Categories
Bluegrass Music

SPBGMA 2025 Summary

Last week I was in Nashville for the SPBGMA conference. Once again, I had a great time! I will be hitting there again next January, hoping to make even more connections. As I did last year, here are some of the good and bad points about the conference and Nashville:

QR Code Parking – I see some cities slowly getting rid of this nuisance, but not Nashville. I hit a downtown garage for 20 minutes and paid $7.00. Later in the weekend, I swallowed my pride and went to Elliston Place (more on that later), and the meter stated $1.75 for one hour. So I scanned the QR code, and then was charged another 68 cents for Travel Fee (my out-of-town license plate?). So now it is $2.43. I am in the restaurant for 20 minutes, and my phone shows a text that my time is almost up! I can see how they sucker people into paying more by this tactic.

Band Competition – There were a few good bands, but the one that I was most impressed with was Lake Side out of Madisonville, TN (www.lakesidegospel.com). The quartet performs mostly bluegrass gospel tunes, and it has some great harmonies. The guitarist for the band is Jonathan Manness, an old acquaintance that I knew from his playing with Valerie Smith & Liberty Pike. It was great seeing him after a number of years. I surely thought that they would place at least 2nd if not 1st, but they came in 5th place. For a list of the finalists, go to the Bluegrass Today website link (https://bluegrasstoday.com/2025-spbgma-international-band-championship-results/).

Alaskan Sunnyside Sisters – This band of young sisters was also in the competition, but did not make it as a finalist. Yes, they were still rough sounding and not truly professional, but I absolutely fell in love with them, as did much of the audience. They performed some bluegrass standards, reminding me a lot of The Peasall Sisters who performed for the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack. They are completely adorable, and are really enthusiastic to get better at their instrument playing and singing. I talked to their mother and told her that I would help in any way that I could to get them better. I also recommended that they listen to Hazel Dickens & Alice Gerrard music for some inspiration and song coverage. They made some good friends at the conference, including Whysper Stephenson, daughter of Larry Stephenson, who was more than happy to jam with them. I highly recommend that you check out some of their videos on their YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/@Alaskansunnysidesisters).

Hollace Oakes – I had blogged about this young fiddling prodigy a few months back (https://luegra.design.blog/2024/11/02/two-great-young-fiddlers/). I was hoping that she would show up at SPBGMA, as there are videos on YouTube of her at Galax and IBMA World of Bluegrass. I finally got to talk to her and her father late in the conference schedule, but told them that anything that I could do to help out her fiddling and potential career they should feel free to ask. I told her that it would be great to see her on the band competition stage next year, so hopefully she will be able to form a band to back her by then. She also posted a few videos of the week on her YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/@HollaceOakes).

Jamming – As expected, the four days of the conference saw a lot of jam sessions going on in rooms, the lobby and hallways. Because I was doing more networking for my songwriting, I wasn’t able to participate in any true jamming. However, some of what I heard was not only fantastic, but inspired me to write down some song ideas. If you go to YouTube and search “SPBGMA 2025,” I am sure that a few dozen videos will show up showing how great it was. Of course, my old body could not stay up too late to enjoy, so I had my earplugs in when I went to bed earlier than most others.

The Kaintuck Band – So this band was practicing in the room next to mine on Friday. I was in my room thinking that I had not heard any jammers playing one of my favorite songs, “Thirty Years of Farming,” by James King (written by Fred Eaglesmith). Sure enough, God strike me dead, within 10 seconds of that thought, the band next door kicked into it. It was like mental telepathy! Of course, I had to get my shoes on and go to their room and talk to them. Nice guys, the guitarist/singer was from La Grange, KY, where I usually stop on my way to Nashville to have breakfast at the Waffle House. I may have talked about this town before. The Main Street in town has active railroad tracks running right down the center, and there are videos on YouTube showing cars almost getting hit by locomotives. It totally reminds me of Mayberry on The Andy Griffith Show.

Jimmy Martin’s Guitar – There it was, on a guitar stand in the hotel lobby. I was ready to take a photo of it, but a relative of Martin’s was there, and she asked if I wanted to pick it up and play it. REALLY? I had to! Man, it was like touching a piece of Heaven!

Food – I hit the Waffle House a few blocks away from the hotel every morning. I absolutely love their Signature Bowl, and if you are there, you HAVE to have the waffles at least once! As stated previously, I went to the famous Elliston Place, but it wasn’t the same. It had moved out of its old location in the diner building and built a new, larger restaurant next door. The decor is the same, but not the spirit, The food is still great, but it seems like smaller portions. One thing that hasn’t changed is its selection of shakes and malts. I had a caramel malt, and I was in Heaven! I also visited the famous Prince’s Hot Chicken. There was a location only a few miles from my hotel, but because of construction the entire way, it took me almost an hour to get there. The place has a number of levels of chicken heat, from Mild to XXXHot. I went for the Medium, and one bite of the chicken fingers that I ordered was burning my tongue! Trust me, it was excellent, but if the Medium was that hot, I would NEVER go near anything more hot.

IMG Retail – I am going to do a whole blog about this place and experience next week, but let me say that it was such a fun experience that I plan on going back to Nashville sometime this spring or summer just to re-visit this place.

