This month's playlist includes tunes from Billy Strings, Brittany Howard, Killswitch Engage, Blackwater Holylight, and more!
The Alabama Shakes siren breaks out on her own with Jaime—a visceral solo album on which she uses a broken Japanese guitar and a laptop to explore the deep dance between heartbreak and happiness.
As the frontwoman and principal songwriter of Alabama Shakes, Brittany Howard’s songcraft and soulful voice are the driving forces behind one of the most revered bands of the last decade. The Shakes’ Blake Mills-produced 2015 release, Sound & Color, was a swirling, psychedelia-tinged slab of soul, blues, and primordial rock ’n’ roll, which debuted as a Billboard No. 1, netted the quartet a grip of Grammys, and heralded their arrival as one of the most vital groups of their generation.
The marathon of touring which followed the success of Sound & Color left Howard drained, afflicted by writer’s block, and in need of a break from the behemoth which Alabama Shakes had become. Making the decision to step away from the group, Howard went about the work of rediscovering herself as a person and a songwriter. Now, with the release of Jaime, the chanteuse has reemerged as a fully fledged solo artist.
Thematically, Jaime is a viscerally human affair. Howard says writing the record served as “a process of healing” and that certainly comes through. The album’s title pays tribute to Howard’s late sister—a musician herself who tragically passed away as a teenager after fighting a rare form of cancer—and its songs were each written in an attempt to confront emotional specters, demons, or situations beyond Howard’s control. It’s a starkly personal and revealing album.
However, despite the record’s formidable pathos, Howard’s playful energy often pokes through its clouds. After all, this is the work of a woman whose extracurriculars include fronting a campy garage-rock project called Thunderbitch, with whom she once performed donning whiteface, a black bob wig, and mounted atop a motorcycle which had been planted dead center on the comically small stage of a Brooklyn club.
To that end, Jaime’s heavy topics float upon buoyant melodies, drown in deep grooves (further accentuated by drummer Nate Smith’s mega performance), and are often juxtaposed against sweet sonics. Questions of faith are channeled into a greasy “anti-gospel” banger in “He Loves Me.” The trauma Howard experienced as an interracial kid growing up in the deep South are pumped into a head-bob-inducing, hip-hop bounce on “Goat Head.” The wide spectrum of feelings being in love can evoke are explored through the neo-soul grooves of “Presence” and sparse, intimate ballads like “Short and Sweet.” Yeah, for an ostensibly dark record, Jaime not only has range. It slaps!
Lurking at the core of Jaime’s songs lies Howard’s criminally overlooked guitarwork. She prefers to frame her relationship to the instrument as a means to an end for songwriting, remarking “it’s just the instrument that I know the most about.” But Howard’s distinctive voice as a guitarist played a major role in shaping Alabama Shakes’ sound and Jaime is no different. The record boasts miniature guitar orchestras that lock into funky, deceptively tricky rhythms, and outbursts of emotional, downright molten lead playing, and Howard’s guitar often provides a perfect dance partner for her vocals, with the two gracefully shadow-boxing throughout the album. While Howard might object to the fanfare, there are guitar moments sprinkled throughout Jaime’s effortlessly cool songs that point to the work of a masterfully expressive 6-string stylist, like the avant-garde guitar conversation that happens during the tail end of “Presence” or the burning solo that cuts through “He Loves Me.” And all of this is made even more impressive by the fact that most of the guitar tracks which appear on the album’s final mix were pulled directly from the home demos Howard recorded with a literally broken, unbranded, vintage Japan-made guitar into a laptop loaded with Logic.
Premier Guitar spoke with Howard by phone as she unwound at home following a short promo tour for the release of Jaime. While we were delighted to be granted some insight into Howard’s approach as a songwriter, the conversation delved much deeper into the mind of Brittany Howard the guitarist, a player who celebrates the influence of people like Queen’s Brian May and Dave Davies as much as rock ’n’ roll pioneers like Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Chuck Berry.
Jaime does a really remarkable job of tackling heavy topics through joyful-sounding tunes.
Yeah! I always like juxtaposition because it makes everything richer. Life is all about juxtaposition: You’ve got happiness, sadness, comedy, death—everything is always juxtaposed next to something. I find it enjoyable making beautiful music about sad topics and vice versa. It makes you listen a little differently, you know?
The rhythm guitar parts on “He Loves Me” are really cool and the track really shows off your strengths as a rhythm player. Could you break down the construction of that one?
