{"id":1043859,"date":"2023-11-16T15:07:32","date_gmt":"2023-11-16T20:07:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.immortalitymedicine.tv\/valerie-june-and-old-crow-medicine-show-are-rippling-the-pond-talkhouse\/"},"modified":"2024-08-17T17:08:57","modified_gmt":"2024-08-17T21:08:57","slug":"valerie-june-and-old-crow-medicine-show-are-rippling-the-pond-talkhouse","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/longevity-medicine\/valerie-june-and-old-crow-medicine-show-are-rippling-the-pond-talkhouse.php","title":{"rendered":"Valerie June and Old Crow Medicine Show Are Rippling the Pond &#8230; &#8211; Talkhouse"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Ketch Secor is the    frontman of the Americana band Old Crow Medicine    Show, as well as an author and a    teacher based in Nashville; Valerie June is a    singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and author from    Memphis. Earlier last month, the two old friends got on a Zoom    call to catch up about Valeries new guided    workbook, the origin story of their    friendship, Nashville, and much more.     Annie Fell, Editor-in-chief, Talkhouse    Music  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch Secor: Where are you?  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie June: Im headed down to Texas this week     Im in New York right now  and then to Tennessee.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Back home again.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Yeah. What about you?  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Im here in Nashville. I just    got in off the road. Tell me about your trip to Africa!  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Oh, my goodness, it was so amazing. It    was the trip of a lifetime. The first thing that I experienced    was being on this tiny, tiny plane and landing on a dirt    landing strip in Lamu, [Kenya]    which is right on the beach. And then the way you get around in    Lamu is by either boat, donkey, or walking.    [Laughs.] So that was new for    me. I performed, I read poetry, and I got to collaborate with    artists from different parts of Africa. There were some    musicians from South Africa, some from Kenya, some from    Tanzania, Uganda. It was a small gig  its called    Littlegig     and it was really, really cool just to hear other    peoples work. There were painters and fashion designers, and    writers, and you would just go to their show and listen to    their talk or their speech or whatever. And from there I went    to the safari. Have you been on a safari, Ketch?  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: I have not. But the first part    youre describing sounds so inspiring. I love the thought about    the fellowship of trans-continental artistry and finding like    minds from different cultures. Ive taken such a deep dive on    African folk music styles, particularly equatorial Africa  so    music from Tanzania to Zimbabwe and Zambia and Congo, I know so    much more about it than I ever did at any other time in my    life. So I want to get this gig!  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Well, the thing about it too is, you and    I were talking at Edmonton Folk Festival, and I was telling you    that I was going and you were like, Oh, they have a huge    country music scene in Kenya. And so when I returned from the    safari and went to Nairobi, I went to a record shop in this    market. It was full of all these vinyl records and 78s and all    kinds of things, and this older gentleman owned it. I was    looking through the records, and there was a lot from the Congo    and a lot from many different parts of Africa, but the biggest    section in the record shop was country music. You wouldnt    believe it. And so I said to the gentleman, Do a lot of people    here listen to country music? He was like, Are you kidding?    Tons of people! And he was like, I dont really like it, but    I sell a lot of it    [Laughs.]  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Thats great. I feel like Nashville has a    lot of work to do in its creating the relationships with the    far flung places that have been impacted by country music, and    I think that Africa is certainly a principal among them. But I    also think that there are other regions of the country that    Nashville just doesnt really consider as part of its story.    One place I always wanted to go  theres two places on Earth    that are on my bucket list, and one is Equatorial Africa, and    the other is the Arctic of Canada  another place where people    love country music, where you can play country songs up there    and people just go wild for it. Its entered the    consciousness.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Wow. Every time I talk to you, its like    speaking with an encyclopedia. I love it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Lets let em know how we first met,    because I think our story is a pretty interesting one.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Well, I was in Memphis and I got invited    to open for Old Crow at Rhodes College, and thats what I    remember. I was such a fan. I was very, very excited to get    that invitation. It was like, Oh, my goodness,    I cant believe it! And the students of Rhodes    College were the ones who put my name in the hat, and thats    how I got so lucky.