Press Release
Source: Sarah Bennett PR
Five-decades-running Americana pioneers Nitty Gritty Dirt Band have already played a major role in the preservation and popularity of folk music—their Will The Circle Be Unbroken album series introduced droves of new fans to folk, country, and bluegrass and earned the band multiple Grammy awards—but now, the long-running group have taken on another American institution near and dear to their hearts; the Bob Dylan songbook.
On May 20th, the band will be releasing Dirt Does Dylan, a ten-track album highlighting some of the gems from Dylan’s vast catalog with the help of three new band members: fiddle specialist Ross Holmes; singer-songwriter and bass player Jim Photoglo (who wrote one of the Dirt Band’s biggest hits, “Fishin’ in the Dark”); and Dirt Band founder Jeff Hanna’s son, the absurdly talented singer and guitarist Jaime Hanna.
Produced and recorded by Ray Kennedy at Room & Board Studio in Nashville, Tennessee, Dirt Does Dylan finds a generation-spanning Dirt Band paying an appropriately great tribute to arguably the greatest songwriter of the 20th century with the help of friends like Jason Isbell, The War & Treaty, Steve Earle, and Rosanne Cash, to name a few.
Today, Billboard premiered the Dirt Band’s cover of “I Shall Be Released,” which Dylan originally recorded with The Band during their infamous Basement Tapes sessions. On this version of the tune, sisters Rebecca and Megan Lovell—better known as accomplished blues-rock duo Larkin Poe—lend their perfectly-blended voices and Megan’s lap steel guitar skills to the mix.
Carpenter takes the first verse vocals while the Hannas handle guitar duties. Aside from the fine songwriting itself, Jeff Hanna and Megan Lovell’s infectious guitar interplay carries the song from verse to verse, culminating in the song’s final solo section.
Pre-order or pre-save Dirt Does Dylan ahead of its May 20th release HERE.
For more information on Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Dirt Does Dylan, please visit HERE.
Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here with You
Girl from the North Country
It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry
Country Pie
I Shall Be Released ft. Larkin Poe
She Belongs to Me
Forever Young
The Times They Are A-Changin’ ft. Rosanne Cash, Jason Isbell, and The War and Treaty
Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right
Quinn The Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)
Catch Nitty Gritty Dirt Band on tour:
Apr. 9 – Rama, ON – Casino Rama Resort
Apr. 29 – Chattanooga, TN – Robert Kirk Walker Theatre
Apr. 30 – Hopewell, VA – Beacon Theatre
May 1 – Wilkesboro, NC – MerleFest 2022
May 13 – Lancaster, PA – American Music Theatre
May 14 – New York, NY – City Winery
May 19 – Mankato, MN – Vetter Stone Amphitheatre
May 20 – Papillion, NE – Sumtur Amphitheater
May 21 – Chesterfield, MO – Chesterfield Central Park Amphitheatre
May 22 – Louisville, KY – Iroquois Amphitheater
June 9 – Eureka Springs, AR – Eureka Springs City Auditorium
June 10 – Kansas City, MO – Uptown Theater
June 11 – Salina, KS – Stiefel Theatre for the Performing Arts
June 24 – Grand Junction, CO – Country Jam 2022
June 25 – North Platte, NE – Nebraskaland Days
July 15 – Decorah, IA – Winneshiek County Fair
July 16 – Chicago, IL – City Winery
July 21 – Marietta, OH – Peoples Bank Theatre
July 22 – Shipshewana, IN – Blue Gate Performing Arts Center
July 23 – Twin Lakes, WI – Country Thunder Wisconsin 2022
Aug. 3 – McMinnville, OR – Yamhill County Fair & Rodeo
Aug. 4 – Boise, ID – The Egyptian Theatre
Aug. 6 – Bellvue, CO – Mishawaka Amphitheatre
Aug. 12 – Hinckley, MN – Grand Country Nights 2022
Aug. 13 – South West Fargo, ND – Lights Amphitheater
Aug. 18 – Three Forks, MT – Headwaters Country Jam 2022
Aug. 19 – Rexford, MT – Abayance Bay Marina
Aug. 27 – Gilbert, AZ – Higley Center For The Performing Arts
Aug. 28 – Tucson, AZ – Rialto Theatre
Sept. 2 – Orange Park, FL – Thrasher-Horne Center
Sept. 3 – Mill Spring, NC – The Earl Scruggs Music Festival 2022
All tour dates and ticket information can be found at: http://www. nittygritty.com/tour.
More About Nitty Gritty Dirt Band: The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band trades on a mix of reimagined classics and compelling newer works. The group formed in 1966 as a Long Beach, California jug band, scored its first charting single in 1967, and embarked on a self-propelled ride through folk, country, rock ‘n’ roll, pop, bluegrass, and the amalgam now known as “Americana.”
The first major hit came in 1971 with the epic “Mr. Bojangles,” which, along with insistent support from banjo master Earl Scruggs, opened doors in Nashville. Behind those doors were Earl Scruggs, Roy Acuff, Doc Watson, Mother Maybelle Carter, Jimmy Martin, and others who would collaborate on a multi-artist, multi-generational, three-disc 1972 masterpiece: Will the Circle Be Unbroken. Circle went triple Platinum, spawned two later volumes, and wound up in the Grammy Hall of Fame.
Was this a cutting-edge combo or a group of revivalists? Was the goal rebellion or musical piety? Yes, to all these things. In the 1980s, the Dirt Band reeled off 15 straight Top 10 country hits, including chart-toppers “Long Hard Road (The Sharecropper’s Dream),” “Modern Day Romance,” and “Fishin’ in the Dark (co-written by Jim Photoglo, who would join the band in the second decade of the new century).
1989 brought a second Circle album, this one featuring singer-songwriter talents including: John Prine, Rosanne Cash, and John Hiatt and garnering two Grammy awards for the band (it later won another, for a collaboration with Earl Scruggs and other fine folks). Circle II also won the Country Music Association’s Album of the Year prize. Circle III was released in 2003, featuring collaborations with Johnny Cash, Dwight Yoakam, Emmylou Harris, Taj Mahal, and more.