed feelings about moving to the “Athens of the South” revealed his Bluff City roots. “As a Memphian,” he confesses, “I felt very reluctant to move to Nashville. I felt like I was sort of a traitor, in a way. But I married a Nashville woman, and this was where she wanted to live.” Put another way, in “I Like to Be With Me When I’m With You,” Holcomb sings, “If I could live on the moon, I would rather stay in Tennessee with you.”

“So we were looking for neighborhoods 20 years ago,” he goes on, “and I came to East Nashville. It’s the only neighborhood in Nashville that reminded me of home, you know? It had this sort of loyalty culture, and it was a little gritty. It was, like, hardworking. It had a chip on its shoulder about the rest of the city. And I was like, ‘Yeah, this is my spot. These are my people.’”

As it turned out, the entire band, including Holcomb’s wife Ellie (who’s since gone on to a solo career) wound up in East Nashville, and thus settled on the name Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors. That moniker is especially apt given Holcomb’s songs, which so often address the ties that bind, the friends we lean on, and the embrace of family, conveyed with a soulful, folk-infused pop sensibility. The inclusive message, bolstered by inclusive music, capped off by the disarming frankness of Holcomb’s heartfelt voice, has since resonated with millions, and the band’s trajectory is an object lesson in the rewards of simply honing your craft and staying true to your vision without selling out. That certainly holds true for last year’s Strangers No More and the new Strangers No More, Vol. 2.

“With both of these records,” he says, “if anybody wants to hear a band having fun in the studio, they can listen to these records. We had the time of our lives. We weren’t worried about commercial stuff. We weren’t worried about the radio. We just were like, ‘Hey, we love making music as a band.’ 

“I’ve got to be myself,” adds Holcomb. “That’s what I learned from the music I loved growing up in Memphis — you know, bands like Lucero, who are just so incredibly original. It was important for me to be my own version of that. But, I mean, I was influenced as much by U2 as I was by Bob Dylan or Bob Seger or Tom Petty, so some of my songwriting has a sort of broad universality to it, like a U2 song, and I’ve grown to embrace that instead of apologizing for it. And I think that that’s part of the Memphis in me, too: being unapologetically myself and not trying to be somebody I’m not.” 

Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors perform at the Mempho Music Festival Sunday, October 6th, at 4:30 p.m. on the Bud Light Stage. For details and a full schedule of bands, visit memphofest.com.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Sweetens Cove: Blended Whiskey by Marianne Eaves and Drew Holcomb

Yes, the infinitely talented and likable Drew Holcomb has waded into the very premium whiskey game as part of the ownership group bringing you Sweetens Cove. And yes, there is a long, sweaty history between country and folk music and corn likker, but this stuff isn’t exactly moonshine. Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors aren’t exactly a country act, but a refined blend of folk and rock. Sweetens Cove is a refined blend of whiskey.

While we’re wrecking clichés, Sweetens Cove isn’t named after some outlaw hideout down in the holler either, but a pilgrimage golf course outside Chattanooga that, without a clubhouse, still manages to attract golfers from around the country. A fact that would have made more of an impression were I not too much of a spaz to appreciate the sport. Holcomb told me that he was introduced to both whiskey (or at least the good stuff) and golf during the same semester abroad in Scotland. He was a student at the University of Tennessee, on a scholarship endowed by Peyton Manning — another owner of the new whiskey producer.

Another cliché that’s getting busted with each bottle is that the distiller is the only one who can produce a fine whiskey. Sweetens Cove takes five select whiskeys from Tennessee and Kentucky distilleries and marries them under the expert eye of their master blender, Marianne Eaves. If you’d like to meet the lady, well, I haven’t got her home number, but she’s featured in Neat: The Story of Bourbon on Hulu. Despite the star-studded ownership group, to hear Holcomb tell it, she’s the real star of the show.

The price tag for this stuff is around $230. I’m a notorious skinflint, so my shock is less strictly financial and more about the principle of the thing. Your reflexes may vary. At any rate, that price tag was more than my handlers at the Flyer were willing to spot, so I had to track down a friend, one Jimbo Lattimore, who was willing to share a snort of the stuff.

