Fresh Air - Bluegrass Star Billy Strings
Episode Date: September 8, 2025The Grammy-winning singer, songwriter and guitarist has one foot in traditional bluegrass and another in improvisational jam music. He has a new album, Live at the Legion, and he brought his guitar t...o our studio. He spoke with Sam Briger about healing himself through songwriting, performing the day his mom died, and how being a father has changed him as a musician. "I sing now from a place of freedom and joy in my belly," Strings says. Also, jazz critic Martin Johnson reviews an album from harpist Brandee Younger. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Now.
This is fresh air.
I'm Terry Gross.
Today's guest is Bluegrass, singer, songwriter, and guitarist.
Billy Stringes. He spoke with fresh airs Sam Brigger. Here's Sam. If you ever find yourself
at an arena concert where tens of thousands of fans of all ages are stomping about to the Billman
Routoon Roanoke or the classic bluegrass song Old Slewfoot, chances are you're at a Billy String
show. A singer, songwriter, and guitarist, Billy Strings is one of the younger generation
of musicians carrying the torch for traditional acoustic bluegrass, even while his music
incorporates excursions into exploratory improvisational jams and the occasional heavy metal
guitar riff. And he's been celebrated by both audiences and the music industry. He's won two
Grammys and Highway Prayers, released in 2024, is the first Bluegrass album in over 20 years to
reach number one on Billboard's all-genre top 100 album sales chart. That album showcases his
songwriting and his terrific band. Since then, he's released a
live album with another ace bluegrass guitarist Brian Sutton called Live at the Legion. The duo
performed in a more intimate setting than the arena strings usually plays in these days, the American
Legion Post 82 in East Nashville, playing a lot of music associated with Doc Watson. Let's hear the
lead off track from Live at the Legion, Nashville Blues, originally by the Delmore Brothers.
I've got the blues
Those Nashville Blues
I've got the blues
Those Nashville Blues
Ain't got no hat
Ain't got no shoes
These people here
They treat me fine
These people here
They treat me fine
Well they feed me beer
And they feed me wine
me wine and I've got the blues. Those Nashville blues, I've got the blues, those Nashville
blues, I ain't got no hair, ain't got no shoes.
That's Billy Strings and Brian Sutton on the new album Live at the Legion.
Billy Strings, welcome to fresh air.
Hey, thank you so much. Good to be here.
So how did the idea for this show an album come about?
Well, we did a live record, I don't know how long ago it was now,
but we did one of our shows, you know, of our big jam grass stuff in the arenas.
And it's just a different kind of energy, big psychedelic jams and big screaming audiences.
And a lot of my favorite live recordings are tiny little small crowds where you can,
You can hear somebody knock over a beer bottle or, you know, you can hear the crowd what they're saying.
It's like Towns Van Zant, live at the Old Quarter, is a big one for me.
So, yeah, we just kind of pulled up into the Legion Hall, and they were really cool to let us do that.
And we had a small crowd there, and we played a bunch of music that we love.
And we got a good recording of it, and Brian Sutton, he's been one of my good friends for quite a few years now.
mentors and heroes and he is one of the greatest guitar players ever yeah he's a he's like a generation
older than you um but he's i think he's perhaps like the go-to bluegrass session guitar player in
um in nashville these days and um so there's a long tradition of bluegrass guitar duos there's
of course doc watson and his son merle there's norman blake and tony rice and his brother wyatt
But it seems like kind of like a no-brainer, just two people playing guitar together.
But it's actually like a little tricky.
Your instruments are right in the same range, obviously.
You're playing a lot of open strings.
There's a lot of fast notes.
It can get a little muddy.
Like, what do you do so you're making sure you're not stepping on the other person?
You just try to listen.
You know, if he's down low, I'll go high or, you know, there's things like that.
You can do a lot of these tunes, too.
a beautiful thing about Doc and Merle
and T. Michael Coleman, with those three instruments,
they could make a big, fat chord, you know?
Like when they ended a song and they played a chord,
it was just this huge chord because
it's almost like hitting a piano in a couple different spots.
You get these guitars to open up and sound big.
A lot of this material comes from Doc Watson,
like some of these songs that are part of his repertoire,
and you said that most everything you do comes from Doc Watson.
