Interviews

DAN TYMINSKI: On Track

The Vermont-native unwittingly inspired a style revolution when he gave George Clooney voice in the Coen brothers filmย O Brother, Where Art Thou?. Its soundtrackโ€”a well-documented phenomenon that scored five Grammys in 2002 (including one for Tyminskiโ€™s indelible take on โ€œI Am a Man of Constant Sorrowโ€) and moved 8 million unitsโ€”literally redressed todayโ€™s bluegrass fan.

Dan Tyminski and Band

The Vermont-native unwittingly inspired a style revolution when he gave George Clooney voice in the Coen brothers film O Brother, Where Art Thou?. Its soundtrackโ€”a well-documented phenomenon that scored five Grammys in 2002 (including one for Tyminskiโ€™s indelible take on โ€œI Am a Man of Constant Sorrowโ€) and moved 8 million unitsโ€”literally redressed todayโ€™s bluegrass fan.

โ€œWe started seeing more cowboys and belt buckles at the shows, but also lots more spiked hair and rock and roll t-shirts,โ€ Tyminski says, laughing, about his gigs with Alison Krauss and Union Station following the filmโ€™s release. โ€œIt made a lot of people who didnโ€™t listen to roots music turn their head and start digging, start asking, โ€˜Who do I need to listen to?โ€™ I still see ripples from it today. Now that everythingโ€™s so accessible, the ripple effect was huge.โ€

Celebrate the latest: Tyminskiโ€™s second solo effort, Wheels, released June 17 on Rounder Records. Its revolving door welcomes an all-star co-op of Nashville talentโ€”Vince Gill, Mountain Heartโ€™s Adam Steffey and Barry Bales among themโ€”who fortify future festival standards like โ€œWho Showed Who,โ€ โ€œI Ainโ€™t Taking You Back No Moreโ€ and the title track. Tyminskiโ€™s sole original composition โ€œHow Many Times,โ€ a buoyant two-step that offsets a heartbreaking narrative, establishes a key highlight.

โ€œLike so many things, that was born out of a need,โ€ the 13-time Grammy winner says. โ€œWe had a showcase in two days, and I was upstairs roasting coffee beans. While the beans were roasting, I was asking myself, โ€˜How many times have I been down this road before?โ€™ I sit down to write the song and I havenโ€™t finished it. I had a guitar in my lap and came up with the first line and the rest of it just wrote itself. I probably put a whopping 20 minutes into that song. The โ€˜realโ€™ songwriters will be able to pick up on that, Iโ€™m sure.โ€

Tim Staffordโ€™s โ€œHow Long Is This Trainโ€โ€”the clear standout amidst a deep and rich collectionโ€”provides the albumโ€™s most important listen. In a time of unforgiving dividing lines, his poignant and pointed wartime vignette delivers the Middle East to Middle America with a refreshing absence of spin. โ€œThe old man stood there waiting for a young man dressed in blue,โ€ Tyminski sings, โ€œAnd he handed him a neatly folded flag and said, โ€˜For you.โ€™ He said, โ€˜Your son he died a hero in the service of this flag.โ€™โ€

โ€œIn these times, you can easily pin that to a lot of different things,โ€ Tyminski explains, โ€œbut there was no political statement in mind. I held onto that song for so longโ€”six, seven yearsโ€”it didnโ€™t make the initial tracking of the record. I couldnโ€™t even remember the song. But after I remembered the first line, I had my hand on my forehead wondering how we couldโ€™ve possibly missed it. The thought of almost letting that one slip by wouldโ€™ve crushed me.โ€

AGE: 41
HOMETOWN: Rutland, Vermont
FAVORITE SONGWRITER ALBUM: Tony Rice-Church Street Blues