North Mississippi Allstars to Headline Charleston Beerfest

CHARLESTON, S.C. (Date) – Lowcountry beer and music lovers have even more to celebrate because North Mississippi Allstars will be headlining this yearโ€™s festival on the Loopit Music Stage Charleston Beer Fest (CBF). The festival will take place on October 22 at Riverfront Park from 1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. The festival includes:

  • Regional breweries
  • Beer games
  • Food trucks
  • Craft vendors
  • Homebrewers

Grab your tickets now and help celebrate our regionโ€™s thriving brewery culture and help support Palmetto Community Careโ€™s work to promote public health throughout the Lowcountry. Tickets are available now at https://www.chsbeerfest.org/tickets. General Admission, VIP packages and Designated Driver ticket options are available to ensure everyone can enjoy the Lowcountryโ€™s premier beer festival. VIP tickets include early access at noon on the day of the festival, extra beer tickets, and more!

North Mississippi Allstars are coming to Charleston Beerfest on October 22, 2022

Nothing runs deeper than family ties. Brothers, sisters, fathers, mothers, sons, and daughters understand one another at the purest level. When families rally around music, they speak this oft-unspoken bond aloud and into existence. After 25 years, twelve albums, four GRAMMYยฎ Award nominations, and sold out shows everywhere, North Mississippi Allstars open up their world once again on their thirteenth album, Set Sail [New West Records], welcoming other family (by blood and by the road) into the fold. As legend has it, Luther and Cody Dickinson started the band in 1996 as a loose collective of like-minded second-generation musicians who shared a local repertoire and regional style. Over the years, the lineup shifted by design, and each subsequent record offered up a different combination of collaborators. This time around, they mined the talents of Jesse Williams on bass and Lamar Williams, JR. on vocals. During the Allman Betts Band Family Revival, the Dickinsons first linked up with Lamar, son of the Allman Brothers bassist Lamar Williams, Sr., becoming fast friends and collaborators and eventually paving the way for Set Sail.

โ€œThe chemistry we have with this lineup is powerful,โ€ observes Luther. โ€œWe are all second-generation musicians and share a telepathic, relaxed ease about creating and performing. I believe music is a form of communion with our loved ones and conjuring this vibe with members of musical families can be inspirational. Lamar and I are like-minded. Iโ€™ve never had the pleasure of working with a singing partner like Lamar. He has a true-blue quality in his musicality that will pull you in and break your heart. At the same time, Jesse grew up playing music with his brothers and his fatherโ€”as did we. He plays like a sibling. We recorded the album fresh off the road and captured the energy we had worked up with him. Iโ€™m drawn to musical families, regardless of style. Playing with second- or third-generation players allows us an easy unspoken musical dialog. Itโ€™s not a big thing; itโ€™s just what we do. We never had to figure out what it means and takes to be a musician. We all inherently know.โ€

They picked up this wisdom by osmosis. As sons of legendary producer and musician Jim Dickinson, Luther and Cody have been producing records themselves since they were teenagers. Separately, the brothers have produced albums by Samantha Fish, R.L. Boyce, Lucero, Amy Lavere, the Birds of Chicago, Ian Segal, and more. Luther produced two records from Otha Turner, including Everybody Hollerinโ€™ Goat, which was named one of the ten most important blues albums of the nineties. Luther and Cody co-produce North Mississippi Allstars records as the โ€œDickinson Brothers.โ€

 โ€œWe learned an enormous amount from our father,โ€ Luther says, โ€œCody and I made mistakes, but weโ€™ve always believed in ourselves, and we had to learn for ourselves. Rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll is self-taught. Each generation has to reinvent itself and shed the skin of the elders. On Set Sail, we feel as if weโ€™ve once again โ€˜broken the code,โ€™ and know what we want and how to get it.โ€

Following 2019โ€™s Up and Rolling, which received a GRAMMYยฎ Award nod in the category of โ€œBest Contemporary Blues Album,โ€ Set Sail continues the bandโ€™s tradition of creating roots music that displays remarkable variety. Luther and Cody Dickinson dig in with the production and different guitar tones; the record sizzles with hard yet understated groove, grown folk music. Lutherโ€™s wide-ranging guitar style features jazz riffs, psychedelic sounds, and soulful slide. Drummer and multi-instrumentalist Cody draws on roots music, rock, jazz, rap, and other styles to create rhythms that propel the bandโ€™s sounds and move it forward. Their two aesthetics combine to create the bandโ€™s unique style, โ€œPrimitive Modernism,โ€ melding the new and the old, traditional, and futuristic, crafted lyrics and improvisational music. Speaking of, the first single and title track โ€œSet Sail Part Iโ€ [feat. Lamar Williams, JR.] rides a riff right out of the Southern Delta into the embrace of a horn section as the vocal interplay simmers on the line, โ€œThe water may rise again, but we shall set sail.โ€

