Song Exploder - Rhiannon Giddens - You Louisiana Man

Episode Date: March 6, 2024

Rhiannon Giddens has released five solo albums since 2015. Before that, she was a member of the Grammy-winning band, the Carolina Chocolate Drops. She is now also the artistic director of the... Silkroad Ensemble, the musical supergroup that Yo-Yo Ma founded. Rhiannon Giddens is one of those people where I feel like they have to start inventing new awards, because she’s already won all of them. She’s got multiple Grammys, she won the Pulitzer Prize for an opera she co-wrote called Omar, she’s a MacArthur Genius, and the new Beyonce song “Texas Hold ‘Em,” the one that features the banjo? That’s Rhiannon Giddens playing the banjo. (I guess that’s not technically an award, but it feels like one to me.) In 2023, Rhiannon released an album called You’re The One, and I talked to her about the song she wrote called "You Louisiana Man," which was nominated for a Grammy for Best American Roots Performance. For more, visit songexploder.net/rhiannon-giddens.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to Song Exploder, where musicians take apart their songs, and piece by piece, tell the story of how they were made. I'm Rishikeshirwe. Rian and Giddens is one of those people where I feel like they have to start inventing new awards, because she's already won all of them. She's got multiple Grammys. She won the Pulitzer Prize for an opera she co-wrote called Omar. She's a MacArthur genius. And the new Beyonce song, Texas Holdham, that features the banjo. That's Rianan and Giddens playing the banjo.
Starting point is 00:00:32 I guess that's not technically an award, but. but it feels like one to me. Riannon Giddens has released five solo albums since 2015, and before that, she was a member of the Grammy-winning band, The Carolina Chocolate Drops. She's now also the artistic director of the Silk Road Ensemble, the musical supergroup that Yo-Yo Ma founded. In 2023, Riannan released an album called You're the One,
Starting point is 00:00:58 and I talked to her about a song she wrote for it called E-Louisiana Man, which was nominated for a Grammy for Best American Roots Performance. far I never. My name is Rianning Giddens. I was born in Greensboro, North Carolina, in the central part of the state. And what was your life like in terms of music? Did you play a lot of music when you were growing up? You know, I was surrounded by a lot of music.
Starting point is 00:01:37 I picked up a few guitar chords from my dad. He was a guitar player. But that was kind of it until I was like my senior year in high school. That's when I kind of decided I wanted to be a singer. So I started auditioning for school. and I went to Oberlin Conservatory. At that time, did you have this idea of like, I want to be an opera singer?
Starting point is 00:01:57 Totally. I mean, I was going to sing at the Met, and I was in a lot of operas at Oberlin. So it was definitely, I was on the track. You go there, and then you go to a grad school, and then you start winning competitions, and then you start getting cast, you know? I completed the first part of that,
Starting point is 00:02:11 which was to go to Oberlin. I didn't do any of the rest of it. This is because I'm trying to have a better understanding of connecting the dots. Like, how do you go from I'm going to be an opera singer. I'm going to perform at the Met to playing fiddle and banjo. All of it started with contra dance, actually.
Starting point is 00:02:29 Because when I went to Oberlin, I saw a flyer for English country dance, and I'm a Jane Austen nut. And that's what they do in Jane Austen novels is English country dance. And I was like, oh, I want to learn how to do that. And so I went, but it was actually a contra dance, which is an American art form descended from English country dance. And there was a live band, and I was like, oh, my God, this is so fun. So I started going to the Contra Dance.
Starting point is 00:02:50 dances at Oberlin. And then I went back down to Greensboro after I graduated and found the contra dance scene. And that's when I started like hearing New England fiddle music, Canadian fiddle music, like all of this stuff and kind of going, this is amazing. I joined a Celtic band. It was like an advertisement. You know, we're looking for a lead singer. And I was like, okay. And then I decided I wanted to pick up the fiddle. And then banjo started to creep in. Do you remember when you first started thinking about you Louisiana man? I remember sitting at the kitchen table and I started writing these words. You turned my head, tripped up my mind, you Louisiana man.
Starting point is 00:03:34 You turned my head, tripped up my mind, you Louisiana man. You burn my bed, lit up my sky. You Louisiana man. Can you tell me what was it that you were feeling that led to those words? is anger. It's like how many times have you struck up a friendship with somebody that then went way further than you thought, romantic or not? You know, you're like, oh, hey, let's have a coffee. And then like two months later, you're like telling each other your deepest, darkest secrets. And then that person has all the power to destroy you. You know what I mean? If they want.
