Catching Up With Shovels & Rope
It’s been a long two years for Shovels & Rope’s Cary Ann Hearst and Michael Trent. Two years of hard touring—they average 200 dates a year—long drives in the van, and weeks at a time away from friends and family. Finally, that hard work is starting to pay off, with fans cropping up from Charlotte to Seattle. Paste caught the husband and wife duo for a chat on Halloween, when they were taking a day off from their grueling tour schedule, to hear about their adventures on the road and what’s next for the band.
Paste: Y’all had your first West Coast tour this year. Do you find audiences outside of the South receive your music differently?
Hearst: We were quite surprised when we got to the West Coast. KEXP was spinning our record before we even got there. We were greeted by 1,000 people at an outdoor festival who were there to see us. I thought they had mistaken us for someone else! The audience was a mix of displaced Southerners who were living in Seattle and music aficionados from around the Northwest. We didn’t think anyone was going to be there, and then there was this huge crowd. That was an incredible feeling. There’s already a place there where our music could fit in and our audience would like it.
The hardest one was in New York City. I thought they weren’t going to like us because we aren’t that fashionable, and it seems like it helps to have your look styled. We were called “fake country music,” and I was surprised because I am from Nashville and am a country musician. Nothing fake about it.
Paste: Michael, is it true your drum kit is from a junkyard?
Trent: [laughs] Yes. We received it from our buddy Jack, who we used to play with in our separate projects. He found that kick drum in a garbage heap. Before we played drums, we would put a mic on the ground and stomp, then we used a box and stomped on it. Right before we left to go on tour, Jack showed up with this kick drum that he found in the garbage. We tried it out and sort of learned how to play drums onstage.
Hearst: It was supposed to be a temp drum while we figure out if we want to use it. All the sound guys started remarking, “Are you kidding me with that kick drum?” But then they told us it was one of the best ones they’d ever heard. So we knew we couldn’t get rid of it. Until it’s unplayable, we’re gonna keep it. The kick drum that we’re using now is the last remnant of the garbage can drum set. The rest were donated to us by musician friends, because not that long ago, we didn’t have two pennies to scratch together.
Paste: You told Garden and Gun that at the time you met Michael, you were listening to a lot of Nirvana and old country, trying to figure out how to blend the two. Do you feel like you’ve come close with Shovels & Rope?