
NATHAN BOWLES TRIO,ย Thursday, Nov. 1, 9 p.m., $5,ย The Cave, Chapel Hill,ย www.caverntavern.com
Nathan Bowles opens his fourth LP with a refrain written by a child: โSo just lie and close your eyes, listen to a lullaby,โ he begins on โNow If You Remember.โ The song, originally composed by seven-year-old Jessica Constable for Julie Tippettsโs 1976 album, Sunset Glow, lends a foreboding feel to the beginning of the record. The rest of the album wrestles with this conceptual interest in self-deception, or being โplainly mistaken,โ building through eight more songs toward a kind of warning: Tell yourself whatever you like, and you may just find yourself under a kind of cultural anesthesia.
Plainly Mistaken, released in early October, is also Bowlesโs first album composed with a full band: The solo becomes a trio with the addition of double-bass player Casey Toll, whoโs worked in several local acts, including Mount Moriah, and CAVE drummer Rex McMurry. Bowles forges ahead with vocals and his beloved banjo, which has been his primary instrument since 2010. McMurry, who moved to Durham by way of Chicago in late 2015, initially met Bowles through mutual friends and, for a short spell, was taking some time off from music.
โI called him up one day,โ Bowles says, โAnd proposed that he un-hiatus himself.โ
Toll, who had previously played with Bowles while accompanying the singer and guitarist Jake Xerxes Fussell, was a natural fit. If earlier albums were marked by a kind of meandering, self-reliant drive, the texture of Toll and McMurryโs seasoned playing lend Plainly Mistaken a full-bodied feel. The album weaves ecstatic moments from bluegrass standards and sunny, fingerpicking lopes, with long, studied periods of drone. The result is something hypnotic, troubled, and deeply involvedโmusic thatโs halfway between avant-garde and old-time.
Bowles moved to Durham in early 2015 from Blacksburg, Virginia, where he went to college. While in Virginia, he joined ranks with The Black Twig Pickers, a string band, and Richmondโs legendary drone-noise outfit, Pelt. Both bands were formative to his percussive practice, as well as his deep love of old-time music; in the years since, Bowles has also toured playing drums for guitarist Steve Gunn. Bowlesโs many musical partnerships reflect the kind of psychedelic-folk camaraderie that has evolved over the past couple decades, comprising a through line of experimental folk-leaning musicians through the Triangle and the upper reaches of Virginia and into Philadelphia.
Bowlesโs collaborative approach to music keeps in time with the larger folk tradition of reinterpretation, and talking with Bowles is like getting a crash course in the history of that tradition. In the course of our conversation, artists ranging from Ernie Carpenter to the Osborne Brothers to Cousin Emmy all organically crop up. But even as he offers his own reinterpretations of songs, as with Tippettsโs โNow Do You Remember,โ Bowles prioritizes capturing a spirit rather than offering a mimeograph.
โHer voice is so specific and kind of inimitable,โ he says, โI was more just trying to get something of the feeling of the song and not duplicate it. I knew as soon as I recorded it that I wanted it to start the record, to be a kind of pacesetter.โ
Bowlesโs thoughtful new takes on old songs distinguish themselves throughout Plainly Mistaken. โRubyโ is the trioโs take on the old bluegrass standard, hewing off the Silver Applesโ 1968 version; Bowlesโs version feels at once accusatory, frenzied, and unsettling, like the wheels are about to come off at any second. His swooning rendition of โElk River Blues,โ written by West Virginia Fiddler Ernie Carpenter, is a second-stab at a song that also appeared on Bowlesโs first album, 2012โs A Bottle, A Buckeye.
โIโve always liked that song solo in sets, but I liked the kind of swing and heft that the trio brought to it,โ Bowles says. โIt just felt so good that I thought, why not record it? There [are] no rules. โฆ It swings in a different way than the solo piece.โ
On the back of the album, a Javier Maras quote accompanies a hazy detail from a Fรฉlix Vallotton painting: โWe go from deceit to deceit and know that, in that respect, we are not deceived, and yet we always take the latest deceit for the truth.โ Thereโs a kind of Gordian knottedness to this idea, a musical expression of our collectively repeated mistakes.
Bowles has explored the slippery edges of language before. 2016โs cover of Jeffrey Cainโs โMoonshine Is the Sunshine,โ gently riffed with Cainโs series of wry, folksy koans (โThe straightest line is crooked, and it ainโt gonna get no straighter,โ goes one). If the music itselfโwith its astral acoustic waves which seem, themselves, to be trying to work some knot outโreflects this idea of aphorisms, it might be its ability to hold more than two things in its heart: the old and the new, what is cosmic and what is rooted in earth. There are, after all, no rules.
Bowles is interested, he says, โin the idea that we donโt learn from mistakes as much as repeat them.โ Pausing, he laughs, โThat probably sounds more pessimistic than it is.โ


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