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The Brothers Comatose Boise November 2022 1 1

The Brothers Comatose‘s singer-songwriter Ben Morrison share some insight into their latest polarizing single “The IPA Song,” “We generally use our music to unify people, but there comes a time for every band when you have to make a statement. This is our most controversial song and we realize that some of our audience will hate us for it, but it’s time we finally say something: we can’t drink IPAs anymore!”

“Phew, that felt good to get off my chest.”

“In all seriousness though, we overdid it quite a bit, back when we were sponsored by a great beer company and they delivered multiple cases of IPA to every tour stop of ours. It was great for a while, but it got to the point where we had cases and cases of warm IPA in our van and that’s all we drank. Too much warm IPA will change a person, and now we can only drink light beer. We’re more of a quantity over quality band these days, at least when it comes to beer.”

“This song came about because there are lots of craft beer lovers in our musical world and we would find ourselves drinking lots of high alcohol percentage beers when we’re playing shows, and we just can’t do it anymore. We want to enjoy a few beers while we’re playing without getting too drunk, and light beer saves us from that. Pabst Blue Ribbon, if you’re reading this, we’re still looking for sponsorships!”

The Brothers Comatose’s new single “The IPA Song” is available now 

Whether traveling to gigs on horseback or by tour bus, Americana mavens The Brothers Comatose forge their own path with raucous West Coast renderings of traditional bluegrass, country and rock-n-roll music. The five-piece string band is anything but a traditional acoustic outfit with their fierce musicianship and rowdy, rock concert-like shows.

The Brothers Comatose is comprised of brothers Ben Morrison (guitar, vocals) and Alex Morrison (banjo, vocals), Steve Height (bass), Philip Brezina (violin), and Greg Fleischut (mandolin, vocals). When they’re not headlining The Fillmore for a sold-out show or appearing at Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival, the band is out on the road performing across America, Canada, Australia, and hosting their very own music festival, Comatopia, in the Sierra foothills.

The San Francisco quintet are heading out for a massive U.S. tour in further support of their most recent album Ear Snacks – a heartwarming collection of collaborations from their Ear Snacks YouTube series.

AJ Lee & Blue Summit

AJ Lee & Blue Summit

AJ Lee & Blue Summit are an award-winning energetic, charming, and technically jaw-dropping band quickly rising on the national roots music scene. Based in Santa Cruz, California, the group met as teenagers, picking and jamming together as kids at local music festivals and jams until one day, they decided they would be a band. “Our roots go really deep,” explains de facto band leader Lee. “We met when we were young kids… We definitely decided to choose each other as a chosen family band later on in life, but in a lot of ways it was naturally just like that in the beginning.” “It was like one of those late at night things,” she continued. “We were sitting on a trailer at Grass Valley” at the annual Father’s Day Bluegrass Festival held in the Sierra Nevada foothills – “Someone said, ‘All of us right here, we’re a band now.’ We kind of didn’t take it seriously, but we were like, okay, we’ll be a band!”

And thank goodness they became a band. Their first gigs were local, small venues, cafes, restaurants, coffee shops, where they’d play for multiple hours honing their set list and learning shared musical vocabularies. Now, as they criss-cross the country performing hundreds of shows a year to larger and larger audiences, you can sense the intention they had back then – to make music together not for just aspirational reasons, but because it’s fun – and it’s all you want to do as young musicians. Currently made up of Lee on mandolin, fiddler Jan Purat, and guitarists Scott Gates and Sullivan Tuttle, the band carries that youthful, festival-parking-lot energy with them still today, but at the same time there’s a genuine ease and confidence to their music making. This is not the bluegrass of ambitious musicians intent on industry success, this is music made firstly for the joy of making it and primarily made for each other. It’s part of why, as they ready their third studio album, City of Glass – their first label release, out July 19th via Signature Sounds – their product feels mature and fully realized, while deep in the Blue Summit pocket.

City of Glass is a slow burn album, remarkable when considered alongside records released by their peers in recent years. Lee & Blue Summit seem unconcerned with mimicking hugely successful jamgrass bands, or making competitive and performatively intellectual new acoustic music, or wishing to establish themselves as the superlative string band in their bluegrass, old-time, and Americana communities. Instead, they’re most interested in discovering themselves, their own music, and sonics and textures truly their own. So, when they went into the studio to track City of Glass and its gorgeous twelve tracks, they once again forsook the roads most traveled by, looking to their local California community for collaborators that also feel right at home in their chosen family band. They brought in Lech Wierzynski, of the California Honeydrops, to produce; they tapped Bay Area steel guitarist Mikiya Matsuda for a couple of tracks; plus they had Californian banjo player, instructor, and Father’s Day Fest veteran Luke Abbott lend five-string to a number.

