One night on Lower Broadway, Morgan Jahnig threw a dollar in the case and 20 years later he’s still our bassist. Like in Boone, busking continued to bear more than just tips. We made the big move as the new century dawned, bringing along buck dancing multi-instrumentalist Matt Kinman. We were a collective, immersed deeply in the richness of Appalachia, but more than that, we were a pack of friends becoming a band.Īfter a chance encounter on a downtown curb in Boone, NC with flat pick legend Doc Watson, we were invited to Merlefest where we caught the attention of Nashville. Kevin and I shared a cabin deep in a holler with no electricity or plumbing (we did have a sheep, Daisy, and a potbelly pig named Jazz). We lived off the land, worked in tobacco fields, made corn whiskey, and learned from the old-timers the affairs of plain living. We had painter/poet Jake Hascup along the for the ride and Shani Abel, a sassy Lubbock Texan who sold found objects during our street corner sets.Īfter crossing and recrossing the continent we settled in the mountains of North Carolina to further explore our newfound musical farrago. Standing behind the big doghouse bass was founding member Benny Gould and, when he wasn’t birdwatching, wily Kevin Ahearn played the banjo. But right from the start it was me in the driver’s seat of that black ’82 Volvo station wagon with the flames painted on the side, Critter Fuqua riding shotgun, and in the rear view there was Willie Watson riding in Kevin Hayes’ Ford Econoline van (we called it the White Whale). Even today, Old Crow remains a collective, borrowing from the unique talents of an evolving cast.
The lineup was fluid, just hitch up the best available pickers and singers around at the time, and if you had a car that was a plus. We knew we had captured something special. Along the way we discovered a unique country sound both old and new, foreign and familiar. We brought our pawnshop fiddles, banjos, guitars and washboards to downtown street corners across Ontario, to paper mill towns above Lake Superior, farmers markets in Manitoba, Indian reservations in South Dakota, and out to the streets of Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle and Portland.
We feel a great obligation to talk about the more difficult things happening out there in the world, but we also feel obligated to make sure everyone’s having a great time while we do it.”Ĭome early for live music under the canopy of trees in The Grove! Gates open at 6:00 PM and drinks for purchase will be available at the First Horizon Foundation Plaza bar.Old Crow Medicine Show began in late September of 1998 when a monkey wrench gang of old-time string band musicians, most of us still in our teens, left Ithaca, New York to cross the Canadian border and play our way to the Pacific.
“Then once we’ve got your attention, we’re gonna tell you about things like the opioid epidemic and the Confederate flag and what’s happening with the environment-but we’re gonna do it with a song and dance. “At the end of the day, we’re still just trying to stop you on the street and get you to put a dollar in the guitar case,” says Jahnig. Ketch Secor - fiddle, harmonica, guitar, banjo, vocals Morgan Jahnig - upright bass Cory Younts - mandolin, keyboards, drums, vocals Jerry Pentecost - drums, mandolin Mike Harris - slide guitar, guitar, mandolin, banjo, dobro, vocals Mason Via - guitar, gitjo, vocals