The color is a medium amber, the nose rich caramel and butterscotch. Jimbo — something of a foodie — found some bananas Foster. After he mentioned it, I caught it as well. This business of picking up aspects of a whiskey only after the first one to speak up mentions it is just one of those things. You could hold tastings in strict silence to get a wider array of impressions, but what’s the fun in that? That’s just a hair too close to drinking alone. Don’t drink alone.

The taste, while excellent, was not as hot as you’d expect for the 102 proof we were drinking. A couple of drops of water opened it up to something that was strangely light without turning loose of its richness. There was something of old wood to it — not anything like the smoke of Islay scotches — but almost the way that the library stacks smell. And yet the deep caramel and butterscotch lingered on. At the risk of sounding like I’m moonlighting for a greeting card outfit, this stuff just dances across the tongue. In my notes, that phrase is in quotes, although I can’t remember which one of us said it. I’ll take the blame. The finish is long and balanced: warm, not harsh.

Sweetens Cove is a great whiskey. More than that, it’s part of a larger trend of which I’m a big fan: the blended whiskeys. Don’t misunderstand me, a single barrel, provided that it’s the right one, is a thing of beauty. These producers focused on blending different whiskeys, again, providing that they are the right ones, open up a new brief for a master blender to experiment. And that opens up a whole new world of profiles for the brown water fan to play with.

Now, go out and play.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Moon River Music Fest at the Levitt Shell

Drew Holcomb plays the Levitt Shell this Saturday.

This Saturday the Levitt Shell will host the Moon River Festival, a one-day only event featuring acts like Switchfoot, Drew Holcomb, and NEEDTOBREATHE. The festival has sold out of general admission tickets, but VIP tickets can be purchased for $75.00. Check out the complete schedule below, along with music videos from a few of the acts. Click here to purchase tickets. 

11:30 a.m. VIP Gates Open

12:00 p.m. GENERAL ADMISSION GATES OPEN

12:30 p.m. DREW & ELLIE HOLCOMB

1:00 p.m. MYLA SMITH

Moon River Music Fest at the Levitt Shell (2)

1:40 p.m. CEREUS BRIGHT

2:20 p.m. STEPHEN KELLOGG

3:15 p.m. COLONY HOUSE

4:20 p.m. JUDAH & THE LION

Moon River Music Fest at the Levitt Shell (4)

5:35 p.m. SWITCHFOOT

Moon River Music Fest at the Levitt Shell (3)

7:00 p.m. NEEDTOBREATHE

8:30 p.m. DREW HOLCOMB & THE NEIGHBORS

Moon River Music Fest at the Levitt Shell

Categories
Music Music Features

Moon River Festival at the Shell

Drew Holcomb loves Memphis. He lives in Nashville, but cut him some slack. He made a video about his love for Memphis and organized the Moon River Festival, which is at the Levitt Shell on Saturday, June 7th.

Drew and Ellie Holcomb are a husband-and-wife songwriting team. Ellie is a Christian artist in her own right and joins her Memphian husband in the Neighbors. Holcomb has done religious and secular work and has landed several songs in cable shows. The band has toured with bands from Los Lobos to the Avett Brothers.

Another Memphian is on the bill! Rob Baird (pictured) plays in a similar vein to the Holcombs. He’s working the Nashville playbook. His 2012 album I Swear It’s the Truth is loaded with pristine acoustic guitars and immaculate drums. The harmonies are sturdy, and the guitars have the sparkle and fuzz of people who know what they are doing.

Knoxville sends us the Dirty Guv’nahs, a dust-kicking mess of electric hillbillies. Their energetic live set is the pride of K-Town and a regular “best band” winner in the Metro Pulse readers’ poll.

Will Hoge was signed to Atlantic in 2004. He ended up like too many: made a record or two and hogtied to apathetic label management. To his credit, he got his masters back and hit the road. Never Give In, his record from 2013, has a hint of Springsteen and Petty to it. His voice has a lot of character. He’s performed at the Opry with Vince Gill singing backup. Dang.

Holly Williams, Judah & the Lion, Dwan Hill, Myla Smith, Idle & Wild, and the Stax Music Academy Alumni Band (more on them later) round out the bill. — Joe Boone