Dec
10

IAN NOE *Canceled*

MaxxMusic, Neighborhood Theatre at Neighborhood Theatre

Charlotte, NC

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Event Details

Doors 7pm / Show 8pm 


Tickets: $15 adv/$18 dos (plus sales tax and service fee) *Tickets available online only*

18+ Valid ID required for entry into venue / Under 18 permitted with parent (Accepted forms of ID: State Issued ID or Driver's License, Military ID, Passport.)


IAN NOE

Alt-Country / Americana / Singer-Songwriter


River Fools & Mountain Saints - Like the creeks that run and tributaries that trickle throughout singer-songwriter Ian Noe’s homelands in Eastern Kentucky, water flows throughout his new LP. Thoughtfully and intentionally named, River Fools & Mountain Saints highlights Noe’s storytelling prowess through12 country rockers and Appalachian ballads, depicting contemporary and historical life in the region.

 

Water’s in the name, of course — River Fools &Mountain Saints, which is due out March 25 via Thirty Tigers — but water also informs the tales Noe tells and the metaphors of perseverance, sustenance, and strength within them. The major floods that decimated the southeastern part of the state in February 2020 remained close at heart during his writing process, as well.

 

The album title came to Noe before any of the songs, serving as a concept and a guiding principle. “That landscape and that geography of growing up in Lee County, Kentucky,” he begins, “I've got so much material of things that I can write about, of stories of all these people and just life in general of growing up there.”

 

“You think about the river? It's down here. It’s low. And then you got the mountains up high. You've got everything in this way! You can go all over the place with that type of landscape, and that's how [the writing] starts.” 

 

From there, Noe pieced together what would become Side A, or “River Fools,” and Side B, “Mountain Saints.” He writes in character studies — the man who introduced him to “Johnny B. Goode” while working in the Lee County oilfields, the woman he saw hustling weed in the foothills, and even state legends like Muhammad Ali and family members become their own heroes in songs like “River Fool,” Mountain Saint,” and “Strip Job Blues,” respectively.

 

Noe often sings about members of his community, honoring the Indigenous people and cultures of the region on “Burning Down the Prairie” or the many veterans of the town on songs like “POW Blues” and “Tom Barrett.” But on other tracks like on the pedal-steel laced “Lonesome As It Gets,” he takes a more autobiographical approach, turning the lens back on himself while living alone in his grandparents’ old house.

 

Even with nature’s guidance, people remain at the core of the record. And while Noe calls Bowling Green home these days and Kentuckians influenced the songs’ creation, these stories capture universal themes relatable to all listeners.

 

Broader in scope and brighter in tone than his lauded debut, 2019’s Between the Country, River Fools & Mountain Saints boasts a fuller sound with more diverse instrumentation. Noe name-drops full-length masterpieces like Bruce Springsteen’s Darkness on the Edge of Town as readily as Arcade Fire’s Neon Bible for structural inspiration, as well as Neil Young’s harmonica work in “Heart of Gold” and Jimi Hendrix’s guitar playing in a rare version of “Voodoo Child (Slight Return)” from 1970 for specific tones.

 

Noe also cites Alabama Shakes’ self-titled debut and Margo Price’s records as sounds that led him to work with producer Andrija Tokic in Nashville. “The fact that I got to work with him is surreal to me after all these years later…romanticizing the sound he’s getting here and the name of the place — The Bomb Shelter,” he exudes. Noe also expanded his sound with the help of bandmembers including "Little" Jack Lawrence (The Raconteurs) on bass and Derry deBorja (Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit) on keys.

 

They recorded on reel-to-reel tapes in short spurts over the course of two years, without the pressure of time, which enabled a wider range of experimentations, collaborations, and sounds. As a result, River Fools & Mountain Saints switched from rocking like Creedence Clearwater Revival to intoning like John Prine or Tom T. Hall; it swaggers with keys on songs like “Pine Grove (Madhouse),” bursts with French horn bombast “One More Night,” and swells with orchestrated strings on the gutting closing ballad, “Road May Flood/It’s A Heartache.”

 

“You wanna write a song that’s been there forever,” he says. “When you listen to ‘Up On Cripple Creek’ by The Band, you don't think about what year it is. It sounds like it’s always been there.”

 

He continues, “But you just can't sit down and make it happen like that. If it happens, then you have to recognize that you’re on to something. I tried to make each song like that; I wanted to make each song a solid as possible. That was my goal.”

 

Despite being written in quarantine and in the wake of natural disasters, River Fools & Mountain Saints remains a positive record. Noe maintains it’s about good moments growing up ina hard place. But most importantly, it’s about music as redemption, romanticism, and release.

Written by Hilary Saunders

 

Opener: Kimberly Kelly


Something's happening in country music. Newer artists and younger audiences are embracing instrumentation, vocal stylings and song structures long thought drowned in the ocean of slick, snap-track productions. Not easily dismissed as merely regional or a novelty throwback, the trend could be on its way to full-blown movement. If so, Kimberly Kelly's Show Dog Nashville debut album may prove to be the clarion call. Either way ... she's not asking.          I'll Tell You What's Gonna Happen is more than her (abbreviated) album title, more than a reference to her connection with a Country Music Hall of Famer, and much more than a historical footnote. Rather, it's a statement of musical confidence earned the only way that happens: talent, work ethic, experience, vulnerability, and courage. For Kelly, it's all of a piece. "I like to think of it as a sub-genre of country music called 'country music,'" she says with a wink.


A native of Lorena, Texas, Kelly has multiple connections to the Nashville industry. She has also been unafraid to defy convention. "This is not my first rodeo," she says of her label debut. "I worked really hard in Texas before I came to Nashville. I wrote songs, put out records, did a radio tour, and played every weekend while earning a Master's degree. They say don't have a 'plan B,' but I watched my mom struggle to get that next level of pay. My mom earned her bachelor's degree when she was 60, so school was important to me to know I could take care of myself."


Her sister Kristen signed to a Nashville label and charted a single in 2012, which gave Kimberly an early education. "I got to sing harmony with her on tours with Brad Paisley, Rascal Flatts and Alan Jackson. I learned so much watching her and the crowd. A lot of my confidence onstage comes from that."


Developing as an artist and making her own music meant circling back to her youth. "Growing up, I focused more on the artist when I was listening to records, then learned that not every artist wrote their songs. I went through a phase thinking I needed to write everything I sing. Maturity helped me realize sometimes the truest artist is one who can take what someone else wrote and elevate that story."


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Event Location

Directions

Neighborhood Theatre

511 E. 36th St., Charlotte, NC, 28205-1103

Show Map

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Talent

IAN NOE

Kimberly Kelly