A Few Months Ago….

26 Aug

I ran into my friend Tift Merrrit in London, we were both on a publicity tour for new releases, and we were staying in the same hotel, right next to the BBC Broadcasting building. We managed to find a time to go out for Chinese food, and she asked me if I’d join her in her room the next morning for yet another interview, this time, with her. She has a fine radio show, and I was happy to able to work this interview with Tift into my schedule.

Here it is, I hope ya’ll like it..

Marfa Spark KRTS 93.5 Tift Merrit interviews yours truly.

One Response to “A Few Months Ago….”

  1. Jennie says:

    Mary, what a great interview. I enjoy listening to you because you don’t hold back. You tell things, your story mainly, like it really is. You express your feelings so well. Guess that’s why you’re a great songwriter. Thanks for sharing your words and music.
    I hope you can find your father. My hope is that he would be a kind soul and want a relationship with you. Let me know when you find out about him.
    Take care,
    Jennie

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WSM AM Radio, Buddy Miller, Nashville is great!

18 Aug

Tania and I played this morning on historic WSM radio, home of the Grand Old Opry Radio show. They are broadcasting from the original home again these days, because the flood took out the new building. It felt like a short walk thru the history of Country Music. WSM is the reason Nashville ended up as the Business center of country music.

Last night, Buddy Miller performed another installment of his three part series/artist in Residence at The Country Music Hall Of Fame, and my friend Darrell Scott invited me to come down..here’s a shot of the band. Buddy Miller, Darrell Scott, Patty Griffin, Regina and Ann McCrary and Byron House and Brian Owens.

Tonight we play a benefit concert at the Loveless Barn for the Nature Conservancy.  What an honor to be part of such a great group of artists, activists and industry folks who care about each other and the world and are working to improve it! Living in Nashville can be wonderful, and today is one of those days!

2 Responses to “WSM AM Radio, Buddy Miller, Nashville is great!”

  1. Ron Hounslow says:

    Mary, I absolutely love your voice! You were great yesterday! Keep it up! You’re one of my favourite artists!

  2. Denise says:

    The notion of community is such an important one.

    Musicians can create whilst alone and then come together to share and learn and create new works. This benefits the musician or artist, the music community and the larger community such as the beneficiaries of the Loveless Barn for the Nature Conservancy [what an ironic name].

    Our communities, whatever shape they take, or wherever they are on our planet can learn much from the example of these gifted and generous artists.

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NPR Radio Interview on Here and Now, LINK

15 Aug

Here is an interview with Here and Now, from NPR station WBUR in Boston. Scroll down a little, and hit the play button, and there it sits. Till it doesn’t anymore.   LIVE ON HERE AND NOW

2 Responses to “NPR Radio Interview on Here and Now, LINK”

  1. Denise says:

    Mary’s music breaks my heart and then mostly lifts it up again.

    I agree with Mary about the drum break. When I heard it at the Enmore Theatre, the reality of separation was made real and personal, it stopped being about someone else whose experience I could maybe try to distance myself from. The drums crashed, and it took everything for me not to vomit up, even though I’d heard the song before and loved it for its painful truth.

    My government is soon to make a formal apology to children who have been left in care, and to their relinquishing mothers. I am both yearning for it hoping for healing, and dreading it for the pain it will bring.
    [Truly, I am never satisfied].

    Thank you Mary for your honesty and truth, and thank you for your bravery in taking that first step, and the thousands of scary ones after.

  2. Brett says:

    Very nice to see you are coming to Toronto again…and Guelph and London too. Looking forward to one or three of those.
    Thanks!

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Charlotte, NC The Evening Muse

5 Aug

Played tonight in Charlotte, at The Evening Muse. A split bill with Peter Case. The weather was wild, lightening thunder, wind and plenty rain. A summer squall roared thru, with a pretty big back end punch.

It was wonderful to see Peter again, he looks great and sounds great, he had a fantastic little rock band with him and he was jamming out on an electric guitar. YEA!

I met several adoptees tonight at the show, and some folks active in the AAC ( American Adoption Congress).

Also, my mother drove up to see Tania and I play. She sat beaning from the third row, and it was fun to have her there. Of course she held court after I was done and told people stories, and several people told her their stories. It was a good night. I think the weather worked in my favor. I never did have the right songs for a sunny summer day….my songs sing better in the rain. The bigger the storm, the better my songs sing. it’s always been that way.

Off to the airport in the morning for my first trip to the Michigan Women’s Music Festival. Looking forward to the adventure!