Can you talk about his influence on you?
Yeah, he's like the ground upon which I stand, you know.
My dad played his music all around the house growing up,
and by the time I could play guitar, you know, five, six years old,
I was learning those tunes too.
I might have been able to play some of them before I knew how to tie my shoes or something.
You know, it was like I was learning how to speak and talk and walk,
I was learning all these Doc Watson tunes at the same time,
and it was just like a religion in my house.
His music is just, it's the best.
I mean, that's what I was listening to on the way over here,
the Sonic Journals, the Owsley thing that he recorded.
It's just these beautiful recordings, and gosh, it was so good.
Everything they were playing was just churning.
I can hear some of his guitar playing in your playing,
But what about his singing?
Was that also influential?
Like he didn't have a big range, but he was expressive and he is singing.
I always think it was very crisp.
I mean, I think his range was really kind of something to behold when you think about it.
He had this great low baritone, and he could also yodel and get up into that really high falsetto.
But with Doc, it was always just spoken.
It was always the information of the song came through and the conversation of it.
You know, people like him, people like Willie Nelson, people like Dolly Parton, these really great storytellers, when they're singing, you know, if you see Dolly Parton on TV singing and you press mute, it just looks like she's talking to you because she is.
She's telling the story, you know, that's one big thing that one of my vocal coaches that I've been working with, one of the big things that I took from some of those lessons was,
Just give me the information.
You know, I get on stage and I sing, and I'm so worried about the pitch.
Is it, am I singing good?
Is the tone good?
Am I singing right?
How's my timing?
This and that.
It's like taking the kids to the park, and you're scared to let them go down the slide because you don't want them to get hurt.
It's like, geez, let them play, you know?
And so if you focus on the story and telling the words, you know, it's just like, I know where the pitch is.
I just need to tell the story.
So you're doing that more?
Trying to.
it's easier said than done all this stuff
you know all the music
kind of zen kind of mindful stuff
that I've been getting into it's kind of the inner game
uh
inner game stuff
you know I mean
I'm high strong
I got a lot of
anxiety and stress
and I'm moving around a lot
I've been really busy the last several years
and I got a lot of my own
personal stuff that
just haunts me on a daily basis
and I try to
I try to do everything I can to just be cool
and get my nervous system to chill
but it just seems like I don't know
what I can do to calm it.
I do the best I can and I'm doing okay
but it's a daily kind of struggle
to just stay on the ground.
Does playing guitar help or is playing guitar
caught up in all of that stuff
because that's what you do for a living?
It depends on what kind of playing guitar.
You know, if I'm on stage
that's where the joy is, you know.
That's where the fun is.
If I'm, I kind of ride myself pretty hard about practice offstage.
Well, let's talk about that.
You know, I noticed on social media like a year ago or so,
you were, you were popping up endorsing this online guitar program
and talking about how you felt like you'd reached a plateau
and you wanted to get better and get out of that.
So what was going on?
The more I play shows, the more shows I play in a row,
the more you can drive yourself back into these old default kind of almost like a rut
of playing licks you always play or playing, you know,
you almost get sick of hearing yourself play the same thing.
And you're just going, oh, this is, you know, I'm not impressed.
I'm not impressed with myself.
I think it's, I don't know, there's something really honest about,
you talking about that because here you are you're playing for tens of thousands of people like
you're an incredible guitar player and yet you still want to improve and you care about your craft
and you know you're willing to talk about like i imagine there's people who are famous guitar players
too who take lessons but they probably wouldn't talk about it i don't know i mean
what do you want me to say i've kind of i've kind of always thought i sort of sucked you know
because I'm me, I'm going to be my own worst critic always.
But I'm just, yeah, of course I'm going to talk about it.
I mean, it's kind of interesting.
It's like I never really took lessons.
I just learned how to play from hanging out with my dad
and listening to him play with my old Brad Laskill, my uncle Brad,
and I kind of just was seeped in this Monroe and Stanley brothers
and Flatt and Scruggs and Larry Sparks and Jimmy Martin and Oswald.
brothers and you know of course mainly doc watson and i was kind of just soaked in that and
marinated in that since i was a little kid and that's how i just heard everything it's kind of
how i hear music but i never i never took any lesson i still don't know what a harmonic minor is
i don't know what the word like diatonic means i don't you know i have no freaking idea i have a very
limited understanding of these music words that people use.