Starting point is 00:04:19 And that's really vulnerable. You know, and you get mad at people, but it's like you're really mad at yourself for staying in it past when you should have or for not letting it go. But in a song, it's much funner to be mad at a person. So I was mad at you Louisiana man. You stole my breath. You took my soul, you Louisiana man. Had you ever written a song from this kind of emotional place before? I was definitely carving out new ground. I mean, I was just in a very, confused time in my life was feeling things in a very intense way. And so I was thinking, I just got to write this down. It was a time I was writing a lot of poetry. I kind of feel like it was almost a teenage delay. Like I didn't have a boyfriend until I was 23. And so I never did,
Starting point is 00:05:16 you know, a lot of those sort of emotional things when I was a teenager because I was just like this nerd reading books and like watching Jane Austen movies or whatever, but not really participating in life in that way. I was an observer. And so I was kind of in the midst of like life life, you know, and not really knowing how to deal with it. I never knew that things we're going to get so far. I never, I never knew that you were going to break my heart.
Starting point is 00:05:46 You're Louisiana man. This was written on the menstrual banjo. And I do that a lot as I find the tune on the banjo. And I often just double myself when I'm singing. It's just so beautiful and supportive to the voice. You can just hear there. They just go together so beautifully. So we made a demo.
Starting point is 00:06:14 It was actually for the Freedom Highway Sessions. And that was a record that had a lot of my mission-based work, like my slave songs. So this song didn't really belong. You know what I mean? It just kind of felt a little too-party for the sort of gravitas of that album. And it just didn't turn out. We didn't get it to where we wanted it to. So we just sat on it and that became the demo, that recording. So can you tell me about what made it right to bring this song in for this one?
Starting point is 00:07:05 You know, I worked on Omar, mine, and Michael Abel's opera for a total of five years. It's the story of a Islamic scholar from Senegal who sold into slavery and ends up living as an enslaved man in North Carolina for over 50 years, dies right before the Civil War. I'm like, that's a heavy story. And all the things that I do are pretty serious and heavy. And so I was just like, oh, I just need to just have some fun, saying some love songs, some breakup songs, whatever. Just have a good time. And so then how did you end up working with Jack Splash as the producer? I felt like a lot of these songs needed a bigger palette
Starting point is 00:07:37 than the folk and acoustic pallets that I've been really working with. And really meeting him, I just thought he had such a quick brain and such a knowledge of all the different styles that I wanted to play in and was willing to meet me halfway. You know, I was like, I don't want to just throw these songs at you and then have it be you with a little bit of me. And I don't want it to be mostly me with a little bit of you, like put some beats on it or something. I want us to actually find a halfway point.
Starting point is 00:08:04 And he was really into it. So I brought some musicians that I've been working with. And he brought the musicians that he's been working with. It was two discrete groups coming together and finding where everybody fit. Because you had all of these different instruments. You had the Cajun fiddle. You hear the banjo. you hear all of these super acoustic sounds
Starting point is 00:08:30 and then the more modern kind of drumbeat the electric bass everybody was just like how's this going to work and then you start playing and it's like oh that's how it's going to work and I was like this is so cooking this is what I was missing
Starting point is 00:08:54 this is what this song needed it was just so neat to hear those cross rhythms and how it just seamlessly worked with the freaking fret banjo from 1858, you know what I mean? Like, these are people talking to each other with music. And that's the way I like to do collaborations, you know? Each piece kind of fits in in this really beautiful nestled way and nobody's covering anybody up. You're overlapping in a way that then highlights everybody. But we can't have everybody playing all the time.
Starting point is 00:09:41 The idea is that you create that energy on the floor and then you just carve it out. Yeah, I thought it was interesting. Listening to the tracks on their own, you can hear how the acoustic guitar kind of pops in and out, like it's edited in and out of the song. Yeah, Newell Tsumbu. He played acoustic guitar on everything.
Starting point is 00:09:59 And this is a great part, but you wouldn't have heard it anyway because there's all this other stuff going on. So you just take it out and then just put it in where it needs to be. You Louisiana man. I love doing harmony vocals. You know, I used to sing with my sister.
Starting point is 00:10:26 She was the lead, and I was harmless. She's older than me. And so that's actually my natural place is I go to harmony first. And I have to like force myself to sing lead. So when I get to sing harmony with myself, like, and I know what I'm going to be doing, I freaking love it. I never knew that things we're going to get so far. I never knew it. I never knew that you were going to break my heart.
