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	<title>Jerry Joseph</title>
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		<title>Glide Magazine &#8211; Jerry Joseph and Friends Overcome Doom, Gloom and Plenty of Smoke For Special Portland Performance (SHOW REVIEW/PHOTOS)</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/09/17/jerry-joseph-and-friends-overcome-doom-gloom-and-plenty-of-smoke-for-special-portland-performance-show-review-photos-glide-magazine/</link>
					<comments>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/09/17/jerry-joseph-and-friends-overcome-doom-gloom-and-plenty-of-smoke-for-special-portland-performance-show-review-photos-glide-magazine/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[aruback]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Sep 2020 20:25:12 +0000</pubDate>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="578" height="289" src="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/jerryjoseph2020-9-12-WM-13-578x289-1.jpg" class="attachment-full size-full wp-post-image" alt="" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/jerryjoseph2020-9-12-WM-13-578x289-1.jpg 578w, https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/jerryjoseph2020-9-12-WM-13-578x289-1-300x150.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 578px) 100vw, 578px" /></p><div id="themify_builder_content-9231" data-postid="9231" class="themify_builder_content themify_builder_content-9231 themify_builder">
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    <p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">On Saturday, September 12th, a group of friends braved adverse conditions and came together outside of Portland, Oregon to celebrate the birthday of a longtime fan of Jerry Joseph.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Joseph brought along his band, The Jackmormons, as well as a couple of guest musicians to play two full sets of music.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Poor air quality and global pandemic be damned, people traveled to attend this show, and guests sported varying sorts and styles of facial coverings and respirators to match their comfort levels.</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The Jackmormons are made up of Joseph on lead vocals and guitar, Steve Drizos on drums, and Stevie James Wright on bass.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">On this night, the lineup was fortified with frequent collaborators Jenny Conlee-Drizos (The Decemberists, Black Prairie) on keys and Al Toribio (Renegade Saints, Mexican Gunfight) on guitar.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The Jackmormons are as tight a band as you’ll find, and both guests proved their mettle with some inspired solos during two sets of longtime favorites, a few covers (including a run through “Pressure Drop” in honor of  the recently departed Frederick “Toots” Hibbert), and a few cuts from Joseph’s new album,</span> <em><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The Beautiful Madness.</span></em></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">After decades of delivering hard-charging live shows and releasing album after album full of poignant rock songs with lyrics that cut to the bone,</span> <em><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The Beautiful Madness</span></em> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">is earning Joseph some much-deserved media attention.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Produced by Patterson Hood and backed by Hood’s band Drive-By Truckers,</span><em> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The Beautiful Madness</span></em> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">finds Joseph at the top of his songwriting game.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">You can read our review of the album</span> <a href="https://glidemagazine.com/247267/jerry-joseph-teams-with-drive-by-truckers-for-emotionally-and-politically-searing-the-beautiful-madness-album-review/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">here</span></a><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">.</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">In addition to his catalog of studio albums and live releases, you can catch Joseph on Thursday evenings during his Happy Book Live weekly livestream.</span></p><p><strong><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Jerry Joseph, Craig’s Birthday Party, Portland, Oregon, 9-12-2020</span></strong></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Set I: Positive Vibration, Brother Number One, Pressure Drop, Wonder Wheel, Fastest Horse, Days of Heaven</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Set II: Bone Towers, San Acacia, Staple Gun, Bouncing Very Well, Istanbul, Speedwater &gt; Craters of the Moon &gt; Let It Be &gt; Speedwater</span></p><p>URL: <a href="https://bit.ly/3hGGxjF">https://bit.ly/3hGGxjF</a></p>    </div>
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		<title>Jerry Joseph: Live music returns to Music Millennium Monday, September 14</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/09/09/jerry-joseph-live-music-returns-to-music-millennium-monday-september-14/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[aruback]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Sep 2020 18:46:12 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jerryjoseph.com/?p=9225</guid>

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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="640" height="276" src="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Jerry-joseph-ad_fitbox_640x400-2.png" class="attachment-full size-full wp-post-image" alt="" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Jerry-joseph-ad_fitbox_640x400-2.png 640w, https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Jerry-joseph-ad_fitbox_640x400-2-300x129.png 300w" sizes="(max-width: 640px) 100vw, 640px" /></p><div id="themify_builder_content-9225" data-postid="9225" class="themify_builder_content themify_builder_content-9225 themify_builder">
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    <div style="text-align: left;" align="center">Music Millennium announced that Jerry Joseph will be doing their first in-store performance since the start of the COVID-19 Pandemic.</div><div style="text-align: left;" align="center"> </div><div style="text-align: left;" align="center">Unlike other in-store events this one can be done from the comfort of your home&#8230;it&#8217;s live-streamed.</div><div style="text-align: left;" align="center"> </div><div style="text-align: left;" align="center">MM said, &#8220;Mark your calendar for September 14th at 1PM!&#8221; Also to stay tuned for details.</div><div style="text-align: left;" align="center"> </div><div style="text-align: left;" align="center">We are.</div><div align="center"> </div><div style="text-align: left;" align="center">URL: <a href="https://bit.ly/2Fo4qip">https://bit.ly/2Fo4qip</a></div>    </div>
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		<title>Glide Magazine: Jerry Joseph Teams with Drive-by Truckers for Emotionally and Politically Searing &#8216;The Beautiful Madness&#8217; (ALBUM REVIEW)</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/20/glide-magazine-jerry-joseph-teams-with-drive-by-truckers-for-emotionally-and-politically-searing-the-beautiful-madness-album-review/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[aruback]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Aug 2020 18:23:03 +0000</pubDate>
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    <p><strong><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Jerry Joseph’s</span> <em><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The Beautiful Madness</span></em></strong> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">could just as easily be titled “The Brilliant Madness.”</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Yes, this should be a contender for Album of the Year in roots-rock circles.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">It is stunning.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Produced by his friend, and now fellow Portland, OR resident Patterson Hood, who recruited his own Drive-by Truckers to back Joseph.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The album is uncannily timely as Portland remains one of the hottest centers of political protest and one devastating song, “Dead Confederate” speaks to racism more powerfully than almost any other song you could name.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Joseph more than understands the darker side of the human condition and explores some of the unspoken aspects of relationships and truths about ourselves that we’d rather keep hidden.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">This is the album that Hood and Joseph had talked about for years and finally got to make.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">It comes highly anticipated and maybe you have already heard some singles or seen the video for “Days of Heaven.”</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Hood holds Joseph in high esteem as one of the greatest songwriters of his generation.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">His goal was to capture the songs in their purest element without many embellishments.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">He says that Joseph brought in some of the best songs he’s ever written and threw himself into each performance.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">For his part, Joseph claims that Hood read him perfectly and found the soul, and ridded the excess out of every note, pushing him to places he didn’t even know existed.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The DBTs, of course, having grown up in the legacy of the Muscle Shoals session recording scene, have lent their support before to albums for Bettye LaVette and Booker T.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Jones.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Oh, and lest we forget, the liners by Patterson Hood are absolutely a MUST READ.</span></p><div class="fluid-width-video-wrapper"><iframe id="fitvid939590" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Nk67X0J-D6c" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" data-mce-fragment="1"></iframe></div><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The album was recorded at bassist Matt Patton’s studio, Dial Back Sound, in Water Valley, Mississippi with chief engineer Bronson Tew.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The two have collaborated on many projects, perhaps most notably on albums for Jimbo Mathus.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Joseph christened the band The Stiff Boys.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">All current DBTs played live on the recording except for Mike Cooley who dubbed in guitar and banjo parts later.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Schaefer Llana sang harmonies and vocals.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The album was recorded in six days.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Besides Cooley’s parts, Jason Isbell added a poignant slide guitar to “Dead Confederate,” Kyleen King played viola on some tracks, and Little Sue Weaver added harmonies.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Adam Lee mixed the album in Portland.</span><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">“Days of Heaven” is named after the Terrence Malick film.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Hood says, “Like the film, it’s filled with beautiful imagery that paints a picture while leaving itself wide open for your interpretation.”</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">You’ll hear the line “with my brother’s .</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">45 at my side” in the song.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Joseph’s songwriting process begins with a list of titles taken from movies, books, road signs, and wherever he can find them.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">With a compiled list in hand, he headed to his brother’s house in El Sauzal, Mexico intending to write the songs.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The site is on a gorgeous bluff overlooking the ocean but, in an area teeming with gangs from the drug cartels.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Thus, Joseph relates, “At his insistence, I kept the .</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">45 action off, on the table with my iPad and notepaper for the few days I was to write, adding a weird vibe to the songs I was writing.”</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">“Bone Towers” is about the unraveling of a relationship with imagery from the skeletal structures of unfinished skyscrapers, left to blow in the wind after the fall of Saddam Hussein.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">(Joseph has spent considerable time touring in the Middle East, Asia, South America and South Africa, among other places). “</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">(I’m in love with) Hyrum Black” is a ‘Mormon Outlaw Cowboy Song’ steeped in blood, religion, and desert air.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The late John Barlow who wrote with Jerry Garcia, called it one of the greatest songs he’s ever heard. “</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Good” is both a prayer for his children and a curse upon the darker forces of culture and politics infused lines such as “If anyone has any soul anymore, to cash in for psalm to answer for our sins.”</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">On the other hand, “Full Body Echo,” also released as a video and single, is the rare feel-good song written in South Africa when Joseph was touring.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">It’s about the way people of one’s past haunt their psyche, like ghosts.</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">”San Acacia” begins with few beautiful notes from Jay Gonzalez and morphs into an engaging song full of harmonies and the indelible chorus of “San Acacia…</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Won’t you take me as I am, As I am” Hood end his liner notes this way, referencing the song – “Jerry, to me is a cult figure who could, in some alternate reality, have easily been one of the biggest stars in the world.