Bowery Boston presents
RESCHEDULED FROM THU. FEBRUARY 9TH. ALL PREVIOUSLY PURCHASED TICKETS HONORED.
Please note: Kyle Craft will no longer be on this show.
Doors: 8:00 pm / Drive-By Truckers: 9:00 pm
Set times subject to change.
This event is 18 and over. Patrons under 18 admitted if accompanied by a parent or legal guardian.
Tickets available at AXS.COM, or by phone at 888-929-7849. No service charge on tickets purchased in person at The Sinclair Box Office Wednesdays-Saturdays 12-7PM. Please note: box office is cash only.
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Drive-By Truckers
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Drive-By Truckers have always been outspoken, telling a distinctly American story via craft, character, and concept, all backed by sonic ambition and social conscience. Founded in 1996 by singer/songwriter/guitarists Mike Cooley and Patterson Hood, the band have long held a progressive fire in their belly but with AMERICAN BAND, they have made the most explicitly political album in their extraordinary canon. A powerful and legitimately provocative work, hard edged and finely honed, the album is the sound of a truly American Band â a Southern American band â speaking on matters that matter. DBT made the choice to direct the Way We Live Now head on, employing realism rather than subtext or symbolism to purge its makersâ own anger, discontent, and frustration with societal disintegration and the urban/rural divide that has partitioned the country for close to a half-century. Master songwriters both, Hood and Cooley wisely avoid overt polemics to explore such pressing issues as race, income inequality, the NRA, deregulation, police brutality, Islamophobia, and the plague of suicides and opioid abuse. As a result, songs like “What It Means” and the tub-thumping “Kinky Hypocrites” are intensely human music from a rock ânâ roll band yearning for community and collective action. Fueled by a just spirit of moral indignation and righteous rage, AMERICAN BAND is protest music fit for the stadiums, designed to raise issues and ire as the nation careens towards its most momentous election in a generation.
“I donât want there to be any doubt as to which side of this discussion we fall on,” Hood says. “I donât want there to be any misunderstanding of where we stand. If you donât like it, you can leave. Itâs okay. Weâre not trying to be everybodyâs favorite band, weâre going to be who we are and do what we do and anyone whoâs with us, weâd love to have them join in.”
Mike Cooley is somewhat more direct. “I wanted this to be a no bones about it, in your face political album,” he says. “I wanted to piss off the assholes.”
AMERICAN BANDâs considerable force can in part be credited to the sheer musical strength of the current Drive-By Truckers line-up, with Hood and Cooley joined by bassist Matt Patton, keyboardist/multi-instrumentalist Jay Gonzalez, and drummer Brad Morgan â together, the longest-lasting iteration in the bandâs two-decade history. AMERICAN BAND follows ENGLISH OCEANS and 2015âs ITâS GREAT TO BE ALIVE!, marking the first time DBT have made three consecutive LPs with the same hard-traveling crew.
“This is the longest period of stability in our bandâs history,” says Hood. “I think we finally hit the magic formula. Itâs made everything more fun than itâs ever been, making records and playing shows.”
Drive-By Truckers might have maintained constancy but Hood embraced change by moving his family to Portland, OR in July 2015, a physical shift which he says “opened the floodgates” to a batch of deeply felt, strikingly emotional new songs. Having recorded the bulk of their canon in Athens, GA, the band was also eager to reinvent their own surroundings. Memphis was considered but when DBTâs November 2015 tour wrapped in Nashville, the band decided to spend a few days at the legendary Sound Emporium getting a head start on the new record.
Never ones to screw around in the studio, DBT cranked out nine new songs in just three 14-hour shifts, as ever with producer/engineer David Barbe at the helm. Coming in directly from the road put a head of steam behind the band, allowing them to lay it all out live on the floor, tracking songs like “Once They Banned Imagine” in little more than a single take.
“We realized we had most of the record,” Hood says, “so we went back after the holidays for four more days, but ended up finishing it in three. We tend to usually take about two weeks to make a record so this was really quick.”
“That was a lot of fun,” the Alabama-based Cooley says, “and a shorter drive for me.”
Speed was of the essence, as DBT was determined to get their record out at the height of the 2016 election season. By their very nature, Drive-By Truckers has always been an inherently political act, “but this is the first time itâs been out there on the surface,” Cooley says, “No bones about it.”
“Iâve always considered our band to be political,” Hood says. “Iâve studied and followed politics since I was a small kid. I got in trouble in third grade for a paper I wrote about Watergate â the teacher sent a note home to my parents saying I was voicing opinions about our president that she didnât appreciate. Thatâs the one time I got in trouble at school where my parents sided with me.”
“SOUTHERN ROCK OPERA was a pretty political record,” Cooley says. “But we hadnât had our first black president yet. We hadnât sat in the bleachers and watched the backlash, which, as acquainted as we are with racism, went beyond what anyone imagined it would be.”
Political matters reared their head on 2014âs ENGLISH OCEANS, most explicitly on Cooleyâs “Made Up English Oceans,” detailing the life and crimes of late Republican black ops master Lee Atwater. Hood further sharpened his own skills by penning an op-ed for the New York Times condemning the Confederate Flag and its vile role in Southern culture.
