1/4/12

SATURDAY: Anti-Freeze Blues Festival in Ferndale

Can you believe that it's 2012?!? Another January means a return to Ferndale and The Magic Bag for the Annual Anti-Freeze Blues Festival! This year's festival features Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band. The show benefits the Detroit Blues Society and includes Thornetta Davis and Johnnie Bassett & the Rattlesnake Shake. He'll be playing the raw pre-war blues he has been spreading the gospel about since his teens.


Admission $20.00 - benefits the Detroit Blues Society.
Saturday, January 7th
 - 

Showtime 7pm
The Magic Bag

22920 Woodward Avenue


There aren’t a lot of Warped Tour vets who can claim proficiency in the use of washboards, bottleneck slides and five-gallon buckets. Most didn’t spend their teens playing along to Charlie Patton and Bukka White albums. And just about none are fronted by a commissioned member of the Honorary Order of Kentucky Colonels. But the Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band are all that and more. With wild sing-a-longs and flaming washboards, their live shows have been converting skeptics left and right.
The Big Damn Band is very much a family affair, with the good Reverend on finger-style resonator guitar and lead vocals, his wife “Washboard” Breezy Peyton on washboard and vocals and distant cousin Aaron “Cuz” Persinger on drums and bucket. The band’s home base is deep in the hills of Southern Indiana’s Brown County, which boasts a population of 14,957. (Or 14,954 when the band’s out on the road playing close to 250 gigs a year, including appearances at the Austin City Limits festival, Bonnoroo and tours with Flogging Molly, Derek Trucks Band and Clutch.)

“I grew up in the country, and rural life and rural culture has shaped me and my music,” says Reverend Peyton, who really is a Kentucky Colonel, just like Elvis Presley, Roy Rogers and Tiger Woods. “I have been playing music since I was a little kid. I am pretty sure we are on to something now.”

That combination of authenticity and originality is evident throughout “The Wages,” driven by the trio’s big damn vocals and melodies, gutbucket guitar playing, and foot-stomping rhythms, all in service of songs that are honest and moving, devoid of irony or artifice. We may be few in numbers, but we sound big,” says Washboard Breezy. “And I think we stand for something big too. Even if sometimes it’s just that it is okay to be a regular person.”