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Watkins Family Hour w/ Margaret Glaspy

When Sara and Sean Watkins first began playing Watkins Family Hour shows at Los Angeles's beloved Largo, the siblings and musicians had little idea just how far the collaborative variety show would go. Twenty years, two studio albums and hundreds of performances later, the two are taking stock of the ever-evolving community of musicians and music lovers the project helped build.

As part of that reflection, Watkins Family Hour is releasing its third studio album Vol. II. The collection features a number of longtime friends of the show joining Sean and Sara across 11 tracks that encapsulate where Watkins Family Hour started, how the project grew and where it could be headed in the future. Guests on the album are Fiona Apple, Jon Brion, Jackson Browne, Madison Cunningham, Lucius, Gaby Moreno, Benmont Tench and Willie Watson.

"During the pandemic, we crossed the 20-year mark," Sara says. "And we wanted to celebrate that. I am kind of amazed that we're still doing it. It doesn't feel like it's been 20 years. But when I think about the number, I think, 'Wow, there were so many transitions that happened in that period where the Family Hour work could have just petered away. And we kept choosing to do it."

Vol. II follows the band's sophomore album Brother Sister, which they released as the COVID-19 pandemic began taking hold of the globe and, in turn, shut down the live music industry. That record was, serendipitously, a quieter affair, showcasing the musical interplay between Sara and Sean that keeps the Family Hour heart beating. In many ways it's also a successor to Watkins Family Hour, the self-titled 2015 album that introduced the band to a broader audience and sent them, along with some of their closest collaborators, out on the road to tour.

Sean and Sara recorded Vol. II in January of 2022. The siblings and their guests recorded the entire LP in just three days, decamping at the historic East West Studio in Los Angeles with producers David Boucher and Tyler Chester. While plotting the project, the pair had a deep roster of past Family Hour guests to choose from, a process that also contributed to song selection for the album.

"A lot of the strategy was marrying the songs to the guests that we wanted to be part of the record," Sara says. "So we knew, for example, that Willie Watson was somebody who we wanted to have on the record, because we have such a long history with him specifically. So we did the Jim and Jesse song 'She Left Me Standing on the Mountain' with Gabe Witcher and Willie, who are both part of the foundation of the Family Hour."

Vol. II opens with "The Way I Feel Inside," a Zombies song Sara and Sean reimagined alongside indie pop band Lucius. Sean plays a rubber bridge baritone guitar on the track, adding a percussive, melodic structure for the group's heavenly vocal harmonies to float through, with the low richness of Sara's violin offering striking counterpoint to one of her more dynamic vocals.

Frequent collaborator and, as Sean puts it, "Largo mascot" Jon Brion joins the group on the Ernest Tubb song "Thanks a Lot," taking the twangy heartbreak of the original and marrying it to Brion's eclectic, virtuosic musical vision, with a delightfully elastic guitar solo from Brion at the song's bridge. Fiona Apple, who joined the Family Hour on earlier tours and has been a longtime fixture at Largo, lends her singular voice to Dean Martin's "(Remember Me) I'm the One Who Loves You," with honky-tonk piano from Benmont Tench and gossamer pedal steel from none other than Greg Leisz. Madison Cunningham, who appears across the album, joins on Elliott Smith's "Pitseleh," a song the Family Hour hadn't played often but was formative to both Sara and Sean.

Sean and Sara tackle two tracks on their own, the propulsive "Hypnotized," a song by the art-pop outfit Tune-Yards, and Tom Brosseau's "We Were Meant to Be Together." "Hypnotized," especially, is a testament to the siblings' ability to make a song their own, as the pair arranged their take on the track on the fly while in the studio recording. Sean's guitar work is at its finest, creating a moody soundscape atop which Sara's crystalline, almost mysterious vocal can shine.

The album's closing track is a reverent take on Glen Phillips's "Grief and Praise," complete with an all-star choir of Watkins Family Hour friends and collaborators: In addition to the album's featured guests, Phillips, Dan Wilson, Joey Ryan, Kenneth Pattengale, Sebastian Steinberg, Ed Helms, Liz Vice and more lending their voices. Lyrically, the song encourages listeners to "sing loud while you're able, in grief and in praise," for a song that, while written years earlier, speaks compassionately to the collective grief we've all experienced over the last two years.