“That was a major learning experience,” he says. “Working with an editor, how to streamline what Iâm trying to say, how to find the most powerful part and get rid of some of the excess. It was really grueling but I was eager to take it on and learn as much as I could from it.”
Hood delivered a finished draft to the Old Gray Lady and within moments, wrote the ferocious “Darkened Flags On The Cusp Of Dawn” on a borrowed guitar â his own gear in a moving van on its way to his familyâs new home in Portland. The song, like so much of the album, is a direct response to 2014âs police shootings of unarmed African-Americans, a moment both Hood and Cooley see as the catalyst for their blunt new approach. Long haunted by the police shooting of a mentally ill neighbor in his former hometown of Athens, GA, Hood wrote “What It Means” in the heat of Ferguson, Staten Island, and the subsequent emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement.
“It was all in my head and just kind of bubbling at the surface,” Hood says. “I think we knew early on that was the direction this record was going to go in.”
Hoodâs friend and collaborator for more than half their lives, Cooley was a on similar trip, reading, writing, and pondering the very same issues that rend the country in two.
“We have conversations about all this stuff,” he says, “but not necessarily in terms of planning an album or anything. Then we go home, he writes a song, I write a song, and theyâre both basically about the same thing.”
“We tend to come to the same conclusions separately but together,” Hood says. “We donât really discuss it until we have a bunch of songs. Weâve always been astounded at how much common ground our songs have, record after record. SOUTHERN ROCK OPERA is the only time we discussed a game plan for what we were going to write, the only time. Itâs kind of uncanny. Truly a beautiful thing.”
Further creative inspiration came from a pair of American milestone pieces of art, Ta-Nehisi Coatesâ National Book Award-winning Between The World and Me and Kendrick Lamarâs TO PIMP A BUTTERFLY, “in my opinion, the greatest musical work of our current time,” says Hood.
“Itâs an inspiring album and one that made me question myself,” he says. “Iâm a white guy from the South, do I have the right to be singing about this stuff? What can I do? The only conclusion I could come up with was maybe white guys, with Southern accents, who look like rednecks, need to say Black Lives Matter too. Itâs a start, a tiny start, but a step in the right direction is better than no step at all.”
“I couldnât not do it,” says Cooley. “Iâve got to speak about this stuff, somehow or another. And Iâm going to speak about it from a middle aged Southern white working class evangelical background male point of view.”
Much like Lamarâs GRAMMYÂź Award-winning song cycle, AMERICAN BAND serves as a stark, tightly focused snapshot of todayâs America, an exemplary illustration of rock ânâ roll as a vehicle for social commentary and clear-eyed reportage. “Guns of Umpqua” captures Hoodâs reaction to the 2015 shooting at Roseburg, ORâs Umpqua Community College while Cooleyâs breakneck “Ramon Casiano” is a topical folk rocker telling the little known tale of former National Rife Association leader Harlon Carter and the murder of 15-year-old Ramon Casiano. Known as “Mr. NRA,” Carter transformed the organization from its original role as a sportsmen and conservationist group into what Cooley correctly declares “a right wing, white supremacist gun cult.” A Southern-rooted band opening their album with such a song makes for a singularly powerful statement, the NRAâs monolithic control of the debate demanding opposing artists to be as overt and vocal on the issue as possible.
“The NRA needs to be turned into a political turd in a swimming pool,” Cooley says, “so all these fuckers will start paddling away.
“What Iâm trying to do is point straight to the white supremacist core of gun culture,” Cooley concludes. “Thatâs what it is and thatâs where its roots are. When gun culture thinks about all the threats they need to be armed against, what color are they?”
Of course the personal can also be politic, represented here by Hoodâs deeply felt “Baggage.” Penned the night of Robin Williamsâ death, the song sees Hood examining his own demons and long bout with depression, “the worst Iâve had as an older adult,” he says. “I was kind of blindsided by it. There had always been a tangible thing that I could point to as to what was wrong, but this time I was grasping for something and not quite finding it.”
AMERICAN BAND is surprisingly optimistic thanks to Hoodâs “absolutely” improved mental health as well as Drive-By Truckersâ passion for the issues behind the material. The band intend to hit the road harder than ever in support of AMERICAN BAND, bringing their songs to the people as they have always done, only this time with the countryâs very future at stake. Fortunately for America, Drive-By Truckers are, as a Great Man once said, fired up, ready to go.
“I feel like Cooley and I both nailed what were going for on every song on this record,” Hood says. “I donât think thereâs a wasted line or word on this record. Thereâs nothing I would change, thatâs for sure. I think we got this one right.”
“Iâm sure there will be people saying âI wish theyâd keep the politics out of it,â” Cooley says, “but one of the characteristics among the people and institutions we are taking to task in these songs is their self-appointed status as the exclusive authority on what American is. What is American enough and who the real Americans are. Putting AMERICAN BAND right out front is our way of reclaiming the right to define our American identity on our own terms, and show that it’s out of love of country that we draw our inspiration.