There are like seven guitar parts on that one. I didn’t want to play anything totally straightforward on that one, and that’s where it started. I asked myself, “If I do this rhythm line as the backbone that all the chords follow, how do I end up in an unexpected place?” That’s basically the inspiration and intention behind all of my guitars parts; finding a way to make things a little bit off-kilter. I listen to a lot of classical music and I love those big rises and falls and dynamic shifts and I like to compose guitar that way. One of my favorite guitar players is Brian May of Queen. I always liked how he stacked up everything and could make something really rich and soaring sounding just through his note choices and an orchestral approach.
Brittany Howard named her solo debut after her older sister, Jaime, who died from retinoblastoma, a rare form of eye cancer, at the age of 13. Brittany was also born with the disease, which left her partially blind in one eye.
The solo on that track gives me some serious Mick Ronson or Prince vibes and manages to feel both off-the-cuff, but also perfectly composed for the tune.
That solo was actually something I did on the demo. I didn’t re-record it for the album. I just wanted something that was blazingly hot and in-your-face, and that just felt like the right thing for the song. It had the right kind of dirt and the right kind of attitude. I usually don’t put guitar solos in songs because it always comes down to asking myself, “What are they doing there?” But that song is a weird gospel/anti-gospel song and I asked myself what was something I’d never hear at church when I played that solo.
Do you recall what you were using for that fuzz sound?
I had a ton of fuzzes on that. I know I was using both a fuzz and an overdrive stacked on that solo, and I used this old Japanese-made, probably Teisco guitar. I can’t recall exactly which fuzz or overdrive, but I was using a very little speaker and I remember it was a stack.
Is the Teisco guitar that sunburst four-pickup model you’ve been using live lately?
Yeah, that’s the one. I played that guitar on everything on the record. I just kind of stuck to it for some reason. At the time I was recording, the neck was actually broken and seriously tilted, but for some reason I really enjoyed the way it made me play. It made me play in a different way and I was excited to hold the guitar because it was very imperfect. I can’t quite explain why, but it was very inspiring.
I think a lot of players secretly prefer what comes out of an instrument that’s fighting them. It forces you to feel more than you think.
Yeah, exactly! When I have a guitar that’s so slick, I just don’t play the same. It’s true that every guitar has its own songs in it and brings out different things. That particular Japanese guitar has so many tonal options with that many pickups and switches, and I’m not even sure if they’re all functioning correctly, but there are so many different sounds I can get out of it. I think that’s also why I stuck to it so much. I think it’s a Teisco even though it doesn’t have a name on it. I found it at a pawnshop and just thought it looked really cool.
I’ve read that you tracked a lot of the album at home in Logic. Did you rely on miked amps or were you using amp sims for much of it?
I was doing a bit of both. Like the solo on “He Loves Me” ended up getting reamped and thrown through some real pedals, but all of the ideas always came from software amps.
What were your go-to choices for real amps and reamping?
It was a little haphazard. I know we used a little Gibson combo amp a lot and we used an old Music Man a lot for clean stuff. That one had a really great, warm clean tone and I used it a lot on the track “Baby.”
Brittany Howard and Heath Fogg explore otherworldly guitar textures on Sound & Color.
Somewhere between the sleepy suburban environs of Athens, Alabama, and the musical explosions of Nashville, Tennessee—a distance of about 100 miles on I-65—there’s apparently a bend in the space-time continuum that the Alabama Shakes discovered on the way to record their new album, Sound & Color. It may even be a portal to an alternate universe where Curtis Mayfield joined Pink Floyd, Otis Redding sings for Radiohead, and Aretha Franklin and Brian Eno are working on an album called Music for Barista Parlors.
Which is a roundabout way of saying Sound & Color is a radical and unpredicted creative leap from the band’s 2012 debut, Boys & Girls—a groovy slice of nuevo-retro soul-rock that’s sold 750,000 copies, hit No. 6 on Billboard’s album chart, and took the band from half-empty clubs to sold out theaters to the main stage at Coachella.
“There were moments along the way where it was shocking,” says Heath Fogg, half of the Shakes’ 6-string tag team along with frontwoman Brittany Howard. “But now that we’ve crossed that bridge, we’re comfortable playing anywhere.”
Another thing that’s changed is the onstage dynamic between guitarists Howard and Fogg. When the Alabama Shakes first started busting out on the heels of Boys & Girls, Howard was a somewhat restrained presence, laying back on guitar and tempering the vast reserves of kinetic energy in her voice. Now she has stepped all the way to the fore. Her singing is at full power, sending up a fireworks display of incendiary whoops and howls over the cascading waves of aural shimmer on Sound & Color’s “Dunes” and evoking the hippest spiraling vocal high-notes of the ’70s—the kind of keening falsetto spikes and coos that made Al Green, Curtis Mayfield, and lesser-knowns like Blue Magic take the human voice over the psychedelic edge.
