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Mike and the Moonpies - Shitty Barn Sessions No. 183
The Shitty Barn
Spring Green, WI
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When frontman Mike Harmeier sang they dont make em like they used to at the start of Mike and the Moonpies last studio album (2015s Mockingbird), it wasnt the idle complaint of an armchair country music critic: It was a self-imposed challenge, answered by Harmeier and the rest of his band of young but stage-hardened, old-soul honky-tonkers, to do something about it.

The idea was, if I walked into a bar with my dad or grandfather, I wanted the album to sound like the stuff that I would play on a jukebox at that bar, says the 33-year-old songwriter, who started Mike and the Moonpies not long after moving to Austin from his native Houston a decade ago. Thats why it had a bunch of different styles on it: theres a Bob Seger kind of thing on there, some Randy Travis sounding stuff, a George Jones kind of thing  That was all a grand scheme that I had in my head.

The reaction was pretty grand, too, with Rolling Stone Country picking Mockingbird as one of the genres best albums of the year. The accolades neatly coincided with the bands signing with powerhouse Americana booking agency Red 11 Music, and the following years jam-packed double-disc Live at WinStar World Casino and Resort only offered further indisputable affirmation of Mike and the Moonpies hard-earned status as one of the Texas music scenes finest real country bands since the release of their auspicious 2010 debut, The Real Country. It turns out Harmeier had something of a scheme in his head for that live album, too  but unlike Mockingbird before it, it had nothing to do with looking back. The rest of the Moonpies  guitarist Catlin Rutherford, drummer Kyle Ponder, bassist Preston Rhone, steel guitarist Zachary Moulton, and piano, organ and Wurlitzer player John Carbone  may not have known it at the time when they hit the WinStar stage, but the frontman was already laying the groundwork for their next studio album.

Sometimes when you go into the studio, you get into a hole where everybody wants to recut their solos over and over, and I wanted to stay away from that when we made our next album. I wanted to have it where whatever happened in the moment is what would go on the record. So, the live album was my way of kind of conditioning the band for that  without me telling them.

Harmeier laughs as he admits this, but the results  as heard on the bands freshly minted Steak Night at the Prairie Rose (February 2018)  speak for themselves. Recorded in April at Yellow Dog Studios in Wimberley, Texas, the Moonpies fifth album is not only their best effort to date, but arguably the first to really nail the irresistible, good-time spark and spirit of one of Austins best bar bands (in any genre) in the studio.

In keeping with the keep it in the moment vibe of the whole record, Harmeier wrote or co-wrote all but one of the albums 10 songs (the exception being The Last Time by friend Jonathan Terrell, who wrote Damn Strait for the Moonpies 2012 sophomore release The Hard Way) in the span of about a month or two, right before the week-long recording session.  And although every song on the album is as unabashedly country as any fan favorite from Mockingbird or the rest of the Moonpies catalog (including the dozens of classic honky-tonk covers from their salad days residencies at Austins Hole in the Wall, White Horse, and Broken Spoke), Harmeier notes that the only concept he had this around was to keep the writing simple enough to allow the rest of the band  and producer Adam Odor  room to really go to town. The only thing I really wanted was for the band to just have fun playing the songs, because I wanted the album to showcase the players on top of the songs that I wrote  just like the live record did.

Not coincidentally, it was Odor who recorded, mixed, and mastered that live album, which in turn landed him the gig helming Steak Night. It was the first time since the Moonpies inception that Harmeier ever felt comfortable handing the reins completely over to someone else. Adam and I actually met the day that he came to the WinStar to record the live record, but it was like we had already known each other for 20 years, recalls Harmeier, who had long been an admirer of Odors resume both on his own and as an engineer on countless projects by famed producer Lloyd Maines (Joe Ely, Dixie Chicks).
From its inception, Steak Night was and is a band album, explains Odor.  No extra layers, no added studio musicians (except for the genius Mickey Raphael guesting on The Worst Thing), no unwarranted overthinking about what is expected.  We worked out musical parts and arrangements together, we worked on instrument tones together, and we hit record on the tape machine and played it together.  Some of these songs came together in a matter of 2 to 3 takes, others took many, many, different directions before landing on what you hear today. Most importantly, what youre hearing on this album is what youll be seeing at each show, night after night.
Of course, the Moonpies themselves had a lot to do with making Steak Night at the Prairie Rose special, too  as did the songs. Highlights include the opening Road Crew, which kicks things off at Highway Patrol-baiting speed powered by the twin-engine roar of electric twang and runaway pedal steel, and the sweepingly melodic gamblers lament, Beaches of Biloxi.

I love that era coming out of the outlaw thing and going into the more contemporary country stuff, where the production starting getting a little bit more poppy but was still kind of dirty, Harmeier explains. For me, thats when things started to get really interesting musically, and I think this whole record kind of has that 80s thing to it  probably because theres so much Wurlitzer all over it. Theres also a whopping dose of twin electric/steel leads, a little Talk Box (played by guitarist Catlin Rutherford on Things Aint Like They Used to Be), a hint of Willie-worthy harmonica (courtesy of guest Mickey Raphael on the waltz Worst Thing), and a whole lot of humor, ranging from the nudge-nudge-wink-winkery of Might Be Wrongto the barbed-wire irony of Wedding Band.

For the record, hes no slouch when it comes to writing earnest, either  especially when drawing from the well of first-hand experience. Much like Mockingbird before it, Steak Night at the Prairie Roses title track plays like an early chapter from Harmeiers autobiography, this one going all the way back to his very first time playing music onstage in front of an audience at age 13.

I grew up kind of going to the bars with my dad and my grandfather and playing the jukebox all the time, which of course is what Mockingbird and a lot of the last record was kind of about. But then I started to take guitar lessons, and when I got to where I could pretty much play two hours worth of songs, whether it be Clint Black or Kansas, anything  thats when my dad got me that gig playing every Wednesday night during steak night at the Prairie Rose in Decker Prairie, Texas. So yeah, thats all real
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If ticket sales are closed here at BPT, any remaining tickets will be sold at the door day-of the event, starting at 6:00 pm. If it says sold out, we are sold out! But keep an eye on Twitter or Facebook for ticket availability updates day of show. Capacity is 110.

Location

The Shitty Barn (View)
506 East Madison
Spring Green, WI 53588
United States

Categories

Music > Country

Dog Friendly: No

Contact

Owner: Shitty Barn
On BPT Since: Jun 07, 2010
 
Sara Stellick
www.shittybarnsessions.com...


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