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">One of the greatest live performers I have ever seen and long one of my favorite songwriters.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">I can’t hear the chorus of “San Acacia” without picturing Jerry singing in front of 100,000 screaming fans, in a soccer stadium in Brazil.”</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">“Sugar Smacks,” the fourth single which also has a video,  a musical rant on the state of the world, a raw blast of emotion accompanied by a dizzying cinematic video, filled with footage from the global wanderer’s many travels over the years.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The montage includes images of Joseph’s tours to Lebanon, Cambodia, Nicaragua, Israel, New Zealand, trips with his non-profit Nomad Music Foundation to Kurdish Iraq and Afghanistan and travels to Mumbai, Brazil and many more.</span>  <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">It’s a wild manifesto of sorts, a punk rocker spitting unrestrained anger at inhuman aspects of human nature, particularly at the horrific violence women face globally – ‘you can’t tell the pigs from the priests” among its many lines. “</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">It might be the most punk rock song I’ve heard in twenty years (or more) and served as a gravitational pull throughout the making of this album,” adds Hood.</span></p><div class="fluid-width-video-wrapper"><iframe id="fitvid964721" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xCIygAMldXc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" data-mce-fragment="1"></iframe></div><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The song came together quickly, Joseph had a riff, pushed record on his phone, started ranting and 20 minutes later, “Sugar Smacks” was pretty much done.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">He muses, “It would be difficult to overstate the magic of the Drive-By Truckers digging into it.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">In Mississippi, at Dial Back Studios when we were recording, Bobby Matt Patton, DBT bass player, delivered an apocalyptic motherfucker of ground shaking bass line.”</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Hood recalls, “In recording ‘Sugar Smacks’, it was the evening of the fifth day of our six.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">With a little preparation, we cut it in one breathless take.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Mike Cooley added a banjo part that played off of the insanity of the ride it takes you on.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">As a founding member of Drive-By Truckers, I place this track among my favorite moments of this band’s discography and the rest of them are in unanimous agreement with me about that.” “</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Black Star Line” was written in the late night/early morning in the hours following David Bowie’s passing.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Joseph unleashed a searing guitar solo that takes the song from its quiet moments to a sexy, lush vibe and a Glam-influenced finale. “</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Eureka,” the album closer is a beautiful ode to Joseph’s mother, ending in a singalong crescendo.</span><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Hopefully, you’re still with us.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">We’ve saved the best for last. “</span><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Dead Confederate” should receive consideration for “Song of the Year,” especially in this year of social and racial unrest.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Hood claims he’s never been able to listen to it all the way through without experiencing chills and tearing up.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">He calls it the worthy successor to “Rednecks” from Randy Newman’s Good Old Boys, this from a songwriter who has written plenty of songs on the subject throughout his career.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">The song assails bigotry and hatred from the defiant voice of a confederate statue being torn down – “Swallowing my granite pride, they haul me out to gravel pits/Forget that I lived and dies, smash me up to chips and bits/Buying selling humans was good work if you could get it/Well the South could build great pyramids or rise up if you let it.”</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Originally Joseph did not intend to put the song on the album but did so at Hood’s insistence, with Joseph playing and singing with no accompaniment.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">He cut it in the control room in one take, completely usurping all the emotion in the room.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">After spending a couple of months with it they added Jason Isbell’s vintage slide guitar part which truly punctuates the song.</span> <span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">Kyleen King played viola and Hood joined in on the last chorus.</span></p><p><span class="blast mmt-sentence" aria-hidden="true">This is a one-of-a-kind devastating album that needs your immediate attention.</span></p><p>URL: <a href="https://bit.ly/3aFDre2">https://bit.ly/3aFDre2</a></p>    </div>
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		<title>Americana UK &#8211;  Interview: Jerry Joseph on Dead Confederates and Middle Eastern child refugees</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/20/americana-uk-interview-jerry-joseph-on-dead-confederates-and-middle-eastern-child-refugees/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[aruback]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Aug 2020 18:20:41 +0000</pubDate>
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    <p>If you have come across Jerry Joseph’s name recently you may be forgiven for thinking he is a new artist, such is the buzz around his latest album <em>‘The Beautiful Madness’</em>. However, he has been a professional musician since the ‘70s and has made over 30 albums. In America, he has built up a dedicated fan base and gained a reputation as one of the better songwriters. He is a true believer in the view that music is art and, despite personal challenges and the disappointment on missing out on a major record deal 30 years ago, he has continued to pursue his muse. Americana UK’s Martin Johnson caught up by phone with Jerry in a camper van on his Portland, Oregon, <span id="more-49607"></span>home’s driveway and they discussed not only Jerry’s music and influences but the jamband scene, Jerry’s charity work to bring music education to children in the Middle Eastern refugee camps, his love of his family and why he recorded his new album with the Drive-by Truckers. They also discussed, what is one of the best songs about the American South, Jerry’s own <em>‘Dead Confederate’.</em></p><p><em>How are you, I hope you and your family and friends are all OK and coping with the challenges of coronavirus?<strong><br /></strong></em>It is weird for me as I’m not complaining. I know musicians are out of work and that, but if I died tomorrow then I could say the last four months have been the best of my life spent with my family. The demonstrations in Portland were horrendous, I went down nearly every night, got the shit kicked out of me a few times, and it was a war zone. You had to pinch yourself to make sure this was actually happening in America. Very strange times overall but I am loathed to complain because of the time I’m spending with my family. I am seriously thinking about moving somewhere because of all the shit that is happening, Ireland you know, we are going into these dark months. When I did the album I was thinking of it being about marriage 10 or 15 years in but I have a couple of political songs on it and they just seem to be work with the newspapers every day.</p><p><em>Strange times indeed. Hopefully, come November, things will start improving.<br /></em>Maybe for you guys but over here I can see another 200,000 dead, the president may even have managed to cancel the elections. It is a funny time for music. I do this streaming thing every Thursday night called <em>‘Happy Book’</em>. It is amazing,  the number of people watching. Numbers have fallen off as people have started camping, but as the darker nights come, numbers will pick up again. I’ve also been working on my breakfast skills with my kids. I had to get to 60 to get my priorities right.</p><p><em>Your songs have been covered a lot by Widespread Panic, how helpful has the jamband link been to your career up to now?<br /></em>I think it hurt me a lot. Here’s the deal with that, someone once called me the Henry Rollins of jambands. I can’t really play all them festivals and my band the Jackmormons are pretty rock heavy. Those guys in Widespread Panic are my fiends, and back in the day before ‘Spotify’, they made me a lot of money. But I couldn’t do things. I remember I couldn’t do a tour with Dinosaur Jr because of my jamband association.  <em>Mojo</em> magazine or <em>Pitchfork</em> get my albums and because of my Widespread Panic association they throw them in the trash without listening. I’ve made like 30 records and in Europe I’ve toured with the Delines, Chris Whitley,  and I come back to the states and I don’t get any credit for that. It has hurt me with other writers. Widespread Panic have a massive live audience but they don’t say anything in their songs. I don’t know what to do there, I can’t renounce my friends, but it has hurt me.</p><p><em>You’ve had a number of bands in your career, Little Women, Jackmormons, why record with the Drive-by Truckers on the new record ‘The Beautiful Madness’?<br /></em>Patterson Hood was aware of my need to breakout of that situation. I’ve got a great band, but we talked about going sideways and using The Truckers. They are amazing and I’ve known them forever, I brought them out on their first tours of the West and we have been friends ever since. Me and Patterson have been dancing around him producing a record and finally it was green lighted. For me, I have never deferred to a producer as much as I have with Patterson. He had a mission, he knew what the songs needed to sound like, he knew the ones he wanted to cut.</p><p><em>Patterson has a great track record as a producer doesn’t he?</em><br />He has amazing ears. He moved to Portland a few years back, and we started hanging, we both had young children. When we came back from touring there was no let daddy sleep for three days, it was straight into childcare. We found such similarities in our lives and we started conversations about making this record. It has been good.</p><p><em>The new record is making a lot of waves in the media due to the quality of the songs. How many did you have to start with and how did you whittle them down to what was used for the record?</em><br />More than I’ve ever had in my life. When I write songs, I try to go somewhere and just spew them out. I don’t do demos. I had a week writing in South Africa and a week in California. My brother has this house down in Mexico and I write a lot of songs there. It is just 90 minutes south of where I grew up in San Diego, and it is kind of a weird area. Big Cartel wars but it also has an amazing surf break. So I had all these songs written, a lot like 30 songs, and I gave them to Patterson to see what he wanted to work with.</p><p><em>He certainly made an impressive selection for the album, mind you, I haven’t heard the songs that weren’t selected.<strong><br /></strong></em>He picked a wide range of songs and the band were pretty receptive to them. It was pretty cool.</p><p><em>You have been a respected musician and songwriter for a long time now, why is it now you are making a big push in Europe?<br /></em>Why? I’ve been trying for years. In the late ‘90s, I was on a label out of Berlin. I would well in like Germany and Italy, not fabulous, but good. However, I could never break in the UK. I’ve lost count of the times I’ve played the 12 Bar on Denmark Street for like 8 people. I kept trying, kept trying going back and forth . I was with Richard Fontaine on the last tour, and those guys are good friends of mine, they started opening for me in the mid-nineties. It all sort of feel into place organically, and the original plan was to be out with The Truckers all of June, and they were going to come out and back me as a band called The Stiff Boys, and then do their show. I couldn’t believe their management were going to let them do that. Those were pretty big shows across Europe and they have been pushed back until next year. I’m out with the Delines in February. One thing I’m known for is a pretty good work ethic. When this thing is over I will work any gig, record store appearance from Cork to Glasgow you know. We’ll see what happens, I’m excited for when I can go work again.</p><p><em>When you are out with the Delines will you be solo?<br /></em>One thing about this record, I can play it solo or with a band. Solo isn’t my scene only because it gets really lonely but I’m probably at my best.  As well as my band, I play with my drummer, who’s wife is Jenny Conlee of the Decemberists and we do a trio thing, so all that stuff is on the table but with the Delines I will be solo. I’m pretty malleable, hell I’m pretty old,  and I’ve had 10 piece bands, duos but if the songs are good that’s what counts. After the songs, it doesn’t really matter.</p><p><em>Patterson Hood of the Truckers has said ‘Sugar Smacks’ is the best punk song he has heard in 20 years. You also have a song about Bowie, ‘Black Star Line’, on the record, how much was he and ‘70s music an influence on your music?<br /></em>I was born in 1961. When I was 10 I started playing electric guitar. There used to be a Beatle’s cartoon on a Saturday and I kind of always wanted to be a musician as well as a superhero and war hero. My mom has my first song.  