The group is proud to be Californian, proud to represent the neo-traditionalist bluegrass and folk from the state and the mighty communities surrounding them. Their music shines with this “think global, act local” sort of approach. On a track called, “Can’t Find You At All,” they even included a sort of reunion of “The Tuttles featuring AJ Lee” – the true family band from their early childhoods that also included Lee, Sully Tuttle, Grammy Award winner Molly Tuttle, and their father Jack Tuttle – who wrote “Can’t Find You At All”.

“I thought, Sully’s on the track and Jack wrote it,” Lee explains. “So, I would love for Molly to sing on it, because it does feel like a mini reunion of The Tuttles… It just feels like coming back to where technically my career started, with them.” Throughout City of Glass, an overarching sense emerges that this is a band who knows who they are, what they are trying to say, and who can help them say it. They know they don’t “need” a banjo to be a bluegrass band. They know they, like so many bluegrass groups with mainstream appeal, know how to make two flatpicking guitarists work in concert, together. And, with Wierzynski at the control room helm, they were able to preserve that feeling of grounded self-assuredness indelibly through these songs, while still challenging themselves outside of their comfort zones and outside of the musical box. Focusing on these qualities and bringing in creatives they trusted, they were able to craft an album that sounds exactly like AJ Lee & Blue Summit while still breaking endless new ground. “Having a powerhouse vocalist and someone we trusted in the control room was really valuable and really fun,” Jan Purat says. “I think it removed a lot of the headiness and back and forth… It felt like it was streamlined, in certain ways, being able to trust his judgment, even though he was from a different genre.” Wierzynski also brought songs to the band, a stunning cover of the soul classic “He Called Me Baby” and a song he wrote, “Bedside Window,” which is rendered by the band as an archetypical bluegrass “fast waltz.” Wierzynski prioritized making the band sound exactly like themselves, producing the vocals to be and sound live whenever possible, moving the band along when a take checked all the boxes, and still bringing in genre and aesthetic inspirations that feel brand new. City of Glass, as a result, is an album that’s just as much country soul and gritty, bluesy Americana as it is bluegrass, all framed through a California folk lens while clearly primed for a much wider audience. The title track is a beautiful and evocative metaphor that conjures the climate crisis and holds an inspiring degree of self-awareness, from this group of young folks. As they sing of a wonderful monument to human kind’s achievements, an awesome and temporal city made of glass, grain by grain, shard by shard, they put the fleeting and intangible qualities of a life as professional musicians under the same lens, once again reinforcing that their priorities in music cannot simply be achievements and success. After all, they know that, someday, all of this will fade away. As such, as much as possible, they have their eyes trained first and foremost on the present moment.

“I’ve learned through songwriting and creating music that you shouldn’t hold anything as precious as you think you should,” Lee says, speaking about writing “City of Glass.” “We’re all happy to experience life with each other and to see what this band turns into, but there’s no expectation that this monument we’ve built will stand forever.”

Perhaps this is why it feels like, whether on stage or in the studio, Blue Summit pours all of themselves into every song, every lyric, and every note. “I think it would lose meaning if it did last forever,” Gates agrees. “For so long making music for a living was ‘ride or die,’ but now we’re very much in the moment and we understand that nothing lasts forever. All I care about is just the next step and not skipping any steps in between.”

The slow burn of City of Glass certainly reaches its tenor, but never in a performative, belabored, or corny way. There are many moments of tension and release, of musical climaxes that are tender and subdued or silly and winking – and yes, absolutely barn burning, too. “Seaside,” written by Sully Tuttle, feels pulled directly from a Steinbeck paean to coastal California. “Bakersfield Clay,” penned by Gates, could have been divinely implanted in his head from Haggard or Owens or any number of lonesome troubadours longing for their southern California home while also longing to leave it behind. “I Still Think of Her” is one of the album’s jewels, a delicious and pining love song with a queer throughline that wrinkles its common, countryfied format in a truly one-of-a-kind way. Like “Can’t Find You At All,” the band finds power here with a less is more approach, building energy without necessarily raising the volume or tempo. Each song demands your full attention, builds intentionally to the next, and gently guides their listeners through exciting and heartfelt twists and turns, musically, lyrically, and melodically. AJ Lee & Blue Summit’s City of Glass is statuesque, while living and breathing. It’s a monument not to ego and virtuosity and self-absorption, but to what beauty can exist when a handful of musicians who know each other so deeply and care for each other so innately choose each other, show after show, day after day, song after song. AJ Lee & Blue Summit are an exemplary band so unconcerned with being remembered, with being enshrined, that they have gone about making a set of songs that will surely be held onto and cherished forever. City of Glass may one day crumble, but this music will never fade away.