The members of Megafaun moved from Wisconsin to Raleigh with Justin Vernon as the band DeYarmond Edison. After Vernon went back north to record as Bon Iver, the Cook brothers and Joe Westerlund stayed on in the Piedmont, crafting a timeless folk-pop that “drinks deeply from the well of the past but could only have been made today” (Drowned in Sound) — an archive of rural America’s ghosts.
In this exclusive live recording event, the rustic avant-gardists teamed up with Fight the Big Bull, the “thrilling” (NPR) nine-piece jazz collective from Richmond, VA, along with Vernon and the blisteringly talented Sharon Van Etten.
Together in Durham for just three shows, they tracked a live album based on Alan Lomax’s collection of shape-note songs and dirt-floor hymns, Sounds of the South, gathered during a two-year trek through the American southeast (1959-1961).
Recast through Megafaun’s experimental Americana, FtBB’s brass jazz, Vernon’s “chilly, rusty grandeur” (Village Voice), and Van Etten’s haunting soprano, the folk songs Lomax immortalized lived again, from September 17-19, 2010, at Hayti Heritage Center, once an AME Zion church and now a semi-sacred venue whose acoustics rival any studio’s.
“What came out in the three live performances that culminated the days of rehearsal was an energy unmatched in all but a few events I have ever witnessed.”
INDY Week
Photos by Jeremy M. Lange