I started playing in bands at 11. We are now taking 1972 and I saw everybody in concert. Back then you could let your 11 and 12 year-old go to concerts. We were just talking the other night about going to the opening night of <em>‘Physical Graffiti’. </em>It was 1974 or something and that’s when I saw Bowie. We were like little kids, and he comes on and asks  how many bi-sexuals are out there, and we said “What is a bi-sexual?”. In Southern California in the ‘70s at 10 or 11 we were already smoking pot, taking acid, that culture, we were only children, it certainly didn’t make for a good time for my parents. I was in a lot of trouble, so we moved to New Zealand when I was 15. My parents thought the could keep me out of trouble by moving to the other side of the world but it didn’t work out. I hung out with a motorcycle gang, played in a heavy metal band, and then I was kicked out of the country. While my parents weren’t happy, I was playing music professionally. I was listening to what every other 15 or 16 year old was listening to, you know some prog stuff, Weather Report what have you. Then, just before I went to New Zealand,  I saw The Wailers. And they may have well have beamed down from Mars they were that different.  The Clash broke when I was in New Zealand, and for a long time I was a reggae guy. My ‘80s band The Little Woman were a roots reggae band and we toured with some reggae guys, Burning Spear for one. However, on every record I did there was always this country thing, country songs on them. One of my big influences was The Amazing Rhythm Aces, lead by a guy named Russell Smith. He died last year and I was crying, this guy meant the world to me, a great songwriter. All that Lowell George stuff was also a big influence. It is funny for kids these days with Spotify playlists. Everyone gets genre specific but in San Diego in ’74, ’75 we saw the Wailers, The Stones, The Allman Brothers, Marshall Tucker, ZZ Top, I love ZZ Top. I had all those influences but I worry for kids now, if they only listen to one thing, they are like hip hop or something. Some 18 year olds are only into Townes Van Zandt, but hey, I love Townes but there is other stuff going down. We had a great young guitar play a couple of years ago, Geoff Crosby, and we were driving in the van and he is like 26 and he asked me “What kind of music should I listen to?”. We were just looking at each other and thinking well you could spend a year just listening to Tuff Gong out of Jamaica for instance. I never liked ‘50s music, never liked Elvis. I was good with all my blues music coming from Rory Gallagher and British white guys. Back then there was only so much music to listen to. Why I feel sad for kids now is that you really have to seek music out, its all available, every song ever written. How do you negotiate those waters, how do you get that vocabulary? We were a bit like sheep in the ‘70s but at the same time it was a remarkable time for music.</p><p><em><img loading="lazy" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-49612 below-entry-meta" src="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-scaled.jpg" sizes="(max-width: 709px) 85vw, (max-width: 909px) 67vw, (max-width: 1362px) 62vw, 840px" srcset="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-scaled.jpg 2560w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-250x167.jpg 250w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-800x533.jpg 800w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-768x512.jpg 768w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-1536x1024.jpg 1536w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-2048x1365.jpg 2048w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-1200x800.jpg 1200w" alt="" width="2560" height="1707" data-attachment-id="49612" data-permalink="https://americana-uk.com/interview-jerry-joseph-on-dead-confederates-and-middle-eastern-child-refugees/jerryjoseph_approved-photo-6" data-orig-file="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-scaled.jpg" data-orig-size="2560,1707" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;1.8&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;ILCE-7M3&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;1581606014&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;55&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;1600&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0.004&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;0&quot;}" data-image-title="JerryJoseph_approved photo 6" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-250x167.jpg" data-large-file="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_approved-photo-6-800x533.jpg" /></em></p><p><em>Do you think music is now undervalued, compared to how it was, due to it’s availability?<br /></em>One thing it has lost is it’s Godhood status. Like I was listening the other day to Layla on vinyl, and I was trying to explain to my wife  like here is Duane, Eric Clapton, Jim Gordon and how awesome these guys were, also Patti Boyd and George Harrison and Eric Clapton, these people were like Gods. Now, those sort of people are the tech people, it is the guy who developed the app, or it is is the person with the most ‘YouTube’ visits. So those people have been replaced. We had movie star and rock star royalty in the States, but I don’t know whether kids look at musicians the same way. Coming back to David Bowie, he walked on stage and Jesus could have walked on stage, Bob Marley  the same. A couple of years ago I went to see Pau Weller and he was playing here in town to 300 or so, I was with a Brit and another guy who didn’t know much about Weller,  the way Paul Weller walked on stage, he just wore massive rock star, he just exuded it. Even if you didn’t know who The Jam were in 30 seconds you would know he was massive. I can’t think of any young rock band I care about. You don’t see it anymore, take The Clash and their bravado when they came out . Joe Strummer is probably one of my biggest heroes, and I look for that in young people and I don’t see it very often. As far as undervaluing, a lot of that is on the musicians I think. There are some DJs I think are remarkable you know, I travel a lot . I was in Afghanistan doing this thing teaching kids in a rock school. The other guys there were Pakistani rock stars, and I asked this guy what does that mean in Pakistan, and he goes well we sold 6 million of our last record and I go, what? Globally I don’t think music is undervalued, but I think of my 10 year old and what he watches on ’YouTube’, when I was 10 if there had been something like that all I would have cared for was my rock heroes. Another thing because the music is all free it is also kind of undervalued.  We are all glued to our phones, primarily because of the unprecedented political times we are living in. Everyday is a shocker, you wake up and look at the news and go holy f&amp;@!, I can’t believe that is happening. I don’t wander round under any allusions. I do this thing, I go to war zones to support kids to learn to play the guitar. It could be the boy had to kill his own parents, the girl was continually raped for two years. I get my guitars and it is funny for them, I bang my head. Every so often though , there is this kid who gets it, and I don’t think that will ever end. I don’t think art will ever end, we are not going to stop painting pictures or writing books.</p><p><em>How are you protecting your career while still dealing with the coronavirus restrictions?<br /></em>We are in extraordinary times, but I’m not sure we will make any money out of it. There was a time when the steaming thing started, I was making more money in an hour on Facebook than in a week of touring. That money has now gone way down.</p><p><em>‘Dead Confederate’, I don’t know what to say. I read you wrote this song four years ago, did you ever imagine how relevant it would become in 2020 with the whole question of Confederate statues taking centre stage?<br /></em>I didn’t think it would be as controversial. About a month ago we were really worried about it because here in Portland we had the Black Lives Matter demonstrations. In the South I am pretty vocal, I work out there and say lets be clear, you tell me your great great grandfather died fighting for the rebel cause, I say f@*&amp; it, he died to protect the selling of human flesh and lives. I have researched this, and I have zero empathy with that cause but I wrote the song as a character, and the statue is not going to say I am a dumbass, racist scumbag. That is not what the statue would say, it would say I have my pride, I have these things. I thought it was really clear where I was coming from, but we got worried because bands like Widespread Panic, they are big down there, but they have this one demographic that is this fraternity for Republicans and Panic gets nervous about anything to do with politics.</p><p><em>As things developed this year with the Black Lives Matter protests and counter protests, did you ever worry that the song might be misinterpreted?<br /></em>I have one issue with the jambands and that is they have nothing to say, it is ridiculous, you have an audience of 10,000 people so say something. When we played the South, if they didn’t hear my introduction, all these dumb f&amp;+%$ would come to the front and pump their fists. A couple of times I almost shut the song down. My wife hates that song because she says I did too good of a job as by the third verse she is feeling empathy for the statue. My son is black, as are my grandchildren, and he is saying “I don’t know dad”, it is too believable. Patterson Hood and Jason Isbell thought it was a good one though. So it is all there, everything is on the table to see. You guys are also having your own trouble with statues.</p><p><em>What got me about that song is that the question of the South is very complex and multifaceted. You have slavery of course which is indefensible and a terrible crime, but you also have a shared black and white culture that has enhanced the lives of the world through primarily music but also through food, literature and art. Your song captured that complexity. But you are not of the South. You were born in California, lived in New York and now Oregon. Where did you get your insight from?<br /></em>Well I’ve spent a lot of time down there with Widespread Panic, The Drive-By Truckers, I’ve toured and toured and I was pretty popular down there. I used to be fascinated with the South. I would have said my favourite state was Mississippi. It was that black and white, good and evil everything laid out. Then I started to hear from these people, educated liberals, who followed me and they started to say the Civil War was not about slavery. I started reading to educate myself, and I have a history Professor friend who helped by giving me a stack of books. The consequence was that some of the shine of the South was gone. They still have political power down there that influences my life here in Oregon. I’m tempted to say give the land back to them and let’s get rid. Tell them they won the war, they are now on their own. The divisions are now very big, mind you a lot of them are going to die as they have Republican governors who are mishandling coronavirus. On the other side, some of my dearest friends have Southern roots but they are not Republican racists. Patterson Hood  is from rural Alabama but his dad played with Aretha Franklyn. I’m too attached to the South to really say f&amp;%* the South, but I wrote that song and stand by it. The thing to remember is those statues weren’t put up until the early 20<sup>th</sup> century, they were put up specifically to remind black people they had better not get their arse caught out after sundown, they were put there for hate. You can talk about all the other statues, you can argue about Mount Rushmore, you can argue about Gandhi, Churchill may have been a racist but he also beat the Nazis. Anyway I’m glad you like it, it was one of those songs that you know after 5 minutes it is a good one. Take <em>‘Sugar Smacks’</em> off the new album, after ten minutes I knew it was a good one. As fast as I could type I got the words down. I sent it to Patterson and I thought he would edit the shit out of it but he said “….no no . we are keeping every f&amp;^%$*( word.</p><p><img loading="lazy" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-49613 below-entry-meta" src="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-scaled.jpg" sizes="(max-width: 709px) 85vw, (max-width: 909px) 67vw, (max-width: 1362px) 62vw, 840px" srcset="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-scaled.jpg 2560w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-250x167.jpg 250w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-800x533.jpg 800w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-768x512.jpg 768w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-1536x1024.jpg 1536w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-2048x1365.jpg 2048w, https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-1200x800.jpg 1200w" alt="" width="2560" height="1707" data-attachment-id="49613" data-permalink="https://americana-uk.com/interview-jerry-joseph-on-dead-confederates-and-middle-eastern-child-refugees/jerryjoseph_og_0725" data-orig-file="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-scaled.jpg" data-orig-size="2560,1707" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;2&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;ILCE-7M3&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;1581442046&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;85&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;1250&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0.001&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;0&quot;}" data-image-title="JerryJoseph_OG_0725" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-250x167.jpg" data-large-file="https://americana-uk.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_OG_0725-800x533.jpg" /></p><p><em>You may not be well known in Europe, but you have taken your music across the world including South America, the Middle and Far East. Also, you are involved in guitar school charity work for children caught up in Middle Eastern war zones. Americans can sometimes take an insular approach as far as the rest of the world goes. Where does your world interest come from? How much has your Irish, Lebanese and Syrian ancestry influenced you?