
In its three decades of existence, the Old Settlerโs Music Festival has fostered romances and even a wedding, not to mention several careers, and this year, it celebrated its 30th anniversary by featuring two rising stars who jumpstarted theirs at the central Texas festival.
Austin native Alejandro Rose-Garcia, who became Shakey Graves at Old Settlerโs, made his official festival debut as the Friday-night headliner, while Sarah Jarosz, raised in nearby Wimberley, performed Saturday night just before headliners Los Lobos. Both artists recounted how they wound up on the Hill Country Stage, the larger of two intimate mainstages at the festival, which takes place a half-hour outside of Austin at the Salt Lick Pavilion and Camp Ben McCulloch on the banks of gently flowing Onion Creek.
Jarosz, who was 10 when she won the festivalโs first Youth Talent Competition in 2002, has performed several times since at the late-April festival. But this year, the 25-year-old singer-songwriter returned as a double Grammy winner; in February she earned Best Folk Album for Undercurrent and Best American Roots Performance for the song โHouse of Mercy.โ That same month, she also earned the inaugural Folk Alliance International Album of the Year award.
Rose-Garcia, 29, hilariously recounted the now well-honed story of how he snuck into the festival campgrounds 10 years ago in the trunk of a friendโs Nissan Maxima and remained in that area, ticketless, for the duration. (The four-day festival has only campground-stage performances on Thursday and Sunday.)ย
โI wandered the campsites at night and played my music for the first time,โ Rose-Garcia said, later noting he also learned to tune his guitar at Old Settlerโs, and served in subsequent years as a trash-crew volunteer. โA man came over to our campsite. Iโm pretty sure he was on LSD, and he had a great conversation with us, or at us โฆ When he walked away, he said, โOh, something to beware of, stay away from the spooky wagons.โ And we were like, โWhat the fuck does that mean?โ But we decided that Spooky Wagons would be a great guitar-picker name of some sort, so we all gave each other stupid guitar-picker names.
โThat night, I went and played music at the campsites, as is tradition โ God bless everybody out there playing music โ and when people asked me what my name was, I said โShakey Graves?โ And they said, โCool. Itโs nice to meet you.โโ
After playing โBullyโs Lamentโ and โRoll the Bonesโ solo, accompanying his expressive voice and guitar picking with loops and his suitcase-thumping percussion rig, Rose-Garcia brought out drummer/percussionist Chris Boosahda and hot Dallas-based crew the Texas Gentlemen for an energetic set. Dressed in suit and tie, the puckish, animated and affable former actor played โUnlucky Skin,โ then scanned the audience and said, โIโm just taking it all in.โ
Then he joked, โIf you guys need any trash taken out, you know Iโm your man.โ
Rose-Garcia, who has been recording new material with Boosahda in Dallasโ Belmont Hotel (temporary home of another renowned Alejandro โ last name Escovedo), also performed โUnknown Legend,โ the Neil Young song he recorded with Shovels & Rope, and, as a sing-along, his most well-known tune: โDearly Departed.โ
His performance capped a day and night that also featured Leftover Salmon, Anders Osborne, Gregory Alan Isakov, Sam Bush, Reckless Kelly, Gaelic Storm, the California Honeydrops, Lilโ Smokies and Session Americana.
Multi-instrumentalist Bush, officially declared by his home state of Kentucky as the father of newgrass, ripped through a terrific set that included โCircles Around Meโ and some notable covers. From the World War I-era folk song โOld Joe Clark,โ he and his band went into an extended circa-1970 jam that suggested the Grateful Dead, then stepped into the Allman Brothersโ โMidnight Rider,โ Grand Funk Railroadโs โIโm Your Captainโ and Rare Earthโs โI Just Want to Celebrate.โย
Meanwhile, over on the Bluebonnet Stage, Anders Osborne delivered Dylanโs โKnockinโ on Heavenโs Door.โ Earlier on that same stage, Austin band Reckless Kelly noted the one-year anniversary of Princeโs death by performing โPurple Rainโ with guest guitarist Rich Brotherton.