So then I get into these sessions, right?
Because Bela Fleck says, hey, come play on my record.
And I'm sitting in a room with Bela Fleck and Edgar Meyer and Chris Thiele.
And they're saying, oh, yeah, it's just, you know, they're counting with all these numbers
and letters and hieroglyphs and all sorts of stuff.
And I'm just like, man, I don't even know what any of this means.
I just know the song goes,
ducka-d-d-d-d-d-c-d-c-dac-d-cah-d-d-cah-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-tt. That's how the song goes to me. I couldn't tell you it in a math equation.
Well, Billy, if you wouldn't mind doing another song for us that's one of your favorites.
I could do, I told you on the way over here, I was listening to that Bears Sonic Journal's, Doc and Merrill, T. T.
And, man, they were sounding good, and they were doing this number here. It's called the
Brown's Ferry Blues.
Hard luck pop
Come on a lane.
Mama giving back his walking cane.
Lord, Lord, I got them browns fairy blues.
Well, he throwed it away and he went to town
to see a little woman and now he's down.
Lord, I got them brown, sparing blue
Hard but pop, you're getting too tight
You don't be drinking your high as kite
Lord, I got them browns fairy blue
Drink a block and tackle kind
He can walk a block and tackle a lion
Lord, I got them browns fairy blue
Well, I walked up to my girls
And I asked him for my true love's hand
Lord Lord, I got them browns fairy blue
Said you la, la, la, little collo
That I hurt hand and got his foot
Lord Lord
I got the grounds
Fairy Blue
Hard luck
Pops
The word was corn
You couldn't buy grain
Lord Lord
I got the grounds fairy blue
Walk around and
Sicking me close
You know the smell of the street
wherever he goes
Lord Lord
I got them brown
So, Billy.
So, Billy, last year you came out with your album Highway Prayers.
I wanted to play the second song from the album,
in the clear. This song is in the long tradition of happy sounding up-tempo, bluegrass
songs with really depressing lyrics. Can you talk about writing it? Yeah, I mean, I don't know. I think
this one was one that I wrote with my buddy Aaron Allen. He's a frequent collaborator. Me and him
and John Weissberger get together a lot of times and we've written quite a few songs together now.
but as soon as I
started reading some of the words
I could hear it in my head
it happens like that a lot of times
even if I write something down
I'm thinking of the music as I'm writing it
you know and it's
it's like I write with the melody
you know
this is the second song from the album in The Clear
so why don't we hear this
well here I am pulled over now just crying on the shoulder down the road that I've been driving on for days
so I ain't my moral compass but it's spinning like a wheel you could take that many different ways
I've had days as black as nighttime and nights that lasted years I spent a thousand hours on my knees
broke down and started praying
But I was pleading with the rain
Just to never feel the difference in the breeze
They say heaven knows
The road is slow
How the hell would have you known
Just where am I supposed to go from here
How much longer now before I'm in there
That's the song in the clear from our guest, Billy Strings'
2024 album Highway Prayers.
And this is with the band that you've been with for a while now.
It's Billy failing on banjo, Jared Walker, on
Mandolin, Royal Masat on bass, and a newer member, Alex Hargraves on Fiddle.
Well, Billy, some of your songs deal with some pretty heavy subjects that you've dealt with in your life,
including, you know, losing friends to suicide, family and friends who are dealing with addiction,
you know, feeling neglect when you were a kid.
When you write songs about that stuff, is it helping you process those experiences?
Is it easy to sing about that stuff once you've written the songs?
Sometimes it's hard.
Sometimes it is definitely, it's how I felt when I sing on stage the night my mom died.
It was cathartic.
It's cathartic.
I've had songs that I've written, you know, about something totally different.
that I didn't realize I wrote for myself until a month later.
I write these words thinking that I'm giving some information to some people that might could hear it.
Really, I'm the one that needs to hear it.
And I wrote that for myself so that I could heal.
And now I go sing it on stage.
And there's also been songs, Stratosphere Blues, and I Believe in You, you know?
The other night I was singing that on stage.
You know, like I said, I wrote that before my mom had died,
and now singing it after is just different.
