The Chart-Topping Blackberry Bushes

Earlier this year, stringband The Blackberry Bushes recorded a full album project, Little Bit of Grace here at Empty Sea.  I engineered the album and co-produced the album with Matt Sirceley.  Since then, the album is in its second pressing and climbing the roots and bluegrass charts due to extensive radio play.

I had brunch with Jes Raymond and Jakob Breitbach from the Bushes to see what they’re up to, and over some delicious green chile eggs at the Four Spoons Cafe, they told me what they were up to.

Jes Raymond (Blackberry Bushes)

So, in March of this year, you guys recorded an album with me called Little Bit of Grace .  That album is now released to the world and doing pretty well – tell me what’s going on with it.

JES: Well, we’ve been touring that album and doing pretty well with it at shows, and we also did a radio promotional campaign with Hearth Music which has caused us to move up the charts in the last three weeks.  We started out at #54 on the FolkDJ-List chart, and then we appeared on the Roots Music Report chart the next week at #36 on the bluegrass chart – pretty exciting because that’s an international chart.  And then this past week we moved up to #19 on that chart – we beat out Rhonda Vincent, that’s our claim to fame.  We’re also #1 on that chart in the state of Washington.

That’s really awesome.  Where have you been traveling on tour?

JES: This spring we went down to Telluride, Colorado, then we did a loop back and around up the coast.  We’ve been out to the Midwest, the Mississippi River Valley, Chicago, and Minneapolis. Now we’re about to leave for the East Coast – we’re going to tour our through the Midwest again, then take ourselves from New England down to the Southeast and back.

So from your most recent tour, what were your most favorite and least favorite gigs?

JAKOB: Oof!  That’s easy. (laughs)

JES: On our last tour, we did a really wonderful small festival called the Boats and Bluegrass Festival that was right on the Mississppi River in Winona, Minnesota.  There were some really great bands – I was really impressed with them.  The people that put on the festival did a really good job for a startup festival of making it have the right energy!

JAKOB: You know a festival organizer spends time at the festival when he makes sure that the porta-potties are lit at night – and there was an exciting undercurrent to the whole festival because the river was rising one inch per hour – so two days after the festival finished the entire campgrounds were under about two feet of water.

Jes Raymond & Jakob Breitbach looking dapper

JES: So there was kind of a feeling of commitment for the people who were there.

JAKOB: Impending doom.

JES: Many of the artists camped, and we stayed up all night and created some memories we’ll keep, which was really great.

JAKOB: And the low point of the last tour was a no-turnout show in Des Moines, Iowa at 11 on a Sunday night.

Zero turnout?

JES: Well, it would have been zero which we were thinking would be kind of cool, because we had a video camera.  There was a nice stage, a good sound system, and we thought, “we’ll get a good video of this.”  But then these four kids who’d seen the poster came in – they thought we looked cool, and they wanted to see the show.  They stood right up front and we played to them!  But then when we looked back at the video it made it very obvious that there were four people watching us.

Four people clapping in an empty room.  (laughs)

JES: It was a low point without being a bummer.

JAKOB: We set ourselves up to have low expectations.

JES: There was a pool in the hotel.

So do you have future album plans?  Are you going to ride this one for a while?

JES: Really, we’ve already got enough tunes for another album, and our plan right now is to start working the songs that we’d like on our next album into our live set, and start playing with those in performance and see what happens by next spring.

There’s always that debate between recording fresh songs versus songs that you’ve polished up on tour.

JAKOB: We definitely did the unproven route on this last record.  It was good in a lot of ways.

JES: I like that in some ways.  I like the process of discovering in the studio.  But [the next record] is a different one and we’ll try it a different way this time.

Click here to purchase Little Bit of Grace on CDBaby.

JAKOB: I think everyone’s a little more ready to go in and lay it down this time – to be more polished and prepared from the get-go.

JES: Really, [Little Bit of Grace] is what’s brought us into this fulltime touring mode  I feel like we grew so much in the studio creating this album, and then since then as we’ve taken it out, we’re really on a learning curve as a group of musicians still.  I feel like we’re almost a new band in the way we approach things.  The process of recording this last album really influenced the way we approach our stage show and rehearsal.

Thanks guys.  Have fun out there on the road!

JES: Thanks Michael.

Recording Projects Update

It’s been quite a great year for recording at Empty Sea. If you’ve only attended shows, you may not be aware that the studio doesn’t stand idle all week between concerts! We record acoustic-oriented albums here – 8 projects so far this year in a number of different genres.

It’s a real pleasure to get to show off some of the work that’s been coming out of the studio! Two of our artists recently released full-length albums which I’m happy to share with you. Each has also agreed to offer a free downloadable MP3 from their album exclusively for Empty Sea fans.  Both of these discs are getting airplay on KBCS 91.3FM – thanks guys!

Jeremy Serwer – Roads

Roads (June 2010)

Free download from the album:  Nervous Energy (click to download)

Click here to purchase Roads on CDBaby.

Fueled by an inordinate number of pastrami sandwiches from the Phinney Market, I produced and engineered Jeremy’s album Roads earlier this year at Empty Sea.

I was thrilled to recently find out that Roads received a CDBaby Editor’s Pick award.

Editor Alex Woodward wrote, “There’s something immediately gripping about Jeremy Serwer’s voice; it’s got just the right amount of gravel to complement his soulful timbre, or the female vocals who accompany him on several tracks…Album highlights include the haunting soul of “Dirty Entity” and the lovely “Bare Witness” which recalls Elliott Smith’s gorgeous melancholy. It’s really compelling, heartfelt music.”

The Blackberry Bushes - Little Bit of Grace


Little Bit of Grace (July 2010)

Free Download: Mermaid (click to download)

Click here to purchase Little Bit of Grace on CDBaby.

We had a full house over here while recording this inaugural studio album for the rocking stringband The Blackberry Bushes: a four-piece band and mandolin wizard Matt Sircely (Hot Club Sandwich), who I co-produced this record with. We’re all thrilled with the result, and the Bushes hit the road to tour just after the discs were delivered – word is that they’ve already had to reorder.

What else are we up to?

Too many projects to list – or apparently, update this blog with any regularity.  There are several more album projects nearing completion – and several more coming down the pike!  Plus a number of exciting longer-term projects which I can’t spill the beans on just yet, but which are going to be pretty darn cool.

Interested in recording here?  Check out our recording section for more information and then contact me to set something up.

The Blackberry Bushes

Please note: This is an afternoon show.  Bring the whole family!

Tickets: $13 advance, $15 at the door.

Click here to purchase advance tickets

The Blackberry Bushes Stringband is a high energy, soulful, Americana quartet.

The “Bushes” are a band of songwriters with a strong Bluegrass and old-time bend. They have remained loyal to their Ozark, Appalachian, and Mississippi River roots and added just a twist of West coast indie-rock.

Second place winners of the 2009 Telluride Bluegrass Band Competition, The Blackberry Bushes Stringband formed in Olympia, WA in 2004. They tour nationally, and feature:

quick pickin’ banjo songstress : Kendl Winter

singer-songwriter-strummer-stomper: Jes Raymond on guitar

rattlesnake fiddler : Jakob Breitbach

and lowdown songsmith : Joe Capoccia on the upright bass.

They are often noted for their sweet harmonies, darling lyrics, and near virtuosic musicianship.