Its Morning Again Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

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Worth the wait: Nitty Gritty Dirt Band in Montgomery on Sunday

Like many touring appearances these days, Sunday'southward Montgomery stop for the Nitty Gritty Clay Band is a long fourth dimension coming.

Two years, in fact. They were scheduled for a 2020 show at the Montgomery Performing Arts Centre, before COVID came and the touring world as we knew it collapsed.

On Sunday, they've got a vii:30 p.m. show, with Dee White scheduled to open. Tickets range from $22 to $52, and are available at mpaconline.org or by calling the box office at 334-481-5100.

"We're but tickled by the fact that folks are bringing their kids and their grandkids to come across us," said Nitty Gritty Dirt Band guitarist and vocalist Jeff Hanna.

When they were planning for the the 2020 MPAC show, I had a chance to speak with Hanna, who said they've played a lot of gigs in Alabama through the years.

"We're really excited to be coming back to Montgomery," Hanna said.

The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band will be at the Montgomery Performing Arts Centre on Sunday.
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Ring volition be at the Montgomery Performing Arts Centre on Sunday.

The iii-fourth dimension Grammy winners have been known to throw a few Hank Williams tunes into their fix listing, which has to be a plus coming into the city where Williams is buried, has a museum and a downtown statue.

"'Jambalaya' is in the set every night," Hanna said. "And typically 'Honky Tonk' is equally well."

Along with Hanna, the group now includes Jimmie Fadden (drums, harmonica), Bob Carpenter (keyboards), Jim Photoglo (bass, acoustic guitar), Ross Holmes (fiddle, mandolin), and Hanna's son Jaime (electrical and acoustic guitar).

"My son Jamie is a bully singer and a fine musician as well," Hanna said.

The band's name stretches back to when they starting time formed in Long Beach, California equally a jug band — a style that Hanna said is a cross between blues and rag time music.

"One of united states came upwards with the idea of beingness a dirt band. I'1000 non certain who that thought came from, just it was a cool idea," Hanna said. "I was nonetheless in college. I had a very brief higher career. I was in a political science grade, and my professor said something virtually getting down to the existent nitty gritty. I walked into our adjacent rehearsal and said how nigh Nitty Gritty Clay Band? It stuck. When we were a jug band, information technology described what we were doing really well, and I think it'south carried over really well into the land stuff, the country rock and all the roots stuff."

Just earlier the pandemic, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band was coming up on the 50th ceremony of their album Uncle Charlie & His Canis familiaris Teddy, which independent the striking "Mr Bojangles."

"It was a great moment for our band because we had made the transition from existence an acoustic, folky jug band into a California state rock band in late '69," Hanna said.

Hanna said it was his favorite album, which is huge because they've released more than than 30 of them since the band formed in 1966.

An interesting fact is that the recording of Uncle Charlie and his singing domestic dog that they utilize on the album predates the band. Hanna said it was made in 1964 past band managing director and record producer Neb McEuen, who died in 2020. Uncle Charlie was McEuen'southward wife's great uncle.

"Nib made that recording on Uncle Charlie'due south porch," Hanna said. "Later nosotros recorded 'Mr. Bojangles,' (Bill) got this genius idea to splice those two things together. Information technology'southward beautiful, because the story fit actually, really well."

And then who was the real dMr. Bojangles from the song? Well, it'southward non the famous dancer Nib "Bojangles" Robinson, 1878-1949. The vocal'southward character actually was inspired during a night in New Orleans jail by songwriter Jerry Jeff Walker, who besides died in 2020.

"Back then, the jails were segregated, so information technology's really an old white guy he was in jail with that was a street performer," Hanna said. The erstwhile guy had taken on the Bojangles name and told Walker about his travels around the Due south with his canis familiaris.

"Jerry merely filed it all away, and wrote that great vocal," Hanna said.

With such a huge catalogue of music to option from for live shows, obviously they can't play it all. Merely instead of only playing their major hits, Hanna said they also like to dive into some of their deeper cuts.

"Nosotros e'er effort to accept the license and reach mode back to something from Uncle Charlie that's not Bojangles," Hanna said. "Or perchance in that location's a country tune that we haven't played a lot since 1980, for example. We try to tailor it a little scrap to the room, to the venue, and the demographics of the crowd."

Follow them online at nittygritty.com.

Contact Montgomery Advertiser reporter Shannon Heupel at sheupel@gannett.com.

This commodity originally appeared on Montgomery Advertiser: Worth the wait: Nitty Gritty Dirt Band in Montgomery on Sunday

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Source: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/worth-wait-nitty-gritty-dirt-124332399.html

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