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Well, I dont remember it that way at all,    because all I remember was walking into a room and seeing you    play and being instantly fascinated, a fan  interested,    wanting to know more, loving what you were doing, and knowing    that I was seeing somebody who was doing something that that I    loved already in a different way than anybody Id ever seen do    it before. And thats a pretty, thats a jaw-dropping    experience, because by that time Id been in Old Crow for about    15 years or something  Id been around the block  and yet you    were just such a captivating performer. I think you were doing    a Carter family tune, or just a really old song, and doing it    with such a unique voice that I was stopped in my tracks. You    were playing on a different floor of this sort of student    conference center, and it was pouring down rain outside. I just    knew right then and there I needed to learn everything I could    about you, and I remember walking up to you, and I think I    boldly asked if I could get your number. And I think I called    you the next day.    [Laughs.]  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: I was so shocked at your warmth because,    I mean, everybody knows Wagon    Wheel  I knew every lyric. Sometimes, you    know, you meet people that you respect and admire, and theyre    big stars, and youre like, Oh, my god, they    werent very sweet. And you just beam, in    every way, and the band as well. You were like, Hey, if you    ever want to record some music, let me know, because Im just    in Nashville and if you come our way, well make it happen. So    yall invited me up, I said, Sure, Im going to do it. And we    went to  was it Whites Creek?  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Yeah. You came over, it was    wintertime because I remember it was really cold  and I    feel like it might have been around maybe 2011 or 10 or 12 or    09. I get mixed up on the dates, but you had already done some    work in Nashville. You knew some people. And of course, your    sister was at MTSU, so you had that family connection. I was    impressed with how far along you already were, and I was just    trying to be a collaborator. But we made some music together    and recorded it, and Gill    [Landry] and me  and Bo    Stapleton, I think, was pretty influential on it, too, and this    guy Larry, who had that studio up in Whites Creek. Thats all    no more. I think theres, like, 17 tall, skinny houses where    that all was.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Wow. Well, it did feel like we were    driving far out into the country. Even though its very close    to the city, its rural out there, so it reminded me a lot of    where I grew up  Humboldt, Tennessee  and just being in the    middle of the country. And you mentioned that I knew people in    Nashville  my lawyer at the time, Coy Martin, introduced me to    all these people. We would meet people, and those connections    were grounding for me in my career, but the doors just werent    opening. The doors opened after working with you, and just the    warmth  yall created a home and a space for me in that in    Nashville. Because I certainly didnt feel very embraced at    first, when I hit the ground there. So it was great to meet    yall and see a different side of it. And then we did a    performance over at  I cant remember the name of it, but it    was a family restaurant type place.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: You and me played at a family    restaurant?  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Yeah! In Nashville. It was    like a restaurant, but they had music. And so we got to do some    of the songs in front of an audience after recording them. I    cant remember what the name of that place was, but that was so    cool.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: I just remember getting ready for the    showcase gig. Because, I mean, I always wanted to do more than    just be a singer-songwriter guy. I wanted to be a producer guy.    And I also had management type instincts. I always was really    interested in the business of music just as much as I was in    the performance of it, or the conjuring of it. And so I was 30    or something when we met, and you were somebody who made me    think, Oh, maybe Im supposed to get into    another side of this work. Maybe Id be like a    talent scout, you know? Because I always thought that a woman    like you belonged in country music and in Nashville, and yet it    didnt seem like Nashville thought that at all. And I wanted to    stand up to that, because I felt like Davey and that looked    like Goliath to me, and I wanted to hit him in the eye with a    rock and wake him up out of its slumber to say, This is a    woman from an hour outside of Nutbush, Tennessee  this is what    Tennessee music sounds like! Nashville, especially 10, 12    years ago, was a lot more old guard. Its a tough word, but the    country music business has had a bit of an apartheid-like    stance for about 100 years, and its been an edifice that needs    to be cracked really deliberately. Its a wall that needs to    come down brick-by-brick, and its still coming down. And yet    as it comes down, its still being erected, so we really gotta    hustle to take it apart. I just feel like thats what I was    called to do.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Deep breath on my end there.    [Laughs.] In all these years,    I see the growth and Im so grateful for it, and the way you    just said that  Im emotional today anyway, but definitely it    brings a few tears to the sides of my eyes. Because being from    Tennessee and that being my home  Joyce Cobb is a Memphis jazz    musician and years ago she said, You sound amazing. If you    ever want to make it, you need to leave here. I was    like, OK.    [Laughs.] Shes an older woman    and she is very successful  she teaches at Memphis University     and it just really hurt me. I dont want to hear that. But    she was very wise to say that.  <\/p>\n<p>    And its still like that to me, because I feel that in    Tennessee, we embrace things outside ourselves, but we dont    really embrace what is there  what was born drinking that    muddy water from the Forked Deer River or walking those fields    where the cotton was grown. Well embrace all the other states    and well embrace anything but what came from our own. And so    the way you just said that, I couldnt have said it any better.    But to be embraced at all and be of color is worth something.    Ill say that. So were getting somewhere.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Well, its about damn time, Ill say    that.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie:    [Laughs.] Yes, Lord. Its a    little wild. But you know, as you said, as soon as we were    [taking down] this one side,    then this other side is being built at the same time. But    thats why I like to work in spirit ways, and I like to work    small, because I think the work of just laying one brick at a    time, were doing this for the future. We might not see the end    result be what we want it to be in our lifetime  because for    you, you said [its been] 15    years youve been doing your own music with Old Crow before you    even met me, and you and I have known each other for a decade    now! So this work is long. It takes a lot of longevity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Well, Ive loved seeing where youve taken    things since I first crossed paths with you, and did my best to    try and impart wisdom and fellowship for you in those early    days. You just took to flight. So its been pretty cool to see    the ways that that youve grown, adapted, and expressed    yourself, going on to New York and making some really powerful,    critically acclaimed records and becoming a mainstay on the    circuit. I didnt see you there because you were working so    hard for about five years after we first met, and then we    caught up in Australia in about 2016 or 17. And thats when I    got to finally touch down with you and learn about some of some    of the things that you were feeling and thinking. Since then, I    only got to spend a little bit of time with you this summer  I    guess I thought when I first met you that I was going to see a    whole lot more of you in my life. Im glad that this    conversation has brought us back together, and that show we did    up in Alberta. And your book, which you just sent to me  tell    me a little bit about that. Im an author, too, and Im curious    how its been for you since your book came out.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Well, its been a month, and I was in    Africa when it came out. Its been really sweet since, because    I went on tour right after I got back, and we did something    before the performances that was like a mini workshop. We    didnt allow any more than 30 people to come to the venue    before the performance, and we did some of the exercises from    the book together. It was so wonderful to just have that    one-on-one contact with people, and then afterwards, them be    able to ask me questions about sharing light and beauty in this    dark world.  <\/p>\n<p>    What I found with this book is that it opens the door for    conversations to be had, and for me to learn from my listeners    and from people that are inspired by my work. Im learning so    much there. Its a guide book, a guided journal  so its like,    I dont feel like I have any answer for what this world could    be, but I think collectively we all have a lot of questions,    and if we start asking them of each other and having    conversations and holding space, then we start writing new    stories. And thats kind of whats been happening in small    spaces for me.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: I just love the concept behind the guided    journal, that theres a collectivism to us telling our personal    stories. I cant think of a better contribution  and really a    more Valerie June way of putting herself out there. Its so    you. I remember when your first record came out and you had a    moniker for it that was so original  I think it had the word    moonshine in it, and it might have had organic in it    too.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie:    [Laughs.] Organic moonshine    roots music.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: [Laughs.]    Thats right, thats what you called it! I think youve always    had a unique way of expressing yourself that is so true to you.    And that truth is just so refreshing, because theres a lot of    different ways to be a musician. One of them is to try and get    famous doing it, and I think thats a motivator for a lot of    people. I always saw you as a more process-oriented type of    artist who was just looking to make peaceful her corner of the    world.  <\/p>\n<p>    I feel myself more of a duality. I feel resigned to folk    music. You know, I probably wanted to rock  I probably wanted    to be an actor or a tap dancer or a movie star  but through    the twists and turns of my coming of age, I gravitated towards    the banjo and the fiddle, and that became my soapbox. But it    also became my ceiling, because I think Ive taken it as far as    you can take a fiddle and a banjo. But I always wanted to take    it further. I think that for me is one of the reasons why Ive    sought out artists like you and others, and have sought to work    with them in the capacity of development so that I can help    expand it, make the ceiling higher. You know, if I can make the    ceiling higher for you, then Im making it higher for me    too.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: And you are such an excellent mentor for    me and so many of us coming up. Watching you even in being an    author and knowing, Oh, well, thats possible    too, the door is open there, too. I dont have to just choose    one form of using my creativity. Whats it    like for you? Do you feel divided when youre writing a book?    