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MP3 Bawn in the Mash - Welcome to the Atomic City

Acoustic; Influenced by the region of western Kentucky ''Welcome to the Atomic City'' has elements of country, bluegrass, old-time, rock and roll, blues, and classical forms of music.

12 MP3 Songs
ROCK: Americana, COUNTRY: Bluegrass



Details:
The mash was distilled from a mixture of darkfire tobacco smoke and gourd-dust in the hills of western Kentucky...

In 2004, Nathan Lynn and Tommy Oliverio began collaborating upon some bluegrass material while living in Murray, Kentucky. Soon after, they met Josh Coffey, and Bawn in the Mash was formed. Cody Campbell, who played bass in the Blood River Bluegrass Band and keys in Whiskey Dickens (both with Nathan) had been around the scene for some time. The missing element was indeed the banjo. Late one evening while working in the Land Between the Lakes, Nathan came across a strange looking fellow who appeared to be lost in the woods. It turned out to be world famous banjoist Alex Faught. Nathan invited Alex over to the Drumzrguruven house-party-jam-sessions the group was having on a weekly basis. For several months the band would get together inside one of the most unique art collections in the world. It was this creative and free-form environment that influenced The Mash, and has helped shape the music you hear today.

In 2005, BITM officially moved their world headquarters to downtown Paducah, Kentucky. Halfway betwixt Monkeys Eyebrow and Possum Trot , it is also called the Land of Four Rivers (Clarks, Ohio, Tennessee, and Cumberland). It was here they woodshed the compositions that would soon be published as ''Welcome to the Atomic City.''

In the spring of 2006, Cody had to take a leave of absence from the group to pursue his education full time. Josh called up his father, Eddie, asking to borrow the family bass during the initial recording sessions of WTTAC. Eddie, an accomplished musician in his own respect, decided it would be better if he learned how to play the bass, and fill-in for Cody. Since then, he has come a long way, and if you listen close it will sound as if he''d been poondoggin'' that bass for years.

The new album: ''Welcome to the Atomic City''

Produced by National (and five-time Tennessee) Old-Time Banjo Champion Dan Knowles (Paris, Tennessee), ''Welcome to the Atomic City'' is a collection of original acoustic compositions that both historically interpret and fictitiously describe events that could have occured during the past 150 years around Western Kentucky.

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