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The SteelDrivers



Last Updated: 10/7/2009

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Status: Single
City: NASHVILLE
State: Tennessee
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/31/2006

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Wednesday, January 28, 2009 

Current mood:  happy
Category: Music

The Loveless Cafe opened its new live music venue Friday night (Jan. 23) with an appearance by the SteelDrivers. With a nearly 1,000-person capacity, the Loveless Barn aims to be the club-sized venue of choice in Nashville’s western suburbs, an area where it is sorely needed. Impressive as the new building was, though, it was the SteelDrivers’ craftsmanship that made the evening for me. Making their entrance to a roaring ovation, the SteelDrivers played song after song, starting the next before applause from the previous one had faded.

To read the rest go to http://blog.cmt.com/2009-01-26/the-steeldrivers-set-the-mark-at-loveless-barn/

Wednesday, January 21, 2009 
They may have just burst onto the bluegrass scene in 2008, but the SteelDrivers have decades of music experience between them–separately, they’ve recorded with everyone from Al Green to Patty Loveless. Together, however, the SteelDrivers are far more than the sum of their individual talents, as they prove on their Grammy nominated single “Blue Side of the Mountain.”
Fans of pure, high lonesome tenors from the likes of Bill Monroe and Del McCoury may find themselves cringing at frontman Chris Stapleton’s voice, which sounds as though he starts his day with a hearty bowl of Gravel-O’s and a whiskey chaser. And even though Stapleton’s hit, radio-friendly songwriting—he’s written chartburners for Kenny Chesney, Josh Turner, and numerous others— may cost him some credibility with bluegrass purists, make no mistake: this is genuine.
Like some other singles we’ve reviewed at The 9513, “Blue Side of the Mountain” focuses on the struggle for inner peace and a sense of safety in a troubled world. Unlike Trent Tomlinson’s recent single “That’s How It Still Oughta Be,” however, “Blue Side of the Mountain” doesn’t lump Americans together under shaky umbrella terms like “we” or “us” while vaguely referring to an unknown time or place. When Stapleton howls “I’m going back to a world of shadow/Gotta find some peace ‘fore I lose my mind/On the blue side of the mountain/Where the sun don’t ever shine,” it’s impossible not to identify with him–something that Tomlinson’s track is lacking.
Fiddler Tammy Rogers chimes in with sweet harmony vocals, providing a startling contrast to Stapleton’s rasp. The arrangement is raw yet skilful, and most importantly it’s from the heart, making the song not only one of 2008’s strongest country/bluegrass/roots tracks, but a lesson to be learned by those inclined to overproduce.
The Grammy nod for “Blue Side of the Mountain” in Best Country Performance By a Duo or Group is a deserved nomination, certainly, but the fact that their competition includes award-magnets Brooks and Dunn as well as commercial favorite Sugarland puts the SteelDrivers squarely in the role of dark horse. We’ll have to see if substance can overcome style come Grammy night.
Thumbs Up
Juli Thanki is a The9513.com and PopMatters.com contributor. She can be reached via email. Check out “Happy-Go-Plucking,” the latest entry in her PopMatters column Torch & Twang.
www.the9513.com
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Friday, January 09, 2009 

3. The SteelDrivers - (Rounder) Bluegrass bands seem to come together and then disappear, but let's hope this quintet sticks around for awhile. The combustible element is singer and writer Chris Stapleton who gives his bluegrass a distinctive bluesy edge.

See the rest at http://www.countrystandardtime.com/d/article.asp?xid=1074

Friday, January 02, 2009 

Category: Music

Fiddler and vocalist Tammy Rogers, part of the hot bluegrass and acoustic music group The Steeldrivers, admits she didn't really have any expectations beyond just getting together and playing music she enjoyed when early collaborations began a couple of years ago with the other band members....

http://www.nashvillecitypaper.com/news.php?viewStory=65050&utm_source=newsle
tter1&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Dec-E-blasts

Friday, January 02, 2009 

Category: Music
Friday, January 02, 2009 

Category: Music

SteelDrivers, SteelDrivers: For a bluegrass record, this thing just gets in your face from the first note. Powerful stuff, and my dad loves it. "Blue Side of the Mountain."

http://blogs.houstonpress.com/rocks/2008/12/lonesome_onry_and_mean_2008s_h.p
hp

Friday, January 02, 2009 

Category: Music
Banjoist Richard Bailey, bassist Richard Fleming, guitarist Mike Henderson and fiddler Tammy Rogers give the Steeldrivers a formidable instrumental lineup. But the ace in the hole is lead singer Chris Stapleton, who
shakes the earth with a rumbling baritone growl that has more in common with soulful modern rockers than with high-lonesome tenors. Add Henderson and Stapleton's dangerous, distinctive songs about murderers and haunted souls, and the result is a rare bluegrass outfit you can't invite to church on Sunday.
http://blogs.dallasobserver.com/dc9/2008/12/top_10_country_albums_of_2008.ph
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Friday, January 02, 2009 

Category: Music

Forgive the five members of The SteelDrivers if they're a little leery about the whole moving-into-a-brand-new-year thing.

When 2008 began, Chris Stapleton, Mike Henderson, Tammy Rogers, Richard Bailey and Mike Fleming were preparing for the Rounder Records release of the band's debut album.

Twelve months later, The SteelDrivers' self-titled album is the No. 1 seller on iTunes' year-end list of Americana and bluegrass albums, and The SteelDrivers is included in year-end Top 10 rankings from The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal and American Songwriter. Oh, and there's that Grammy nomination, too, in the country performance by a duo or group with vocals category.

http://www.tennessean.com/article/20081228/TUNEIN/812280324/1005/RSS6003

Friday, January 02, 2009 

Category: Music

The SteelDrivers are five accomplished musicians who joined forces in Nashville to form a bluegrass band unlike any other -- and not merely because singer Chris Stapleton owes as much to Memphis soul as he does to the high lonesome tradition. Every song on "The SteelDrivers" (Rounder) is a gem, which befits a group that sprang from songwriting sessions. The album reminds us how spectacular acoustic country music can be.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123005281362230443.html

 

Wednesday, December 17, 2008 

Current mood:  validated
Category: Music

On the iTunes Top 2008,  Best Americana / Bluegrass Albums category, The SteelDrivers are NUMBER 1…......... followed by Robert Plant/ Alison Krauss.  Word.