<br /></em>Well my father was an international figure, he was a scientist and was a top guy for tuna in Conservation, Fisheries and Food. I was speaking to his counterpart in Tokyo the other day, so I grew up with a kind of global thing. I visited museums a lot and travelled to Central and South America as a kid. I kind of realised 15 years ago that I was never going to be a big enough rock star to get invited to Vietnam or something, but if I wanted to see the world I had to make it up. So we started putting these tours together, South East Asia, we did Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, then we did Lebanon where I have family as I’m Lebanese Syrian on my father’s side. I found my grandmother’s village in the Beqaa Valley.  I played Israel and we played Tel Aviv and air raid sirens go off and this guy next to me said in a million years Hamas will not get a missile through, two seconds later the first one f&amp;^%$£* hits. We then play our show. They asked if we wanted to cancel our other shows and we said no. That is what lead to the Afghan people asking me if I would go to a school and teach music. So I started raising money and that lead to the Iraqis asking me to visit the refugee camps. I think I had found something I could do hands-on. I’m willing to go to war zones, I can hand a kid a guitar and watch them learn a chord. I can get the girls to sing, these girls have been in slave camps, death camps even,  and culturally they are not even meant to laugh. With an interpreter I finally get them to sing and I think that is the sound of God. Musicians always talk a lot and support a lot of causes and that is great, but rarely is it something you can get your physical hands-on, you know. So me and my mate Charlie fly to Iraq and if I can help one kid, if I can change that kid’s life and get them to go to university to study music, is that worth $50,000? Do you know how many times people spent $50,000 sending me to rehab, the amount of money spent getting me of heroin pales compared to these things. I am a fortunate person, I am still alive, I have a beautiful young family, currently I can still write songs. It just gives me something to do. You are right, Americans are isolationist, 85% of Trump voters don’t have a passport. They don’t know anything about the world, all they see is this one version. We live in extraordinary times.</p><p><em>What is your views on streaming? You have mentioned it and some artists are trying to move away from it to try and get more control of their music and how it is sold.<br /></em>Whatever money I made from royalties, which wasn’t a lot, I would get a cheque four times a year for $3,000. Once Spotify started that dropped to $300. I was never a big radio guy, and when I did this hour thing that I do on Thursdays I keep it free therefore rely on tips. Mike Cooley and those guys do it behind a paywall. If you are broke you can watch for free, I’ve got a great band and I’ve had $500 tips, but most people tip $5. I find it very uncomfortable. It is the most nervous I’ve ever been as far as doing my job goes. I don’t know why, it may be the camera, I forget the words. I’m a huge Nick Cave fan, and I was looking at his new merchandise website. Right now we are selling a lot of T-shirts and back catalogue albums. We have this captive audience who can’t go out to a concert. Think about it, you spend $30 on a t-shirt, you may buy a CD for $30, you drink at least $30. So they have this money in their pocket. We will see. They say six million people are up for eviction in the next few weeks.  I have a small but loyal fan base. I could book a tour now, thirty to fifty tickets per show at $40 and I would probably sell that out. Just for me alone I could still make a living. All of my friends who are bigger and more successful than me are struggling to work out what to do. It is going to shake shit up. I know a lot of music business guys who are Jewish and they never had a clue the $500 million investment in Live Nation by the Saudis was coming. I try not to be a luddite and embrace the technology. I was telling a young person the other day, that since humans started making art, the first time a guy in a cave in France put black charcoal, red berry juice, red clay and made a buffalo, this is the most exciting time in human history to make art. You can have a kid in Liverpool, a kid in Akron, a kid in San Paulo and they rehearse on ‘Zoom’ , make a record and put it out, I use the word extraordinary very often but it is f&amp;^*$%£ extraordinary. There are no rules, what a time to be 22 years old and an artist. I don’t know about being my age, but for young people, wow.</p><p><em>If you could go back with your experience, what would you change?<br /></em>My biggest regret is when I was 30 I lost this big record deal, I was about to be signed to Capricorn Records, it was this huge thing, and a few things happened and I didn’t get the deal. I was 30 and I thought I was done, I thought it was over. I just seemed so old to me, if I could go back, and I’ve done too many shitty things, the one thing I would change would be to realise how young I was at 30. People were telling me I was still young, and I was convinced that I had nothing left. We were listening to some Faces record the other day, I mean how young was Ronnie Lane when he wrote those songs, he looks 12 you know. That doesn’t happen so much anymore. Most musicians don’t get a deal until they are 30. It is not that weird group of 19-year-olds, The Faces are a good example because you look at them in their tiny suits and they are 12 years old and they are massive. We covered Debris on my stream last night. I have seen more younger musicians in the UK, Bristol, Glasgow, Dublin even. Young bands, dressing up and going for it but you never see that in the US.</p><p><em> At AUK, we like to share new music with our readers, so can you share who is currently on your playlist?<br /></em>When this thing started, and I hope I don’t get a divorce, I started buying a lot of vinyl. I’m looking on ‘Amazon’ and see something for $20 and I get it. Even my kids are saying, daddy has another package. With vinyl, I’ve been trying to buy all the records important to me. The other day I got that new Bobby Gentry, <em>‘The Delta Sweete’</em>, and it is amazing, all the Tom Petty records. I’ve posted pictures of the covers of the vinyl I’m listening to on ‘Instagram’ . It is the summer, so Sly Stone <em>‘There’s A Riot Going On’ </em>and Santana always remind me of the summer. I don’t listen to ‘Spotify’ that much. I was trying to teach my kids about the record. So we open the record up, they look at the cover and we put the thing on. I’ve really been too involved in listening to stuff from my youth.  Every so often there will be something crazy, that Taylor Swift new record is f&amp;^%*$£ amazing. I really love Big Thief. It has been weird because you haven’t been able to go and see some of these bands as no one is touring. You have to go deep with an artist and I’m not sure Spotify does that for me. Can you still get as excited listening to a stream as when you open a record and put it on. Bob Dylan’s <em>‘Murder Most Foul’ </em>is like a Picasso. I have spent a lot of time listening to a Scottish band, a favourite band of mine, Frightened Rabbit. The guy killed himself, he was always talking about jumping of this bridge in Glasgow for like four records, and he finally jumps of the bridge. I just go down these weird holes, the American band Messengers are always playing in my house. I’m a fan of The Hold Steady, Jason Isbell is like a big Nashville thing, I hope that answers the question.</p><p><em>It certainly does, a very wide spread of music.<br /></em>We are trying to figure out what to do with the kids who aren’t going back to school. We are talking about taking a group of six kids who go to a different parent every week. My wife teaches 5<sup>th</sup> Grade and she is in the basement teaching, I was thinking what do I do on my day? I can probably teach 20th-century history, and music appreciation. So we go,  today we are talking about Miles Davis, and the first thing you have to learn is to say mother%^&amp;%$£ like Miles. I think I would be a great teacher.</p><p><em>Is there anything you want to say to your European fans?<br /></em>My friends in Ireland have just sent me the ‘Uncut’ article, and what is kind of funny is they are working this new record like I am a new artist, but I have had over 30 records out, if people like what they hear, I would encourage them to go back over my catalogue and get a more rounded view of me. I’m looking forward to touring this record. If we are lucky may be I can bring my family. We have been talking about moving to the UK for years now. So maybe we will see you guys sooner rather than later. If they cancel the elections I will be over on the next plane. Please thank your readers for their interest so far.</p><p><em>Are you going to issue a compilation album if the new one does well?<br /></em>It is something we are talking about. At the core, we think that maybe the best follow-up, plus me and Patterson are already talking about the next new record. I think my fans in America would love a compilation record. The problem is how do you take 300 songs down to 15. No idea really. But we will be working on it.</p><p><em>Jerry Joseph’s ‘Beautiful Madness’ is released on 21st August on Decor Records</em></p><div class="jetpack-video-wrapper"><span class="embed-youtube"><iframe class="youtube-player" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/cw4QR-9QsSY?version=3&amp;rel=1&amp;fs=1&amp;autohide=2&amp;showsearch=0&amp;showinfo=1&amp;iv_load_policy=1&amp;wmode=transparent" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" data-ratio="0.5630952380952381" data-width="840" data-height="473" data-mce-fragment="1"></iframe></span></div><p><em>Photo Credits: Jason Thrasher</em><p>URL: <a href="https://bit.ly/2E1QV85">https://bit.ly/2E1QV85</a></p>    </div>
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<p><a class="a2a_button_facebook" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F20%2Famericana-uk-interview-jerry-joseph-on-dead-confederates-and-middle-eastern-child-refugees%2F&amp;linkname=Americana%20UK%20%E2%80%93%20%20Interview%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20on%20Dead%20Confederates%20and%20Middle%20Eastern%20child%20refugees" title="Facebook" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_twitter" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/twitter?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F20%2Famericana-uk-interview-jerry-joseph-on-dead-confederates-and-middle-eastern-child-refugees%2F&amp;linkname=Americana%20UK%20%E2%80%93%20%20Interview%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20on%20Dead%20Confederates%20and%20Middle%20Eastern%20child%20refugees" title="Twitter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_dd addtoany_share_save addtoany_share" href="https://www.addtoany.com/share#url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F20%2Famericana-uk-interview-jerry-joseph-on-dead-confederates-and-middle-eastern-child-refugees%2F&#038;title=Americana%20UK%20%E2%80%93%20%20Interview%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20on%20Dead%20Confederates%20and%20Middle%20Eastern%20child%20refugees" data-a2a-url="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/20/americana-uk-interview-jerry-joseph-on-dead-confederates-and-middle-eastern-child-refugees/" data-a2a-title="Americana UK –  Interview: Jerry Joseph on Dead Confederates and Middle Eastern child refugees"></a></p><p>The post <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/20/americana-uk-interview-jerry-joseph-on-dead-confederates-and-middle-eastern-child-refugees/" target="_blank">Americana UK -  Interview: Jerry Joseph on Dead Confederates and Middle Eastern child refugees</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/" target="_blank">Jerry Joseph</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>No Depression: Jerry Joseph Balances the Current and Timeless on ‘The Beautiful Madness’</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/20/no-depression-jerry-joseph-balances-the-current-and-timeless-on-the-beautiful-madness/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Aug 2020 18:18:17 +0000</pubDate>