โ€œโ€˜Set Sailโ€™ really set the tone,โ€ Cody goes on. โ€œIt could be taken literally or figuratively. Philosophically, itโ€™s about the way the waters literally do rise. Weโ€™re talking about climate change in a literal sense, but itโ€™s also symbolic in a social sense. It wonโ€™t be the first time.โ€ โ€œSee The Moonโ€ [feat. Lamar Williams, Jr. & Sharisse Norman] hinges on a head-nodding bass line as Sharisseโ€™s harmonies uplift a downright spellbinding performance from Lamar underlined by Lutherโ€™s unpredictable guitar phrasing. The most familial moments on the record happen when Lutherโ€™s daughters Lucia and Isla sing together on โ€œAuthenticโ€ and โ€œDidnโ€™t We Have A Time,โ€ marking a full circle moment in poetic fashion. Delicate instrumentation wraps around plaintive and powerful lyrics laced with nostalgia on the lullaby-style chorus. โ€œItโ€™s one of my favorite songs,โ€ smiles Cody, who has recently become a father himself. โ€œHearing my nieces on it was a high point. It was really meaningful, deep, and beautifully sad, but also hopeful.โ€ Strings and horns give way to the smoky blues of โ€œNever Want To Be Kissedโ€ [feat. William Bell], illuminating yet another side of the sound. Luther notes, โ€œMost of these songs have been floating around in my lyric books, waiting for their time to come. โ€˜Rabbit Footโ€™ and โ€˜Outsideโ€™ were inspired by conversations I remember having with Otha Turner and R.L. Burnside. We leaned into our other greatest influences: folk, soul, and psychedelic rock, but everything we play feels like North Mississippi. The recording also benefited from a new creative process I learned from a book, Q on Producing, that Cody sent me. I read about Quincy Jonesโ€™s philosophy of never recording a vocalist reading a lyric sheet. Up and Rolling was recorded with the band in the room. The genesis of Set Sail was the nylon string guitar and the vocals, and letting the memorized lyrics shape the song structure or lack thereof. This led to a whole new phonetics-based editing process that Iโ€™d never used before. Some of the lyrics were improvised and created on the mic, capturing the moment of creation.โ€

Building the songs from the guitar and BPM on Set Sail enabled Luther and Cody to experiment with their drum and guitar sounds in a leisurely way they hadnโ€™t afforded themselves since their debut album, Shake Hands with Shorty (1999). In the studio, Cody mixed the songs again and again, working tirelessly but never losing perspective. Codyโ€™s grooves and Lutherโ€™s songwriting furnish the albumโ€™s foundations.

Luther admits, โ€œRecently, I had my mind blown by Rick Rubin saying that fitting lyrics into the puzzle of structure can compromise the message. Indeed, rules are made to be broken. Iโ€™m glad these songs came to fruition at this time because I was able to express my stance on life and love. The fear of having my children grown up and asking me why I didnโ€™t speak up for what I believed in has driven me and helped mature my songwriting and solidify my stance. Having kids made me get my story straight.โ€ The Dickinson brothers have recorded and toured with Mavis Staples, Charlie Musslewhite, John Hiatt, Robert Plant and Patty Griffin, G Love, Jon Spencer, the Tedeschi Trucks Band, Los Lobos, and the Black Crowes. Meanwhile, their seminal debut, Shake hands with Shorty (2000), earned the band the first of four GRAMMYยฎ nominations, and changed the Dickinson brothersโ€™ lives forever.

Luther adds, โ€œQuincy says, โ€˜Music gives back what you put into it.โ€™ We have dedicated our lives to music, and itโ€™s given us a fantastic journey thatโ€™s still only beginning. In 1997, R.L. Burnside hired me and took me on the road. R.L., Kenny Brown, and Cedric Burnside taught me how to tour nationally after years of touring locally. The Shake Hands with Shorty tour in 2000 took Cody and I around the world and changed our lives. We never really slowed down.โ€

They forge ahead always as a family, first and foremost. โ€œNorth Mississippi Allstars means family,โ€ Cody concludes. โ€œI get the joy of working with my brother. Our families keep growing too. Thereโ€™s a sense of history. The older I get, the more I realize how important it is to record this music, so younger kids can hear it. I just want to make sure we pass it on. Itโ€™s a huge honor to be a part of this tradition.โ€

About Palmetto Community Care

PCC is a nonprofit organization dedicated to enhancing the quality of life for persons living with HIV/AIDS and providing HIV prevention resources for schools, churches, community organizations and the workplace in Charleston, Berkeley and Dorchester counties. We believe no one living with HIV or AIDS should go without medical care, everyday resources and emotional support.

PCC takes a multi-faceted approach to helping those living with HIV/AIDS by providing medical case management, access to medical care, housing assistance, financial assistance, nutritional assistance and legal assistance along with an array of other supportive services. PCC also works to prevent this epidemic through education, media campaigns, community outreach and free, daily HIV/STD testing.

For more than 31 years, Palmetto Community Care has been serving men, women and children living with HIV/AIDS and we remain dedicated to improving our community and improving outcomes for individuals living with HIV until there is a cure for this epidemic.

Media Contact

Richard Reams

Palmetto Community Care

843-747-2273

rreams@palmettocare.org