X
How do I get paid? Learn about our new Secured Funds Program!
  View site in English, Español, or Français
The fair-trade ticketing company.
Sign Me Up!  |  Log In
 
Find An Event Create Your Event Help
 
Nathan Bell
Trinity House Theatre
Livonia, MI
Share this event:
Get Tickets
There are no active dates for this event.
Advanced ticket sales have ended. Any remaining tickets will be available at the door beginning at 7:30 p.m.


Event

Nathan Bell
Nathan Bell has lived life. At 56, the wizened songwriters weary voice bleeds experience. Hes seen both sides of the cointraveled the nomadic, bohemian path of the hard-luck troubadour, and found comfort and meaning in the stability of a family, a home and a near two-decade corporate gig. And now, with a guitar back in his hands where it should be, hes ready to tell the tale. But its not just his own story hes after. Its a story of America, of the working classesboth blue and white collar.

Bell is a songwriters songwriter, a man who has shared bills with legends like Townes Van Zandt, Emmylou Harris, Taj Mahal and Norman Blake. The son of a poet and professor, his concise narratives come wrapped in gorgeously downhome yet ethereal production, adorned with gentle harmonies, daydreaming mandolin and the occasional blanket of pedal steel. Hes got a keen eye for detail, and an unapologetic penchant for the political, populist humanism of his literary heroes John Steinbeck, Jack London and Studs Terkel. With his latest LP, I Dont Do This for Love, I Do This for Love (the third installment in a potent trilogy that began with 2011s Black Crow Blue and continued with 2014s Blood Like a River), Bell has created a song cycle that is both moving and timely.

Its fairly easy, Bells says, to come up with a concept built around working men in the traditional senseminers and factory workers. But theres also these white collar guys who thought there was a rainbow at the end of this thingthat if you worked hard and took care of your family, it paid off. So you gave up things, you made certain sacrifices. But when you really look at it, wheres the payoff? A lot of it is gone. And Donald Trump isnt bringing it back. Hes not the guy, its not the place, its not the time. The middle class is getting screwed, just not by the people they think because journalism has gotten so bad. Back in the days of the Soviet Union, when they had no real journalism, it was up to the artists to fill that role, and thats a big part of what I was trying to do on this record.

Backing Bell on the sessions for the new album are his friends Missy Raines & the New Hip. A renowned musician, singer and songwriter, Raines has won seven International Bluegrass Music Awards for Bass Player of the Year. Additional harmony vocals on the record were provided by singer/songwriter Annie Mosher and Nathans wife, Leslie Bell. I Dont Do This for Love, I Do This for Love was recorded live in the studio in two days at the Rec Room in Nashville, with additional tracks completed at Bells own Little Studio in Signal Mountain, Tenn. Missy and her band are top-notch players, so we were able to get some great takes in a short amount of time, Bell says. I never use Autotune, never fly a chorus from the front to the backeven when Im layering stuff, I never punch in. If I dont get something right, Ill just start over until I get the whole take. The end result is very organic, like an old Neil Young record.

Though he now resides in Tennessee just outside of Chattanooga, Nathan Bell was born in Iowa City. Obsessed with Jimi Hendrix, he picked up the guitar at age 15 and started playing in local rock & roll bands. Equally enamored with folk-blues artists Lightnin Hopkins, Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee, he soon drifted toward acoustic music, and lit out across the country for Boston after high school, where he began writing his own songs and became a fixture of the citys vibrant early '80s music scene. By 1983, hed formed proto-alt-country duo Bell & Shore with then-wife Susan Shore. The two scored a record deal, returned to Iowa City, began touring heavily, and would eventually release a pair of records, the second, L-Ranko Motel, scoring a rave review from Rolling Stone. Their marriage and musical partnership ended in 1989, with Bell headed for Nashville, and what seemed like a promising solo career. But things didnt work out as planned.

I had some recording contracts on the table, Bell says, and then all hell broke loose. I tried for a while, but Nashville was a bad match for me. Ive always been the same guy no matter what, and I just didnt get along with the politics. I wasnt going to church for gigs, as they say.

By 1993, Bell was out of the music business entirelyhe didnt pick up a guitar or write a song again for almost 15 years. At first, he worked some basic labor jobs, before becoming swing-shift manager at a shop that sold fine cigars and imported beer. After a few years, through one of his regulars, he landed a gig at AT&T, where he stayed for nearly two decades, working his way up to a cozy management position in Chattanooga while he and Leslie raised their two children. Eventually, though, a call from an old friend and a kind gesture from his wife thrust Bell back into the arms of his first love, music.

Really, it was a bit of an accident, he says of his 2008 comeback. Don Henry, an old songwriter friend of Bells was on tour, scheduled to play what looked like a terrible gig in nearby Lafayette, Ga. He called Bell and begged him for some company. Having not seen him in years, Bell obliged. When he showed up to the gig, Henry somehow hornswoggled him on stage. I could only remember two songs, and I couldnt sing or play for shit, Bell says. It really pissed me off. I started playing again because I had to figure out if I could still do it.

But what ultimately pushed Bell over the edge was what he found waiting for him at home after a subsequent business trip. My wife had emptied our walk-in closet and put in a desk, a chair, a lamp, a guitar and a pad of paper, and said You really ought to be doing this. It blew my mind because I didnt even know shed noticed. So I started writing again. It was the beginning of the end of moving up the corporate ladder.

Bell says the time he took to live life, work a straight job, get married and have children was the most important thing he couldve done to become a better songwriter. I was always trying to write songs older than I was, experiential songs, he says. To spend 15 years managing people, doing a job every day, working 60 hours a week, and being happy doing itthats a really different thing than a struggling artist being pissed off all the time. So I came back with a deep appreciation for things I didnt understand before. If I didnt take that time off, Id be half the writer I am now.

His post-hiatus albumsespecially I Dont Do This for Love, I Do This for Lovewouldnt have been possible without all the years of perspective under his belt. The idea behind the title of the new record is that, for somebody who goes to work every day and has a family, hes not doing what he does because he loves the job, hes doing it for the love of being, of existing, of being part of the world.

Its something Bell now knows firsthand, something thats allowed him to thrive in the latest chapter of his life. I feel really fortunate, he says. Its a hell of an uphill battle at 56. Being younger would help, but Im doing quite well. Ever since AT&T shitcanned me, I get to play all the time. As a writer and a guitar player, I couldnt be in a better place.

Location

Trinity House Theatre (View)
38840 West Six Mile
Livonia, MI 48152
United States

Categories

Music > Americana
Music > Folk
Music > Singer/Songwriter

Kid Friendly: Yes!
Dog Friendly: No
Non-Smoking: Yes!
Wheelchair Accessible: No

Contact

Owner: Trinity House Theatre
On BPT Since: Jul 05, 2015
 
Trinity House Theatre
www.trinityhousetheatre.or...


Contact us
Email
support@brownpapertickets.com
Phone
1-800-838-3006 (Temporarily Unavailable)
Resources
Developers
Help
Ticket Buyers
Track Your Order
Browse Events
Locations
Event Producers
Create an Event
Pricing
Services
Buy Pre-Printed Tickets
The Venue List
Find out about local events
Get daily or weekly email notifications of new and discounted events in your neighborhood.
Sign up for local events
Connect with us
Follow us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Follow us on Instagram
Watch us on YouTube
Get to know us
Use of this service is subject to the Terms of Usage, Privacy Policy, and Cookie Policy of Brown Paper Tickets. All rights reserved. © 2000-2024 Mobile EN ES FR