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Acoustic Sunday with Tom Paxton, Three Women and the Truth

Folk music icon and 2009 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award recipient Tom Paxton says he doesn’t mean to preach. He just tries to hold a mirror up to the world. “I’m not a propagandist. I never have been,” Paxton says. “I just try to reflect the world I see around me.”

Though he has written his share of incendiary folk songs — such as “If the Poor Don’t Matter” and “Lyndon Johnson Told the Nation” — Paxton believes in the importance of seeing the whole spectrum when it comes to songwriting. “I write all kinds of songs,” he says. “I write songs for children. I just finished a love song this afternoon.”

Paxton recently wrapped up a tour in celebration of his 80th birthday — and more than 50 years in the music business as a songwriter, performer, and supporter of music education — from his beginnings as a frequent performer in New York’s Greenwich Village, where in 1962, he recorded his first of more than 60 albums, to his more recent songwriting workshops as part of Warren Wilson College’s Swannanoa Gathering. “I turned 80 on Halloween, and within two weeks, I heard myself described as spry,” Paxton says. “You know you’re old when people describe you as spry.”

Kathy Mattea

Paxton credits Pete Seeger and Seeger’s group the Weavers as being early sources of inspiration. “My model has always been the Weavers. They were the ones who inspired me,” Paxton says. “They didn’t shy away from singing songs about the world around them, but they also sang lullabies and songs of family.” It’s that spirit of unprejudiced observation that fuels Paxton’s songwriting engine. “I’m looking for an idea, and any idea can be a good idea,” Paxton says. “I wrote a song about the firemen on 9/11, who ran up the stairs when everybody else was running down.”

Paxton, along with his band the Don Juans, will play a benefit concert for Indie Memphis, dubbed Acoustic Sunday Live, on December 17th at the Halloran Centre for Performing Arts downtown. “I’m having as much fun now as I’ve ever had,” Paxton says, “and it’s all because I’m hanging out with these two friends from Nashville, John Veznor and Don Henry, who call themselves the Don Juans.” The Acoustic Sunday event seems to represent something of a Tennessee truce between the often differing musical styles of Memphis and Nashville, as many of the performers at the Indie Memphis benefit have made Tennessee’s state capital their home. Also performing will be the Nashville-based Three Women and the Truth: Gretchen Peters, Kathy Mattea, and Mary Gauthier.

Bruce Newman, Indie Memphis board member and host of WEVL’s popular Folk Song Fiesta program, conceived the event as a fund-raiser and a showcase. “I’ve been doing these concerts as fund-raisers for different organizations since maybe the late ’90s,” Newman says. “When I started on the board of Indie Memphis a year ago, I thought that [it] would be a good beneficiary of a fund-raiser.” And Newman says asking Paxton to participate was a no-brainer. “I had him in Memphis for a Woody Guthrie tribute,” Newman says. “Then I had him in Memphis to open the Rose Theater at the University of Memphis.

Mary Gauthier

“I know Mary Gauthier and Gretchen Peters,” Newman says. “I thought it would be cool if we could split the bill up with Tom and then have [them] do this thing called Three Women and the Truth, which is basically songs about what it’s like to be a female in a fairly male-dominated business.”

Describing themselves as “three women, three guitars, and the words, music, and hard-won wisdom of three lifetimes spent in pursuit of the song,” the women can boast multiple Grammy nominations, a CMA Song of the Year, and accolades from No Depression magazine, The New York Times, and Bob Dylan.

“I’m looking forward eagerly to coming back to Memphis,” Paxton says. “I’ll be as spry as ever.”

Tom Paxton and the Don Juans, Three Women and the Truth featuring Gretchen Peters, Kathy Mattea, and Mary Gauthier at the Halloran Centre for Performing Arts, Sunday, December 17th at 7 p.m.

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Music Music Features

Home Again

On Sunday, December 8th, Beth Sholom Synagogue will host Acoustic Sunday Live!, a concert with three acts: Jesse Winchester is a former Memphian who worked with Robbie Robertson and the Band and has had his songs recorded by Joan Baez, Elvis Costello, Jimmy Buffett, the Everly Brothers, and others. Mary Gauthier is a singer-songwriter with a colorful past and an iconoclastic ‘tude. No Depression magazine named Gauthier’s album Mercy Now the sixth best album of the decade. Memphis’ Motel Mirrors with John Paul Keith and Amy LaVere round out the bill.

Winchester was born in Louisiana in 1944, but his family moved to Memphis when he was 12. He always had a musical bent. “I certainly wasn’t a prodigy in terms of talent. But I was in terms of enthusiasm and interest. I was always into it, but I didn’t start writing until later,” he says.

