Jump to content

Old School Freight Train

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Hmains (talk | contribs) at 21:09, 30 June 2018 (standard quote handling in WP;standard Apostrophe/quotation marks in WP;add/change/refine category; MOS fixes using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Old School Freight Train
The group at Northwest String Summit in 2007 with Noam Pikelny, Luke Bulla, Darol Anger & Brittany Haas Image by [https://www.flickr.com/people/49846995@N00 scarletbegonia14]
Background information
OriginVirginia, United States
GenresFolk
Country
Americana
Bluegrass
Old-time
Years active2000–2009
LabelsAcoustic Disc
MembersJesse Harper
Pete Frostic
Nate Leath
Darrell Muller
Nick Falk
Past membersAnn Marie Calhoun (née Simpson)
Ben Krakauer

Old School Freight Train (OSFT) was a Charlottesville, Virginia-based band that combined bluegrass, jazz, Latin, and Celtic sounds to create their music.

Career

The band's eponymous debut album, Old School Freight Train, was met with considerable acclaim. Relix magazine, included them in their "Artists Too New to Know" series in May 2005. Daniel Gewertz of the Boston Herald called them: "The most talented young string band in the land."[citation needed]

Mandolin master David Grisman heard their music in the Fall of 2004 and invited them record at his Dawg Studios in Mill Valley, California. He manned the production and recording himself with the help of Dave Dennison. From these sessions came Run, OSFT's second album and their first for Acoustic Disc, Grisman's acclaimed independent label. He says of the experience:

After forty years of recording acoustic music, it's not very often that a new band catches (and keeps) my attention. Old School Freight Train has done that and more. They are certainly an emerging force to reckon with in today's wide world of acoustic music.[citation needed]

They have backed David Grisman as his band on several tours in 2005 and 2006. They opened for Merle Haggard on May 3, 2006, at the Charlottesville Pavilion.[citation needed] They were co-billed with King Wilkie at the Starr Hill Music Hall in Charlottesville, Virginia November 15, 2006. They played at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. on September 23, 2006.

The band's tour schedule has included the Newport Folk Festival, MerleFest, Wintergrass, Strawberry Music Festival, and the Menokin Bluegrass Festival in Warsaw, Virginia.[citation needed] In 2007, they played the Stagecoach Festival in Indio, California.[citation needed]

Six Years was released on March 17, 2009. The group has since disbanded.[citation needed]

Reception

Tim Dickinson, National Affairs Correspondent for Rolling Stone, said of the group's sound:

Shades of Jack Johnson, Ben Harper...even a kiss of Van Morrison. With Not Like The Others, Old School Freight Train is off on a timeless new track, blending roots and rock to create a sound that's all their own.[citation needed]

Relix magazine, including OSFT in their "Artists Too New to Know" series in May 2005, described their playing as:

Musically daring, the outfit melds folk, bluegrass, jazz, soul and pop into a seamless blend with invigorating and accomplished picking.[1]

Daniel Gewertz of the Boston Herald noted:

...they finesse everything from breakneck bluegrass and seductive, sinuous Gypsy jazz to a dynamic, grassed-up version of Stevie Wonder's 'Superstition.' There are even brief side-trips to Ireland and Latin America. This Virginia-based Freight Train hurtles along the roots-music tracks with grace and style.[citation needed]

David Grisman, who recorded their album Run on his independent label, said:

Their finely crafted tunes and innovative arrangements bring creativity, taste and wit to a broad spectrum of contemporary styles - vocal and instrumental, all firmly rooted in many traditions.[citation needed]

In his review of Six Years, John Borgmeyer said in the C-Ville Weekly:

Six Years marks an evolution for Charlottesville's Old School Freight Train, in which the band leaps from the well-traveled track of "newgrass" onto a blend of pop and traditional music that's all its own.[2]

Personnel

Nate Leath on fiddle with Old School Freight Train at The Festy music festival in Nelson County, Virginia on October 9, 2010

Old School Freight Train's vocalist, songwriter, and guitarist was Jesse Harper. Pete Frostic played mandolin, Nate Leath played fiddle, Darrell Muller played upright bass, and Nick Falk was the drummer.

Former members have included Ann Marie Calhoun (née Simpson) on the fiddle, and Ben Krakauer on banjo. They went on to play in Walker's Run. Calhoun has also performed with Jethro Tull, Steve Vai, and well as Ringo Starr. She was also the "My GRAMMY Moment 2008" winner on the 50th Annual GRAMMY Awards, chosen to perform with the Foo Fighters live.

Discography

Albums

  • Old School Freight Train (2002), Courthouse Records – ASIN: B000083GLJ
  • Pickin' On John Mayer: A Bluegrass Tribute (2003), Various Artists CMH Records
  • Pickin' On Wilco: Casino Side (2004), CMH Records – ASIN: B000294ROE
  • Run (2005), Acoustic Disc – ASIN: B00080Z66K
  • Pickin' On Coldplay: A Bluegrass Tribute (2005), Various Artists CMH Records – ASIN: B00070Q886
  • Pickin' On John Mayer Vol. 2 (2005), Various Artists CMH Records
  • Live in Ashland (2006) – ASIN: B000WGX6LM
  • Six Years (2009) Red Distribution — ASIN: B001QWEE3A

Guest appearances

References

  1. ^ Relix Artists Too New to Know, May 5, 2005, Relix.
  2. ^ 'C-Ville Weekly March 17, 2009 - March 23, 2009, "Freight Train Jumps The Track"; Six Years review by John Borgmeyer

Further reading

  • "New Dawgs: Old School Freight Train" by Rudi Greenberg, May 27, 2008, Express
  • "Old School Freight Train: Not a 1-way ticket" Lancaster New Era, July 26, 2007