The band’s first release since 2018’s Grammy-nominated North Of Despair Album included in NPR’s notable releases for August 28.  “Wood & Wire not only offers a steadfast devotion to bluegrass, but also to the further possibilities it provides.” – Bluegrass Today

“Look closely and you can see all the way down into the music’s soul.” – Twangville

August 28, 2020 – Austin, TX – “I don’t like bluegrass, but I love you guys,” is something Wood & Wire hear often from new fans, and while the band never claims to defy categorization—they are, after all, a four-piece band made up of guitar, bass, banjo, and mandolin—they certainly ignore the notion of musical boundaries. Today, Wood & Wire released No Matter Where It Goes From Here, a whirlwind of songs and styles sprung from the band’s punk, hardcore, and jazz backgrounds and crafted into a cohesive, collective work; one certainly capable of earning yet another Grammy nomination for the band. Already, No Matter Where it Goes From Here has garnered praise from the likes of American Songwriter, No Depression, Wide Open Country, Fretboard Journal, and The Boot ahead of today’s release. Fans can stream or purchase the album now at this link.

On this nine-song collection, Wood & Wire—Trevor Smith (Banjo, Vocals), Dom Fisher (Bass, Vocals), Tony Kamel (Guitar, Vocals), and Billy Bright (Mandolin, Mandola, Vocals)—combine virtuosic playing with engaging melodies and lyrics that range from mentions of Banksy and Kerouac (“John”), a social commentary on money and exploitation (“Pigs”), to the 1794 Whiskey Rebellion and steam-powered river travel. No Matter Where It Goes From Here was produced by Wood & Wire and Pat Manske (Robert Earl Keen, Ray Wylie Hubbard) at The Zone in Dripping Springs, TX.

The first single “Pigs,” written by Kamel and Silas Lowe, is a driving Wood & Wire-style commentary on the power of money and its effect on everyday life. “This tune was originally inspired by my deep disdain for reality TV shows,” says Kamel. “It expanded as a social commentary on money and how we as a people consume, and are constantly manipulated by the constant flow of media information–and misinformation.” The music meets the message flawlessly and aggressively before leading into the next, more peaceful instrumental, “Roadie’s Circles,” joined by acoustic music legend, Peter Rowan. The song starts with Rowan’s lusty yodel, then weaves traditional bluegrass tempos into an intricate rondo of interconnected textures, with jazz-kissed Southwest breezes and a Spanish-guitar interlude.

They’ve been playing the historical song, “Spirit of ’94,” written by band friend Geoff Union of Ragged Union, since being invited to perform at the 2018 Whiskey Rebellion Festival, held annually in Washington, Pennsylvania, where the insurrection began. The charmingly melodic Robin Bernard/Dom Fisher tune “Paddlewheels” would totally steal the heart of late riverboat pilot John Hartford. The river also figures in Bright’s composition, “My Hometown,” an El Paso reminiscence in which he mentions, “ My hometown is steeped in funk/My hometown’s got the border punk junk”. If those words evoke Punch Brothers before Stanley Brothers, that just affirms how broad the spectrum of bluegrass-oriented music really is.

Another standout is album-opener, “John,” a good-time swing about Kamel’s high school buddy who didn’t adhere to the life he was prescribed. John became a commercial salmon fisherman and artist in Alaska, Kamel a musician. It is an ode to the “seekers, searchers, and drifters” sung about in the song’s chorus; those that go against the grain and choose a direction less traveled.

In a way, that sentiment is a perfect precursor for an album full of unapologetic ideals that, when combined with world-class musicianship, results in a release to appease most everyone who will hear it. Bright sums up the artistic philosophy behind the band. Just getting to gigs, much less performing, staying together, sustaining the precarious lifestyle; the odds are stacked against success. “As performers,” he adds, “we understand this plight and that the only way forward, wherever we may land, is to put ourselves out there, no matter where it goes from here.” For Kamel, it applies not only to the band’s dynamic, but the bigger-picture uncertainty of their musical future in a pandemic-tilted world. “We’ll ride whatever wave that comes our way,” he assures. “We just can’t control what kind of wave that is.”

No Matter Where It Goes From Here Track Listing:
John
Can’t Keep Up
Pigs
Roadie’s Circles (feat. Peter Rowan)
Spirit of ‘94
Home and the Banjo
My Hometown
Paddlewheels
Clamp’s Chute

More About Wood & Wire: The Texas songwriter tradition casts a long shadow today, and Austin-based Americana roots juggernauts Wood & Wire could easily rattle off a long list of songwriters that inspire them from Willie Nelson to James McMurtry, and everyone in between. But ask them about what it is about Texas that brought us so many great songwriters, and they stop cold. That’s because they don’t romanticize their culture or their past, they’re too busy working their asses off making new music, writing new songs. This isn’t a land made for quiet reflection, it’s a land made for hard work. Respect for honest labor is a central theme in Wood & Wire’s 2018 GRAMMY Nominated album for “Best Bluegrass”, North of Despair ( Blue Corn Music). The characters on the album live large and aren’t afraid to share their opinions about the modern world. This kind of vivid, haunting songwriting focused on lives spent deep in the countryside is a hallmark of Texas songwriting. But it’s the melding of this hard country songwriting with high-octane bluegrass instrumentation that makes for Wood & Wire’s signature sound. Artists like John Hartford have trod this ground before, mixing up great songs, bluegrass virtuosity, and a strong sense of place, and Wood & Wire aim to pave the way for Austin’s roots scene, bursting out of the giant expanses of the state with a fully-fledged vision for a new Texan sound. Their follow up full-length album No Matter Where It Goes From Here was released in August 2020. 
https://www.woodandwireband.com/