Chicago Sun-Times

SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT

Old Crow Medicine Show marks 20 years as a band, and it all started in Chicago

- Joshua Miller is a local freelance writer. BY JOSHUA MILLER For the Sun- Times

‘ The very first time I played on a street corner, which was something I was going to do for the rest of my life, I did in Chicago,” says singer- songwriter Ketch Secor, about his late teenage years. Secor planted himself near Soldier Field during Taste of Chicago’s 1998 run in Grant Park. “I think I made $ 80. It was unbelievab­le. That’s where it all started.”

Busking on streets and at various other spots across the country eventually led to the creation of his band, Old Crow Medicine Show, that same year. Twenty years later, he can’t help but be thankful for the journey the band has taken. In fact, the Grammy Award winners picked “Volunteer” as the title of their latest album as a way to acknowledg­e this unique bond.

“When you’ve been playing in the same band for 20 years with virtually the same group of people, it makes you wonder how it’s possible that you could have possibly stuck it out with the same gaggle all those years,” Secor says. “I tend to think of this in terms of oath or marriage or enlistment. Whether you’re taking an oath or getting hitched, the spirit of volunteeri­sm is in that. In that you have to take on a collective identity.

“When we become volunteers, we lose a little piece of the ego and the sense of self, and we begin to look in the spirit of unity toward a collective sense of ourselves. That’s the kind of thing that allows a band to exist for 20 years— the letting go of yourself and wearing the mask of many.

“It was more than our desire to be in a successful band,” Secor continues. “We wanted to be successful in an old- time strings band, which is kind of weird, right? We weren’t even in a bluegrass band. We were in a genreless genre. And we had to figure out how to do it. The spirit of volunteeri­sm is in everything we do, whether it’s volunteeri­ng for our audience or one another and for the very song itself.”

It also helped that esteemed producer David Cobb volunteere­d his services. They recorded the new album in Nashville at the legendary RCA Studio A.

“The spirit and environmen­t in which we made this album was influenced by his presence and generosity of his ears,” says Secor of Cobb. “We recorded it in 11 days. I think one of my favorite quips is that we probably could have made it in six if we hadn’t taken such long lunch breaks.”

“Volunteer” is the first Old Crow-Medicine Show album to include electric guitar since their 2004 debut. It was Cobb’s idea to include it. While the instrument is perfectly within their wheelhouse, the band’s tried to stick as close as they can to be a true oldtime string band.

“We could’ve always had electric sounds, we just never did. It doesn’t feel like a major deal to have them or not have them. It’s no groundbrea­king Dylan goes electric at Newport,” Secor says.

Still, they aren’t afraid to try new things. They performed recently with pop singer Kesha for the CMT series “Crossroads.”

“It was a fabulous opportunit­y to understand what pop music is about and what it takes to do it,” Secor says. “I felt a great appreciati­on for what she does and for what all the women of pop music do to inspire their audience and be impactful in this world.”

Secor also is glad the band has been able to leave its own impact on music and the world at large.

“It’s affirming of the suspicion I had when I was 18 years old that I was going to make a splash, make a joyful noise,” he says. “And that it would be heard and reverberat­e for years to come.”

 ?? DANNYCLINC­H ?? Old Crow Medicine Show
DANNYCLINC­H Old Crow Medicine Show

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