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The Steel Wheels
Leave Some Things Behind

The Steel Wheels — Leave Some Things Behind (April 14, 2015)

      The Steel Wheels — Leave Some Things Behind 
Location:
Album release: April 14, 2015
Record Label: Big Ring Records
Duration:     49:25
Tracks:
01. We've Got a Fire      3:28
02. So Lonely      4:09
03. Heaven Don't Come by Here      3:59
04. End of the World Again      4:13
05. Milo      1:53
06. Help Me      3:22
07. Old Guitar      3:57
08. Promised Land      3:07
09. Mountains Quake      2:01
10. Find Your Mountain      3:26
11. Winter Is Coming      4:18
12. Worn Wool, Soft Leather      2:42
13. Rescue Me, Virginia      4:11
14. Every Song Is a Love Song      4:39
℗ 2015 Big Ring Records
© The Steel Wheels
Editorial Reviews
♣  2015 release from roots outfit. Some things come to be in their own time, of their own accord. Such has been the case with The Steel Wheels. In the beginning, it was simply a matter of four young men who'd happened to cross paths at a formative moment in each of their lives reveling in the shared experience of plucking acoustic instruments and blending their voices. But over the years, what had begun organically as a pure lark evolved into a mission: to fuse the personal with the universal, the deeply rooted past with the joys and sorrows of everyday existence. These thematic and stylistic vectors intersect powerfully on Leave Some Things Behind, a deeply human, emotionally authentic work that interweaves timely songs with timeless sounds. On the album, co–produced and engineered by Ben Surratt, the four band members are joined on various tracks by roots–music luminary Tim O'Brien, Nashville–based singer/songwriter Sarah Siskind, drummer Travis Whitmore and Hammond B3 player Ethan Ballinger. Together, they've wrought a work that is musically intricate and conceptually resonant, the sounds serving the songs at every moment.
REVIEW
BY MICHAEL VERITY; May 1st, 2015
♣  The Steel Wheels' fourth studio album, Leave Some Things Behind, is about transience, the spiritual comings and goings that Buddha started telling us about 2,500 years ago (before Tibetan lute players invented the merch table). It’s about the double–edged sword of those device-driven distractions that many of us love but stand in the way of loving our loved ones. It’s about staying clear about our intentions and being forthright in our actions. It’s about leaving some things behind to discover something new — as on the opening song, "We’ve Got a Fire," the band’s testament to remaining true to their goals of creating music in community with their audience.
♣  Inspired by a backstage rant by singer and songwriter Fred Eaglesmith, it opens with the tightly wound tenor of Trent Wagler gone a cappella before the band drops into a country backbeat tune about "the truth" as they know it. "So Lonely" highlights Wagler's greatest songwriting strength — his ability to write a love song about home, whether it be the literal fires of the hearth or the figurative fires of the spirit. The harmonies here, provided by mandolinist Jay Lapp and fiddler Eric Brubaker, are typically stellar. The band explores their affection for the deep Southern sounds of the wind blowing through the mossy trees on the funereal ballad, "Heaven Don’t Come by Here."
♣  “Turn off the noise. I’ll light you a candle,” sings Wagler on "End of the World Again," quite possibly one of the most beautiful songs of homecoming ever written. Flanked by Brubaker’s supremely tasteful fiddle melodies, the band notes that “you can’t help but leave some things behind” when you reach the end of the world again. Lapp’s composition, "Milo" is a healthy hoedown of a tune, an instrumental free–for–all that dispenses with ideas of fancy shredding to instead focus on the nuances of the band as a whole.
♣  The second half of this 14–song set includes a beautifully done homage to the spirit of a well–worn "Old Guitar," a delicate ode to the passing of the seasons ("Winter Is Coming"), a spunky barndance barrel full of harmonies called "Warm Wool, Soft Leather," and the slightly bluesy "Every Song Is a Love Song" (which tips the band's affection for a little rock and roll).
♣  Ever since the Steel Wheels caught the world’s attention with the brilliant a cappella rendering of "Rain in the Valley," they’ve consistently delivered some of America’s finest modern string music. Wagler’s tightly wound tenor is Virginia personified, and his songwriting rich and thoughtful. Brubaker is as tasteful as any fiddler on the scene, with Lapp’s string work and Brian Dickel’s bass foundations being thoroughly tasteful. This is an excellent record.
♣  http://www.thebluegrasssituation.com/
Website: http://thesteelwheels.com/
BIO
♣  Some things come to be in their own time, of their own accord. Such has been the case with The Steel Wheels. In the beginning, it was simply a matter of four young men who’d happened to cross paths at a formative moment in each of their lives reveling in the shared experience of plucking acoustic instruments and blending their voices. But over the years, what had begun organically as a pure lark evolved into a mission: to fuse the personal with the universal, the deeply rooted past with the joys and sorrows of everyday existence.
♣  These thematic and stylistic vectors intersect powerfully on Leave Some Things Behind (released April 14 on the band’s own Big Ring label), a deeply human, emotionally authentic work that interweaves timely songs with timeless sounds. On the album, co–produced and engineered by Ben Surratt, the four band members — lead singer/guitarist/banjo player Trent Wagler, standup bass player Brian Dickel, fiddler Eric Brubaker and mandolin player Jay Lapp — are joined on various tracks by rootsmusic luminary Tim O’Brien, Nashville–based singer/songwriter Sarah Siskind (who co–wrote two songs and sang on another), drummer Travis Whitmore and Hammond B3 player Ethan Ballinger. Together, they’ve wrought a work that is musically intricate and conceptually resonant, the sounds serving the songs at every moment.