It's like I knew something or something, you know.
I'm sorry about your mom passing away.
She died this last June.
Would you mind singing a verse of that?
I could try.
Let's see.
Couldn't help but wonder why you threw yourself away
Come on out from under and just take it day by day
It's true
I believe in you
Took a walk to wonder
And I wandered on a thought
It's kind of hard to get through
All the things we ain't been taught
It's true
But I believe in you
After all the years of medication
Feels good to get your life
on track
As long as you live
I'm sorry to tell you
You never get that monkey off your back
Yeah
Something like that anyways, you know
Yeah, that's a beautiful song
Thank you for playing that
No problem, man
If you're just joining us, our guest today is Billy Strings
His two most recent albums are live
at the Legion with guitar player Brian Sutton and from 2024 highway prayers. I'm Sam Brigger
and this is fresh air. Well, Billy, when your mom died this last June, I think you heard in
the morning and you had a gig that night, you decided to play it. You got on stage and you made
obviously an emotional announcement about it and you said that your mom would have wanted
you to go on. She wouldn't have wanted you to cancel.
the show. Why is that? The only reason she died is so she could, you know, space travel and be
there. She was at all the shows, you know. She was always in the mix, right up front. She'd show up in
New Orleans or Seattle or somewhere, and I wouldn't even know she was coming. She freaking hitchhiked
there, you know? I was like, what? She walks in my green room. What? You didn't even tell me you're coming,
you know? She was just a wild one, and she was really living her best life in this last
little bit. She had become quite involved with a lot of my friends and fans, you know, that go to
every show and go out in the lot and stuff. And she became really close to a lot of these people.
And I was, um, always had mixed feelings about that. Um, what do you mean? Well, I wanted her to
go have fun and, and be doing, you know, whatever she wanted to be doing. But, um, I worried about her
running into the wrong people or you know she's been an addict my whole life and um had short stints
where she was doing pretty good you know and i love to see her out there hanging with all the fans but
at the same time i was leery of them you know i would go over to visit my parents house and there would be
like the fans there that i see in the front row of my concerts all the time people you knew or did it
or just knew as fans mostly i just recognize them from the crowd you know and then i get to know them
because they're hanging out with my parents or something, but, you know, and who, what am I
supposed to say, like, don't do that?
I don't know.
They're grown people, but I don't know.
She was getting older, and I kind of just had this vision of her in my head that I wanted,
which is stupid.
It's not realistic to try to come up with somebody else's life in your brain, but, like,
I just wanted her to have a garden, and my dad, 70 years old, she was 64.
I was like, man, you guys should, like, be settling down, you know, don't you think?
said of raring and tearing and going and eating all these shrooms and going to all these
concerts. And then she did get wrapped up in the wrong stuff. And that's why she's not here
anymore. I'm sorry, this might be too personal, but did she overdose? Is that?
Yeah. Oh, I'm sorry. Yeah. And it's, you know, it's, um, it's, it's, it's messed with me
in my whole life and now it's going to mess with me for the rest of it. You know, I have
complex post-traumatic stress and I have anxiety and depression and I have for for years tried to
deal with this stuff just that happened to me when I was a kid you know it wasn't just being neglected
and they're not being food in the house and you know my parents being strung out and I miss them
even though they're sitting right in front of me and like while they were partying and you know
stuff like that I was around the corner being molested you know before I was 10 years old and
all that stuff, you know, and I've had to deal with that, you know, and it's a really hard thing
because there's such beautiful people, and they taught me so much about music. But yeah, their
addiction has been really hard on me for my whole life, and it still is, and really triggering
to lose her in this manner, you know. Well, I'm sorry, I hope talking about it is not triggering
any hard feelings for you right now. I got to talk about it because it's like,
My whole life I've had to keep a secret in order to try to not make them look bad, you know?
Like even when I was in high school, I spoke to a counselor one time.
I mean, I was in 10th grade, but I was couch surfing.
I didn't live with them.
You know, I moved out when I was like 13 because the house was no longer a home.
They were strung out.
And it's a wonder I was even going to school.
And one time I got pulled into a counselor instead of the principal's office, you know.
And they said, what's going on?
and I finally just, they told me anything I say is between them and it won't leave the room.
