Touring Blues singer-songwriter musician Ryan Lee Crosby talks punk roots, new album and what draws him to music

Mississippi blues singer-songwriter, guitarist and teacher has punk roots?

Ryan Lee Crosby has navigated quite a journey into the music world after setting his sights on his first guitar at three years old.  I had the honor of interviewing Mississippi blues singer-songwriter, guitarist and teacher Ryan Lee Crosby about a new album, current international tour and what ultimately draws him to music.  Click here to learn more about Blues musician Ryan Lee Crosby, hear his music and where he will perform next.

Ryan Lee Crosby Photo by Lisette Rooney

Sleepless Critic:  I understand you were involved in punk at one point?

Ryan Lee Crosby:  Yeah, when I first started performing publicly, I was involved in a post punk band called Cancer to the Stars.  Labels are a tricky thing, but I suppose you could say that it was a post punk band.

SC:  Ok, and what kind of sound did you have?

RLC:  Well, we played together just shy of four years and our sound changed quite a bit over time.  When we initially began about 25 years ago, we were drawing from electronic music like drum, bass and early ambient music from The Imbeciles, Brian Eno, Joy Division and Gang of Four. It was a rock trio, but we were interested in evoking electronic sounds with guitar, bass, drums and vocals.

Our sound became louder, more aggressive and noisier.  By the time we ended, it was more like *sigh* a dark sounding rock band.  It’s hard to describe.  I think we had a lot of unusual influences such as Hip hop and trip hop.  It was electronic and Nirvana was an influence too, so it was a lot of different things. 

SC:  I ask you that because I reviewed a documentary of a hard core punk band at the NYC Indie Film Festival a few years ago and the punk documentary was paired with a jazz documentary.  You can make your own rules with jazz and punk, so perhaps that is how they related. 

RLC:  Yeah, I feel that there is an overlap between punk and blues too and it doesn’t surprise me to hear that punk and jazz can be considered in the same context.  Where things become really interesting is in all those styles of music, I think it is also embedded in blues and punk.  

I’m not a jazz musician, but I own some jazz records and within all of those, they are musical expressions of a yearning for freedom and a longing to transcend boundaries, make your own rules and your own community.  Those are the threads that make them feel resonant. 

I think of how brisk the momentum might be in 1940s bebop holding it alongside the hardcore punk of a band like Bad Brains.  They may sound like completely different types of music to the casual listener, but I think there’s a lot we can get when we let go of what something looks like or where it’s from and feel into the underlying quality of the work.  So, I think the rhythm and a sense of the momentum and drive in the rhythm a lot of times have a lot to do with that.

Ryan Lee Crosby with guitar Photo by Lisette Rooney

SC:  I agree and great insight into how all these genres can tie together.  You are a blues musician now, but how did you discover the guitar and how did you evolve into the artist you are now?

RLC:  My first memory of the guitar is the one my mom had when I was three years old.  It was kept in a separate room and I was not supposed to go in there.  I remember going into this room and seeing the guitar under a light bulb so there was this light shining down on it.  I didn’t start to play until much later.  My uncle and both my brothers played guitar so I came to it a little bit late.  My mom didn’t play, but I used that guitar on my first record and it disappeared somewhere in my early 20s. I don’t know what happened to it.  Guitar was kind of a means of relieving pressure and something that helped me relax into myself.

I am a guitarist, music teacher and have an English degree.  I never used my English degree, but it was something I enjoyed studying in school.   I went to Northeastern University because I was interested in their Music Business program, but after about a year of being in the program, I realized that it wasn’t really for me.  My parents didn’t want me to drop out of college and I didn’t have the heart to disappoint them so I stayed in school and got an English degree. 

SC:  I understand you have an avant guard blues style of playing the guitar.

RLC:  Well, I’m very interested in regional traditions and Mississippi in particular.  I spent time with a number of older practitioners down there, especially my primary mentor, Jimmy “Duck” Holmes.  I relate to playing the blues in that way.  That is oral tradition passed from person to person and my relationship to the blues is being as traditionally oriented as I can be.  I want to honor the way as I understand music is taught and passed on.  I also have these other genres and styles in my background and while I am organized around traditional Mississippi Blues, it all goes through the filter of my own life experience which includes a lot of other contexts.  It’s traditional to a degree, but there are a lot of entrances that come into it so I end up doing things like playing an electric 12 string guitar or sometimes using an ambient slide guitar and other things that you wouldn’t normally hear in traditional Mississippi blues.