Starting point is 00:10:58 The baseline really captures the sort of agitation. and kind of friction in the song where you can tell the protagonist is just like trying to play it cool even at the end, which, you know, I generally tend to like to leave woman-oriented songs about men who've done them wrong or whatever.
Starting point is 00:11:19 I generally like to leave it on a positive. Like, this thing happened, but I'm not going to let it define me or whatever. So at the end, you know, I've wept my tears and I'll move on. You louisee. So she's like, yeah, Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:37 But then underneath it's like, do-da-d-d-da-da-da-da-da. So she's, lyrically, you're saying, I've moved on, but then the music hasn't actually changed along with it. I mean, I think I can speak for a lot of people who've been in relationships and they go, I'm totally over this. Are they totally over it? No. But you have to say it enough until you are over it.
Starting point is 00:12:00 You know, you keep repeating it until you've actually done it. So, you know, this protagonist is, she's not quite there. But like, she's stating an intention. So that's upright bass and electric bass. You know, that's the electric bass. Yeah, T. Ray on bass. And I could see him from my booth. And I just like watch his fingers fly.
Starting point is 00:12:28 Or just be like, what is going on right now? So good. And then that's on the upright. And that's Jason Seifer. Jason has played Cajun music. He's played Irish music. So he's been my bass player for a long time, and they're coming from totally different musical worlds. White, upright bass player, black electric bass player, and they're totally different genres,
Starting point is 00:12:57 and they could work together, like, no problem. At the end of the song, I think everybody was just really digging on each other. There's this outro of just, it's like party time. Then Jack had horns added. That was another moment where I was like, okay, this is freaking cool. I'm so glad we're doing this. I would have never thought of that in a million years, and that's why you collaborate.
Starting point is 00:13:53 You know, we have these relationships with people where they don't do what you want them to do. You know what I mean? And it's like they ain't got to do what you want them to do because they've grown people and they're going to do what they want to do. But that doesn't stop us from wanting them to be different. The person who this song is about, do they know what's about them?
Starting point is 00:14:19 They do. I sent it to them. What was that? like. Oh, it was funny. I was just like, I've been processing things and this is how it came out. I was like, this is how I feel. And they were like, that's a great. That's a great. It's a great. It's a great song. Coming up, you'll hear how all these ideas and elements came together in the final song. I have a new album of my own coming out on April 24th. It's been about 15 years since I last put out a full length. And this is the first one that'll be out under my own name, Rishikesh, her way.
Starting point is 00:15:00 I started making Song Exploder when I was feeling lost in my own music. music career. And then for over a decade, I've gotten to have these incredible conversations about the process of making music, talking to other artists. And it made me completely rethink my relationship to music and my way of writing songs. And this album is the product of all of that. It features contributions from some of my favorite artists, including some folks that you may have heard on this podcast, like Iron and Wine, Kevin Morby, Vagabond, Fenlily, and the producer Phil Wynrope. I'm going to be on tour playing in cities across the U.S. April, and I'm trying to bring the spirit of the podcast with me. So every show that I'm playing
Starting point is 00:15:38 will begin with a conversation about the album with a different amazing guest moderator in each city, like Adam Scott, Samin Nasrat, Jason Manzukas, Josh Molina, Minjin Lee, Ken Jennings, John Roderick, Austin Cleon, and more. They're all going to be my conversation partners on stage, and then I'll play with my band. The album is called In the Last Hour of Light, and the first couple songs are out now. You can listen to the music and get tickets for the shows on my website, rishikash.co, or just go to songexploder.net slash live. That's songexploder.net slash live. Thanks. And now here's You Louisiana Man by Riannon Giddens in its entirety. Tripped up my mind, you Louisiana man, lit up my sky, you Louisiana man. Things we're going to get so far I
Starting point is 00:17:31 Never, I never knew that you were going to break my, you took my Louisiana man. You look so cold and I get so far. You're Louisiana man. Visit SongExploder.net. You'll find links to buy or stream, you Louisiana man. And you can watch the music video. This episode was produced by Craig Ely, Theo Balcom, Kathleen Smith, Mary Dolan, and myself. The episode artwork is by Carlos Lerma, and I made the show's theme music and logo.
Starting point is 00:20:57 Song Exploder is a proud member of Radiotopia from PRX, a network of independent, listener-supported, artist-owned podcasts. You can learn more about all our shows at Radiotopia.fm. You can follow me on social media at Rishi Hereway, and you can follow the show at Song Exploder. You can also get a Song Exploder t-shirt at songexploder.net slash shirt. I'm Rishi-Kesh Hereway. Thanks for listening.

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