Red Beet Records

Eric Brace


Since 1997, Eric Brace has been the frontman and songwriter for the acclaimed roots-rock band Last Train Home. With eight CDs and one live concert DVD to its credit, LTH is one of the most prolific and admired bands in the Americana music world.
 
At the core of the band's sound are Eric's evocative songs and his warm voice. "Brace's tenor, when combined with his lyrics which evoke endless late nights on the prairies without ever specifically referring to them, is one of the treasures of the whole Americana genre," says roots-rock great Sid Griffin (Long Ryders, Coal Porters) in a review in the peerless British music magazine MOJO. The Washington Post proclaims that "Brace hasn't let years of grueling road work compromise his songcraft," while the British audiophile magazine Hi-Fi Plus lauds Eric's "great grasp of melody and song structure."

Eric's other main musical outlet is his duo work with Peter Cooper. Cooper, who has his own solo career as a singer/songwriter, is also the music writer for Nashville's Tennessean newspaper. When Eric moved to Nashville in 2004, the two became fast friends, a friendship solidified in Peter's living room listening to Tom T. Hall, Willis Alan Ramsey, the Seldom Scene, Charley Pride, and Bear Family box sets while pouring screw top red wine. There were so many influences in common, it was inevitable that they'd soon be performing live together.
 
The first Brace-Cooper duo release, "You Don't Have to Like Them Both" (Red Beet Records, 2009) had Eric stepping away for the first time from the comfortable surroundings of Last Train Home.  Their release was top ten on the Americana and Folk DJ charts and number one on the Freeform American Roots chart.  It's lead track, Brace's "I Know a Bird," was a #1 Folk song upon its release.  In addition to originals penned by Brace & Cooper, the album included songs by Jim Lauderdale, Todd Snider, Kris Kristofferson, Karl Straub, and Paul Kennerly.  The core band was Pedal Steel Hall of Famer Lloyd Green, Jen Gunderman (The Jayhawks, Last Train Home) on keyboards and accordion, Paul Griffith (Todd Snider) on drums, and Dave Roe (Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson) on upright bass. The recording also features Grammy-winning multi-instrumentalist Tim O'Brien, guitar kings Richard Bennett (Mark Knopfler, Steve Earle), Tim Carroll (Elizabeth Cook), and KennyVaughan (Marty Stuart, Lucinda Williams), singer-songwriter Jon Byrd, Daniel Tashian (The Bees, The Silver Seas) on ukulele, and Scotty Huff (The Mavericks, Keith Urban) playing a bit of flugelhorn.
 
The pair's second release, "Master Sessions" (Sept. 2010) was a great excuse to go into the studio with two of Brace & Cooper's instrumental heroes, pedal steel legend Lloyd Green and dobro ace Mike Auldridge, who were great mutual admirers but had never recorded an album together until this one.  They surrounded Mike and Lloyd with the most talented and sympathetic musicians they know. And the result is a work of stunning beauty that Mike and Lloyd include among the most fulfilling recordings they've ever made.  In addition to Lloyd Green and Mike Auldridge, the players were: Richard Bennett  on guitar, Jen Gunderman on keyboards and accordion, Pat McInerney on drums, and Dave Roe on upright bass. The recording also features harmonies by Kenny Chesney (yep, that one), Julie Lee, and Jon Randall.  For that release, they recorded songs of theirs, but also tunes by Jim Lauderdale, Todd Snider, Kris Kristofferson, and others.
 
The collaboration with Peter Cooper is the second of Eric's non-LTH projects, the first being the 2006 release "The Skylighters." That's Eric, plus bluegrass legends Mike Auldridge (dobro, pedal steel) and Jimmy Gaudreau (mandolin, guitar), along with the LTH rhythm section of Jim Gray and Martin Lynds. That record is a lively mix of bluegrass, country, western swing and more.
 
Besides keeping LTH rolling down the track, Eric's got several other collaborations and solo projects in the works. One currently on the front burner is a musical (or song cycle or concept album or whatever you want to call it) about the California Gold Rush. It's a collaboration with Washington DC songwriter Karl Straub (whose songs "Tonight," "It Doesn't Matter," "They Dance Real Close There," and "Soul Parking" have been recorded by LTH).
 
This whole musical path started when Eric played in a Boston-area bluegrass band, the Mystic Valley Mountaneers, while in college. Back in Washington DC in the '80s he formed the guitar-pop/indie-rock band B-Time with his brother Alan Brace. A more roots oriented band, the Beggars, followed in the early '90s, again with Alan, LTH steel player Dave Van Allen, singer Alice Despard, ex-Neighbor guitarist John Moremen, and others. Eric also spent several years playing bass with Kevin Johnson & the Linemen. During that same period, Eric ran the Washington-area label Top Records, releasing a dozen albums by DC bands Carnival of Souls, the New Keys, Sleep of Reason, Not Even, and more.
 