2 Responses to “Charlotte, NC The Evening Muse”

  1. Lori says:

    Just last week I discovered Mary Gauthier; it was through her NPR interview. After hearing that broadcast and a few of the songs they played from THE FOUNDLING I was converted. I went home and straight to ITunes to download her music. I immersed myself that evening…looked up her lyrics and read “her story” and almost felt like it was some divine intervention that brought me to that NPR interview. While THE FOUNDLING songs were beautiful and chilling, PRAYER WITHOUT WORDS struck me the most…it was so Dylanesque…but it wasn’t merely her profound and/or witty lyrics that stirred me. It was also her voice, her melodies…the blend of it all was so superb. And only a few weeks after discovering Mary, I had the fortune of hearing her live in Charlotte, at The Evening Muse. What an ideal intimate venue. She and Tania E. were as crisp and clean as a studio recording; they were the perfect complement to one another. What beautiful lyrics, harmonies, strings and chords! I hope our paths cross again.

  2. Terri says:

    I was at there last night — and Mary, I hope you’ll see this… I just want to say how great the show was.

    Yes, Peter was as good as ever — in his adorable, somewhat fumbling way. I wasn’t sure what to expect, to be honest, after his health issues, but was pleasantly surprised at how strong his voice and attitude were. (‘Course no real surprise about the attitude… :)

    But the stars of the show as far as I’m concerned, were you and Tania E. I must confess that I just “found” you when I learned that you were co-billed last night… Oh, I had heard your name, but hadn’t heard your wonderful music until recently. As a bit of a writer myself, I am blown away by your wordsmithing and cadence — makes what you say all the more touching interesting.

    I sat with tears in my eyes during several of your Foundling songs. What a poignant, searching, powerful and hopeful story of redemption!!! Your story touched me deeply in a way that was unexpected and oh-so-thought provoking; in fact, I’ve lain awake half the night thinking about it. I am now a fan forever and will be at your next show here… and the next…. etc. Most of all, I hope this album has given you whatever answers you needed — or at least the beginnings of them. I can’t imagine living your life; I’m sure it’s had its rough patches and deep holes.

    But I surely am glad you’re here to tell the story — and all the others you tell!!! Cheers to discovery and hats off to you and T.E. for an OUTSTANDING show!!!

    Thanks also for taking the time to play Mercy Now. Best and safe travels………..Terri

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Review in US Catholic

5 Aug

The Foundling/US CATHOLIC

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Danny Duncan Collum

Mary Gauthier (Razor and Tie, 2010)

Singer-songwriter extraordinaire Mary Gauthier (“go-shay”) has a voice like a rusty string on a slide guitar. But that never held Bob Dylan back, and in Gauthier’s musical vision, pretty is hardly the point. That same jarring, unvarnished quality runs through her lyrics. A recovering alcoholic, early in her career Gauthier laid her disease on the line with a song that proclaimed, “fish swim, birds fly?.?.?.?I drink.” At the center of many of Gauthier’s best songs is her harrowing life story, a tale that makes some recent recovery memoirs sound like Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. At 15 she stole the family car, ran away, and spent the next 20 years drunk, high, and/or institutionalized. But on this new album she cuts to the painful, bleeding core of her biography and turns it into a jewel of poetic narrative, with accordions and fiddles on the side.

Gauthier was the foundling of the album’s title. As a newborn she was left on the steps of St. Vincent’s Infants Home in New Orleans to be adopted into a family dominated by a raging alcoholic father. But she says a sense of not-belonging dogged her from childhood and well into her sober years. Recently she tracked down her birth mother and called her up, receiving a painful brush-off that is transcribed in The Foundling’s central song, “March 11, 1962” (Gauthier’s birthdate).

Gauthier’s artistic template for The Foundling was Willie Nelson’s 1975 album, Red Headed Stranger. Like that classic, The Foundling features consistent instrumentation and repeated musical themes (including two “Interludes” and a “Coda”) that lend coherence to the narrative. It suffers for the lack of Nelson’s pipes and mad-genius guitar work, but The Foundling’s emotional wallop far outstrips the model.  But Gauthier’s tale is never played for bathos. Indeed, her matter-of-fact, off-handed restraint, which makes the tragedy so disturbing, also renders credible “The Orphan King’s” affirmation: “I still believe in love.”

This article appeared in the August 2010 issue of U.S. Catholic (Vol. 75, No. 8, page 42).

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