Nonetheless, Howard cites Queen’s Freddie Mercury and wide-jawed, Italian-American, big-band belter Louis Prima as her earliest vocal pillars. ”When I was growing up, I thought their melodies were cool,” she offers.
Apart from Howard’s exploding vocals, her guitar playing is magical and original on the Shakes’ new songs. You can hear it in her reverb-soaked, stutter-step rhythm that drives the album’s first single, “Don’t Wanna Fight,” as Fogg lays slinky chords over the top. And her composition “Gemini” offers an amazing six minutes of textural architecture that unreels like a modernist progeny of Pink Floyd’s 1969 opus Ummagumma.
Heath Fogg (with 2013 Gibson ES-335) on collaborating with Brittany Howard: “There definitely aren’t assigned roles. It’s different every time we set out to write or work on a song.”
Photo by Deneka Peniston.
Sound & Color also has room for the adrenaline punch of the punk rocker “The Greatest” and the Otis Redding-in-space “Miss You.” And while the music paints a broad cosmic soundscape, it does so in ways that complement Howard’s passionate voice, even as her lyrics slyly and sometimes eerily relate the details of inscrutable relationships, spiritual awakenings, and emotional tides.
Howard says she’s always written and played this way, which may be true. Yet the more the Alabama Shakes have toured, the more she’s let the genie out of the bottle, arriving at their— and her—current apex.
Listening to the sonic fairyland the band has now created, it seems that Blake Mills, who produced the album with the Alabama Shakes, was an important part of Sound & Color’s sounds and colors. He’s an experienced studio guitarist and creative singer/songwriter who has collaborated and toured with Conor Oberst, Kid Rock, Fiona Apple, and Lucinda Williams, and he co-founded the band Dawes. He spent a year working with the Shakes quartet, a lineup completed by bassist Zac Cockrell and drummer Steve Johnson, at Nashville Sound Emporium (save for a tune recorded at L.A.’s United Recording, where the album was mixed).
Howard says that Mills was “definitely part of the conversation. So instead of four of us there would be five of us arguing about where the chorus should go.”
“If we had more time,” she continues, “I would have done this on the first record, too. We all love the first record, but we just didn’t have time to explore these types of things. That’s what I’ve always been into. I’m not really gonna change.”
Fogg is more generous. “I think Blake helped everyone feel comfortable and confident,” he explains. “Blake’s got an amazing ear. He can hear things that I just don’t. And he had a really unbiased approach and opinion, so it was nice to have an outside voice that hadn’t been part of this family for years. He brought out the best in us, and that paid off. He didn’t sugarcoat anything, and that was nice, even though it was also tough at times.”
Whether it’s a new chapter or a previously overlooked textbook, Sound & Color is destined to be one of 2015’s most intriguing and inventive rock albums, with its blend of freaky headspace and heartfelt soul, and the palette of surges and stops that raise the bar on dynamics to a level of drama unheard since Nirvana’s Nevermind. But when the band and Mills convened at the historic studio built by ex-Sun Records engineer Jack Clement in 1969, they were staring at a nearly blank canvass. Thanks to the demands of touring, they’d only had time to write a few new songs. But Fogg says there was a game plan in place.
“The goal was to be free and expressive,” he says. “We tried to be creative and not worry too much about concepts or genres or anything like that. We wanted to compile as many songs as we could and craft them into songs that we loved.”
Shakes onstage: Brittany Howard flanked by bassist Zac Cockrell and co-guitarist Heath Fogg (with his 2013 Gibson ES-335). Photo by Christopher Altenburg.
At times that required pursuing tunes like Ahab chased the whale. “We definitely had a desire to be a more dynamic version of ourselves, both sonically and with songwriting,” Fogg continues. “The guitar sounds in the song ‘Gemini,’ for instance, where it gets kind of far out with the fuzz, is a good example. That’s Brittany playing all the guitar parts in the big crescendo. She had crafted the song on MIDI instruments at home using her computer. Although we’re using keyboards more on this album, we thought it would be fun to translate that demo to our instrumentation. So all of those sounds are just her with her little Gibson amp cranked all the way up, laying parts on top of each other until they have the same effect her original synth part did. She recreates the basic synth tone with a fuzz pedal, and then there’s reverb and tremolo. The layers weave in and out so it sounds like the individual guitar parts are sustaining longer than they really are.”