From 1992 to 2002, Eric was a columnist for The Washington Post, covering first the local arts scene, then the area's nightlife and live music world. In 1997, the self-titled "Last Train Home" CD was released, and it was just a matter of time before word got out to the point where Eric could take LTH on the road full-time. That happened in 2003, the same year that LTH won the Washington Area Music Association's Wammie award for "Artist of the Year." Since then, the band has appeared on the CBS's "Late, Late Show with Craig Ferguson," the syndicated public radio program "Mountain Stage," and on stage opening for the likes of Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton.
 
Living in Nashville has led to recognition of Eric's strengths as a songwriter, and he has collaborated with some of Nashville's finest writers, such as Jim Lauderdale, Walter Egan, Peter Cooper, and Amelia White. He formed the Red Beet Records label, releasing three compilation CDs of music from a variety of splendid East Nashville musicians, as well as Peter Cooper's "Mission Door" and "The Lloyd Green Album,  and Fayssoux Starling McLean's "Early."
 

Yuletide From The Other Side


Buy This CD Now >>

A multitude of East Nashville musicians donated their holiday cheer to this collection, which benefits EarthMatters Networks, a community environmental organization based in East Nashville. www.earthmattersnetworks.com

Track Listing

  1. 1. Silent NightListen
  2. 2. Little Drummer BoyListen
  3. 3. Home From ChristmasListen
  4. 4. Bringing in a Brand New YearListen
  5. 5. Louisiana SnowListen
  6. 6. A Kiss for ChristmasListen
  7. 7. (I Wanna Spend My) Christmas Time With YouListen
  8. 8. Cool Yule Listen
  9. 9. Silent NightListen
  10. 10. Just Like Christmas EveListen
  11. 11. Christmas RainListen
  12. 12. Y Corryn Ar Pry’Listen
  13. 13. Dominick the Donkey Listen
  14. 14. Christmas Kisses (With Kookaburras) Listen
  15. 15. Santa’s on a Diet
  16. 16. This ChristmasListen
  17. 17. Hark the Herald Angels SingListen
  18. 18. GreensleevesListen
  19. 19. Tighten Up - Merry Christmas
  20. 20. Django Bells
  21. 21. End of the Year
  22. 22. Christmas Alphabet
  23. 23. Holiday Season
  24. 24. Snow
  25. 25. Away in the Manger
  26. 26. Black Friday Blues
  27. 27. It Ain’t Christmas
  28. 28. Holiday Blues
  29. 29. Sleigh Ride
  30. 30. It’s the Thought That Counts
  31. 31. My (One and Only) Christmas Song
  32. 32. Snowbound
  33. 33. Do You Ever Think of Me?
  34. 34. Kosher for Christmas
  35. 35. Talking Christmas Post-9/11 Anti-Terrorist Blues
  36. 36. What Are You Doing New Years Eve?
  37. 37. What Are You Doing New Years Eve?

Reviews

  • Nashville Scene
    YULETIDE FROM THE OTHER SIDE CD RELEASE Local-band compilations are notoriously hit-and-miss, but this collection of holiday numbers from a predominantly East Nashville crowd bats well over .500.

    Over the River and Through the Woods
    YULETIDE FROM THE OTHER SIDE CD RELEASE Local-band compilations are notoriously hit-and-miss, but this collection of holiday numbers from a predominantly East Nashville crowd bats well over .500. Some of the highlights: Cerys Matthews’ “Y Corryn Ar Pry’,” which is thoroughly haunting, despite being sung in Celtic; Circus Dog Serenade’s take on late Morphine frontman Mark Sandman’s “Snow” (particularly poignant since Sandman was a friend of Circus Dog’s Jamie Rubin); Meghan Hayes’ “Kosher for Christmas” (featuring the line, “Why eat ham to celebrate our favorite Jew?”); Jennifer Niceley’s sassy version of Billy Ward’s “Bringing in a Brand New Year”; and Sara Beck’s sweet “Just Like Christmas Eve.” (Beck, incidentally, sang one of her own songs with Stevie Wonder at last week’s Sommet Center show—you can’t get much holier than that.) Proceeds from CD sales benefit EarthMatters NetWORKS, an East Nashville environmental organization. 4-8 p.m. at Family Wash —JACK SILVERMAN
     
  • The Tennessean
    Eric Brace of Red Beet Records released a follow-up to "The Other Side: Music From East Nashville" just in time for Christmas.

    "Yuletide from the Other Side: More Music from East Nashville" features traditional and original Christmas tracks from East Nashville artists.


