Photo by Jason Stoltzfus
Larkin Poe
Larkin Poe
The sister duo of Rebecca and Megan Lovell, who make up the band Larkin Poe, have been nothing if not prolific during their career, releasing six full-length studio albums and five EPs, while guesting on a variety of releases by other artists over the past dozen years.
But the sisters say they were able to be more authentic than ever on their new album, Blood Harmony. Ironically, they achieved this clearer representation of themselves by making an album in a very different way from how their other Larkin Poe albums were brought to life in the studio. They will perform March 17 at Turner Hall.
In the past, making albums has pretty much been a sister show. Aside from their 2014 full-length debut, Kin, Rebecca and Megan Lovell had self-produced their albums and recorded virtually all the instruments themselves, pairing guitars, keyboards and other instruments with programmed beats to create a marriage of organic and synthetic sounds.
But for Blood Harmony, they went old school, using live drums, bringing in members of their touring band and playing live in the studio.
Southern Roots
Perhaps more fundamentally, the sisters leaned further than ever into their Southern roots and blues and classic rock influences, which resulted in a song cycle they feel is the best representation yet of the music they want to make as Larkin Poe.
“I do think we’ve been incredibly fortunate to be a band that continues to burn slowly,” Rebecca said. “I think over the years we’ve been allowed the time and space to really spread out and learn the details of how my sister and I work together as a team, what stories we want to tell, how we want to embrace the many different angles of musical interest that we have. We were able to grow up listening to a lot of classic rock records, a lot of classical music, a lot of bluegrass, a lot of country and a lot of different styles that are definitely a part of who we are. And I think the years that we’ve spent together working through the many different pathways has led us to a place where with Blood Harmony, specifically, we were able to just be ourselves and to really fully embrace all of the different parts of who we are.
Photo by Jason Stoltzfus
Larkin Poe
Larkin Poe
“We just want to be authentic to the deepest, most true bits of our core,” she added. “And I think of any of the records we’ve made, this album has definitely brought us the closest to achieving that goal.”
Rebecca isn’t overstating the pair’s extensive musical history. They started out as teen-agers in 2005 joining forces with older sister Jessica in the bluegrass/Americana group the Lovell Sisters. The trio released a pair of albums, toured extensively and made multiple appearances on Garrison Keillor’s “A Prairie Home Companion” radio show.
Artistic Growth
The Lovell Sisters disbanded in 2009 when Jessica decided to go to college and pursue other interests. That’s when Rebecca and Megan formed Larkin Poe and broadened their sound considerably, going primarily electric and encompassing not only Americana and bluegrass, but rock, pop, blues, and soul, with Rebecca taking on electric guitar, keyboards and lead vocals and Megan playing a variety of instruments, including lap steel, slide and guitar.
The notion of making a live-in-the-studio album wasn’t foreign to the sisters considering albums from the 1960s and ‘70s were commonly recorded that way. But making “Blood Harmony,” which was co-produced by the sisters and Rebecca’s husband, Tyler Bryant (of Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown), resulted in a good deal of artistic growth.
“I think being able to write this album thinking of the stage and being able to carry that live energy into the studio really made a huge difference in the way that this album has taken us leaps and bounds forward creatively,” she said
The recording approach works well on the consistently strong Blood Harmony. The live drums inject a new level of energy and muscle to the Larkin Poe sound, while the guitars sting, rip and roar through these hooky songs. The sisters’ blues roots shine on the slamming “Bad Spell” and “Might as Well Be Me.” Songs like “Kick the Blues,” “Bolt Cutters & The Family Name” and “Southern Comfort” are tart and tough rockers with a Southern feel, while some country and Americana seep into the punchy “Georgia Off My Mind” and the title track.
The way Blood Harmony was recorded means the new songs will translate well to the live stage, it took some thought, work and creativity for the sisters to craft their current live show.
“One of the hardest things about reworking the set list for the new year is figuring out which songs we’re going to play because at this point, we have released a lot of records, pretty much at least one record a year. So we have a lot to pull from,” Megan said. “The set list this year is going to be a lot off the new record. I think we’re pretty much going to play all of the songs from the new record. And then we’re also going to pull in some old favorites that we’ve been reworking. It’s going to be a really fun and energetic set.”