Howard constructed the demo in her kitchen using Apple’s Logic software. “I had this melody, which is where my songs usually start, in my head,” she explains. “I started layering it and spreading other musical ideas I got from that melody across the song. Then I had a short story I’d written, and I made that the lyrics. And it all worked.”
Brittany Howard's Gear
Guitars
1971 Gibson SG Custom
Harmony Rocket
Amps
Orange Tiny Terror
1960 Silvertone cabinet
Effects
Boss FRV-1 Fender Reverb
Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Boss TU-3 Tuner
Strings and Picks
D'Addario EXL115 Nickel Wound/Medium Blues-Jazz Rock Strings (.011-.049)
Dunlop Tortex picks (.73 mm)
Heath Fogg's Gear
Guitars
Epiphone Sheraton-II
2013 Gibson ES-335
Amps
Ampeg Gemini I
Effects
Fulltone Supa-Trem
Twosome Dual Fuzz
Boss TU-3 Tuner
Strings and Picks
D'Addario EXL115 Nickel Wound/Medium Blues-Jazz Rock Strings (.011-.049)
Dunlop Tortex picks (.73 mm)
The more nuanced new numbers like “Gemini” and “Dunes” seem a challenge to translate to the stage, but the Alabama Shakes are now taking three backing singers and two keyboardists on tour. A mix of fuzz pedals and the good ol’ loud/soft/loud/soft ethos does the rest. “In ‘Gemini’ the performance is already powerful enough that I don’t need three screaming guitars like on the record,” Howard says. “By the time we reach that point everybody is feeling it, and we compensate for that with dynamics. That way it becomes a live composition. We use drama, like they do for movie soundtracks.”
And if it’s not clear on their albums, the Shakes’ live shows display a fluid division of labor between Howard and Fogg.
“There definitely aren’t assigned roles,” Fogg relates. “If she’s got a demo that she started with a guitar riff and no second guitar part, I have the freedom to come up with whatever I want. But sometimes Brittany has demos with multiple guitar parts already crafted, so it’s my job to record one of those parts to the best of my ability. And there are songs on the album that she would rather just sing and not play her guitar parts live, so I play some of those parts onstage. Or when we’re recording we’ll both come up with parts on the fly and try to craft something together. It’s different every time we set out to write or work on a song.”
Howard was drawn to music making at age 11, when she saw her music teacher play guitar in class. “Until then, I didn’t know girls could play guitar,” she says. “I first started writing songs because I didn’t know how to tune a guitar. I made stuff up just to play, and then later I started figuring out you’re supposed to keep it tuned a certain way. Then I had to reteach myself the proper way to play guitar. At that point I was 12, so I learned super-easy songs like Blink 182’s. I don’t know notes. I don’t say, ‘Oh yeah, this is an A chord this is a C chord.’I’m not really a studied player. I don’t really know all the chords.”
But that didn’t dissuade her from starting the Alabama Shakes with bassist Cockrell in 2009, when both were students at Limestone High School, near Athens. After adding drummer Johnson, they cut a demo that caught Fogg’s ear, and the lineup was set.
Fogg’s father played guitar in local bands. “There were always guitars, an acoustic and electric, around the house, and my dad would play them a bit and show me things I wanted to learn,” Fogg remembers. He was playing with friends and in ersatz weekend bands when he joined the Alabama Shakes.
YouTube It
Watch the Alabama Shakes light up the Coachella music fest with "Future People" from their new album Sound & Color.
“I feel like I’m getting closer to the voice I want to have as a guitar player,” Fogg says. “But I would definitely say that around the time I started playing with the Shakes I was feeling confident, starting to feel like the guitar player I wanted to be. Every year I feel closer than I did the year before.”
Fogg has a crisp take on his creative partnership with Howard: “A lot of people miss the point about what’s great about Brittany. She’s an expressive, extremely musical person, and one of her best qualities is her guitar playing. She’s fearless and very melodic, and the things she plays are easy to counter, which makes it easy for me. I feel lucky to be able to play with someone like that. And like me, she’s not extremely studied, and she’s learning every day. We’re pretty simple guitar players, not trying to be too technical or fancy, but trying to create something interesting together.”
“I’m really proud of the steps we all took with this second album,” Fogg adds. “They might be considered bad ideas in the music industry, because Sound & Color isn’t a repeat of Boys & Girls, but they’re good ideas artistically. As people and musicians, we always put that mentality first, and that’s important.”