And I said, yeah, my parents are on meth and I don't even live there.
And my house got raided right after that.
You know, that same day, five state cops came up, raided the house.
I almost sent my mom to prison because I opened my mouth.
And from then on, I never said to anybody about anything.
I've just, it hurts me, but what hurts me is I've always just been worried about them, you know,
And I've always wanted them to be good.
And when I say be good, I mean to be well and happy and have some sunshine in their life.
A few years ago, I was able to buy them at home, my parents.
And stuff was good for a while.
But, you know, it just, yeah, it really breaks my heart that it went back to this and now she's gone.
So I think my duty here is to continue doing what I'm doing for one thing.
thing. Use all that beautiful energy that I get from her, that crazy wild streak. I got to use
that and, you know, honor her in that way. And I feel a great kind of duty as far as just writing
down these words, making these songs for people to heal from. And also, you know, who knows, maybe
someday I'll actually be able to help kids that are in the situation that I was in. Maybe I'll
be able to help their parents, you know, like open a rehab or something or something like that
to just to help combat this because it's, it's really hard, you know.
Yeah.
Are you taking some time for yourself right now?
Like, are you able to take some time off the road?
And you have a young family now that's also, that's at home.
Yeah, they're with me on the road.
Oh, they go with you on the road.
Heck yeah, man.
So, yeah, I got the whole gang, and we're out there traveling, and it's really cool.
It's awesome.
And so, yeah, I've just been leaning into that, leaning on my family, you know, my band.
Let's hear one of your songs from Highway Prayers, which is all about being on the road,
leaning on a traveling song.
And this starts out with some great bluegrass harmonies and also some really terrific fiddles playing together.
So let's hear that.
Where the air is clear, and the road is straight,
all the choices have been made.
I'll keep rolling right along,
leaning on a traveling song.
Seeing things that just aren't there.
Five hours away from anywhere
Highway 80 way out west
Can't afford to get no rest
Both the lining up on high
Rip the darkness from the sky
Behind the wheel where I belong
Weaning on a traveling song
That's Leading on a Travelin song from Billy Strings.
Our guest today from his album, Highway Prayers.
If you're just joining us, our guest is musician Billy Strings.
We'll be back after a short break.
This is fresh air.
Earlier we talked about Doc Watson,
and I wanted to ask if you'd play a tune that maybe was one of the earlier songs
that you learned as a kid.
Yeah.
When I was a kid, I mostly just played rhythm.
So I'll give an example of that.
My dad, he would play this.
you know that's the fiddle tune Beaumont rack
yeah and so I would play
you know and so that's how I did play you know and so
that's how I started and that's kind of what I did for the first few years of playing
I was my dad's rhythm player and that gave me a chance to just listen
to how the songs worked to just kind of stay there in the bass kind of notes and um and listen to
the melodies and listen to the harmonies how the vocals worked together and uh that kind of bluegrass
harmony just seeped in my ears i guess and um later on i i got an electric guitar a little mini
squire strat and a pig nose amp for christmas one year i think i was probably nine or ten or so
and that was my first time really trying to play solos and stuff like that
but it was more i was getting into hendricks and i was playing more
you know guitar center stuff when i got into middle school i wanted to play
with people that were my age you know i'd always played with my dad and his friends
and some of them were much older and i just wanted to play music with people that were into the
same stuff as i was like skateboarding and
video games, whatever, you know.
And so the only thing that was really going on in my middle school at the time was heavy metal.
And I went to a couple of shows, and I just, I hated it at first.
It was like, this is not music, you know.
I don't know what this is, but it ain't music.
But I just fell into that friend group, and then next thing you know, I started,
I acquired a taste for this music, and then I fell in love with it.
But after my bands kept breaking up and falling apart, I kind of got back into Doc Watson at
this time. And just bluegrass in general, this would have been around the time that stuff was
really rough around the house. I remember specifically stealing my mom's old Chevelle one day.
How old were you? 14, 15. You know, because I'd go over to my parents' house and hang out with them
and stay there and party, and it's not like I just totally left and disowned them. I just,
once I realized stuff wasn't going to change, I mean, I didn't end up really moving back there,
but I'd go there for a weekend and hung out there a bunch,
but I didn't, it wasn't like my home.
