A Few Honest Words highlights Kentucky's enormous contribution to contemporary American music from the velvet crooning of jazz greats to fusion hip-hopers to funky indie folk rockers.
For anyone who loves music, an excellent choice is A Few Honest Words: The Kentucky Roots of Popular Music by Jason Howard. Kentucky is often associated with folk, country and bluegrass music with native sons and daughters like Bill Monroe, Naomi and Wynonna Judd, Loretta Lynn, the Everly Brothers, Joan Osborne and Merle Travis. This book gives a broader view and includes cellist Ben Sollee, jazz great Helen Humes, vibraphonist Lionel Hampton, hip hop artists like Nappy Roots, and many more.
Kentucky inspired Stephen Foster, America's first professional songwriter, and gave birth to Bill Monroe, Lionel Hampton, Rosemary Clooney and scores of headlining artists in every genre of music. Jason Howard's A Few Honest Words illustrates Kentucky's harvest of gifted musicians continues well into the era of hip-hop, jam bands and all your various indies and alts. Howard's knowledge and love of music brighten the narrative as these wonderful artists tell their stories.
Jason Howard has gathered up all those sweet Kentucky sounds and brought them home to a reunion. His Few Honest Words is like a country-folk music festival in prose.
This book would be a fresh addition to any academic or public library with a community interested in Appalachia, and/or the roots of traditional and popular musical styles.
A thoughtful and important book. It's tremendously satisfying that specific areas of the South are receiving their due attention. Kentucky has given so much to the landscape of American music.
An important contribution to the wider conversation about what qualifies as contemporary American roots music and what it means for music to communicate a sense of place in our profoundly uprooted time.
The rich soil of Kentucky has given rise to a formidable crop of American folk music, and the influence remains as strong today as it was a century ago. Howard (Something's Rising: Appalachians Fighting Mountaintop Removal) continues his work portraying the lives and labors of Kentuckians, this time focusing on the music of native sons and daughters of Kentucky and on the vast influence of the region in defining the term "Americana" in music and culture. The sense of context provided by Kentucky songwriter Harlan Howard's famous definition of a good country song—"three chords and the truth"—is developed through conversations with performers including Naomi Judd, Dwight Yoakam, Joan Osborne, Matraca Berg, Nappy Roots, and the Watson Twins. The book manages to touch on folk, country, bluegrass, hip-hop, jazz, gospel, and blues. VERDICT Howard ranges from anonymous mountaineers to urban pioneers in this sprawling, honest exploration of a seminal source of American music. This book's combination of interviews and history makes for an entertaining study of the heart of American roots music.—Bill Baars, Lake Oswego P.L., OR
Jason Howard updates Alan Lomax's 1930's-60's research that enriched our experiences with folk musicians of the South.
By shining a light on an inclusive array of homegrown performing artists—some well known, some destined to be, all of whom are following in the footsteps of Bill Monroe, Lionel Hampton, the Everly Brothers and Loretta Lynn—Jason Howard has crafted a loving and thoughtful homage to his beloved state of Kentucky, giving us pitch perfect journalistic prose from the heart of the country.
"His research and personal interviews with Kentucky's famous as well as up-and-coming sing/songwriter musicians show roots music as a connecting thread of influence with the idols of his youth as well as contemporary artists. While honoring icons of the state—the Carter Family, Bill Monroe, Loretta Lynn, Lionel Hampton, and the Everly Brothers—Howard illuminates a similar love of Kentucky in Current performers of many genres from bluegrass to rap....Howard skillfully documents a new era of Kentucky roots music. His book deserves a place in the history of American song."
The Courier-Journal - Mary Popham
The book offers unique insights on the musical culture of Kentucky.
A Few Honest Words: The Kentucky Roots of Popular Music , contains perhaps the broadest look at music emanating from the Commonwealth's sons and daughters to be found in print.
To fans of bluegrass, folk, rock, country, and hip-hop, this book will come as a pleasant surprise, as it traces disparate forms of American music to their roots in Kentucky.