Ryan Lee Crosby Photo by Lisette Roone

SC:  You are in the middle of a big tour, but you are a Boston guitarist and singer-songwriter.

RLC:  I lived in Boston for just shy of 25 years and that is home to me.  A lot of my formative experiences all happened living in or around the city.  I feel like a Bostonian at heart, but I have been living in Rhode Island for the last three years.

I recently played at Satellite at Remnant Brewing in Cambridge, MA and it was really lovely.  A couple of shows in Boston this year, but for a lot of my life, I would play around town pretty frequently at places like TT the Bears, the Middle East, Atwoods, The Lizard Lounge and Passim.  For the past few years, rather than trying to play in town every month,   I’ll try to do two really intentional performances a year. 

I have two or three weeks worth of tour dates that have not been announced yet, but this fall, I plan to do a good loop around New England, New York, NYC and then go down to Mississippi and do a loop in the South. 

SC:  What makes the concerts in the South different than the ones in Boston?  If the blues is influenced in Mississippi, it must be a different feeling there.

RLC:  Oh yeah, absolutely because the cultures are so different.  Blues traditions were influenced by and created in Mississippi.  If I go to play the Bentonia Blues Festival, that’s the style of music I love in the town it was created.  If I’m playing that style in Blues in Boston, Rhode Island, Europe and elsewhere in the world, sometimes I’ll have to explain this kind of music. If I’m playing where the music originated, I don’t have to explain anything.  If I do have to explain anything, I have to explain why I’m there. 

In the South, audiences respond to an outgoingness that is not second nature to me as a New Englander.  The mood of the exchanges is just different in lots of ways.  Performing in Europe feels more like performing in New England.  Europe has cultural differences too, but I feel more cultural differences in the South than in the Netherlands or in Germany. Going to the source where the music originates from is a powerful feeling.

I grew up in Northern Virginia until I was 11 and then moved to New England.  Northern Virginia is just barely in the South and I don’t know how to connect what draws me to Mississippi, but it draws me somehow.

Ryan Lee Crosby Live

SC:  Are you working on new music?

RLC:  My new record, At the Bluefront, is out August 20 and we’ve been putting singles out from that album once a month or so.  I believe there are three songs that they can listen to either at my band camp page, my website or through streaming services and I am working on new material as well.


SC:  Do you have a favorite track that you really want people to listen to?

RLC:  The first song is Catfish Blues featuring Jimmy “Duck” Holmes who sings and plays on the track which is a real honor.  He’s on half the album.  People can hear another song called Mistreating People which is a pretty traditional Bentonia Blues style as well. 

SC:  It’s a tough industry to be a musician.  What is your biggest joy in what you do?

RLC:  What keeps me going is a heartfelt desire and a longing that comes from what feels like right from the center of my being to feel connected.  Music is an opportunity for us to connect to ourselves, connect to beauty, to meaning, to purpose and can give us a path and connect us to each other in community and in collaboration and to a sense of something bigger than ourselves.  That’s what I’ve always wanted my life to be about and I feel very fortunate that I’ve been able to live that life and to keep on going.

SC:  What I love the most about music is after a song is created, it doesn’t change.  You can revisit it and you can change as you get older, but the music stays the same. 

RLC:  When you produce a recording or document, it can live on.  It’s a beautiful thing.

Ryan Lee Crosby is currently on tour. Click here to learn more about Blues musician Ryan Lee Crosby, hear his music and where he will next take the stage.

REVIEW:   Company One’s ‘The Boy Who Kissed the Sky’ a heartfelt tale that rocks the cosmos

Music lifts, transports, comforts, brings people together, and provides its own therapy to the happy and the hurt.  Though the Boy, depicted with earnest and imaginative optimism by Errol Service Jr., is not aware of it yet, a force much bigger than him is going to lead the way to his destiny. 

Errol Service Jr. in ‘The Boy Who Kissed the Sky’ Photo by Erin-Crowley

Directed inventively by Summer L Williams with funky musical direction by David Freeman Coleman, joyfully choreographed by Victoria Lynn Awkward and loosely based on legendary guitarist Jimi Hendrix’s life, Company One presents Idris Goodwin’s celestial and groovy The Boy Who Kissed the Sky live and in person at the Strand Theatre in Dorchester, Massachusetts and now streaming through Saturday, August 12.  This far out production is 70 minutes with no intermission and pay what you can tickets are available.  Part of what makes Company One’s The Boy Who Kissed the Sky special is its commitment to the community and social change by partnering with a number of community organizations including Project Bread, Zumix, and Boston Music Project through this production.  Click here for more information and tickets.