"It's a great reminder to appreciate what we have," Sean says. "And in a way, it encapsulates the idea behind this album, which is appreciating what we have while knowing that nothing lasts forever, but recognizing that, at this point, things are as strong as ever with the Family Hour."

While Vol. II is certainly a celebration of the show itself, it's also a tribute to Largo, the beloved Los Angeles venue that first hosted them and is an essential hub of the city's creative community. "We wanted to capture what we've done over the years, but also capture the process that is continually at work, which is this intermingling of the musical community here in Los Angeles that surrounds Largo."

"Another interesting aspect of the Family Hour is that it enables us to do songs that might be overdone," Sean adds. "'Tennessee Waltz,' with Benmont Tench, is a beautiful song, but we're not going to go to the Station Inn in Nashville and play it. But at Largo, it's a whole different thing."

As both Sean and Sara continue to work on their own solo music, as well as with their other bands like Nickel Creek and I'm With Her, Watkins Family Hour remains an invaluable resource and respite for them both, offering a familiar but ever-evolving space to test new ideas, meet new collaborators and, most importantly, have a good time doing what they love.

"It's been really exciting to be part of this thing that is happening and growing and enables us to dig deep into this musical community" Sean says. "The consistency has been invaluable to both of us, as musicians." Sara adds, "But also, in life, the Family Hour has been and continues to be a huge part of making us feel anchored in the crazy city of Los Angeles."

~~~~~~~~~

Returning to the studio as Watkins Family Hour, Sean and Sara Watkins consider brother sister a duo-centric record - yet one that feels bigger than just two people. With Sean primarily on guitar and Sara on fiddle, and with both of them sharing vocals, the siblings enlisted producer Mike Viola (Jenny Lewis, Mandy Moore, J.S. Ondara) and mixer-engineer Clay Blair to harness the energy and honesty of their live sound.

"From the beginning, our goal was to work on these songs to be as strong as they could be, just the two of us," Sara explains. "And with a few exceptions on the record, that's really how things were. It was a tight little group of us, working dense days where we could squeeze them in.

Sean (who is four years older than Sara) adds, "Because of the limited amount of time we had collectively to spend in the studio, there was a general sense of urgency, which I think the three of us (Sara, Mike and I) kinda strive for on these days. We didn't have that much time and that made it fun and exciting. It was just us, in one room, facing each other with some really great mics, often playing and singing at the same time, trying to capture what Sara and I do in a real way."

For the first time, the Los Angeles-based siblings carved out time to write with each other, often during the naptime of Sara's toddler. They took early versions of the new songs to Viola, who instinctively rearranged some of the song structures in an effort to draw attention to interesting lyrics or surprising arrangements.

"Mike brings a diverse musical-history to his production work," Sean says. "He's worked with a lot of people [from The Figgs to Fall Out Boy] that surpass just bluegrass or folk, but his sense of the songwriting craft and melody is right in line with us. He was bringing ideas that we would have never had, and vice versa."

As Watkins Family Hour's first project since a self-titled debut album in 2015, brother sister begins with "The Cure," which Sean was inspired to write after watching Tidying Up With Marie Kondo. The concept of throwing things away is evident in the lyrics; there's also a sense of knowing that you're in an unhealthy relationship, but still choosing to avoid fixing it.

"Part of the fun of being a songwriter is being able to write about something that started from an image and then transcends that image to speak to something greater," Sara observes.

Sara chose the beautiful "Neighborhood Name" after hearing it on a record by Courtney Hartman and Taylor Ashton, while "Just Another Reason" is an original that Sean describes as having "a vague, nebulous vibe" lingering below the surface. In contrast, the instrumental "Snow Tunnel" is like an epiphany, titled after Sean's memory of driving through Zion National Park, emerging from the darkness of a loud tunnel into a peaceful panorama of snow.