    RED BEET RECORDS RELEASES SECOND EAST NASHVILLE CD

    Eric Brace of Red Beet Records released a follow-up to "The Other Side: Music From East Nashville" just in time for Christmas.

    "Yuletide from the Other Side: More Music from East Nashville" features traditional and original Christmas tracks from East Nashville artists.

    The CD release party will be held 4-8 p.m. Sunday Dec. 9 at Family Wash, and Grimey's will host an in-store event from 3-5 p.m. Dec. 15.

    "I was really happy to see that most people wanted to contribute original tracks," Brace said. " The covers of more traditional tunes (like Diana Jones singing "Hark the Herald Angels Sing," or the Gypsy Hombres' gypsy jazz take on "Jingle Bells") are all pretty distinct, but they are the minority, by far. Most are originals, never before released."

    As was the first one, the Yuletide CD is a benefit collection; proceeds this year will go toward East Nashville-based Earth Matters Networks. Purchase the CD at Art & Invention Gallery, Family Wash, Bongo Java (East Nashville only), 5 Spot, Grimey's, Katie K's, Alegria, Turnip Truck and Margaret Maddox YMCA.
  • The Rage
    By Jason Moon Wilkins
    Oct 26, 2006

    "The Other Side: Music From East Nashville" CD Release Show.

    Last Train Home leader Eric Brace moved to East Nashville from Washington D.C. a few years ago, and he has been entrenched in the East Side's obscenely rich music scene ever since.

    At some point, Brace looked around and thought what many musicians and music lovers have thought before him: "I have to do something about this. People have to hear this music." But unlike most folks with big dreams and shallow pockets, Brace was able to scrape up enough cash to cobble together a fairly comprehensive collection showcasing East Nashville's Americana and roots rock community.

    The resulting double-disc compilation appropriately begins and ends with tunes by the man many consider to be the best songwriter living in East Nashville, and the artist who immortalized the "other side" on his five-star CD "East Nashville Skyline," Todd Snider. If that sounds like a somewhat guarded compliment -- best songwriter in East Nashville, as opposed to, say, the entire city -- just listen to the other 29 artists on "The Other Side," from authentic roots original Paul Burch to insightful rock tunesmith Mack Starks, and you can hear why that is truly something to brag about.

    Of course, it is a compilation, so there are some musical clunkers in the mix, but even the lesser songs serve as a way to includes some of the scenes essential characters whose artistry may not be up to par with their peers but whose efforts have been important in the development of the community.

    Assembling such collections is a ruthlessly thankless task (we're sure Brace is already getting reamed by bile-spewing bloggers angry that their band wasn't included), and it's extremely easy to point out all the deserving voices not represented on "The Other Side," but as a snapshot of a very focused part of an eclectic scene, it works.

    The set is beautifully packaged and comes complete with short, smart descriptions of every artist and song that give excellent encapsulated intros to the work of these underappreciated artists. Brace has a national perspective on this music and this scene, thus his collection was built to have a broad appeal far beyond Nashville's city limits. You can imagine this set sitting in Starbucks alongside other such compilations, or being acclaimed on NPR and Amazon. For this reason -- the additional opportunity for this music to be heard by a broader audience -- if nothing else, Eric Brace deserves a pat on the back, and a shot of something strong.
  • The Yummy List
    By Holly Gleason

    Eric Brace honed his eye covering culture, especially music, for The Washington Post - yet the sweet-faced musico/songwriter's love of words and melodies permeates his compilation celebrating Music City's shadow music scene. A hotbed of creativity that exists beyond the big rigs and mondo-numbers of Music Row, E. Nashville's fertile ground let Brace plant the of classic Americana band Last Train Home. Giving back to the scene and the Martha O'Bryan Center, which provides education and employment services to local people, this double disc set was born.
    Recognizing what is so obvious, yet so unseen, he gathered the tribes -- journeyman Todd Snider who bookends the project with the tenderly insightful “Some Things Are” and “From A Rooftop,” rock upstart Matthew Ryan, critic and incisive humorist grasser Peter Cooper, old school country thrush Elizabeth Cook, almost trance-folkie Kieran Kane, post-Westerburg punk/sweetness from Steve Wedemeyer, the brittle fragility of images from Stephen Simmons & Eric Fritsch and the gypsy violin- and cello-drenched'n'etched serenading of Circus Dog Serenade. As engaging as a Starbucks or Putamayo compilation, this can be loaded, forgotten and enjoyed deeply.
    Bonus: To celebrate the release, many of these artists will be appearing at Nashville's celebrated alternative venues The Basement on Oct. 27 and the Family Wash on Oct. 28. Experience a boiling over scene live and alive.
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