Adriana Alvarez, Errol Service Jr. and Martinez Napoleon in ‘The Boy Who Kissed the Sky’ Photo by Erin Crowley

In many ways, musician Jimi Hendrix was deemed ahead of his time.  Part biography, part musical and part fantastic trip through time, the cosmos, and through hardship, The Boy Who Kissed the Sky envisions possibly how Hendrix got there.  It is noteworthy that Service’s boy is never referred to as Hendrix and can be translated into any dreamer’s potential.

 This production boasts a wealth of various projections by Rasean Davonte Johnson including traffic and misty rain as well as kinetic water colored special effects and cosmic imagery.  Through all of the pizzazz and psychedelic special effects lies an inspirational tale built for any dreamer attempting to overcome challenging circumstances.  Set in Jimi Hendrix’s hometown of Seattle, Washington, It also delivers a strong message about the value of hard work, keeping an eye on the prize, and believing in one’s boundless potential.

The cast of ‘The Boy Who Kissed The Sky’ Photo by Erin Crowley

The Boy Who Kissed the Sky’s energetic cast is lead by Errol Service Jr. referred to only as The Boy.  Much of the cast plays more than one role.   Service’s Boy is amiable, sympathetic, imaginative and inquisitive as he waits for his mother, depicted warmly by Yasmeen Dunkin Cedric Lilly is enigmatic and forthright as the boy’s veteran father, Mel and Keira “Kee” Prusmack delivers a humorous yet kindhearted performance as Mrs. Newton, the boy’s nosy neighbor.

L-R Martinez Napoleon and Errol-Service Jr. in ‘The Boy Who Kissed the Sky’ Photo by Erin Crowley

However, grooving through time and space backed by some of Hendrix’s music history and influences is Martinez Napoleon who soars as J. Sonic.  With excellent vocals, mystical charisma, and an easy rapport with Service Jr, Napoleon sweeps through the production with a smooth yet caring demeanor as Martinez attempts to demonstrate that the boy, using a broom as a guitar, is more powerful than the boy ever thought possible.

The cast of ‘The Boy Who Kissed The Sky’ Photo by Erin Crowley

Backed by Eugene H Russell IV and Divinity Roxx’s uplifting rock n roll and blues-inspired score especially for numbers A Feeling Without A Name and Way Back,  The Boy Who Kissed the Sky is a musical celebration elevated by Jimi Hendrix’s iconic fashion sense and Danielle Dominique Sumi’s dramatic and galactic 60s-inspired costume design.  An epic and renowned onstage band trio jams high above the production’s stage alongside a gigantic moon and Wooden Kiwi Productions constructed the rock n roll set equipped with giant wooden amplifiers and stereo speakers under Danielle DeLaFuente’s scenic vision.

Idris Goodwin’s ‘The Boy Who Kissed the Sky’ is appropriate for all ages and a wonderful production to anyone could use a little inspiration.

Directed inventively by Summer L Williams with funky musical direction by David Freeman Coleman, joyfully choreographed by Victoria Lynn Awkward, and loosely based on legendary guitarist Jimi Hendrix’s life, Company One presents Idris Goodwin’s celestial and groovy The Boy Who Kissed the Sky live and in person at the Strand Theatre in Dorchester, Massachusetts and now streaming through Saturday, August 12.  This far out production is 70 minutes with no intermission and pay what you can tickets are available.  Click here for more information and tickets.

REVIEW: Company Theatre walks the line between love and rage with Green Day’s catchy punk musical, ‘American Idiot’

Rage. Love. Town. City are the themes emblazoned within the songs and tale of the Tony award-winning punk rock musical, Green Day’s American Idiot, presented by the Company Theatre and continuing through Sunday, February 17 at the Company Theatre in Norwell, Massachusetts.  It is an in-your-face journey of a group of young, unambitious city dwellers who occupy a portion of an angry, rebellious America.  Green Day’s American Idiot is a concert drama that contains mature themes and surprising moments.  Click here for more information and tickets.

Green Day American Idiot set

The set of Green Day’s ‘American Idiot’ Photo courtesy of Jeanne Denizard

This high energy musical is based on Green Day’s lauded album, American Idiot, a band known for their raw, catchy, guitar-tinged riffs, and uncensored lyrics.  With hits such as Holiday, Know Your Enemy, Boulevard of Broken Dreams, Wake Me Up When September Ends, and Good Riddance (Time of Your Life), Green Day’s American Idiot contains the music and vocal chops that would please Green Day fans while also considered a message-driven punk rock opera.