Moving from one landscape to the next - literally and musically -- is nothing new to Sean and Sara Watkins, who have performed separately and together for nearly their whole lives. Growing up near San Diego, they played countless shows at a local pizza place in Carlsbad, California, with their childhood friend, Chris Thile. As young adults, those three musicians broke out nationally as Nickel Creek, an acoustic ensemble that sold millions of albums, won a Grammy, and toured the world.

Encouraged by a local club owner in Los Angeles, Sean and Sara formed Watkins Family Hour in 2002 as an outlet to try out some original songs and a few covers that wouldn't work in Nickel Creek. That club, Largo, has since become the home base for Watkins Family Hour, whose shows frequently pair musicians who seem to have little in common, yet find a shared language in their music.

With Nickel Creek on hiatus, Sean and Sara released multiple solo albums and pursued other collaborations, most recently with Sara's involvement in I'm With Her. However, the siblings gravitated toward the idea of another Watkins Family Hour album after realizing that their calendars afforded them a rare opportunity to write, record, and tour together.

Their musical chemistry is clear on songs like "Lafayette," an ode to Hollywood as well as the hometowns left behind by its aspiring stars; "Fake Badge, Real Gun," about confronting authority figures as well as your own beliefs; "Miles of Desert Sand," whose haunting coda underscores the vivid imagery of immigration; and "Bella and Ivan," a playful instrumental named for a friend's two dogs who love to wrestle.

Two choice covers complete brother sister. Warren Zevon's poignant "Accidentally Like a Martyr," which they unearthed for a tribute show, conveys all the complicated facets of love, and "Keep It Clean," the rabble-rousing Charley Jordan gem from the '30s, serves as a grand finale, with David Garza, Gaby Moreno, and John C. Reilly all chiming in on vocals.

"That's just fun to sing," Sean says. "Going into this record, we wanted to focus on the duo-centric thing, but this was a chance to lean into the group aspect, and have some of the people that have been a part of the Family Hour but weren't on the first record that we made years ago."

However, brother sister remains exactly that - the result of a brother and sister creating music.

"It felt really good to dig into the potential of two people," Sara says. "There are a few songs on the record where Matt Chamberlain comes in to play drums, and we filled in the low end in a few cases with Mike Viola playing MOOG or piano, but the primary goal of this record became to see what we could do when it is just the two of us. The arrangements and the writing were all focused on that. Listening now, I'm really proud of what we did. These are songs that would not have come out of either one of us individually, and it feels like a band sound, like this is what we do, the two of us.
Watkins Family Hour w/ Margaret Glaspy

When Sara and Sean Watkins first began playing Watkins Family Hour shows at Los Angeles's beloved Largo, the siblings and musicians had little idea just how far the collaborative variety show would go. Twenty years, two studio albums and hundreds of performances later, the two are taking stock of the ever-evolving community of musicians and music lovers the project helped build.

As part of that reflection, Watkins Family Hour is releasing its third studio album Vol. II. The collection features a number of longtime friends of the show joining Sean and Sara across 11 tracks that encapsulate where Watkins Family Hour started, how the project grew and where it could be headed in the future. Guests on the album are Fiona Apple, Jon Brion, Jackson Browne, Madison Cunningham, Lucius, Gaby Moreno, Benmont Tench and Willie Watson.

"During the pandemic, we crossed the 20-year mark," Sara says. "And we wanted to celebrate that. I am kind of amazed that we're still doing it. It doesn't feel like it's been 20 years. But when I think about the number, I think, 'Wow, there were so many transitions that happened in that period where the Family Hour work could have just petered away. And we kept choosing to do it."

Vol. II follows the band's sophomore album Brother Sister, which they released as the COVID-19 pandemic began taking hold of the globe and, in turn, shut down the live music industry. That record was, serendipitously, a quieter affair, showcasing the musical interplay between Sara and Sean that keeps the Family Hour heart beating. In many ways it's also a successor to Watkins Family Hour, the self-titled 2015 album that introduced the band to a broader audience and sent them, along with some of their closest collaborators, out on the road to tour.