And so, yeah, I stole my mom's car one day
when I was just sitting around getting drunk by myself.
And that's how bored I was,
and that's how kind of there was nothing to do in this town.
I mean, there's 600 people that live here.
There's nothing to do.
So I was just getting drunk during the day,
and I stole mom's car, and I went down Hayes Road,
this old country road with cornfields on either side.
And man, I put the pedal to the floor, and I just, I was going,
and that corn was just a blur on either side.
And there was a tape sticking halfway out of the deck,
and I pushed it in, and I'm like, I wonder what my mom's listening to, right?
And then this is what came on.
I was in those heavy metal bands and all this stuff,
and I hadn't really been listening to Bluegrass very much,
but I was kind of heartbroken at the way my life was at the time.
And when I heard...
I wandered again
To my home in the mountain
You know, Ranked Stranger came on
That's what my mom had in her tape deck
And I just started slowing that old car down
Until I came to a complete stop
And I just pulled over on the side of the road
And I started crying
and I was drunk, you know, but this song hit me right in my heart.
In that moment, I was like, what am I even doing in these heavy metal bands?
Bluegrass is where my heart is.
This is the music I should be playing.
And at that time, I just started hunting for an acoustic guitar, you know,
and my friend Zach had one, and one of the first tunes I learned how to actually pick.
How to play the lead on and stuff is a thing called Nothing to It.
It goes like this.
I'm going to be able to be.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to be able to be a little bit more than I'm
I'm going to be.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to be.
I don't know.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to
I'm going to
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
and
I'm
I'm
I'm
Is that one of those.
Is that one of those licks that you're now tired of, or you still like it?
I love it
Yeah
It's still the best
I mean any of that Doc Watson stuff
You decided at some point that
Playing guitar was your way out
Was kind of like your salvation
And a way to get out of the kind of life
That your mom and dad were leading
But at what point though
Did you sort of realize like this could
I could make a living doing this
I could really get somewhere
Or hopefully get somewhere
That wasn't until I was about
18 years old or so. I failed all through school. I graduated from an alternative ed.
The only reason I graduated is because I was selling mushrooms and I was able to pay this kid
five bucks per assignment, 25 bucks a week to help me get the answers to algebra so that I could
graduate. So I graduated a year late from an alternative ed thing. But, you know, I had dropped out
several times in those years. They filed truancy on me, all this stuff. I was a complete, I stopped
paying attention in sixth grade, you know what I mean? By the time I tried to apply myself,
they were talking about trigonometry. I was way late. Well, but so you must have at some point
like decided to take this leap of faith. I mean, and just try to make it. Well, when I graduated high
school, I was kind of in this situation where it was like, okay, I need to get out of Ionia,
because nothing's happening here and I'm just going to end up going down a bad road if I stay
here. I'm going to end up
OD or in prison or, you know,
it's just, it did not look good.
The way I felt is, in Ionia, it was black and white,
gray. And I moved up to Traverse City,
Michigan. A friend of mine, Brendan Lauer, bless his beautiful little
heart. He had a room and he said, hey man, you want to come
stay up in Traverse City? We need a roommate. Hell yeah. So I went up to
Traverse City, man, and all of a sudden it was like technicolor. It was like beaches and there was
like microbreweries and art galleries and people like singer-songwriters and there was like coffee shops
and people were into like art and stuff. So I started doing a couple open mic nights up there just
messing around because this is when I was studying Doc Watson kind of heavy again. I had, I got acoustic
guitar and I was just sitting at home posting myself with no shirt on freaking YouTube or whatever.
You know, I'm trying to show off my new tet hat.
too. But I went and did some open mic nights up there, and, man, I played Black Mountain
Rag or something, and I got a standing ovation. And I go, whoa, holy crap. It's like, these folks
either love Doc Watson or they've never heard anything like this before. Your dad taught you
how to play guitar. Have you picked out a guitar for your son yet? Do you plan to teach him the way
your dad taught you? Well, he's already got one that he just bangs on the floor. I gave him a
him this Martin Dreadnought Jr.
Used to be my guitar, I'd just practice on the bus and stuff,
and I took tape, and I covered up all the pokey parts
where the strings are on top,
and I wrapped them real good so he can't poke himself on that.