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    <p>At the end of the Bible, John the Revelator writes one of the most apocalyptic, prophetic pieces of text in history. Though the book of Revelation is full of images and stories that conjure visions of the end of times, it also presents the culmination of this world as being a near-unfathomably beautiful worship gathering, featuring “a great multitude that no one could number, from all tribes and peoples and languages.” While the current state of America seems like it might be closer to the end times than it is to this divine party, it’s the balance of darkness and light, the battle between good and evil, that has made this book such an important text, regardless of difference in faith or belief.</p><p>On Jerry Joseph’s new record, <em>The Beautiful Madness</em>, he walks the line between darkness and light, good and evil, and does so masterfully as he somehow speaks into the current realities of life with songs that were written well before a virus ravaged the globe and the murders of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd erupted protests and movements in the name of justice.</p><p>In other words, <em>The Beautiful Madness </em>is both prophetic and apocalyptic, quickly becoming a revelation for all who have ears to hear.</p><p>“Putting down the torch, surrender to the swell,” Joseph sings on opening track, “Days of Heaven.” “Ready for the dive, these are the days of heaven.” Co-written with Drive-By Truckers’ founding member Patterson Hood (who also produced the album), “Days of Heaven” sets the foundation for what’s to come on the rest of the record: living life on the brink of beautiful madness.</p><p> </p><p><iframe title="Jerry Joseph - Days Of Heaven (Official Video)" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/7GbFS0apKPE?feature=oembed&amp;wmode=opaque" width="500" height="281" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" data-mce-fragment="1"></iframe></p><p>Throughout the new album, that madness journeys from the personal to the corporate. On “Sugar Smacks” — a track Hood says is “the most punk rock song I’ve heard in 20 years” — Joseph sets his focus on Washington, D.C., and beyond with a perspective that harkens Lou Reed’s <em>New York</em>. Though there’s an unforgettable novel found inside the track, it may be best summed up in the jarring lyric, “It’s a scary fucking world when you can’t tell the pigs from the priests.”</p><p> </p><p><iframe title="Jerry Joseph with Drive-By Truckers, " src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xCIygAMldXc?feature=oembed&amp;wmode=opaque" width="500" height="281" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" data-mce-fragment="1"></iframe></p><p> </p><p>“Sugar Smacks” is followed by “Dead Confederate,” a song that rings with the prescient voice of The Bottle Rockets’ “Wave That Flag.” Written four years ago — <em>four years ago </em>— Joseph assumes the role of a Confederate statue, exclaiming that he “ain’t sorry, ain’t regretting it,” and admitting without a hint of repentance, “Buying, selling humans was good work if you could get it / Well, the South could build great pyramids or rise up if you let it.” Jason Isbell lends a hand by offering his slide guitar skills to the haunting track, and unsurprisingly, has heaped praise on the song, calling it one of his top five tracks about the South.</p><p>While these songs tend to highlight the madness of the world, there is plenty of beauty on the new album. “Black Star Line” is a nod to the great David Bowie, written the night he died. “Good,” though bleak and seemingly hopeless at times, wraps up with the exhortation, “You said you’re seeking something bigger, I think you should / It’s up to us now to deliver, and make it good.”</p><p>Fortunately, Joseph is far from alone on his venture; Hood not only sat in the producer’s chair and lent a writing hand on a couple of tunes, he was also joined by his Truckers band to back Joseph throughout <em>The Beautiful Madness </em>(Hood’s co-founder and co-frontman Mike Cooley even shows up on “Sugar Smacks” and “Bone Towers”). But no matter who joins him, Joseph remains the revelator of this story, and it is one that will continue to find new life with every twist and turn this country, and world, takes.</p><p>URL: <a href="https://bit.ly/329Ls78">https://bit.ly/329Ls78</a></p>    </div>
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<p><a class="a2a_button_facebook" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F20%2Fno-depression-jerry-joseph-balances-the-current-and-timeless-on-the-beautiful-madness%2F&amp;linkname=No%20Depression%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20Balances%20the%20Current%20and%20Timeless%20on%20%E2%80%98The%20Beautiful%20Madness%E2%80%99" title="Facebook" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_twitter" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/twitter?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F20%2Fno-depression-jerry-joseph-balances-the-current-and-timeless-on-the-beautiful-madness%2F&amp;linkname=No%20Depression%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20Balances%20the%20Current%20and%20Timeless%20on%20%E2%80%98The%20Beautiful%20Madness%E2%80%99" title="Twitter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_dd addtoany_share_save addtoany_share" href="https://www.addtoany.com/share#url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F20%2Fno-depression-jerry-joseph-balances-the-current-and-timeless-on-the-beautiful-madness%2F&#038;title=No%20Depression%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20Balances%20the%20Current%20and%20Timeless%20on%20%E2%80%98The%20Beautiful%20Madness%E2%80%99" data-a2a-url="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/20/no-depression-jerry-joseph-balances-the-current-and-timeless-on-the-beautiful-madness/" data-a2a-title="No Depression: Jerry Joseph Balances the Current and Timeless on ‘The Beautiful Madness’"></a></p><p>The post <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/20/no-depression-jerry-joseph-balances-the-current-and-timeless-on-the-beautiful-madness/" target="_blank">No Depression: Jerry Joseph Balances the Current and Timeless on ‘The Beautiful Madness’</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/" target="_blank">Jerry Joseph</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Rolling Stone &#8211; Country Music Picks: Week of August 17th &#8211; Jerry Joseph’s challenging “Dead Confederate&#8221;</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/17/rolling-stone-country-music-picks-week-of-august-17th-jerry-josephs-challenging-dead-confederate/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[aruback]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Aug 2020 18:09:50 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jerryjoseph.com/?p=9169</guid>

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    <h3>Jerry Joseph, “Dead Confederate”</h3><p>A Confederate statue on the cusp of being toppled tells its story in songwriter Jerry Joseph’s damning and disturbing ballad. It’s a challenging listen: about the South, America’s racist history, and what’s to come. The song appears on Joseph’s new album <em>The Beautiful Madness</em>, produced by Patterson Hood and featuring Drive-By Truckers as the backing band. Those haunting slide-guitar notes on “Dead Confederate”? That’s Jason Isbell.</p><p>URL: <a href="https://bit.ly/348ohNa">https://bit.ly/348ohNa</a></p>    </div>
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<p><a class="a2a_button_facebook" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F17%2Frolling-stone-country-music-picks-week-of-august-17th-jerry-josephs-challenging-dead-confederate%2F&amp;linkname=Rolling%20Stone%20%E2%80%93%20Country%20Music%20Picks%3A%20Week%20of%20August%2017th%20%E2%80%93%20Jerry%20Joseph%E2%80%99s%20challenging%20%E2%80%9CDead%20Confederate%E2%80%9D" title="Facebook" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_twitter" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/twitter?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F17%2Frolling-stone-country-music-picks-week-of-august-17th-jerry-josephs-challenging-dead-confederate%2F&amp;linkname=Rolling%20Stone%20%E2%80%93%20Country%20Music%20Picks%3A%20Week%20of%20August%2017th%20%E2%80%93%20Jerry%20Joseph%E2%80%99s%20challenging%20%E2%80%9CDead%20Confederate%E2%80%9D" title="Twitter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_dd addtoany_share_save addtoany_share" href="https://www.addtoany.com/share#url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F17%2Frolling-stone-country-music-picks-week-of-august-17th-jerry-josephs-challenging-dead-confederate%2F&#038;title=Rolling%20Stone%20%E2%80%93%20Country%20Music%20Picks%3A%20Week%20of%20August%2017th%20%E2%80%93%20Jerry%20Joseph%E2%80%99s%20challenging%20%E2%80%9CDead%20Confederate%E2%80%9D" data-a2a-url="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/17/rolling-stone-country-music-picks-week-of-august-17th-jerry-josephs-challenging-dead-confederate/" data-a2a-title="Rolling Stone – Country Music Picks: Week of August 17th – Jerry Joseph’s challenging “Dead Confederate”"></a></p><p>The post <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/17/rolling-stone-country-music-picks-week-of-august-17th-jerry-josephs-challenging-dead-confederate/" target="_blank">Rolling Stone - Country Music Picks: Week of August 17th - Jerry Joseph’s challenging “Dead Confederate"</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/" target="_blank">Jerry Joseph</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>American Songwriter: Jerry Joseph Delivers the Dreaded Darkness on ‘The Beautiful Madness’</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/17/american-songwriter-jerry-joseph-delivers-the-dreaded-darkness-on-the-beautiful-madness/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[aruback]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Aug 2020 18:00:08 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jerryjoseph.com/?p=9166</guid>

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    <p>Jerry Joseph | <em>The Beautiful Madness</em> | (Cosmo Sex School)<br />3.5 stars out of 5</p><p>Jerry Joseph clearly doesn’t take anything for granted. He’s always been tough, tenacious and prone to speak his mind, no matter how gruff or uncompromising he might appear  in the process. His new album, <em>The Beautiful Madness</em>, makes all of that absolutely clear, finding Joseph tackling issues ranging from the rancor raised in response to the Black Lives Matter movement to the ever evolving rollercoaster ride that finds most relationships in a constant state of flux. He dispenses with triviality and doesn’t allow sentiment to shade his perceptions. And when he lets loose with a bitter rant or a relentless invective, it simply serves to assert his intent.<br /><br />Indeed, the new album adroitly sums up the state of the world as it exists today. In the ironically dubbed “Good” Joseph delivers his own turgid treatise:</p><p>“Everybody I know these days talking bout the end of times<br />Fires and hurricanes and the coming of intelligent design</p><p>War and rumors of war pandemic parasites</p><p>Atomic Yellowstone blowing out all the night.”</p><p>Indeed, you won’t find a more succinct update, even on the evening news.</p><p>Produced by longtime admirer Patterson Hood and backed by Hood’s band, the Drive By Truckers, Joseph provides a scathing delivery that is, by turns, rugged, ramshackle, sprawling and assertive. The caustic spoken word soliloquy at the core of “Sugar Smacks” offers homage to David Bowie, Johnny Thunder and Joe Strummer while also decrying a seemingly senseless contradiction in terms. “It’s a scary fucking world when you can’t tell the pigs from the priests,” he moans, leaving no stone unturned in his wake. Likewise, he rips a page from today’s headlines on the plodding but pervasive “Dead Confederates,” a song that decries today’s racial disparity from the ill advised perspective of a stubborn racist southerner.</p><p>It’s evident by now that <em>The Beautiful Madness</em> isn’t an album for the faint of heart or those that hope for mere escapist entertainment. After all, Joseph has put himself in the trenches in real life, quite literally as well. His Nomad Music Foundation brings music instruction to children in war zones and refugee camps, and he has no qualms about sharing the cold realities of dark and dire circumstance with those who dare to listen. Gritty yet determined, assertive but still steady, Joseph offers a stealth-eyed glimpse of a world seemingly on the verge of collapse. Salvation may be elusive, but clearly Joseph won’t give way to the inevitable just yet.</p><div class="fluid-width-video-wrapper"><iframe class="lazyloaded" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xCIygAMldXc" name="fitvid0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" data-rocket-lazyload="fitvidscompatible" data-lazy-src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xCIygAMldXc" data-was-processed="true" data-mce-fragment="1"></iframe></div><div>URL: <a href="https://americansongwriter.com/the-beautiful-madness-jerry-joseph-album-review/">https://americansongwriter.com/the-beautiful-madness-jerry-joseph-album-review/</a></div>    </div>
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<p><a class="a2a_button_facebook" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F17%2Famerican-songwriter-jerry-joseph-delivers-the-dreaded-darkness-on-the-beautiful-madness%2F&amp;linkname=American%20Songwriter%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20Delivers%20the%20Dreaded%20Darkness%20on%20%E2%80%98The%20Beautiful%20Madness%E2%80%99" title="Facebook" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_twitter" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/twitter?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F17%2Famerican-songwriter-jerry-joseph-delivers-the-dreaded-darkness-on-the-beautiful-madness%2F&amp;linkname=American%20Songwriter%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20Delivers%20the%20Dreaded%20Darkness%20on%20%E2%80%98The%20Beautiful%20Madness%E2%80%99" title="Twitter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_dd addtoany_share_save addtoany_share" href="https://www.addtoany.com/share#url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F08%2F17%2Famerican-songwriter-jerry-joseph-delivers-the-dreaded-darkness-on-the-beautiful-madness%2F&#038;title=American%20Songwriter%3A%20Jerry%20Joseph%20Delivers%20the%20Dreaded%20Darkness%20on%20%E2%80%98The%20Beautiful%20Madness%E2%80%99" data-a2a-url="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/17/american-songwriter-jerry-joseph-delivers-the-dreaded-darkness-on-the-beautiful-madness/" data-a2a-title="American Songwriter: Jerry Joseph Delivers the Dreaded Darkness on ‘The Beautiful Madness’"></a></p><p>The post <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/17/american-songwriter-jerry-joseph-delivers-the-dreaded-darkness-on-the-beautiful-madness/" target="_blank">American Songwriter: Jerry Joseph Delivers the Dreaded Darkness on ‘The Beautiful Madness’</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/" target="_blank">Jerry Joseph</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Interview: Jerry Joseph on the Beautiful Madness, Drive-By Truckers with Jason Isbell &#8211; Americana Highways</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/06/interview-jerry-joseph-on-the-beautiful-madness-drive-by-truckers-with-jason-isbell-americana-highways/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[aruback]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Aug 2020 18:26:43 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jerryjoseph.com/?p=9159</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Jerry Joseph has a new album coming out this month, The Beautiful Madness, produced by Patterson Hood and backed by the entire Drive-By Truckers band. Stitched together by a common thread of raw honesty, the DBT adopted a style that dovetails seamlessly with Jerry Joseph’s songs. The project is very powerful and versatile. After the entire [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/08/06/interview-jerry-joseph-on-the-beautiful-madness-drive-by-truckers-with-jason-isbell-americana-highways/" target="_blank">Interview: Jerry Joseph on the Beautiful Madness, Drive-By Truckers with Jason Isbell - Americana Highways</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/" target="_blank">Jerry Joseph</a>.</p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="1400" height="933" src="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_ByJasonThrasher_0725sm-e1596646812291.jpg" class="attachment-full size-full wp-post-image" alt="" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_ByJasonThrasher_0725sm-e1596646812291.jpg 1400w, https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_ByJasonThrasher_0725sm-e1596646812291-300x200.jpg 300w, https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_ByJasonThrasher_0725sm-e1596646812291-1024x682.jpg 1024w, https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/JerryJoseph_ByJasonThrasher_0725sm-e1596646812291-768x512.jpg 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1400px) 100vw, 1400px" /></p><div id="themify_builder_content-9159" data-postid="9159" class="themify_builder_content themify_builder_content-9159 themify_builder">
