Local Spins Live

Local Spins Live Podcast is a radio show based in West Michigan featuring different artists every week. Catch the show 10 a.m. Wednesdays on News Talk 1340 AM, with a preview at 9:30 a.m. on 97 WLAV-FM. Read about the featured artists and much more at: www.localspins.com

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‘Reso-phonic’ bluegrass musician Mark Lavengood: The Local Spins Artist Spotlight (Podcast, videos)


Lindsay Lou & The Flatbellys' resonator guitar whiz was reared on rock but has embraced the beauty of the Dobro and bluegrass music. He hosts a special Bruce Springsteen Tribute on Thursday night in Casnovia.

 

Picture a Comstock Park High School wrestler, pumping himself up before meets with the eardrum-rattling, bone-crunching heavy metal fury of Slipknot and Korn – the same scholar-athlete who also played football, baseball and percussion, and immersed himself in the music of ska/punk/reggae outfits like Sublime and the funk/alt-rock of the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Now picture that same fellow several years later, reveling in the acoustic glory of the resonator guitar, aka Dobro, and the beauty of rootsy modern bluegrass.

Mark Lavengood may have changed course musically as a solo artist and key member of the up-and-coming Michigan bluegrass band Lindsay Lou & The Flatbellys, but he brings the same intensity and fired-up attitude to his live acoustic performances as he did when he was an adrenaline-pumping athlete and metal-head.

“I love playing the Dobro, that’s my heart and passion,” says Lavengood, a multi-instrumentalist who also plays acoustic guitar and drums. “The timbre of it is what originally drew me to it.”

Introduced to acoustic music by former bandmates in the group The Winter Sessions, Lavengood also found inspiration in the playing of internationally renowned Dobro great Jerry Douglas and Michigan musicians such as Drew “Capt. Midnight” Howard and Joe Wilson.

“Seeing those guys, that blew my mind,” he says of seeing Howard and Wilson perform with Lansing’s Steppin’ In It. “The more I got into it, the more I realized there’s not a lot of Dobro players and if you’re trying to make a niche for yourself in music, like hey, ‘There you go. Why don’t you give it a try?’ ”

And so, he did, eventually joining Lindsay Lou & The Flatbellys in 2010 and solidifying the lineup of the fast-rising Michigan bluegrass outfit that’s toured nationally and released a pair of highly praised studio albums, 2010’s “A Different Tune,” and 2012’s “Release Your Shrouds.”

But Lavengood also is getting his feet wet as a solo artist and songwriter. He released a 7-inch self-titled vinyl EP earlier this year, with plans for recording an album of “reso-phonic bluegrass-oriented tunes” in Kalamazoo come January, before The Flatbellys head out west for another tour. He hopes to tour behind his solo CD next summer “as a band under my own name.”

On Wednesday, he played an original song, “Brenda Lee,” on Local Spins Live on News Talk 1340 AM (WJRW) with help from Fauxgrass mandolinist Jason Wheeler. You can listen to a full podcast of the show here and watch a video of the duo’s performance below.

The pairing of the two musicians comes as Lavengood organizes an unusual, star-studded benefit concert at a tavern that’s owned by his mother. The Bruce Springsteen Tribute tonight (Thursday) at the Half Moon Bar & Grill off M-37 in Casnovia, about 20 miles north of Grand Rapids, will feature performances by Lavengood & Thunder Road (a family band), Fauxgrass, The Crane Wives, Drew Nelson, Jen Sygit, Ralston Bowles and Nicholas James Thomasma.

A SPRINGSTEEN TRIBUTE FOR A WORTHY CAUSE

The featured artists will play three favorite Springsteen songs plus one original tune as part of their sets, beginning at 7 tonight (Thursday). Although admission is free, donations will be encouraged to support three women’s centers in Grand Rapids: The YWCA Women at Risk International and Safe Haven. (Catch a snippet of Lavengood, Wheeler and Bowles improvising a little tribute to Bruce Sprinsteen in a video below.)

Lavengood, who now makes his home in Ann Arbor along with the rest of the Flatbellys, chose to pay tribute to
Springsteen because it’s his mother’s favorite artist, though he noted the superstar rocker has been inspired by the same seminal folk icons as ...


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 October 10, 2013  17m