Yeah.
So when are you going to start teaching him how to play the strings?
Oh, man, like I said, he's...
He's already gone.
He's 10 months, and he's just banging on it.
But I sing for him all the time.
It's always the best.
I remember that first night when we got home,
the night of my 32nd birthday,
the first time I was able to be at home with my son,
and I held him and I sing this little song.
I'll sing a bit of it for you.
He went to sleep in my arms when I was singing this to him,
and it's probably the best moment of my entire life,
besides maybe just the moment he was born.
But there's this little lullaby.
Sleep, pretty, baby,
sleeping
you
close them
pretty by
I
listen
while your daddy
sweet
a bless to you
and I
And I sang that to him
and he fell asleep.
That was like the best.
Well, Billy Strings, I want to thank you so much
for coming on Fresh Air today.
I thank you for having me.
Billy String's latest album is called Live at the Legion.
He spoke with Fresh Air's Sam Brigger.
Special thanks to Brian McGlynn
at Audio Productions in Nashville.
This is Fresh Air.
The harp has never been commonplace in jazz,
but it's not a novelty either.
In the 50s, Dorothy Ashby pioneered a space for the instrument, mastering bebop, soul jazz, and other hybrids.
Alice Coltrane, a high school classmate of Ashby's, received a harp as a gift from her husband,
the legendary saxophonist John Coltrane, and she used it to create a style often called spiritual jazz.
Brenda Younger follows in their footsteps, using the harp in many styles of jazz and popular music.
For instance, she's played on sessions with Common, Lauren Hill, and The Roots.
Younger's own music embraces a broad range of jazz and jazz-adjacent styles.
On her new recording, Gadabout season, she plays Coltrane's instrument and updates the style of the Great Harpice's early recording.
that's brandy younger's song reckoning the lead track on her new recording there are a few trends that distinguish jazz in the 2020s as the rise of the harp
its shimmering grace is perfect for the textural focus of so many composers and the instrument's history as a cornerstone of spiritual jazz and as a jazz ambassador in related genres provide the perfect entrance for brandy younger on the scene she's championed
the work of her artistic foremothers, and she's played on sessions with Common, Lauren Hill and The Roots.
In that regard, she has many allies among young musicians who dote on different styles.
Here, she's joined by fellow rising stars, Shabaka, Mikaya McCraven, and Joel Ross on the title track.
Unlike Dorothy Ashby and Alice Coltrane, Younger is not alone among Harpest.
There are others like Edmark Hastaneda, Destiny Muhammad, Isabel Olivier,
to name a few. Younger style deftly uses her instruments full range. She can give it an assertive
weight of a guitar or austere reserve of electronic instruments. The harp's ability to be both
cordal and percussive enables her to move freely in a tune, but as a soloist, she can command
center stage, as she does on Breaking Point.
But that's about as soon as far as
But that's about as insistent as younger gets.
more so than her others, delves deeply into the spiritual side of jazz.
It's not laid back, but it is elegantly minimal music that invites contemplation.
It's as if she's creating a safe space for reconsideration,
which Alice Coltrane's late 60s and early 70s recordings did.
But as she demonstrates on New Pannicle, rather than retro, it feels very of the moment.
Johnson writes about jazz for the Wall Street Journal and Downbeat. He reviewed Brandy Younger's
new album, Gatabout Season. Tomorrow on Fresh Air, my guest will be Rob Reiner. We'll talk about
directing the new sequel to Spinal Tap, the groundbreaking mockumentary about a heavy metal band.
We'll also talk about Reiner's remarkable life and career. He directed when Harry met Sally,
the Princess Bride, A Few Good Men, Stand By Me, and More, and was a star of the sitcom All in the
family. I hope you'll join us. Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our technical
director and engineer is Audrey Bentham. Our managing producer is Sam Brigger. Our interviews and
reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberto Shorock, Anne Rhebel Donato,
Lauren Crenzel, Monique Nazareth, Theacalloner, Susan Yucundi, Anna Bauman, and John Sheehan. Our digital media
producer is Molly C.V. Nesper. Our consulting visual producer is Hope Wilson.
Madden directed today's show. Our co-host is Tanya Mosley. I'm Terry Gross.