Available worldwide September 23 on Wrinkled Records, and for preorder on iTunes August 5
Mac Wiseman is an American Treasure, Bluegrass pioneer, and Country Music Hall of Famer, who is now releasing an album that is transcending in the way of folk music. “Songs From My Mother’s Hand” is very telling for Wiseman, and exactly what the title suggests.
While he was growing up, his mother kept several composition books in which, she wrote the lyrics of folk songs broadcasted over their radio by kerosene light at their kitchen table in Virginia. From the time Wiseman received these notebooks he treasured them, waiting until he was 89 to take them into a recording studio, and turn them into a Hall of Fame-worthy album, bridging the generational gap that has formed in the evolution of country music, and sharing his mother’s short-hand with the world.
I was fortunate enough to speak with Thomm Jutz of Wrinkled Records who produced this amazingly unique album, about the experience as a whole.
When I heard about Wrinkled first receiving word of the project, it was alluded to that there had been a resounding “yes, please,” regarding the company taking on Wiseman’s endeavor. I asked Jutz what brought this unanimous response about, moreso the historical nuance, or the cite of the inspiration that brought it all to life?
“Both, in equal measure,” he responded. “It’s really an incredible package that was handed to us and Wrinkled by Mac. He’s kept these books for all these years. Content, artwork, musical direction, all of it fell into place because of these books, and because of Mac’s history as one of America’s most important singers.”
It is ironic that Wiseman, at this point in vast musical career, is bringing everything full circle by sharing the influence of music that fostered his life at such a young age. I believe that if this album has been completed earlier in Mac’s career however, it would not have been so successful, because the weathered-warmth his voice aids to each track is something that only time and life can produce.
I wondered if it had been difficult to stay authentic to the original sound of the songs, or if Mac’s institutional knowledge about American Roots music was all that was needed to keep this album true to it’s 1930’s sound.
“Peter Cooper (co-producer) and I are both keenly interested in (Southern) music from this era,” Jutz revealed. “So between Mac, us and the players we chose, we were confident that we’d represent these songs adequately without trying to sound retro.”
Which is exactly what they did. This album appeals not only to those who favor American Roots music and it’s history, but also those who enjoy learning where the music they love today originated from, and what better way to learn the origin than from the handwriting of a woman who single-handedly documented it as it unfolded.
It is hard not to wonder if the process became emotional at times for the engineers, producers, and musicians involved, because of how different the concept was, and how connected Mac was the content he was performing.
“Yes,” Jutz revealed when I inquired about just that. “Hearing an 89 year old master of American music singing with a 23 year old acoustic music star Sierra Hull would make anybody with an appreciation for this kind of music emotional.”
If anyone could make an album as timeless as this, a success in today’s industry, it is Wiseman with his already large and loyal fan base, from Nashville and beyond.
“So far the reactions from the Nashville community has been incredible. We are still talking to the hall of Fame about how to best collaborate on this.”
I inquired if it was a difficult process to find the musical origin of the songs that were lyrically provided by Mac’s mother, and how true to the instrumentation they were able to stay for the album.
“Not really. Mac remembered all of these melodies very well,” Jutz answered. “As far as instrumentation there’s really no rule book. We simply didn’t want to use any instruments that wouldn’t have existed back then, therefore it’s all acoustic, no drums, and no artificial sounds of any kind.”
The authenticity of the project is apparent, and it’s hard to to appreciate the immense technique it must’ve taken to, like Jutz alluded to, keep the album from sounding falsely retro.
“I would say that anybody who’s interested in Folk music, Bluegrass, Roots music in general should hear this record,” Jutz offered, when I asked the real target audience they favored when fostering this album.
It is easy to see that Mac’s warm and compassionate connection to this music is the reason that songs from the early 1930’s, a time when composition books and kerosene lights were the entertainment on Tuesday nights, are now reaching the hearts of those in a generation where the world never turns off and winds down. There is also something about the simplicity of it all, that makes the listener feel as if they are disconnected from the bustle of today.
“I think these songs take us back to a time that’s often romanticized,” Jutz agreed. “Those were hard times in rural Virginia, yet they were also simpler times, and I think that’s what attracts us to these songs. A lot of folks are on overload from all the overproduced and virtually created music and want to hear music played by human beings again,” he continued.
In a world full of stress, high standards, and false pretenses… where sounds are considered music after they originate from a computer, and saxophonists take a back seat in the corner bars of America to the doctored sounds of music today. We live in a world where we can’t turn off, and “Song’s From My Mother’s Hand” forces listeners to do just that.