Do you feel like youre not focusing on your music? Or do they    go side by side?  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Well, I wrote this book  its a childrens    book and its called Lorraine: The Girl Who    Sang the Storm Away, and it is a book that I    first started thinking about when I was a kid myself, about 18.    I had been up in East Tennessee, where behind me there was a    tobacco field. I was squatting in this old ladys house, didnt    have any running water  it was sort of like some intentional    hillbilly boot camp kind of lifestyle thing that Old Crow was    doing back in the late 90s. And so this elderly woman had    given me her house to stay in as long as I fixed it up. West    Tennessee is really different from East Tennessee, particularly    when it comes to topography  you know, East Tennessee has    really high and rugged mountains, and West Tennessee is rolling    hills. But what West Tennessee has a lot of is ramshackle,    fallen down houses, and thats what I was living in up on the    east side of the state.  <\/p>\n<p>    Anyway, I met this woman of Cherokee descent named    Lorraine, and she told me a story about her pet crow and I    started thinking, Thatd be a good story for    kids. So I spun out this book, but I couldnt    find anybody to illustrate it. The publisher was sending all    these cheesy, sort of computer generated looking graphics, and    finally I was on the website of the art college here in    Nashville, and I met this woman, Barbara Higgins Bond. Now,    Barbara, who went to Memphis State and is from Little Rock, was    the first African-American woman to design a US postage stamp.    She hadnt illustrated a book in 20 years  shes in her early    70s now. Well, I brought her out of retirement, and she created    this character based on her granddaughter, and its just been    such a powerful combination of her artwork and my words to be    able to tell the story. Ive read this book to more than 10,000    children, and I just know that the change that we want to see    in the world begins with sitting down with kids and    exemplifying peace and love and and opportunity.  <\/p>\n<p>    We live in a tough state. You know, theres a high infant    mortality rate in our state, one of the highest in the country.    There is a low graduation rate, one of the lowest in the    country. Tennessee is a problematic place for children to come    of age, so its just ever so important that artists like you    and I take a stand for our kids, because the continuum    continues and we really gotta raise them up. Right?  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Its true. Ive visited several schools    around the kids book, Somebody to    Love, and so many of the schools, in a musical    state, dont have much of a music program anymore. So the kids    were really excited to have music coming in. And I was just    coming in to play and and read the story. But I think about it     and the literacy rates and just ways we can get kids excited    about learning and growing in that way  and music, I think, is    a big way to do that. I think its a good way to open the door    for kids, because most kids love sound. They love just playing    with sounds and seeing where it goes, you know? So if you can    somehow connect that to science and math and reading, then    youre getting ahead on something. Hows your school?  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Oh, pretty good. Were in our eighth year.    We got a permanent building now. We got 150 kids  when I    started it, there were 16. So its really coming along. Its    not without its problems, because its so hard to raise money,    but, you know, both my children go to this school, and 153    other kids. About half of them are on scholarship, and we have    a really great, diverse community. I think a lot about the    concept that others and, of course, Dr. King came up with    called the Beloved Community  and Valerie, I feel like you and    me are in the Beloved Community together. And I think that our    work together and as individuals expands the Beloved Community    to include others. So youre over there in Tanzania, and youre    inviting people into your Beloved Community that we all share,    and Im inviting people in and I want people of all stripes in    my Beloved Community, because thats what makes it so    beloved.  <\/p>\n<p>    We got a short time here and theres a lot of work to be    done. I know Im feeling really heavy hearted about the affairs    of the world, and I was curious how youre feeling when you    turn on the news.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Definitely super emotional. I have days    where, you know, I just cry. But I also have never felt more    moved to create spaces of beauty and to highlight beauty, and    to use beauty as a political force. Because what we really want    to see, us in the Beloved Community, is more expansion of    beauty. And so I think where we focus our energy is what we    create. So while I think we need to know whats going on in the    news and we need to be aware of whats happening in the world,    we also have to take that and be alchemists with that energy.    We cannot stay in the place of the heaviness and the darkness.    We have to use that as motivation for creating and expanding    the Beloved Community. Because every single second that we    spend spiraling and spinning and feeling helpless is a second    that we could be spending in the opposite    direction.  <\/p>\n<p>    So, I dont know. I feel that sometimes when I talk about    beauty or I think about beauty, or I speak about small things    or what a single person is able to do with one breath or one    thought, it just seems like speaking to the side of a brick    wall or something. Because people really, really want to hear    something thats going to make them jump up and feel some kind    of rage or whatever. But I think theres something to be said    for creating a space of something beautiful and something tiny    in just your home, your heart, your community and how that    expands out across the world.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Im glad youre not getting too down to    continue that work. I agree with you. And yet, sometimes it    feels like Im watching the children of Gaza flee or the    children of Israel run from bullets and I think,    Wait, Im supposed to write songs? Im supposed to    make sure that my kids go to the orthodontist?    What are my responsibilities in comparison to, you know,    the moms and dads of Crimea or the east of Ukraine? So I feel a    little bit paralyzed sometimes when I take scope of my artist    life and the privileges of having a life in which the expansion    of beauty seems like thats what Im here to    do.All you can do in the wake of tragedy, if    youre a person like you or me, is sing and build community and    offer music as restorative, as hope, as optimism, as healing,    as mourning, as lamentation. But were dealing with notes and    sounds, and it just feels like when the perpetrator is dealing    in bullets or in crimes or in injustice or in environmental    catastrophe  going back to little Davey and big old Goliath,    its just like hurling stones at a missile thrower, hurling    rocks at a rocket ship. It just seems like you have to make an    awful lot of beauty in the world if youre going to counteract    all the evil, all the ugliness.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: As I think about that, I think about my    ancestors and what they went through as enslaved people, and    what the mindset of being like Harriet Tubman had to be to pull    out of conditions that were war zones. And even for our kids    living in Memphis  which is such a violent town, and theyre    not even able to go out on the street and play  I think    about, Well, what does the mindset have to be    in order to truly embody Dr. Kings Beloved Community? What do    I need to think today as I watch these kids run in fear in war    zones? What do I need to do? What can I do? What is my space    and where is my power? Because every day were    making small choices that add up to justify certain things that    are happening in the world. And I think it starts first with    the mind. So having our minds in a certain space to open up a    way for growth to happen, for energies to shift. So thats what    I think in terms of beauty  that if my ancestors were to hold    on to the pain and the trauma only, then I would probably not    be sitting here free today. They had to shift their energy and    focus and call forth something new in order for that to even    start to be a possibility, they had to begin to see it. And so    if all we can see is the pain and the heaviness, then it makes    it very difficult for us to really, really start to put our    boots on the ground and move toward what we want it to be    like.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: Right on. I think its a    thorny branch, and you are the flower.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Uh, not alone.    [Laughs.] Not without you,    dont put me out there like that!  <\/p>\n<p>    Ketch: [Laughs.]    Yeah, well, were gonna keep rippling this pond together. Were    going to keep throwing the big rocks and making them splash and    making waves  and were going to ride them waves, and the new    generations coming up that is going to ride those waves. Im    really glad you reminded me of Memphis  theres so much work    that musicians can do to help be inspirations, to shine a light    in the dark places, in Memphis, Tennessee. We need it in    Nashville too. And we need each other. And Im so, so grateful    that the Great Spirit brought us together.  <\/p>\n<p>    Valerie: Me too, me too.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the original here:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.talkhouse.com\/valerie-june-and-old-crow-medicine-show-are-rippling-the-pond-together\" title=\"Valerie June and Old Crow Medicine Show Are Rippling the Pond ... - Talkhouse\" rel=\"noopener\">Valerie June and Old Crow Medicine Show Are Rippling the Pond ... - Talkhouse<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Ketch Secor is the frontman of the Americana band Old Crow Medicine Show, as well as an author and a teacher based in Nashville; Valerie June is a singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and author from Memphis. Earlier last month, the two old friends got on a Zoom call to catch up about Valeries new guided workbook, the origin story of their friendship, Nashville, and much more <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/longevity-medicine\/valerie-june-and-old-crow-medicine-show-are-rippling-the-pond-talkhouse.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[1246678],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1043859","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-longevity-medicine"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1043859"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1043859"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1043859\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1043859"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1043859"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1043859"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}