New York Journal of Books - Michael Cala
" A Few Honest Words highlights Kentucky's enormous contribution to contemporary American music from the velvet crooning of jazz greats to fusion hip-hopers to funky indie folk rockers." -- Utne
" A Few Honest Words: The Kentucky Roots of Popular Music , contains perhaps the broadest look at music emanating from the Commonwealth's sons and daughters to be found in print." -- Richmond Register
""His research and personal interviews with Kentucky's famous as well as up-and-coming sing/songwriter musicians show roots music as a connecting thread of influence with the idols of his youth as well as contemporary artists. While honoring icons of the state--the Carter Family, Bill Monroe, Loretta Lynn, Lionel Hampton, and the Everly Brothers--Howard illuminates a similar love of Kentucky in Current performers of many genres from bluegrass to rap....Howard skillfully documents a new era of Kentucky roots music. His book deserves a place in the history of American song."" -- Mary Popham, The Courier-Journal
""The rich soil of Kentucky has given rise to a formidable crop of American folk music, and the influence remains as strong today as it was a century ago. Howard continues his work portraying the lives and labors of Kentuckians, this time focusing on the music of native sons and daughters of Kentucky and on the vast influence the region in defining the term 'Americana' in music and culture. Howard ranges from anonymous mountaineers to urban pioneers in this sprawling, honest exploration of a seminal source of American music. This book's combination of interviews and history makes for an entertaining study of the heart of American roots music."" -- Library Journal
"A thoughtful and important book. It's tremendously satisfying that specific areas of the South are receiving their due attention. Kentucky has given so much to the landscape of American music." -- Rosanne Cash
"An important contribution to the wider conversation about what qualifies as contemporary American roots music and what it means for music to communicate a sense of place in our profoundly uprooted time." -- Jewly Hight, author of Right by Her Roots: Americana Women and Their Songs
"By shining a light on an inclusive array of homegrown performing artists--some well known, some destined to be, all of whom are following in the footsteps of Bill Monroe, Lionel Hampton, the Everly Brothers and Loretta Lynn--Jason Howard has crafted a loving and thoughtful homage to his beloved state of Kentucky, giving us pitch perfect journalistic prose from the heart of the country." -- Rodney Crowell
"For anyone who loves music, an excellent choice is A Few Honest Words: The Kentucky Roots of Popular Music by Jason Howard. Kentucky is often associated with folk, country and bluegrass music with native sons and daughters like Bill Monroe, Naomi and Wynonna Judd, Loretta Lynn, the Everly Brothers, Joan Osborne and Merle Travis. This book gives a broaderview and includes cellist Ben Sollee, jazz great Helen Humes, vibraphonist Lionel Hampton, hip hop artists like Nappy Roots, and many more." -- Courier-Journal
"Jason Howard has gathered up all those sweet Kentucky sounds and brought them home to a reunion. His Few Honest Words is like a country-folk music festival in prose." -- Michael Streissguth, author of Johnny Cash: The Biography
"Jason Howard reveals the indelible impression of Kentucky's culture upon its artists and musicians and makes clear the strains that its music has played true in the realm of American music." -- Chevy Chaser
"Jason Howard updates Alan Lomax's 1930's-60's research that enriched our experiences with folk musicians of the South." -- Nuvo
"Kentucky inspired Stephen Foster, America's first professional songwriter, and gave birth to Bill Monroe, Lionel Hampton, Rosemary Clooney and scores of headlining artists in every genre of music. Jason Howard's A Few Honest Words illustrates Kentucky's harvest of gifted musicians continues well into the era of hip-hop, jam bands and all your various indies and alts. Howard's knowledge and love of music brighten the narrative as these wonderful artists tell their stories." -- Bob Edwards, host of The Bob Edwards Show and Bob Edwards Weekend on Sirius XM radio, and author of A Voice in the Box: My Life in Radio
"The book offers unique insights on the musical culture of Kentucky." -- Kentucky Libraries
"This book would be a fresh addition to any academic or public library with a community interested in Appalachia, and/or the roots of traditional and popular musical styles." -- Tennessee Libraries
"To fans of bluegrass, folk, rock, country, and hip-hop, this book will come as a pleasant surprise, as it traces disparate forms of American music to their roots in Kentucky." -- Michael Cala , New York Journal of Books