Elmore Magazine March/April 2013
Transcription
Elmore Magazine March/April 2013
CINDY CASHDOLLAR B Y S C O T T P E A V L E R March/April 2013 | Elmore 24-28_FEA2.indd 26 2/19/13 12:11 PM Elmore | March/April 2013 24-28_FEA2.indd 27 2/19/13 12:11 PM Learn more about Cindy Cashdollar’s guitars at elmoremagazine.com During her time with Redbone, Cashdollar discovered just how unusual female resonator guitar players were and how many preconceptions and prejudices still lingered in the music world. “I did not see any female resonator players, even though there were a couple of active ones around,” Cashdollar said. “At the time, I did not know that Barbara Mandrell had played steel, since I didn’t research it that much before jumping into it. Audience members just seemed to assume that the chick in the band was married to one of the other band members. When I was playing with Leon Redbone, there were multiple instances in which I would be getting my stuff into the venue and the door would be locked for sound check, and I had to beat on the door and explain that I was in the band.” Today, Cashdollar has no such troubles. Recently, over the span of a few days, Cindy Cashdollar performed with Asleep at the Wheel along with Ruthie Foster, Willie Nelson, Robert Earl Keen and Pat Green at the Austin City Limits’ Moody Theatre before heading to New York City to join Jorma Kaukonen and Hot Tuna for their annual two night visit to the NYC Beacon theatre, then immediately headed to Los Angeles to begin recording with Ryan Adams and appear with him on Conan. Such is the life of Cindy Cashdollar, the Austinbased musician who has proven herself to be the go-to Dobro/steel player. Having performed and recorded with a who’s who of the music world ranging from Rod Stewart to Van Morrison to Paul Butterfield to Bob Dylan, she’s traversed blues, bluegrass, Cajun, folk, western swing, country-rock, alt-roots and more. She’s one busy gal. “Cindy Cashdollar is the most versatile slide guitarist around,” says acclaimed blues veteran Johnny Nicholas. “She hits every note perfectly. But what distinguishes her in my mind is that she also has the soul to play the blues—which is really rare.” Herb Remington—himself a legendary steel guitar player, composer and manufacturer of custom steels— also notes Cashdollar’s versatility while finding yet another rare quality in her: “Cindy has a very good musical ear; that is very rare for a steel player. She is always working on new techniques to use with whatever music style she is playing and exploring both the tunings and hardware to enhance her sound.” “Cindy is a great musician, very melodic and very imaginative, and while she is associated mostly with western swing, she can play virtually any style and is always willing to try new things,” agrees Americana legend Dave Alvin. When Alvin began to recruit an allfemale band for a series of live performances, Cashdollar was one of the first to be signed. Cashdollar’s role certainly does change depending on the assignment, and she adapts to the work, whether it’s on a tour or a recording session. Her remarkable musical versatility on several instruments also creates some unique challenges, however. “It gets complicated,” Cashdollar said. “At a recent show in Austin, I played five different guitars, and sometimes—just for a split second— I’ll grab a guitar and realize that the key of A is not on the second fret on this guitar, but it’s on the seventh fret. There is a cost consideration with the airlines charging so much extra for all your gear.” Before airlines and tours and five different guitars, Cashdollar (really her birth name) spent her early years in Woodstock, NY, where her grandparents had a dairy farm, and her dad handled the deliveries. Here, her versatility was born. The area afforded her exposure to a variety of music styles played by local musicians as well as by the touring musicians, who had a tendency to stop by the friendly, bucolic and musically historic area before or after gigs in New York City. Her dad liked country music, while her mom had much broader musical interests coupled with a huge record collection. At age 11, she saw her first concert: Van Morrison, John Hammond Jr. and Odetta. It was also at this time that she got her first guitar PR EV IOUS PAGE : ROB B UC K ; N EX T PAG E: CH UC K HO LL EY fter hearing that Leon Redbone was in the market for a resonator/Dobro player, Cindy Cashdollar quickly drove across three counties to meet Redbone and his band before a performance. After sitting in for sound check and the show, she was hired on the spot. Two days later, she left on the first tour of what became five years of performing and recording with Redbone. March/April 2013 | Elmore 24-28_FEA2.indd 28 2/19/13 12:12 PM with Redbone and indicative of the unique sort of musician she is, once Cashdollar realized that the band was in town and scheduled to appear on a local TV station, she simply waited for their bus to arrive. As it unloaded, she asked who the steel player was. When he was identified, Cashdollar asked him if it was true that he was leaving, and when he said yes, she handed him her demo tape. When frontman Ray Benson invited her to Austin for an audition and realized she was only just learning the instrument, he offered her a six-month trial gig. She relocated to Austin for the job and has been there ever since. “Thank God Ray Benson is a patient man. It was like western swing boot camp, and I kind of had to learn steel for real since it wasn’t just a fun