Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mark Kelly Hall returns home to play Puckett’s

- BY SUSAN PIERCE STAFF WRITER Contact Susan Pierce at spierce@timesfreep­ress. com or 423-757-6284.

Mark Kelly Hall was born in Chattanoog­a, grew up in Cleveland, Tenn., has lived in Hawaii, Oregon and finally Nashville for the last 15 years. On Sunday night, May 28, Hall will return home to play a family-friendly acoustic show at Puckett’s Grocery & Restaurant.

Hall taught himself to play guitar at age 14, learning what he could from a Mel Bay instructio­n book and playing along to songs on the radio.

After graduating from Bradley Central High School in 1982, he majored in broadcasti­ng at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. He started playing in public by leading worship songs at a college Bible study. The first song he wrote was a “good-bye song” for the leaders of that Bible study, he says.

“It went on for too many verses, but it made the female leader cry, so I figured it was a hit,” he recalls.

While he knows music is his calling, it’s not a fulltime gig yet, so he works for a law firm in Nashville’s AT&T building. His show Sunday night will reflect his fascinatio­n with pop culture along with his experience­s in locations away from his home state. He’ll be joined onstage by guitar player Dana Harding.

Q

Who encouraged your interest in music?

A:

Everyone in my family loves music, but my mother was the original musician in the family. She always sang, played piano and accordion and tried a few other instrument­s. She was voted Most Talented of the class of 1957 at Tyner; she was Elizabeth Vaught then.

Q

Who were your musical influences? A:

James Taylor, Jim Croce, Jackson Browne, maybe B.J. Thomas vocally and Christian artists like Bob Bennett and Randy Stonehill. I like prog rock (Kansas, our own Glass Hammer), R.E.M. and U2 as well, but I don’t know how much of that shows in my own stuff. Barry Manilow and the Carpenters and I’m not ashamed to admit it!

Q

What are some of the songs you’ll play at Puckett’s?

A:

I do originals and throw in some familiar songs like “King of the Road” and “Tennessee Waltz.” I also do a medley of bubble-gum pop songs. That’s a fun one.

I have one that is about an ancestor, Alexander Kelly, who fought in the American Revolution and was on the original Tennessee legislatur­e. He was involved in picking out the site of what became the University of Tennessee. His family settled in Marion County; one of his descendant­s started Kelly’s Ferry.

The DAR dedicated a large grave marker to him last year, and I was privileged to do the song as part of the ceremony. Best graveyard gig ever.

Q

When you say you perform “songs that

reflect the spiritual heritage of the Bible-belt South, combined with a lifelong fascinatio­n with American pop culture,” can you give an example?

A:

I just mean they include my take on the Christian faith, or faith in general, and also observatio­ns about what I see on TV, online, etc.

I have one called “Children of the ’70s” that I’ve been doing quite a while. It mentions Gilligan, the Jeffersons, stuff like that.

I don’t do overtly religious songs, but my faith is at the foundation of my worldview, so I’m sure it comes out. The important thing is to say what’s true.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Mark Kelly Hall
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Mark Kelly Hall

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States