Bands – Along with the Larry Stephenson Band, other popular bands that performed at the awards show included The Grascals, Junior Sisk, Rhonda Vincent & The Rage, and Nothin’ Fancy. During the week, a number of other bands that performed included Dave Adkins, NU-BLU, Edgar Loudermilk, and my favorite band, The Kody Norris Show. One band that I had wanted to see for a long time was The King James Boys. They are a fantastic bluegrass gospel group, with amazing harmonies. There was a young lady sitting near me that seemed to know every word of every song that they performed. I asked her if she was related to anyone in the band. She said that she was not, just someone that was a big fan of the band. I immediately tagged her as a “Gospel Groupie,” a term that she and the band loved, and have proceeded to start writing a song about the experience.

Sylamore Special – This band won the band competition last year, and tradition is that the winner performs at the closing of the following year’s conference. The band was great back then, but has matured even more to being a fantastic bluegrass band this year. These younger performers have a good chance of being in the high ranks of bluegrass bands within a few years.

Songwriter Workshop/Showcase – I had complained about labeling this event as a workshop last year, and in some of the promotional material, it was deemed a “showcase.” However, some other material still listed it as a workshop. It still consisted of four bluegrass songwriters (Johnny Williams, Jeanette Williams, Donna Ulisse and Rick Stanley) performing some of their compositions to the audience. As I have stated previously, a workshop would be professional songwriters sitting down with aspiring ones and helping them to better their craft.

Well, that was one of my longer blogs, so I will end it there for now. Chew on it and comment.

Categories
Bluegrass Music Lutherie

Getting Ready for SPBGMA/Fesley Body Finishing

I leave for Nashville in less than two weeks for the SPBGMA conference, and I am getting ready in more ways than one. Packing clothes and medicines will get done a few days before, but what I am doing now is getting things done for my networking down there.

I have already posted two new songs on my ReverbNation page, and I may tag on one more before the week is over. I have learned that it is easier and less cumbersome to upload songs on the ReverbNation page and hand out business cards than making a bunch of demo CDs and handing them out. My problem is still getting the nerve to approach artists that I don’t already know.

I really didn’t do any jamming last year, so I plan to try and get into it more this year. I’ll take the Sevillana guitar down with me. Last year I took way too many guitars and a bass with me, and hardly opened up a case let alone jammed. Plus, It takes up way too much room in my small car.

I have already set up some time with one songwriter to hopefully do some co-writing. The conference ends Sunday, but I’ll be sticking around Monday just for the reason of possible songwriting work.

I’m not sure if I will be doing any contacting for article writing. I haven’t heard back from my editor at Fiddler Magazine in a long while. I sent in an article recently, and ever since the magazine went online-only, It has been hard to stay in touch.

I’m also taking down a lot of 12-packs of Vernors Ginger Ale. This is a Detroit staple, and I know a lot of friends down there that crave it and can’t get it in Nashville.

If the weather is behaving, I will probably hit Rosine, Kentucky on the way down and pay my respects to Bill Monroe. It is a time-consuming detour, but I feel it has to be done when the opportunity arises.

Of course, I have to hit the Waffle House, Jack’s BBQ, and I hope to visit another Nashville eatery institution, Prince’s Hot Chicken. The original location is just a few miles from my hotel down there, so I don’t have an excuse. While I’m not a big fan of hot chicken, I do like to try places that are featured on food-related television shows and YouTube channels. I’ve seen some great stories about Prince’s, so it is a must!

Changing topics, I decided to get started on finishing one of the guitar bodies. I’m starting with the Fesley Strat body, since it was the best set-up already smooth sanded. I buffed it a bit more with OOOO grade steel wool. It is too cold to do spray painting outside, and I don’t have good ventilation for spraying inside the house, so I’m trying my hand at stain/finishing it with a combination stain and polyurethane coating and a brush. It is a lot more difficult to work with than I imagined, as the stain does not seem to go on that even, perhaps due to the polyurethane. I will probably end up doing at least five or six coats and sanding between them. I do like the color that came out. I am using a stain labeled Mahogany, and on the mahogany body, it darkens it nicely. The label says you can do sanding and re-coating after an hour, but I plan to let it dry for a day and see what happens.

Chew on it and comment.

Categories
Bluegrass Music

I’m Going to SPBGMA/Billy Strings

I apologize for being late on this blog, and I am keeping this one short.

Well, I sent in my registration for SPBGMA 2023 in Nashville in January! I really need this vacation, as I haven’t been on any getaway for over three years. Someone hit-and-run my car last week, so I was considering not going due to the cost of repairs. However, if I don’t get away for a few days, and use these next few months to look forward to the vacation, I will probably snap! The AMA AmericanaFest and the IBMA World of Bluegrass conferences used to be my regular trips, but since both organizations have become so political, I’ve passed on them for over two years now, and I don’t miss going (although I do miss seeing some of my friends there).

Although it is not as big as AMA or IBMA, SPBGMA shows itself to be non-political, just there for the love of the music. That is good enough for me, as I just want to listen, jam, and maybe shop some of my songs around. Watching some of the videos from the last SPBGMA conference, I am sure that I will have a blast! I hope to see some old bluegrass friends, make some new connections, jam in the hallways, get some artists to be interested in my songs, and talk to some fiddlers about articles for Fiddler Magazine.

Here’s another cool thing that Billy Strings does. In addition to his charity work of donating guitars to underprivileged kids, he loves to give people a free taste of what his live shows are like. In cooperation with nugs.net, Strings will broadcast the first 15 minutes of his current show live on YouTube for free, and for anyone interested in seeing the entire show, that person can pay to have the show streamed. Trust me, those first few minutes of a Billy Strings show are powerful, and even if you don’t purchase the streaming service, you will be amazed at his talent for free! Yeah, the first three or four minutes of the free broadcast are loaded with advertisements, but it is worth the wait.

Chew on it and comment.

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