♣  Memorable original tunes like the sorrowful “Heaven Don’t Come by Here,” the anxious “End of the World Again,” the a cappella tour de force “Promised Land,” the indigenously metaphorical “Find Your Mountain,” the autobiographical “Rescue Me, Virginia” and the climactic “Every Song Is a Love Song” are bound by a plainspoken eloquence and an unforced urgency, while the dual kickers “We’ve Got a Fire” and “Warm Wool, Soft Leather” seem tailor–made for the Grand Ole Opry stage circa 1968 — as if intimating some of those precious things we’ve left behind.
♣  The band’s genesis dates back to 2004, when Wagler, Dickel and Brubaker were college students in Harrisonburg, Virginia, which sits in the Shenandoah Valley an hour’s drive from Charlottesville. “The school we met at is Eastern Mennonite University,” Wagler recalls, punctuating the reveal with a wry chuckle. “That begs the next question, which is, ‘Why in the world did you go to Eastern Mennonite University?’ One of the unique things about our band is that all four of us grew up in Mennonite families — and I hesitate to even use the word because many people who don’t have much experience with Mennonites see that as Amish, but that’s not accurate. It was more of a secular Mennonite upbringing. So that was where the three of us met, but we didn’t start the band right away.”
♣  As undergraduates, Wagler played bass and Dickel guitar in a punk–leaning alternative band, but over time they developed an interest in acoustic music, as Trent learned flatpicking and began writing songs, while Brian studied guitar making at a school for aspiring luthiers. They began performing casual gigs as a duo, and it wasn’t long before Brubaker began playing with them, expanding the nascent group’s sound with his fiddle and bass voice, which enriched the harmonies. Once Wagler crossed paths with mandolin player Jay Lapp on the local folk circuit, the lineup was complete — although none of them realized at the time that these four like–minded friends had begun the process of becoming a going concern. After making an album together under Wagler’s name, they continued to play informally for the next half decade, while also recording a 2007 LP as Trent Wagler and the Steel Wheels. Concurrently, they worked day jobs and started families.
♣  Finally, they took the leap of faith, throwing their lots together as The Steel Wheels, a band name redolent of steam–powered railroad trains, America’s industrial age and the buggies of their Mennonite forebears. Their initial offering as a committed unit, 2010’s Red Wing, put the newly minted full time band on the map at the dawn of the folk–music renaissance; the LP spent 13 weeks on the Americana Music Association’s Top 40 chart, while the track “Nothing You Can’t Lose” was named Best Country Song at the Independent Music Awards. The Steel Wheels’ visibility continued to increase via 2011’s Live at Goose Creek, 2012’s Lay Down, Lay Low (the IMA’s Album of the Year) and 2013’s No More Rain (the last–named containing live–off–the–floor re–recordings of pre–Red Wing material), they spent much of their time traveling the blue highways and interstates behind these records, while Wagler found the time to build a stockpile of new songs.
♣  Leave Some Things Behind stands as the culmination of these five years of maturation and intensive roadwork. Whereas the previous albums were essentially collected snapshots of The Steel Wheels at certain points in time, the new work turns on a concept that dates back to Homer — and the Old Testament.
♣  “We had more songs for this record than ever before,” Wagler points out, “and that caused us to ask, ‘How does all this stuff fit together, and what’s it about?’ A theme emerged, which I’d been somewhat conscious of as I was writing — the Exodus theme. I don’t want to overstate the biblical aspect, but those biblical metaphors are big metaphors in our lives regardless of the institutions they come from. I was fascinated by the notion of going away from home to look for something. But the further we go toward something, the further we’re inevitably going away from something else, meaning those ideals come at a cost, sometimes small and mundane, sometimes huge. You see the theme running through the album, overtly in ‘Promised Land,’ hopefully in ‘Rescue Me, Virginia,’ and existentially in ‘Heaven Don’t Come by Here,’ which opens with the image of an unmarked grave. And ‘End of the World Again’ is about the things you leave behind when you leave home, and in following what you’re seeking, not knowing whether there’s gonna be anything left when you come back.
♣  “That narrative of following your dreams and stepping against your own comfort zone was replayed for me in the lives of my parents and grandparents, and I left home, too,” he continues. “It’s hardly a unique story; we live in a transient culture, and we move for many different reasons. That’s the personal side, but I think this music also connected to the other guys in the band in that all four of us are dads now. We travel and tour; that is our livelihood, and when we’re gone we’re really gone. But when we come off the road, we’re really home. So we live with that push and pull.”
♣  Home, family, community (further evidenced in the band’s annual Red Wing Roots Music Festival, the third edition of which will take place in July), a sense of belonging, seeking and finding, the pendulum of gains and losses — these are the Big Issues embedded into the fabric of Leave Some Things Behind, an album that promises to be as enduringly relevant for the listener as it will always remain for the dedicated artists who poured their hearts and souls into its creation.
♣  “What sets The Steel Wheels from the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia apart from many bands is the combination of their stellar instrumentals, accentuated by the one of a kind lead vocal of Wagler, and keenly supported by strong harmonies. Eric Brubaker on fiddle, Jay Lapp on mandolin, and Brian Dickel on bass weave in and out intricately throughout this record, painting vivid imagery which flows effortlessly, just teasing the lyrics enough to allow them to resonate within you.” — Country Standard Time
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The Steel Wheels
Leave Some Things Behind

 

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