Sean and Sara recorded Vol. II in January of 2022. The siblings and their guests recorded the entire LP in just three days, decamping at the historic East West Studio in Los Angeles with producers David Boucher and Tyler Chester. While plotting the project, the pair had a deep roster of past Family Hour guests to choose from, a process that also contributed to song selection for the album.

"A lot of the strategy was marrying the songs to the guests that we wanted to be part of the record," Sara says. "So we knew, for example, that Willie Watson was somebody who we wanted to have on the record, because we have such a long history with him specifically. So we did the Jim and Jesse song 'She Left Me Standing on the Mountain' with Gabe Witcher and Willie, who are both part of the foundation of the Family Hour."

Vol. II opens with "The Way I Feel Inside," a Zombies song Sara and Sean reimagined alongside indie pop band Lucius. Sean plays a rubber bridge baritone guitar on the track, adding a percussive, melodic structure for the group's heavenly vocal harmonies to float through, with the low richness of Sara's violin offering striking counterpoint to one of her more dynamic vocals.

Frequent collaborator and, as Sean puts it, "Largo mascot" Jon Brion joins the group on the Ernest Tubb song "Thanks a Lot," taking the twangy heartbreak of the original and marrying it to Brion's eclectic, virtuosic musical vision, with a delightfully elastic guitar solo from Brion at the song's bridge. Fiona Apple, who joined the Family Hour on earlier tours and has been a longtime fixture at Largo, lends her singular voice to Dean Martin's "(Remember Me) I'm the One Who Loves You," with honky-tonk piano from Benmont Tench and gossamer pedal steel from none other than Greg Leisz. Madison Cunningham, who appears across the album, joins on Elliott Smith's "Pitseleh," a song the Family Hour hadn't played often but was formative to both Sara and Sean.

Sean and Sara tackle two tracks on their own, the propulsive "Hypnotized," a song by the art-pop outfit Tune-Yards, and Tom Brosseau's "We Were Meant to Be Together." "Hypnotized," especially, is a testament to the siblings' ability to make a song their own, as the pair arranged their take on the track on the fly while in the studio recording. Sean's guitar work is at its finest, creating a moody soundscape atop which Sara's crystalline, almost mysterious vocal can shine.

The album's closing track is a reverent take on Glen Phillips's "Grief and Praise," complete with an all-star choir of Watkins Family Hour friends and collaborators: In addition to the album's featured guests, Phillips, Dan Wilson, Joey Ryan, Kenneth Pattengale, Sebastian Steinberg, Ed Helms, Liz Vice and more lending their voices. Lyrically, the song encourages listeners to "sing loud while you're able, in grief and in praise," for a song that, while written years earlier, speaks compassionately to the collective grief we've all experienced over the last two years.

"It's a great reminder to appreciate what we have," Sean says. "And in a way, it encapsulates the idea behind this album, which is appreciating what we have while knowing that nothing lasts forever, but recognizing that, at this point, things are as strong as ever with the Family Hour."

While Vol. II is certainly a celebration of the show itself, it's also a tribute to Largo, the beloved Los Angeles venue that first hosted them and is an essential hub of the city's creative community. "We wanted to capture what we've done over the years, but also capture the process that is continually at work, which is this intermingling of the musical community here in Los Angeles that surrounds Largo."

"Another interesting aspect of the Family Hour is that it enables us to do songs that might be overdone," Sean adds. "'Tennessee Waltz,' with Benmont Tench, is a beautiful song, but we're not going to go to the Station Inn in Nashville and play it. But at Largo, it's a whole different thing."

As both Sean and Sara continue to work on their own solo music, as well as with their other bands like Nickel Creek and I'm With Her, Watkins Family Hour remains an invaluable resource and respite for them both, offering a familiar but ever-evolving space to test new ideas, meet new collaborators and, most importantly, have a good time doing what they love.

"It's been really exciting to be part of this thing that is happening and growing and enables us to dig deep into this musical community" Sean says. "The consistency has been invaluable to both of us, as musicians." Sara adds, "But also, in life, the Family Hour has been and continues to be a huge part of making us feel anchored in the crazy city of Los Angeles."

