Wow! Not sure what happened to this header, but it looks
artsy for now... In the meantime, buy some tickets!
“The distinguishing feature throughout is the couple’s caressing
harmonies, which carry on the legacy of Johnny and June, Gram and
Emmylou.” -- Maverick
“…the pair click together like an old belt buckle.” - - Independent
On Sunday
“Welch and Rawlings apart – its hard to recall two modern country
voices that dovetail as elegantly as this husband and wife team… A
dream.” - – Uncut
·
Check out Johnny’s exciting new record, EX TEMPORE on Rt. 8
Records:
As I listen to the new record by Johnny Irion I tell myself "boy,
you better get to work because this guy is kicking you in the
behind!" Ambitious is the word that comes to mind. Genre-bending
material with mind-blowing arrangements that twist and turn into
unexpected musical alleyways... but never a dead end. A must-have
for lovers of pop, roots and all-around great music. Count on me as
a fan for life." GARY LOURIS (The Jayhawks)
·
Biography
“Authentic.” “Timeless.” “Harmonious.” “Exhilarating.” Any or all of
these adjectives could describe the folk-rock sound created by Sarah
Lee Guthrie and Johnny Irion (eye-ree-un). The musical richness and
psychological depth of their initial collaboration, the fittingly
titled Exploration, is irrefutable proof that the disarming
granddaughter of Woody/daughter of Arlo and the prodigious South
Carolinian quite naturally bring out the best in each other.
The material
– 11 originals plus a previously unrecorded Pete Seeger song –
ranges from the stone country of “Swing of Things” and the
high-lonesome folk of “In Lieu of Flowers” to the Burritos-style
foot-stomper “Gotta Prove” and the rocking, biting social commentary
of “Gervais.” Particularly striking is the title song, which looks
out at an unsettling world from the sanctuary of a lasting
relationship. The track builds to a crescendo of squalling guitars
and thundering drums as Johnny and Sarah Lee sing, “Fear is what
they want / Don’t let ’em get your goat… No risk can be plain / And
the time is running off the clock.” At the other extreme is the
gentle acoustic ballad “Mixed Blessings,” the incandescent capturing
of an intimate moment in time. The distinguishing feature throughout
is the couple’s caressing harmonies, which carry on the legacy of
Johnny and June, Gram and Emmylou.
Johnny wrote six of Exploration’s songs, three are co-writes by the
duo and two are solely written by Sarah Lee - “Holdin’ Back” and
“Mornin’s Over” – which testify to her rich bloodlines, evidencing a
contemporary take on the profound simplicity that distinguished the
work of her legendary grandfather. The Guthrie legacy appears to be
in good hands for decades to come.
Exploration was produced by Gary Louris (of the Jayhawks) and Ed
Ackerson.
It features, among others, Louris and his bandmate Marc Perlman, Son
Volt veterans Dave Boquist and Eric Heywood, Irion’s childhood
friend Zeke Hutchins (who also drums for Tift Merritt) and Tao
Rodriguez Seeger, who guests on his grandfather Pete’s “Dr. King.”
Tom Rothrock (Beck, Elliott Smith, R.L. Burnside) mixed the album
and programmed the drum machine that crashes the hillbilly party of
“Gotta Prove.”
Sarah Lee was two years old when she made her singing debut
as part of a children’s chorus on Arlo’s 1981 album, Power of Love,
but she had little subsequent interest in making music herself,
although she was surrounded by it. “I think it was in me,” she says,
“but I wasn’t ready for it.” After graduating from high school in
1997, Sarah Lee agreed to tour-manage her father, who was emceeing
the Further Festival, on which members of the Grateful Dead were
joined by the Black Crowes. She got on so well with the Crowes and
Chris Robinson that, when the tour ended, she made what proved to be
a life-altering decision: “I knew all these cool rock & roll guys,
so I decided to move to L.A.”
Irion came out of the vibrant Carolina indie-rock scene of the early
’90s,
first as a member of Queen Sarah Saturday and later with Dillon
Fence. He, too, got friendly with Robinson while Dillon Fence was on
the road with the Crowes. Robinson convinced Irion to come out to
L.A. and join Freight Train, a band he was producing. That was in
the fall of ’97, just after Sarah Lee arrived in town. Whether by
serendipity or cosmic intervention, the two were on a collision
course; they met at an L.A. club and began dating a week later.
Their relationship was musical as well as romantic, although
tentatively so at first. Johnny provided melodies for Sarah Lee’s
Dylan-influenced poetry and played guitar while she sang. One night
in his Santa Monica apartment, he handed Sarah Lee an acoustic and
taught her a couple of basic chords. As she strummed, he started
playing licks over the top, “so that it sounded kinda good, for like
a second,” Sarah Lee recalls. Noticing a growing smile on her face
as she plucked the strings, Johnny turned to her and said, “It’s
fun, huh?” Johnny’s words echoed in her head for days afterward. “I
thought, ‘Gosh, it is fun,’” she remembers. “I’d never known that
side of it; music was like a business to me.” It was then that Sarah
Lee realized she’d discovered her true calling.
Sarah Lee had just applied for college when word of her musical
epiphany reached the family; she got a call from her mother urging
her to forget higher education and join her father on tour. So she
went out on the road with her dad – “I’m the comic relief in the
show,” she says with a laugh – but she always came back to Johnny. A
year and a half into their relationship, he proposed. “It totally
sideswiped me,” says Sarah Lee, “but I’ve always been a one-person
person. He solidified me and believed in me and my art.” They
married in 1999 and soon thereafter moved from hectic L.A. to
Irion’s birthplace, Columbia, S.C.
Two years later they simultaneously released solo albums on Arlo’s
Rising Son label. Since setting out on the road together in 2001,
they’ve averaged 180 shows a year. The next step was obvious – it
was time to make an album together. Louris was at the top of their
producer wish list, and they double-teamed him in Amsterdam late in
2003, while the couple was on the Blue Highways tour and the
Jayhawks were headlining one of their own. They convened last
February in Ackerson’s Minneapolis studio; inspired and brimming
with positive energy, the principals knocked off the record in 12
productive days. After New West’s Peter Jesperson caught an
extraordinary live show in Ventura, CA, he offered the duo a deal.
At once timely and timeless, the album marks the intertwined coming
of age of two vital and distinctive artists. The funny thing is,
when you hear them for the first time, you’ll probably feel like
they’ve always been there, singing in your ear. Think of Exploration
as an introduction to your newest old friends.
####
© 2005 Sarah Lee
Guthrie and Johnny Irion