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    <p>Jerry Joseph has a new album coming out this month, <em>The Beautiful Madness</em>, produced by Patterson Hood and backed by the entire Drive-By Truckers band. Stitched together by a common thread of raw honesty, the DBT adopted a style that dovetails seamlessly with Jerry Joseph’s songs. The project is very powerful and versatile. After the entire band supported Joseph on the album, including one song with Jason Isbell, they were going to tour together to co-promote <em>The Beautiful Madness</em> along with the Drive-By Truckers’ new album. Those plans have currently been rescheduled. <em>Americana Highways</em> was honored to talk to Jerry Joseph about all of this, for over an hour while Joseph walked in the park saying hello to dogs and ducking lawnmower noise. We went through nearly every song on the album.</p><p><strong>Americana Highways: Your new album <em>The Beautiful Madness</em> was produced by Patterson Hood, and is you with the Drive-By Truckers band. Tell us a little about that experience of working with those guys.</strong></p><p>Jerry Joseph: I’ve worked with a lot of musicians and producers over the years. Even a week before we recorded this album I had flown to Alaska and there was a gig in a jam band I was in. We called ourselves Maximum Love Vibes, it was me and Dave Schools and Steve Kimock and his son, and it was in that jam band world. And I pretty much went straight from there to Mississippi. I had a jam band experience and then I got to Mississippi and it was just … so remarkably different. Those guys in the Truckers, they would sit in front of me almost like it was a classroom, and they’d say “tell us the story.” So I’d tell the story of the song, and whatever it was then we’d listen to the demo, and then go in and track.</p><p>Mike Cooley plays on “Sugar Smacks” and “Bone Towers.” Jason Isbell plays on “Dead Confederate”; it was really significant to have him back with the Drive-By Truckers for this one, and great to have him on this album, and it was great to have the whole Drive-By Truckers band. There in Mississippi it was the rest of the band on the rest of the album. I played a National steel guitar that I played acoustic on almost the whole thing. It’s ironic that finally after 30 years I’m been starting to get some recognition in the press for my guitar but on this record I am decidedly not playing solos. Although there is a decent outro on “Black Star Line.” Anyway we’d be playing into 2am, and everybody would stay, and it felt like we were all having an exceptional moment together.</p><p>When the Jackmormons are on our game, I feel like we are the best 3-piece on the planet, you know? So I had some trepidation using a different band. But it was really so beautiful, the Truckers were amazing. Without the pandemic we would just have been wrapping up this European tour where they were going to come out before the Drive-By Truckers and back me as my band. That was unprecedented. I couldn’t believe their manager was going to let that happen. (laughs) We’ve rescheduled it, but no one can see the future right now.</p><p><strong>AH: That is really significant that Jason Isbell played on a song too.</strong></p><p>JJ: Yeah, that was the first time they had all recorded together in years, and on such a distinctive song, especially right now with everything that’s going on in our country.</p><p><strong>AH: Meanwhile the pandemic has altered your tour plans.</strong></p><p>JJ: You know, if I die tomorrow, I’d die knowing the past three months of my life have been the best of my life. I’d like to tell you I’ve done a lot in my life, but for the past four months, nothing has compared to that experience. For me to be home, and to wake up every day with my young children and my wife together as a family, has just been remarkable. So I can’t really complain about the Covid shutdown in that sense.</p><p>That said, at the same time my whole career went in the f-ing toilet. And in a funny way, you know, it was the timing of it. I spent years, I’ve had 20 or 30 tours of Europe playing kabob houses and whatever I could do to try to break in Europe. And then finally I was getting some real traction there, like UNCUT magazine had picked me for song of the month, and all this stuff is happening. I had been considering moving my family to someplace like Ireland for a year, and working on this record over there. But it’ll be a cold day in hell before they let an American passport in anytime soon.</p><p>But the upside in terms of career stuff is that we can take our time with it. We considered holding the release of this thing until 2021. But up until now I’ve put out an album every year since 1995, and that’s been important to me, and I resisted pushing back the release date. But I don’t have a $40,000 promotional budget, there’s no management team, so we can work on the release for as long as it takes. And then we can tour behind it later.</p><p><strong>AH: In the album notes, written by Patterson, the Drive-By Truckers are called “the Stiff Boys.” How did you come up with that nickname for them?</strong></p><p>JJ: We were recording the song “Sugar Smacks,” and somewhere in that song, which I wrote in only a couple minutes in Mexico as it came off the top of my head, there was a point where I was doing the shout-outs: Can I get an “amen” for DeeDee (Ramone), and can I get an “amen” for Johnny Thunders, then David Bowie, and Joe Strummer, and then I spontaneously added at the beginning “and the Stiff Boys.” And Patterson heard me and afterward he said “that was a cool reference,” and I said “yeah, I was trying to figure out some cool Bowery lower east side band names,” and Patterson said: “That’s a great one.” And I looked at him and I said “was that really a band?” and he said “No?” We both cracked up, we were both trying to be super cool demonstrating some esoteric NYC punk rock knowledge, and we didn’t want to concede to the other one that we had no idea what the f- the other person was taking about. You know there were bands like “Stiff Little Fingers” and the “Dead Boys” and then suddenly there were these “Stiff Boys” that came out of nowhere, and it was funny and then it stuck. The “Stiff Boys.” (laughs)</p><p><strong>AH: You’ve released the song “Sugar Smacks” early, along with a powerful video. For the record, I’m currently obsessed with it. There is so much going on, it’s so intense. The video is potent and so is the song itself. You even recorded this in one take, for the album.</strong></p><p>JJ: And I probably wrote it in ten minutes. I have this process where I save up ideas and then go somewhere to write, and I blurt a bunch of stuff out in a few days. This record was written up in Marin County, and at a friend’s place out in the country in Utah, and in Pringle Bay South Africa, and at my brother’s house in Mexico where I’ve written a lot, and there are songs on there that just came right out in minutes. When it’s working the stuff just flies.</p><p>Like, for “Dead Confederate” I was up at a friend’s place in a canyon in Utah and I had the first line or something, and he hates smoking, so I went out on his porch to smoke, and I came back in and played it, and he was like “Did you just write that thing while you were smoking a cigarette??”</p><p>So once it starts rolling, it rolls.</p><p><strong>AH: Patterson wrote in the liner notes that you were very prolific, echoing Jason Isbell who describes you as a “triple threat.”</strong></p><p>JJ: I do tend to play all the songs that I’ve written. I think the Jackmormons work with about 320 originals. But then there’s a funny thing about my career where, like, if there was a parallel universe and you could say I had “hits,” most of my hits, most of the songs my fans like, have never been in the studio. But they are on live records: on<em> Live Radish Head</em> by Little Women, <em>Mouth Full of Copper</em> with the Jackmormons, and <em>Goodlandia</em>. If I was doing my “greatest hits” record, there would be a few from those live records, but they haven’t been recorded in the studio.</p><p>But there isn’t some trove of unreleased stuff, there aren’t journals of lyrics I never used. Often I write a song and teach the band and soundcheck it that night and play it.</p><p>Back to this album, though, I had about 30 songs, which is more that I have ever gone into a project with. Patterson picked which ones he wanted to put on the album.</p><p><strong>AH: Patterson counts “Sugar Smacks” as among his “favorite moments of (the Drive-By Truckers) discography.”</strong></p><p>JJ: I was surprised because the one that’s the most controversial right now is “Dead Confederate,” but initially I thought “Sugar Smacks” could be the one that may be f-ing my career. (laughs) What I did was start out with something as horrible about myself that I could think of, so that way I could continue and go after everybody else too.</p><p>I had gotten out of rehab and my ex was standing on the stairs listing all my friends she had been sleeping with, counting down to make a fist with her hand, and I shoved her. So there’s the line “It wasn’t inappropriate touching, it was attempted murder.” And I start right out with that. One thing I’ve learned is that if you open up with the nastiest stuff about yourself, then they can’t go after you about it.</p><p>And there’s the part about there’s another jam band playing another version of “The Weight” because, it’s a cool song, but does the world need another version? (laughs)</p><p>And the video for “Sugar Smacks” is pretty crazy. You see all the footage of all these war zones. And we were trying to decide whether to put the place names in the video. I’ve been been all those places: Syrian border, Iraq, Mumbai, Afghanistan. And everybody has something that bums them out.</p><p>I wanted to put that video out 6 months ago, I had written that song 2 years ago. Same with “Dead Confederate.” And that was long before this whole thing exploded, between the coronavirus and the protests here.</p><p><strong>AH: You’ve spent time in those places, for example the Kurdish refugee camps. Are you in touch with them and how are they faring during the pandemic?</strong></p><p>JJ: I got a letter from the main woman who ran the camp I spent time with, and they are being bombed right now, so everyone is going after the Kurds. There’s genocide there. The bombs are dropping half a mile from the camps. And they let ISIS out of prison so they are back too. It’s carnage. So much is going on in the world that people can’t focus on it. I can’t even focus on it. So this time is perfect for dictatorial fascists.</p><p>We were supposed to be back there in the camps in May. Covid has hit there and workers can’t go back and forth to the camps. They don’t have enough hospital beds on a good day, let alone sanitation. So a lot of people are going to die. But here in the US your grandma is going to die.</p><p>I try not to let fear dictate my life, but, the whole point of taking guitars into those zones doesn’t seem to make sense right now.</p><p>Meanwhile here in America there are the Portland protests, where I live, and my wife and my friends here and I are focused on Black Lives Matter, so when I think about other areas it comes across like I’m saying “well what about the flu?” in the face of the covid-19 pandemic.</p><p>So much is going on.</p><p><strong>AH: “Dead Confederate” is really timely in light of the protests after George Floyd’s murder, and the focus on at least some of the confederate statues.</strong></p><p>JJ: I don’t usually write characters, I’m not that kind of writer. If you want a rare example of that you could listen to “Ten Killer Fairies” from the point of view of a woman who is getting ready to be executed by a Mexican drug cartel. That’s a character study. But I don’t often do it. But in “Dead Confederate,” I’m a statue that’s about to get torn down. But I don’t say “I’m a racist Neanderthal” because I’m the character. He’s going to say “it was a rebel yell heard round the world” and there are these lines in there you could hate. My wife says I did it too well. And in the South when I’ve played that song, I’d introduce it in a way that I was clear to explain that I am against defending a racist heritage. And I’ve had death threats. But this song doesn’t have a ten minute moment for me to say what I think.</p><p>A smart music journalist could figure out the percentage of music fans that are racist and how they (mis)interpret songs. In songs that are a social commentary, for people who take it at face value there is a danger in this song. When we were starting to put the video together for “Dead Confederate” there were a lot of ideas, and we didn’t want to glorify the racism. There are lines in the song that could be taken at face value when they are intended to be more of a twisted commentary. I could see some bubba frat boys singing along thinking I was glorifying what I wasn’t. And those lines, if you took them out of context, then they could look like they are supporting the exact opposite thing. They could take a line out of context and put it on the most racist t-shirt. But both Jason Isbell and Patterson Hood knew what it was when they played on it.</p><p>I’ve had my share of controversy. But it’s important to me to talk about the ugly side of things.</p><p><strong>AH: “Hyram Black” is a pretty wild ballad, what’s the story behind that one?