Sharing a bit of the mentality of Rent and the 90s film, Reality Bites, the characters in American Idiot wander into a realm of rebellious indifference, confusion, and perhaps laziness looking for their purpose in life as Green Day sings, “in the land of make believe.”  Some are unconcerned and others genuinely lost.  Partially set in a beat up apartment equipped with a blank, but lit tube TV and shabby couch which perhaps reflects a thinking but lost generation, American Idiot shows they have a hell of a lot to learn.  

The energetic, daring choreography by Corinne Mason, which includes moshing and head banging, reflects the anarchic nature of punk music.  The choreography in Holiday, which includes a group of characters packed into a wire cart, is a visual highlight.

Cast of Green Day's 'American Idiot'

(Back row, L-R ) Audrey Clark of Northboro as Whatsername, Jose Merlo of Attleboro as Jose, William Oliver of Weymouth as Will, Sarah Kelly of Braintree as Heather, John Crampton of Dedham as John, Jessica DePalo of Westboro as Extraordinary Girl, Brendan Duquette of North Attleboro as Tunny (Front row) Theo Victoria of Brockton as Theo, Evan Cole of Natick as Johnny, Aliyah Harris of Mansfield as Aliyah Photo courtesy of Zoe Bradford

This cast of jaded youths include a haunting performance by Chris Boyajian as Joshua/St. Jimmy, a role that Green Day lead singer Billy Joe Armstrong took over for 50 performances during the show’s run on Broadway.  Evan Cole hits all the right notes as Johnny, who also plays his own guitar for Boulevard of Broken Dreams, one of the show’s few quieter tunes.  He shares a natural camaraderie with Brendan Duquette as naive Tunny and William Oliver as oblivious Will, a trio of friends heading in different directions.  Sarah Kelly stands out as Heather as she develops her resolve during a heartfelt Last Night on Earth.  Aliyah Harris as Aliyah also lends her serious pipes to Favorite Son and Too Much Too Soon.

The Company Theatre presents Green Day’s American Idiot through Sunday, February 17, with a special event for Valentine’s Day.  All performances take place at Company Theatre, 30 Accord Park Drive in Norwell, Massachusetts  Click here to support the Company Theatre and here for more on their 2019 season.

 

 

 

Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with Brian O’Donovan and WBGH’s ‘A St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn’

Revel in rich, Celtic traditions and captivating live performances with WGBH’s 12th annual St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn from Wednesday, March 15 through Saturday, March 18.  Hosted by Brian O’Donovan and touring through Worcester, Beverly, New Bedford, and Cambridge, A St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn offers the excitement of Ireland’s history, Celtic traditions, storytelling, and annual concert with a dynamic array of musical guests from all over the map.

A St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn kicks off its Massachusetts tour on Wednesday, March 15 at the Hanover Theatre in Worcester, for the first time at The Cabot Theatre in Beverly on Thursday, March 16, take the stage at the Zeiterion Theatre in New Bedford on Friday, March 17, and then concluding the tour at the Sanders Theatre, Harvard University in Cambridge for two performances on Saturday, March 18.  WGBH members get a discount on tickets. Click here for further details and for tickets!

Once again musically-directed by Keith Murphy, this highly-anticipated concert features musicians such as world-renowned fiddler Liz Carroll and popular harp and fiddle duo Jenna Moynihan and Mairi Chaimbeul. Karan Casey, Irish folk singer and founding member of Solas, will also appear with the Kara Casey Band.  A St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn will showcases local performers such as the Miller Family, featuring guitarist Ruby May, fiddler Evelyn, and multi-instrumentalist Samuel.  Hailing from Smithfield, Rhode Island, The Miller Family are traditional Irish dancers who have toured and competed in dance competitions from Montreal to Rhode Island. Winners at the World Irish dancing championships, the Miller Family are happy to share their upbeat rhythms.

 

St. Patrick's Day Celtic Sojourn 2014

Celebrate ‘A St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn’ from March 15-18 Photo courtesy of WGBH

Click here for the complete list of performers to ring in this thrilling holiday.  From Beverly to Cambridge, A St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn is quickly approaching. Click here for tickets and further details.  For a taste of Irish and Celtic traditions each Saturday afternoon, click here to tune in to A Celtic Sojourn hosted by Brian O’Donovan on 89.7 FM WGBH from 3 – 6 p.m.  Follow A Celtic Sojourn on Facebook for updates and much more.