On Saturday, Jarosz and Shinyribs both performed โWhen Doves Cry.โ
Their versions couldnโt have been more opposite; Jarosz, who pronounced Prince โone of the greatest all-time artists ever,โ gave a blues-tinted, beautifully thoughtful rendition performed on mandolin, with the appropriately named Jeff Picker adding a jazz break on his double bass.
Shinyribs, the performing moniker used by Kevin Russell and his band, encored with the song, pulling out the stops with the full r&b band: horns, backing vocalists, keyboards, bass and guitar. But Shinyribs had worked Prince into his repertoire even before the brilliant rockerโs death, just as heโd done with David Bowie.
The edition of โGolden Yearsโ he and the band performed Saturday was so deconstructed, it took a minute to recognize โ which is, in a way, as it should be with covers.
They were just two of many high points in a raucous, over-the-top set that also included a couple of flygirl dancers โ not to mention Shinyribsโ own kinetic movement; at one point, the singer and multi-instrumentalist even crawled on his hands and knees through the flowerbeds dressing the stage lip. This was after he suggested, โSomebody grab David Hidalgo off the other stage and bring him overโ (which might have made Los Lobos a tad upset but would have been amazing to see), but before he sang โDonut Taco Palace,โ an ode to his favorite Austin taqueria, followed by a declaration of love to โmy favorite root vegetable.โ โSweet Potato,โ his so-called โyam jam,โ was full of puns, schmaltz and very Prince-like, rock-solid rhythms.
Shinyribs likes to call his Louisiana and Beaumont, Texas-rooted sound โtub gut stomp and red-eyed soulโ (also the title of a song on his new album, I Got Your Medicine). Itโs as fitting a description as any for music thatโs all about a funky good time โ so good, the former Gourds member has turned leading a conga line to the campgrounds into a new festival tradition. He also closed the festival Sunday.
But before he played on Saturday, a slew of noteworthy roots artists had filled the unseasonably cold air, among them Peter Rowan with Wood & Wire, another band that formed at Old Settlerโs; Elephant Revival; the Del McCoury Band; the Honeycutters; the Travelinโ McCourys; Nikki Lane; and Old 97โs.

Lane alternated tracks from her new album, Highway Queen, and 2014โs Dan Auerbach-produced All or Nothinโ, mixing twangy country with rock influences goosed by her lead guitarist boyfriend, Jonathan Tyler, who sang Auerbachโs part of the โLoveโs on Fireโ duet. They also harmonized nicely on Tylerโs Van Zandt-nodding โTo Love is to Fly.โ Laneโs set slightly overlapped Jaroszโs, providing the kind of contrast that always makes the Old Settlerโs lineup so intriguing. With about 16,000 attending per day, itโs a manageable crowd, too. Despite a tighter configuration and smaller stages this year, the ambiance was still friendly and laid back โ even when Dallas-raised rockers Old 97โs stormed the Bluebonnet stage after Lane, revving up the energy level with a style that truly connects the dots between what was once called insurgent country and is now considered Americana.
Paying homage to their influences (โMama Triedโ) while taking no prisoners, they strutted and twanged their way through a set filled with gotta-love-โem tunes like โLetโs Get Drunk and Get It On,โ โStonedโ and from their new Graveyard Whistling album, โGood with God.โ Lane joined them on that one, covering Brandi Carlileโs part as she did when the band performed it on โLate Night with Seth Meyers.โ
Thatโs another thing about Old Settlerโs. The relaxed mingling extends to the artists as well; for many, festivals offer rare chances to hang out together. Sometimes, collaborations occur. Alter-egos like Shakey Gravesโ are created, and young Sarah Jaroszs are inspired to keep developing. Itโs a bit like a family watching the kids grow up and do well. When they come home and show their progress, those who witnessed their evolution canโt help but feel proud. And even those who didnโt can feel the love โ and appreciate the talent.
There sure was enough of it to go around.