</strong></p><p>JJ: That one is another character song, which again is unusual, so it’s rare that there would be two of them on one album. That song was written with John Barlow — he wrote a lot of Dead songs with Bob Weir. I was in a songwriting session with John Barlow, Bob Weir, Lukas Nelson and me, and we were writing songs by phone and text. I was in Mexico and we were writing by text, and while I was in between texts with them, this song came out.</p><p>It’s from the point of view of a girl who’s betrothed to a Mormon outlaw. And it’s actually part a musical subgenre of Mormon western-migration folk songs, there was a question about what happened when they go to Salt Lake, then once their troubles were over, what do they do? There were all these bodyguards for Brigham Young and they’re all in Utah now, and they are outlaws, and think they have some divine right to take what they want. They would take your cattle, and just take whatever, and they knew this, and knew that I had a band called the Jackmormons, and that I knew something about the LDS church, so that was how I got into that songwriting group.</p><p>“Hyrum Black” is similar to “Dead Confederate” in that some of the lines are like “the smell of blood in the desert, I crave it” where I was trying to figure out how do I write about sensuality from a woman’s point of view and one who loves a killer.</p><p>So there are two character songs on the album, which is weird because it is really rare for me.</p><p><strong>AH: Then you have “Days of Heaven” where you sing about “your brother’s .45.”</strong></p><p>JJ: I was at my brother’s place in Mexico for that one. My father had a place in Encenada, he was the world’s authority on tuna. He set the global tuna catch quotas — Dr. James Joseph, you can google him. My brother is also in the tuna business, and his house overlooks this really great surf break. And then you look the other way and there’s this valley, which is where the people of my song “Ten Killer Fairies” lived. You can see the fighting, there are fentanyl manufacturers there, and meth labs there where the established cartels live, and the government wants to shut them down, but they make millions of dollars. They are killing each other. My brother’s house sits on a cliff in Encenada. He might be the toughest human that I’ve ever met, and I’ve bet a couple tough guys. But he was freaked out because these young guys were climbing up the cliffs, and going through the backs of the gringo houses, shooting people and robbing them. And he says to me “You’ve got to keep the gun on the table.” And I said “But Michael I’m writing songs” and he says “You won’t have time to run back to the bedroom.” So the gun was sitting on the table while I was writing on my phone and recording myself singing it. That was the first song I wrote from those songwriting sessions. If I’m hitting a wall, I’ll look at books on a shelf or videos, and I’ll pick one. And the film “Days of Heaven” was sitting there, by Terrence Malick. So I wrote that song and gave it that title.</p><p><strong>AH: “Bone Towers” is a heavy, powerful, love song.</strong></p><p>JJ: My musical styles come from a wide range, and I was a reggae singer for a long time and I’ve got that in my blood. I like a super simple bass line that everyone can relate to in one second. Originally I thought this record could be about marriage. And I wanted it to be about the middle part of a marriage. Everybody writes about the beginning, right? Like: “I saw her across the room and she was my spirit animal, she laughs at all of my jokes.” (laughs) And then everybody writes about the end, right? Like: “She cut out my heart, she left it on the floor,” that kind of stuff. But I think the middle stuff, where on some days you’re not sure you like each other, and I know I’m a difficult person to be married to. So that’s what “Days of Heaven” is about, and that’s what “Bone Towers” is about. I was trying to get that feeling, of how you get lost in the middle of relationships. People always talk about years at a time where they really didn’t talk very much. It’s pretty important to try to write that stuff without intentionally hurting anybody. Lord knows I’ve hurt a lot of people’s feelings. But I’m also a pretty big believer that if it’s a good line you need to put it in there, regardless of the consequences. So there are some honest lines in there and It’s a middle-aged approach to where I’m at.</p><p>“Full Body Echo” is another song with that concept that there might be things that I’ve missed or need to appreciate from the past. It’s about the echoes or the reverberations of the past coming back. There are songs or smells and they can bring you back to people or places you haven’t thought of in 20 years.</p><p><strong>AH: “San Acacia” is another beautiful one.</strong></p><p>JJ: I thought the best damn song might be “San Acacia.” We were driving to El Paso, I had just been in Iraq, I’d grown up a lot, and realized I hadn’t been across the Mexican border in Juarez in like 40 years. So when we got to El Paso I said I wanted to go to dinner in Juarez. Well nobody wants to go to dinner in Juarez, it has the highest murder rate in the world. On the drive I had been texting my best friend’s daughter, she’s around 30, and I had passed the sign for San Acacia, and that’s her name, so I said do you realize there’s a saint with your name? She was my daughter’s best friend, she has only one arm. She’s a woke hipster, and I had this name on my mind, and then I went down to Juarez, where they still never solved what happed to the thousand girls. There’ve been these disappearing women and they never figured it out. At the border, the border guys were like “What are you doing?” I said “I’m going to go get some tacos.” And they said “In Juarez?” Then we were talking, and I was telling him how I was just getting back from Iraq. They said keep your head down and keep moving. So I went in to the plaza and got some tacos. I’ve been in a lot of pretty heavy places in the world, but in Juarez the vibe is as dark as anywhere.</p><p>So I had all these experiences, the girl, the location, and I was trying to put it together in some kind of Peter Gabriel type anthem. (laughs)</p><p><strong>AH: What’s the story with “Black Star Line”?</strong></p><p>“Black Star Line,” I wrote the night David Bowie died. That one is about my relationship with David Bowie, I wrote that song about being infatuated with David Bowie as a kid, I saw him in 1974 on his Diamond Dogs tour. I grew up listening to all his records. I really enjoyed playing guitar on that outro on that one. This song also really got defined by the Truckers’ keyboard player Jay Gonzalez.</p><p><strong>AH: And the song “Eureka”?</strong></p><p>JJ: Eureka was about my mom. My mom was from Eureka, California. She married my Dad and my Dad went to HSU and she was an only child from this kind of upstanding Eureka family. She was an adopted only child and her biological father tried to take her back. Her biological mother had died, so her biological father gave her to her mother’s father. But there were two kids and the biological father kept the boy. So my mother grew up going to school with this boy who was her brother from the other side of the tracks, and then later her biological father tried to get her back. And then later my Dad came in and he’s an East LA Arab, brown skinned, and then when they were getting ready to get married there was all this hate mail coming to my grandparents. It was one of those towns you can never get out of. But she did, and one day she was walking across the Great Wall of China and she realized she had escaped. And then even when my Dad died she never went back to that town.</p><p><strong>AH: This is quite a record!</strong></p><p>JJ: The songs on the record are talking about David Bowie, and my mother, and confederates, and Mormon cowboy boots and marriage. This time it was something different. I think it just all went through the Patterson Hood blender of editing. He was on a mission.</p><p>For me it’s always been super self-centered. So I don’t often write that character stuff because its taking all that spotlight off of me. I look back at all these records, it’s a pretty honest. But the thing about characters is that you can say whatever you want, whereas if it’s about you it better be true. Because if not, somebody from 6th grade is going to find you on social media and tell you that wasn’t true. They’ll say: “you wanted to be a pirate.” Maybe I should have been a pirate. A little Lebanese pirate.</p><p><strong>AH: In the short term you’re in a holding pattern with live touring?</strong></p><p>JJ: I am somewhat worried about the stuff we rescheduled. It’s rescheduled for next June, but right now we don’t know. The American passport is worthless. It should be the passport that everybody wants and now it gets you into maybe three places. It’s frightening because it’s probably going to get worse.</p><p>Joe Strummer said “the future’s unwritten.” The depressing part of this is nobody can make a plan. We can’t make a plan. I’ve tried to do a couple shows, like one in a backyard with a $70 ticket, and another one in Bozeman for $30 a ticket. I have an online streaming series, though.  I could book a handful of live stuff, but everything is changing so quickly that you don’t want to cancel again. But everybody is going through it. We’re all going through it.</p><p>The album is spectacular. You can preorder here: <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/">https://www.jerryjoseph.com/</a></p><div class="jetpack-video-wrapper"><span class="embed-youtube"><iframe class="youtube-player lazy-loaded" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xCIygAMldXc?version=3&amp;rel=1&amp;fs=1&amp;autohide=2&amp;showsearch=0&amp;showinfo=1&amp;iv_load_policy=1&amp;wmode=transparent" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" data-lazy-type="iframe" data-src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xCIygAMldXc?version=3&amp;rel=1&amp;fs=1&amp;autohide=2&amp;showsearch=0&amp;showinfo=1&amp;iv_load_policy=1&amp;wmode=transparent" data-ratio="0.5625" data-width="640" data-height="360" data-mce-fragment="1"></iframe></span></div><p>URL: <a href="https://bit.ly/3ilr3Tb">https://bit.ly/3ilr3Tb</a>    </div>
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		<title>Portland Tribune: The myth comes down with Jerry Joseph&#8217;s &#8216;Dead Confederate&#8217;</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/07/28/portland-tribune-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Jul 2020 19:55:44 +0000</pubDate>
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    <p>The Portland singer/songwriter hasn&#8217;t been a stranger to socio-political songs, and one song touches on one timely issue.</p><p>Four years ago, when he wrote the song &#8220;Dead Confederate,&#8221; Portland singer/songwriter Jerry Joseph never envisioned the furor over historic statues, symbols and place names would engulf our nation.</p><p>It&#8217;s been an issue, yes, but not to the extent we see today with social justice movements.</p><p>Like many people, he detested the whole concept of the Confederacy and people buying and selling other people. And Joseph said he certainly appreciates how the Civil War changed the nation&#8217;s history. Having friends from the South who feel the same, Joseph penned &#8220;Dead Confederate,&#8221; using the voice of the statue itself as people tore the old soldier down and sent the effigy to the dust bin of history.</p><p>In summer 2020, the song resonates with anybody who sees statues as glorification of an inglorious past. Let&#8217;s just say, Joseph&#8217;s song couldn&#8217;t be more timely, set to be released Aug. 21 as part of his &#8220;The Beautiful Madness&#8221; album.</p><p>Patterson Hood and his band Drive-By Truckers collaborated with Joseph on the record, and he wrote in the liner notes that &#8220;it&#8217;s one of the best songs about prejudice and hatred that I have ever heard.&#8221;</p><div class="elastic_zone" align="center"><div id="beacon_a93c6f7425" style="text-align: left;">Jason Isbell, who plays guitar on the song, calls it one of the top five songs ever written about the South.</div></div><p>One of the lyrics: &#8220;Hey now baby I&#8217;m a dead confederate, 80 years I stood my ground, I ain&#8217;t sorry, ain&#8217;t regretting it, now they&#8217;re trying to tear me down &#8230; Hey now baby I&#8217;m a dead confederate, rebel pride, a heart of stone, I ain&#8217;t worried, I ain&#8217;t sweating it, wish they&#8217;d just leave me alone.&#8221;</p><p>Another: &#8220;Swallowing my granite pride, they haul me out to gravel pits, forget that I lived and died, smash me up to chips and bits.&#8221;</p><p>The thing is, Joseph, an Oregon Music Hall of Fame who calls Portland home and tours the world, said that some people felt the song sympathizes with the ol&#8217; reb.</p><p>&#8220;My wife hates it,&#8221; said Joseph, 59. &#8220;She said, &#8216;You get two verses in and you have empathy for this (expletive) statue.&#8217;</p><p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t write characters, I&#8217;m a self-absorbed musician, everything&#8217;s about me, but when I do write it&#8217;s important to be the voice of the character. The Confederate statue is not going to sing that &#8216;I&#8217;m a racist… tear me down.&#8217; The statue is singing from the point of being proud of his cause. I thought I could make it ugly enough that no one would think I&#8217;m identifying with it. Most southerners don&#8217;t get that image. They&#8217;re pulling him down and putting him in the dust bin of history, which is where he belongs.