Dogwood Tales :: 13 Summers 13 Falls

The days get shorter and the nights get longer. And colder. As the darkness settles in we wrap ourselves in Harmonies, heartbreak, and hope. The ashes of loss still contain the embers of hope.

Wilco, Son Volt, and Whiskeytown will be obvious touch-points for many, but Dogwood Tales have crafted their own voice (with killer harmonies).

Album opener circles the refrain:

“It’s hard to be in the right place
for the right thing all the time.
It’s hard to be anywhere when I got you on my mind.”

There’s a sense of being caught in a winter storm here sometimes. Our protagonists sometimes don’t quite sure where’ they’re going or even who they are. But there is a pervasive sense of hope throughout the EP. Pedal steel laces through the often forlorn lyrics ushering us in to moments of hope. Even though the nights are long, morning’s on its way. These songs explore love, loss, and heartbreak with clear-eyed honesty. Sometimes it’s hard and we’re not sure where we’re going or if we’ll make it, but the days will again wash in and the light will eventually return. Sometimes the best we can do is hold out for the hope of a better day to see us through the long winter nights.

“Hold You Again” doesn’t back down from the truth of lost chances and lonely new realities. “I know I may never feel it again,” they sing, but we get the sense that it was still worth it. The bright melody and washes of feedback are a sonic blanket against the cold reality. The push and pull; the give and take of life and love try to find their balance in these 5 songs. “It feels like a matter of time before the dark gets hold of me.”

“25” opens with the lines “I just want to wake up and feel like I’m alive because I’ve got some cousins that didn’t see 25.” There is a stark wrestling with reality. These lyrics don’t shy away from death and loss but they don’t swirl the pity party drain either. There’s a search throughout these songs; here’s the reality; we love, we lose, we die, and we try to make sense of it all. What’s it all about? What’s it’s all for? Is the power of love enough to see us through these long dark nights? Dogwood Tales think so and invite you into their sunbaked cosmic Americana world to see what you think. Whatever your conclusion, this is music for those long dark winter nights when we need to be reminded that the light will eventually return. “we’ve still got miles of road to go” they sing on the title track and there is a sense of surety that we’ll get there eventually.

Highly recommended

The Deets:

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Dogwood Tales - 13 Summers 13 Falls

01. Hard To Be Anywhere
02. Hold You Again
03. 25
04. Since Yesterday
05. 13 Summers

credits

releases November 18, 2023 on WarHen Records

Kyle Grim - Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
Ben Ryan - Electric Guitar, Vocals
Stephen Kuester - Pedal Steel
Danny Gibney - Bass, Organ, Wurlitzer & Piano
Jake Golibart - Drums & Percussion

Produced by Erik Kase Romero
Recorded by Erik Kase Romero and Danny Gibney
All tracks Mixed by Danny Gibney except Hold You Again by Adrian Olsen
Mastered by Garrett Haines
Photograph by Kyle Grim


Check out a recent live session from earlier this year:


  • Visit Dogwood Tales’ website

  • Follow Dogwood Tales at Facebook

  • Support Dogwood Tales at Bandcamp

  • Support Dogwood Tales and WarHen Records at Bandcamp

  • Purchase Dogwood Tales’ music at Amazon


Kern! Live! And Pre-Popped!

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In case you missed it, The Kernal just released a fantastic live album, Kern! Live! I haven’t yet been able to see The Kernal live, but my friend Taylor has and he wrote the following on Instagram:

“Forget lawyers, guns, and money! Send The Kernal instead! This live album! It’s a beautiful portrait of the characteristic moments of unchecked poetic aggression and rapturous absurdity that we have come to love about The Kernal’s shows. I’m at a real loss for words to describe how glad I am to listen in on this performance.”

With the exception of ‘Where We’re Standing’ which originally appeared on 2011’s independently-released (though Bandcamp says 2013), Farewellhello, the live album draws heavily from 2016’s Light Country and includes previously unreleased tracks. The band is tight and the harmonies soar above the old-school country twang without ever sounding kitschy. Quirky, definitely, but never kitschy.

The Kernal combines folk, rock, soul and even a little bit of funk but the foundation is always and unashamedly old-school country. The Kernal’s father used to play guitar for Del Reeves and used to wear the very same red suit that has now become synonymous with The Kernal. That Grand Ole Opry vibe hangs heavy over the album without ever becoming suffocating.

Preview the track “Just The Other Side of Nowhere” from Kern! Live!

Before he was known as the Kernal (his “fake name” as he jokes on Live!, the Kernal went by his real name, Joe Garner and put out two independently-released EP’s. With The Kernal’s permission we are celebrating the release of Live! by looking back at these earliest releases. Garner now says that these are not “his favorite” releases, which is understandable given the more raucous direction his music has taken, but the strong songwriting voice and unique attention to detail is undeniably already present, especially on songs like ‘They’re All Gone’ and “Bury the Hatchet” on Mourning Birds, his debut release.

In 2008, my same friend Taylor wrote the following about the “Mourning Birds” EP, the debut release from singer-songwriter Joe Garner:

Recorded at a mountain studio in east Tennessee and released independently, Garner's is a sound definitely grown from the ground. Earthy, honest and plaintive; Mourning Birds beckons back to the folk ballads of a simpler time and at the same time casts a shadow of unease on its own mirth. Compiled with a handful of friends giving sparse and simple accompaniment to his guitar, Garner's first effort includes six tracks that display the enigmatic range of moods that make this burgeoning songwriter and storyteller a haunted soul not soon forgotten.

Mourning Birds Tracklisting:

  1. They're All Gone

  2. Bury the Hatchet

  3. High School Devotion

  4. June and God

  5. The Ballad of Gypsy Jack

  6. Coyote Cry

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Garner followed the strong debut with a very Independent EP 2009. It was hand-packaged and came as a CD-R. I was lucky enough to get a copy but I’m not sure how many people can say the same.

The shift towards old school country is what’s most interesting about the EP, though the songs are still strong. Listening to these back-to-back, the shift to a full band leaves the sparseness of Mourning Birds behind but the Twang hasn’t fully taken over. It might be better classified as alt. country but the shift towards more traditional Country is already apparent. It’s like watching someone finally embrace who’ve they’ve been all along. The EP includes an early version of Farewellhello’s ‘Homicide’ at a slower pace but the core of the song is already worked out.

2009 Tracklisting:

  1. Goodtime Charlie’s

  2. Homicide

  3. Coat of Arms

  4. Reason, What Reason

Though these releases might not be The Kernal’s favorite, they are terrific postcards from the journey of a songwriter finding his voice because he has lots to say.

  • Visit The Kernal’s profile at Single Lock Records.

  • Download the Mourning Birds EP at Noisetrade.

  • Support The Kernal at Bandcamp.

  • Purchase The Kernal’s music at Amazon.

  • Download Mourning Birds as a Zip file.

  • Download 2009 as a Zip file.