Winchester gained experience like so many musical Memphians do: “We had a garage band in Memphis with my friends. We were called the Church Keys. No one’s ever heard of us. We were as insignificant as we could possibly be. The big guys were the Shades. At one point, Larry Raspberry tried out for our guitar player. He never took the job. I don’t know what happened, but he showed up one day. He had a Stratocaster with ‘Larry’ engraved on the fingerboard like Ernest Tubb.”

Winchester’s life took a major turn when he went to Canada to avoid the draft. It’s not a subject he readily addresses. It’s a complex decision for a young man and a philosophical quandary for an adult. “I really couldn’t tell you in simple words what my thoughts and feelings were,” Winchester says. “I don’t know if I could do that.”

The decision kept him in exile until President Carter pardoned draft dodgers in 1977. But in 1968, he encountered a life-altering opportunity.

“I was in the basement of a church where this guy owned a really nice two-track tape recorder. He offered to let me use it. We set it up in the basement of the church, and I would make a demo tape of some songs that I’d written. A friend of a friend lived in Montreal and knew Robbie Robertson. The Band had just hit big with Music from Big Pink. I had heard that and been knocked out because here was somebody playing musical parts as opposed to 30-minute stoned-out guitar solos that went nowhere and started nowhere. The Band represented a kind of return to roots. I was really impressed and thought music was ready for that. Anyway, this friend of a friend brought Robbie down into the basement of the church.”

Robertson eventually produced Winchester’s first self-titled album: “He liked the songs. And it was convenient because we were working on the demo at the time. So everything fell into place. He took a copy to Albert Grossman, who was their manager at the time. He was Gordon Lightfoot’s and Bob Dylan’s manager. Janis Joplin’s manager. As big as you can get. Albert liked it. That’s how my recording career began.”

By the time things were up and running, the situation proved to be short-lived.

“He produced the first record I made,” Winchester says. “We did it at Yorktown Studios in Toronto. We used a bunch of the guys who’d worked with Ronnie Hawkins but didn’t become the Band. Ken Pearson played keys, and Dave Lewis played drums — a lot of the leading lights of the Toronto music scene, which is a very good music scene at any time.”

Levon Helm played mandolin and shared drum duty on Jesse Winchester.

“I opened for the Band a few times when they did shows in Canada. There was one particular night we did together at Massey Hall, a beautiful concert hall with old wood, so it just sounds beautiful. We did a few other shows together. But it wasn’t long after that they quit playing entirely or at least touring. So doing further stuff with them wasn’t really an option.”

But songwriting has been the basis of Winchester’s success and notoriety. He began writing after being frustrated with live performance.

“After I moved to Montreal, I had some trouble getting stolen from by promoters with bands. I’d worked with bands most always, usually as a rhythm guitar player. The promoters would just take off with the money and what have you. All kinds of problems developed. So I just started to play solo in restaurants and that kind of thing. I got a job at a coffeehouse where you were expected to write your own songs like Bob Dylan did. I started writing when I started playing solo, and it never stopped. Except for dry spells.”

Accounting for dry spells, Winchester’s output is profound. His reception among the top-tier songwriters of his time is unreal: Tim Hardin recorded Winchester’s song “Yankee Lady.” Elvis Costello recorded “Quiet About It.” James Taylor cut “Payday.” The list goes on and on: Roseanne Cash, Jimmy Buffett, Vince Gill, Lucinda Williams, Little Feat, Lyle Lovett, and Allen Toussaint. It’s a staggering group of songwriters to have endorsing one’s output. They mostly cover his songs. But sometimes he gets together to collaborate.

“Every now and then someone invites me to sing harmony on something. Wynonna Judd did, and that was fun. The Weather Girls, if you remember “It’s Raining Men,” their follow-up song to that, which was a flop, was one of my songs. They invited me to sing harmony on it, which was fun. Jimmy Buffett and those people will invite me to collaborate. It happens, and it’s fun when it does.”

Winchester’s Memphis connections endure in ways old and new: “I live in Charlottesville, Virginia. I lived in Quebec until 2003, 37 years. Then I met Cindy, who, oddly enough, I met when I was playing in Memphis. She was living here, but she’s from Iowa. And, you know, you introduce a woman into the story and the plot zigs. And it zags.”

Winchester still has family here. Among those kin is notable drummer Graham Winchester, who toured Europe in March with fellow performer John Paul Keith.

As for Keith, he is busy promoting his latest solo album, Memphis Circa 3AM, which was one of Roland Janes’ last projects.

“It was the best-sounding session I’ve ever worked on,” Keith says. “He really did have it. Not only was it a privilege to be around him and to know him and all that, it was also the best session I’ve ever had. It came out as the best results I ever got. It was really special.”

Acoustic Sunday Live!

With Jesse Winchester, Mary Gauthier, and Motel Mirrors 

Sunday, December 8th, 7 p.m., $39-$100

Beth Sholom Synagogue

bsholom.org