&#8221;</p><div class="elastic_zone" align="center"><div class="adv_jump"><a href="https://pamplinmedia.com/pt/11-features/474946-383701-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate#Advertising_3">A D V E R T I S I N G | Continue reading below</a></div><ins class="adsbygoogle" data-ad-client="ca-pub-9880854669406733" data-ad-slot="6335853208" data-adsbygoogle-status="done"><ins id="aswift_0_expand"><ins id="aswift_0_anchor"><iframe id="aswift_0" src="https://googleads.g.doubleclick.net/pagead/ads?client=ca-pub-9880854669406733&amp;output=html&amp;h=250&amp;slotname=6335853208&amp;adk=3193165017&amp;adf=468704001&amp;w=300&amp;lmt=1595963785&amp;psa=0&amp;guci=2.2.0.0.2.2.0.0&amp;format=300x250&amp;url=https%3A%2F%2Fpamplinmedia.com%2Fpt%2F11-features%2F474946-383701-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate&amp;flash=0&amp;wgl=1&amp;dt=1595963985162&amp;bpp=16&amp;bdt=2599&amp;idt=42&amp;shv=r20200723&amp;cbv=r20190131&amp;ptt=9&amp;saldr=aa&amp;abxe=1&amp;correlator=8399786646377&amp;frm=20&amp;pv=2&amp;ga_vid=1657217621.1595963983&amp;ga_sid=1595963985&amp;ga_hid=1154846727&amp;ga_fc=0&amp;iag=0&amp;icsg=4503599425126408&amp;dssz=49&amp;mdo=0&amp;mso=0&amp;u_tz=-420&amp;u_his=1&amp;u_java=0&amp;u_h=1080&amp;u_w=1920&amp;u_ah=1040&amp;u_aw=1920&amp;u_cd=24&amp;u_nplug=3&amp;u_nmime=4&amp;adx=786&amp;ady=1806&amp;biw=1903&amp;bih=937&amp;scr_x=0&amp;scr_y=0&amp;eid=21066358%2C21066807&amp;oid=3&amp;pvsid=611326261836634&amp;pem=815&amp;rx=0&amp;eae=0&amp;fc=640&amp;brdim=0%2C0%2C0%2C0%2C1920%2C0%2C1920%2C1040%2C1920%2C937&amp;vis=1&amp;rsz=%7C%7CpeEbr%7C&amp;abl=CS&amp;pfx=0&amp;fu=8192&amp;bc=31&amp;ifi=1&amp;uci=a!1&amp;btvi=1&amp;fsb=1&amp;xpc=3ghUHm8lOy&amp;p=https%3A//pamplinmedia.com&amp;dtd=80" name="aswift_0" width="300" height="250" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" sandbox="allow-forms allow-pointer-lock allow-popups allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" data-google-container-id="a!1" data-google-query-id="CK-BqJTV8OoCFQaOfgodfA4I_w" data-load-complete="true" data-mce-fragment="1"></iframe></ins></ins></ins><div id="beacon_5444988f6a"><a class="jcepopup jcemediabox-image" href="https://reach.adspmg.com/lg.php?bannerid=3270&amp;campaignid=746&amp;zoneid=739&amp;loc=https%3A%2F%2Fpamplinmedia.com%2Fpt%2F11-features%2F474946-383701-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate&amp;cb=5444988f6a"><span class="jcemediabox-zoom-span"><img loading="lazy" src="https://reach.adspmg.com/lg.php?bannerid=3270&amp;campaignid=746&amp;zoneid=739&amp;loc=https%3A%2F%2Fpamplinmedia.com%2Fpt%2F11-features%2F474946-383701-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate&amp;cb=5444988f6a" alt="" width="0" height="0" /></span></a></div></div><p><a name="Advertising_3"></a><p>UnCut Magazine named &#8220;The Beautiful Madness&#8221; album of the month and &#8220;Dead Confederate&#8221; song of the month, saying that &#8220;Joseph specializes in searing socio-political songs in the shape of heavy ballads and rumbling alt-country.&#8221;</p><p>Joseph, a self-described &#8220;lefty,&#8221; sees nothing redeemable about Confederate statues. &#8220;Absolutely not&#8221; do they belong in private museums, although he does concede that, if you look deep enough, a great many people memorialized by statues (or place names and such) have racist tendencies.</p><p>He read a post on Instagram that argued that we&#8217;d be pulling down 95% of the statues, if we went by such a criteria. &#8220;What does that say about your culture when 95% of those people have those backgrounds?&#8221; he added. &#8220;It&#8217;s the best argument why we can say we suffer from systemic racism.&#8221;</p><p>Joseph often tackles social issues in his singing and songwriting. Think of a cross between Merle Haggard and Bob Dylan, and you have Joseph, a rough-around-the-edges fellow who clearly has lived a life and trudges on to tell about it.</p><p>His latest single, &#8220;Sugar Smacks,&#8221; is basically a nine-minute rant about the world we live in — the president, guns, cartels, the abandoned Kurds and &#8220;Lakota Sioux Medicine songs sung by Rocky Mountain white kids, thirty different bands playing the Grateful Dead Book.&#8221;</p><p>&#8220;Cause the real world leaves me throwing up and wishing it was done,&#8221; one lyric reads.</p><p>Joseph has been staying home — aren&#8217;t we all? — during the COVID-19 pandemic and period of government restrictions. Happily staying home, as he has spent ample time around his wife and two younger children; he has two older children and grandkids. He has enjoyed going to Coquine restaurant for its sourced vegetables, sardines, mussels and more — &#8220;it&#8217;s getting me through,&#8221; he said.</p><p>He&#8217;s usually traveling and playing music with his band the Jackmorons — well, he has been to Montana this summer, that&#8217;s something. He often works in war-torn lands and on behalf of refugees.</p><p>The video from &#8220;Sugar Smacks&#8221; includes footage from his travels to: Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Kibbutz Ketera, Eilat and elsewhere in Israel; Beqaa Valley and Beirut, Lebanon; Kabul, Afghanistan; Ramallah, Bethlehem and West Bank Territories, Palestine; Kampot, Phnom Penh, Angkor Wat and Siem Reap, Cambodia; Bangkok, Thailand; Mumbai, India; Nicaragua; Saigon, Vietnam; Manaus and Sao Paulo in Brazil; Melbourne, Sydney and Perth, Australia; Athens, Georgia; Tijuana and Tulum, Mexico; Wellington, New Zealand; Berlin, Germany; Portland; Breckenridge, Colorado; Halabja, Iraq; Jordan; Duhok, Kurdish Iraq.</p><p>You get the picture. The guys gets around.</p><p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t been in one place for four months my whole life, other than being incarcerated (as a youth),&#8221; he said.</p><p>He has a lot of fans, including Hood, who writes in &#8220;The Beautiful Madness&#8221; liner notes, &#8220;Jerry, to me, is a cult figure who could, in some alternate reality, have easily been one of the biggest stars in the world. One of the greatest live performers I have ever seen and has long been one of my favorite songwriters.&#8221;</p><div class="elastic_zone" align="center"><div id="beacon_6272bb51c7" style="text-align: left;">While taking on our world&#8217;s problems and dead Confederates, Joseph also sees what has happened in Portland with protestors and federal government crackdowns on riots. He visited downtown one night and subsequently became enveloped in crowd control measures, and &#8220;it kicked the (expletive) out of me.&#8221; He fears that politician rhetoric could lead to more violence and confrontation.</div></div><p>Joseph does yearn for a simpler time.</p><p>Part of him wants to record his song about marriage, and hopes someday they build a statue for (the fictitious) &#8220;John and Mary Smith who&#8217;ve been married 71 years.&#8221;</p><p>As far as the future, if and when he returns to the road, will the road welcome him?</p><p>&#8220;I&#8217;m getting a lot of offers, at some point I gotta go back to work,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know where I&#8217;m going from here. Are (foreign countries) going to allow U.S. passports?&#8221;</p><p>URL: <a href="https://bit.ly/30WDzBq" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://bit.ly/30WDzBq</a>    </div>
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<p><a class="a2a_button_facebook" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F07%2F28%2Fportland-tribune-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate%2F&amp;linkname=Portland%20Tribune%3A%20The%20myth%20comes%20down%20with%20Jerry%20Joseph%E2%80%99s%20%E2%80%98Dead%20Confederate%E2%80%99" title="Facebook" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_twitter" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/twitter?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F07%2F28%2Fportland-tribune-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate%2F&amp;linkname=Portland%20Tribune%3A%20The%20myth%20comes%20down%20with%20Jerry%20Joseph%E2%80%99s%20%E2%80%98Dead%20Confederate%E2%80%99" title="Twitter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_dd addtoany_share_save addtoany_share" href="https://www.addtoany.com/share#url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jerryjoseph.com%2F2020%2F07%2F28%2Fportland-tribune-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate%2F&#038;title=Portland%20Tribune%3A%20The%20myth%20comes%20down%20with%20Jerry%20Joseph%E2%80%99s%20%E2%80%98Dead%20Confederate%E2%80%99" data-a2a-url="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/07/28/portland-tribune-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate/" data-a2a-title="Portland Tribune: The myth comes down with Jerry Joseph’s ‘Dead Confederate’"></a></p><p>The post <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/07/28/portland-tribune-the-myth-comes-down-with-jerry-josephs-dead-confederate/" target="_blank">Portland Tribune: The myth comes down with Jerry Joseph's 'Dead Confederate'</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/" target="_blank">Jerry Joseph</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Jerry Joseph with Drive-By Truckers, &#8220;Sugar Smacks&#8221; (Official Video)</title>
		<link>https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/07/22/jerry-joseph-with-drive-by-truckers-sugar-smacks-official-video/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[aruback]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Jul 2020 13:55:46 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jerryjoseph.com/?p=9137</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>“’Sugar Smacks’ might be the most punk rock song I’ve heard in twenty years (or more). As a founding member of Drive-By Truckers, I place this track among my favorite moments of this band’s discography and the rest of them are in unanimous agreement with me about that.” – Patterson Hood &#8220;Sugar Smacks&#8221; is A [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/2020/07/22/jerry-joseph-with-drive-by-truckers-sugar-smacks-official-video/" target="_blank">Jerry Joseph with Drive-By Truckers, "Sugar Smacks" (Official Video)</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/" target="_blank">Jerry Joseph</a>.</p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="1074" height="630" src="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Sugar.jpg" class="attachment-full size-full wp-post-image" alt="" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Sugar.jpg 1074w, https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Sugar-300x176.jpg 300w, https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Sugar-1024x601.jpg 1024w, https://www.jerryjoseph.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Sugar-768x451.jpg 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1074px) 100vw, 1074px" /></p><div id="themify_builder_content-9137" data-postid="9137" class="themify_builder_content themify_builder_content-9137 themify_builder">
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    <p><strong><em>“’</em></strong><strong>Sugar Smacks’ might be the most punk rock song I’ve heard in twenty years (or more). As a founding member of Drive-By Truckers, I place this track among my favorite moments of this band’s discography and the rest of them are in unanimous agreement with me about that.” – Patterson Hood</strong></p><p><strong>&#8220;Sugar Smacks&#8221; is </strong><strong>A Ramble West Film</strong></p><p>Directed by Mara Whitehead and Justin Benoliel</p><p>Edited by Mara Whitehead</p><p>Creative Director: Jerry Joseph and Justin Benoliel</p><p>With special thanks to the people of the globe for having us.</p><p><strong>Video includes footage from Jerry&#8217;s travels to: </strong></p><p>Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Kibbutz Ketera, Eilat and elsewhere in Israel; Beqaa Valley and Beirut, Lebanon; Kabul, Afghanistan; Ramallah, Bethlehem and West Bank Territories, Palestine; Kampot, Phnom Penh, Angkor Wat and Siem Reap, Cambodia; Bangkok, Thailand; Mumbai, India; Nicaragua; Saigon, Vietnam; Manaus and Sao Paulo in Brazil; Melbourne, Sydney and Perth, Australia; Athens, Georgia; Tijuana and Tulum, Mexico; Wellington, NZ; Berlin, Germany; Portland, OR; Breckenridge, CO; Halabja, Iraq; Jordan; Duhok, Kurdish Iraq</p><p>“In 2010 my friend Justin Benoliel came to the recording of the Jackmormons’ <em>Happy Book</em> record and presented an idea to make a documentary about me. My stipulation was that we travel to film it. So on Justin’s dime, besides filming the Jackmormons’ now legendary Nicaragua shows, we did tours of Southeast Asia &#8211; Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia and Thailand; and then the Middle East &#8211; Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine and Israel; and somewhere in there we fit in Europe, Mexico and various USA locales. While playing shows in Tel Aviv, the first Hamas rockets hit the city, but we went ahead with our shows. That decision resulted in my being asked to come to Kabul to teach at a co-ed underground rock school. I raised significant monies for instruments to bring with me for the students and thus that was the beginning of my NOMAD Music Foundation, which has since brought me twice to Kurdish Iraq to teach guitar to kids in the refugee camps of Chamishko and Arbat. </p><p>There’s some reason for everyone to hate me in this song…and maybe a line to find vindication, as well. I wish I knew how to reach the Kurdish bead seller in Istanbul who called himself Johnny Thunders to hide from Erdogan’s persecution of Kurds, or how to thank the people who invited me and Charlie to their Holi Fest street party in Mumbai, or how to figure out a way to bring more attention to the Duhok mountain I’m standing on at the end of this video, as it’s currently being attacked by Turkish bombers daily (as are the camps).    </p><p>Patterson said ‘Sugar Smacks’ is a perfect punk rock song. I don’t know about that. I’m just an aging self-centered punk, handed an extraordinary chance in life to see stuff in person. For which I shall be forever grateful&#8230;” </p><p>– Jerry Joseph</p><p><strong>“Sugar Smacks” is the fourth single from Jerry Joseph&#8217;s forthcoming album <em>The Beautiful Madness </em>to be released August 21, 2020 on Cosmo Sex School/Soundly Music for North America and the rest of the world and décor records for Europe, UK, Australia and New Zealand. </strong></p><p>Single available now here: <a href="https://ffm.to/jjss.oyd">https://ffm.to/jjss.oyd</a> and pre-order album here: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?v=7GbFS0apKPE&amp;event=video_description&amp;redir_token=806QNgPyCJfKwgpop2XV_2n5RbV8MTU5MzY1MzE4MEAxNTkzNTY2Nzgw&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fffm.to%2Fjjbma.oyd">https://ffm.to/jjbma.oyd</a></p><p><strong>“Sugar Smacks” Produced by Patterson Hood and recorded with Drive-By Truckers</strong></p>    </div>
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