The Unlikely Story Of A Band With A Lot To Like: Mipso
The band Mipso never anticipated being as successful or as long lived as they became. It is a band that mandolin player Jacob Sharp called unlikely, because none of the members studied music when they met in college at UNC-Chapel Hill, and none of them thought music was going to be a career -- nothing beyond their initial love of other bands, and of playing together. If Mipso is an unlikely band, it is also quite an exceptional one, now set to release their fifth album (sixth if you count their Mipso Trio debut). They were in the middle of recording their new record during the time we got together in the small city of Elkin, NC on a beautiful summer evening. In this episode of Southern Songs and Stories, we talk with members Libby Rodenbough, Joseph Terrell and Wood Robinson as well as Bridget Kearney of Lake Street Dive, who is soon to tour with Mipso in her project with Benjamin Lazar Davis. Get set for many live songs from their performance at the Reevestock Music Festival, where we met, and find out how their approach to making music has not changed all that much over the years, while their sound has evolved considerably. Mipso also shares their take on how their music reflects Southern culture, and we even take a stab at revealing exactly how they came up with their name and what it means.
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Songs heard in this episode:
Mipso: Excerpt of “Edges Run” performed live at Reevestock 8-3-19
Mipso: “A Servant To It” performed live at Reevestock 8-3-19
Mipso: Excerpt of “A Couple Acres Greener” performed live on WNCW 5-22-15
Mipso: Excerpt of “Get Out While You Can” (2018 single)
Mipso: “Louise” performed live at Reevestock 8-3-19
Bridget Kearny & Benjamin Lazar Davis: excerpt of “Slow Rider” from Bawa
Mipso: cover of Guy Clark’s “Dublin Blues” performed live at Reevestock 8-3-19
Southern Songs and Stories is produced in partnership with public radio station WNCW and the Osiris podcast network, and is available on podcast platforms everywhere. Would you like to help spread awareness of the artists featured here on Southern Songs and Stories, their music, and this series? Simply subscribe to the podcast and give it a good rating and a comment where you get your podcasts. For example, you can find us on Apple/iTunes here, on Stitcher here, and Spotify here. This is Southern Songs and Stories: the music of the South and the artists who make it. - Joe Kendrick