~~~~~~~~~

Returning to the studio as Watkins Family Hour, Sean and Sara Watkins consider brother sister a duo-centric record - yet one that feels bigger than just two people. With Sean primarily on guitar and Sara on fiddle, and with both of them sharing vocals, the siblings enlisted producer Mike Viola (Jenny Lewis, Mandy Moore, J.S. Ondara) and mixer-engineer Clay Blair to harness the energy and honesty of their live sound.

"From the beginning, our goal was to work on these songs to be as strong as they could be, just the two of us," Sara explains. "And with a few exceptions on the record, that's really how things were. It was a tight little group of us, working dense days where we could squeeze them in.

Sean (who is four years older than Sara) adds, "Because of the limited amount of time we had collectively to spend in the studio, there was a general sense of urgency, which I think the three of us (Sara, Mike and I) kinda strive for on these days. We didn't have that much time and that made it fun and exciting. It was just us, in one room, facing each other with some really great mics, often playing and singing at the same time, trying to capture what Sara and I do in a real way."

For the first time, the Los Angeles-based siblings carved out time to write with each other, often during the naptime of Sara's toddler. They took early versions of the new songs to Viola, who instinctively rearranged some of the song structures in an effort to draw attention to interesting lyrics or surprising arrangements.

"Mike brings a diverse musical-history to his production work," Sean says. "He's worked with a lot of people [from The Figgs to Fall Out Boy] that surpass just bluegrass or folk, but his sense of the songwriting craft and melody is right in line with us. He was bringing ideas that we would have never had, and vice versa."

As Watkins Family Hour's first project since a self-titled debut album in 2015, brother sister begins with "The Cure," which Sean was inspired to write after watching Tidying Up With Marie Kondo. The concept of throwing things away is evident in the lyrics; there's also a sense of knowing that you're in an unhealthy relationship, but still choosing to avoid fixing it.

"Part of the fun of being a songwriter is being able to write about something that started from an image and then transcends that image to speak to something greater," Sara observes.

Sara chose the beautiful "Neighborhood Name" after hearing it on a record by Courtney Hartman and Taylor Ashton, while "Just Another Reason" is an original that Sean describes as having "a vague, nebulous vibe" lingering below the surface. In contrast, the instrumental "Snow Tunnel" is like an epiphany, titled after Sean's memory of driving through Zion National Park, emerging from the darkness of a loud tunnel into a peaceful panorama of snow.

Moving from one landscape to the next - literally and musically -- is nothing new to Sean and Sara Watkins, who have performed separately and together for nearly their whole lives. Growing up near San Diego, they played countless shows at a local pizza place in Carlsbad, California, with their childhood friend, Chris Thile. As young adults, those three musicians broke out nationally as Nickel Creek, an acoustic ensemble that sold millions of albums, won a Grammy, and toured the world.

Encouraged by a local club owner in Los Angeles, Sean and Sara formed Watkins Family Hour in 2002 as an outlet to try out some original songs and a few covers that wouldn't work in Nickel Creek. That club, Largo, has since become the home base for Watkins Family Hour, whose shows frequently pair musicians who seem to have little in common, yet find a shared language in their music.

With Nickel Creek on hiatus, Sean and Sara released multiple solo albums and pursued other collaborations, most recently with Sara's involvement in I'm With Her. However, the siblings gravitated toward the idea of another Watkins Family Hour album after realizing that their calendars afforded them a rare opportunity to write, record, and tour together.

Their musical chemistry is clear on songs like "Lafayette," an ode to Hollywood as well as the hometowns left behind by its aspiring stars; "Fake Badge, Real Gun," about confronting authority figures as well as your own beliefs; "Miles of Desert Sand," whose haunting coda underscores the vivid imagery of immigration; and "Bella and Ivan," a playful instrumental named for a friend's two dogs who love to wrestle.

Two choice covers complete brother sister. Warren Zevon's poignant "Accidentally Like a Martyr," which they unearthed for a tribute show, conveys all the complicated facets of love, and "Keep It Clean," the rabble-rousing Charley Jordan gem from the '30s, serves as a grand finale, with David Garza, Gaby Moreno, and John C. Reilly all chiming in on vocals.

"That's just fun to sing," Sean says. "Going into this record, we wanted to focus on the duo-centric thing, but this was a chance to lean into the group aspect, and have some of the people that have been a part of the Family Hour but weren't on the first record that we made years ago."

However, brother sister remains exactly that - the result of a brother and sister creating music.

"It felt really good to dig into the potential of two people," Sara says. "There are a few songs on the record where Matt Chamberlain comes in to play drums, and we filled in the low end in a few cases with Mike Viola playing MOOG or piano, but the primary goal of this record became to see what we could do when it is just the two of us. The arrangements and the writing were all focused on that. Listening now, I'm really proud of what we did. These are songs that would not have come out of either one of us individually, and it feels like a band sound, like this is what we do, the two of us.
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