little hobby anymore,” Cashdollar said. “So I took lessons from Herb Remington in Houston and Maurice Anderson in Fort Worth—both of whom played with Bob Wills—and also from John Ely, who had previously been with Asleep at the Wheel.” The six-month probation period became an eight-and-a-half-year tour that earned her five Grammy awards. In 2001, when she finally went to Benson to say she was “burned out,” his response was, “I can’t imagine what took you so long.” At Marcia Ball’s rehearsal studio in Austin, TX PR EV IOUS PAG E: ROB B UC K ; N EX T PAG E : C HUCK H OL L EY and began learning basic techniques from Billy Faier, a pioneer banjo player and folk singer. Cashdollar’s first professional gig came playing bluegrass with the John Herald Band along with the Woodstock Mountain Revue. Her other early excursions in the fertile soil of Woodstock included stints with blues great Paul Butterfield and with Levon Helm and Rick Danko of the Band—they would eventually morph into a larger group called the Woodstock All-Stars. During this time, she also heard Mike Auldridge’s Eight String Swing, which led her to the lap steel and eventually to a Fender double-neck, non-pedal steel guitar. “I tried pedal steel, but because I took up steel so late in life as a hobby, I found it to require more linear thinking as compared to the more intuitive, by-ear type of person I am. So maybe when I retire, I’ll get a simple little single neck pedal steel—three pedals and one knee lever,” Cashdollar said. Soon after taking up the steel, she moved to Nashville for the myriad of music opportunities there, and soon after arriving, she heard that Asleep at the Wheel was looking for a steel player. In a move echoing her break-in Elmore | March/April 2013 24-28_FEA2.indd 29 2/19/13 12:12 PM Now a freelance artist, she finally had an opportunity to work on a long-delayed solo album, Slide Show, which illustrates the various musical styles she had experienced over the years, showcases her versatility and brings together the cast of luminaries that, through charmed upbringing and her unique brand of gumption, had informed her career—legendary players like Remington, Auldridge, Redd Volkaert, Sonny Landreth, Steve James, Marcia Ball, Lucky Oceans, John Sebastian and Johnny Nicholas. Fittingly for an album so tied up in Cashdollar’s history and singularity as a musician, Slide Show closes with “Locust Grove,” an original composition named after her grandparents’ dairy farm in Woodstock. According to Jorma Kaukonen, another one of Slide Show’s brilliant collaborators, “If you think of the instrument that she has chosen to become a master of, starting on Dobro and winding up on steel, these instruments are not lightly undertaken, and she has become a master, in her case, a mistress of them.” Observing not just the unique nature of her musical path, Kaukonen also notes the exceptional collaborative spirit that has allowed her to achieve her one-of-a-kind status in the music world: “Besides her instrumental prowess, she is one of these people who is so fine-tuned when it comes to playing with other people, depending on what is required of her in terms of lead or support, her musical taste is literally unassailable.” “There are not many guys that can hang in there with her,” Kaukonen adds. From the ranks of all those with whom she’s worked throughout her career, there’s a veritable chorus putting to rest the gender prejudice she faced all those years ago, a prejudice she of course helped overturn. “It is always an honor to be on the stage with her because she has kicked ass with every guy she ever played with,” Dave Alvin agrees. “When you’re playing in a band with Cindy Cashdollar,” said famed slide guitarist Steve James, “you realize that she’s the heaviest cat in the band.” “She can hold her own with anybody and can kick ass when she needs to,” says legendary Telecaster master Redd Volkaert. These days, in the few moments when she’s not touring or recording, she often plays with Volkaert in various Austin venues. Volkaert sees what Kaukonen and so many others before them have seen: “She is excellent at knowing what is needed musically in a given situation. When we play with each other, it is like having a conversation with our banter going back and forth. We are bouncing off of each other and stimulating the other person so that that the process is great fun for us and better music for the listener.” Cashdollar champions her atypical instruments. In addition to developing four instructional DVDs for Dobro and steel guitar (via Homespun Tapes) and providing exposure to both sounds in her guest appearances on Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion (broadcast on National Public Radio), Cashdollar teaches at Kaukonen’s Fur Peace Ranch music camp in Pomeroy, Ohio and participates in workshops in conjunction with various guitar festivals. Cindy Cashdollar transcends her status as a performer, saving Dobro and steel for American music. “Steel guitar and Dobro are an odd corner of the universe and that is one of the things that makes Cindy so special,” Kaukonen says. “She has taught at our Fur Peace Ranch several times, and over the years, people who have taken her classes talk about her class as a musically defining moment in their lives.” DAV E A LVIN AN D T HE G UILT Y WOM EN : Y EP ROC ; CIN DY CA SH DO LL AR : ROB BUC K 8Yfm\, with Dave Alvin and the Guilty Women. Right, on stage with her National Reso-Phonic. March/April 2013 | Elmore 24-28_FEA2.indd 30 2/19/13 1:35 PM