• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 7, Sunday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

The Wood Brothers Won’t Be Pinned Down on ‘Puff of Smoke’ Album

Story Center by Story Center
October 26, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
The Wood Brothers Won't Be Pinned Down on 'Puff of Smoke' Album

RELATED POSTS

Best Australian and New Zealand Music of the Week: BOY SODA, WHO SHOT SCOTT, Inertia and More

Seeing One Of Madison Square Garden’s 57 Live Concerts This Summer? Come Hungry.

New Music Friday: 30 Hip-Hop, R&B Releases You Need On Your Playlist

At last month’s Earl Scruggs Music Festival, the Wood Brothers might have seemed a tad out of left field for a gathering dedicated to the late bluegrass picker. And yet, the same could be said whenever the trio is on a bill at a jam-band show, jazz night, or some blues club. But that’s the beauty of the roots-rock act: The Wood Brothers encompass the essence of any genre thrown their way.

“Bluegrass [is] an amalgamation of different traditions, as is a lot of jazz,” singer-guitarist Oliver Wood tells Rolling Stone backstage at Scruggs. “And in the big picture, that’s kind of what we’re trying to do. What makes us happy is to take these different traditions and mix them together.”

Sitting backstage with Wood is his brother, bassist Chris Wood, and multi-instrumentalist Jano Rix. Initially, the siblings formed a duo in 2004, with Rix coming aboard in 2011. Before that, the brothers were already well-established in other bands: Oliver in Atlanta-based blues/funk outfit King Johnson, Chris as part of Brooklyn jazz fusionists Medeski, Martin & Wood.

“I think the blessing and the curse is that we started so late,” Chris says. “I’ve done a lot of maturing since then, learned a lot, and got my ass kicked in plenty of ways. But at least we weren’t kids getting together and starting a brother band.”

Since their inception, the Wood Brothers have created a unique artistic world that combines Oliver’s deep love of rock, blues, and folk with Chris’ passion for jazz, classical, and improvisation, all aligning with the steadfast anchor of Rix’s percussive talents and sonic curiosity.

“You evolve as a human, you evolve as a musician, you evolve as a band,” Oliver says. “We always talk about how no matter how weird we get — or want to get — in the studio, it still sounds like us. We are still us, and the core of us has been around for a long time. It’s not going to go away. It’s really fun.”

ADVERTISEMENT

The intricate, musical prowess and creative freedom within the Wood Brothers is apparent on their latest album, Puff of Smoke. The record is signature Oliver, Chris, and Jano cooking up a vibrant, melodic stew — part big-tent soul revival, part joyous dive into the abyss of whatever itch each member is wanting to scratch.

Editor’s picks

“I’m not the bee’s knees/I’m not the seventh son/I’m not the Hoodoo man/I’m not the chosen one,” Oliver howls on the uplifting “Witness,” featuring Dave Matthews Band saxophonist Jeff Coffin.

“If you do it long enough, you finally get this full-circle moment of where you’re playing music now as sort of a seasoned person, [where it] starts to feel once again like it did when you were psyched about it as a kid,” Chris says. “There was no thought of pressure or being something special or amazing, you were just attracted to it and playful.”

“Sometimes you find you were really ‘living the dream’ when you were 10 years old,” Rix adds.

That playfulness and innocence is heard across the entirety of Puff of Smoke, but also delivered each night onstage by the band. In the years leading up to the formation of the Wood Brothers, Oliver and Chris had been living apart, each wandering their own respective paths from both sides of the Mason-Dixon Line. But that all changed during one family Christmas.

“We hung out with different people, still playing music, but we were just not very close,” Oliver says. “[Christmas] gave us a way to reconnect as brothers, just to play and have this in common, share this knowledge and have fun. It didn’t start off, ‘Let’s have a career together.’ It was more, ‘Hey, when I see you at Christmas, we’re going to jam and it’s going to be fun.’”

Related Content

“There was definitely a spark,” Chris says. “The way [Oliver] plays music, I strangely relate to it, and I have a chemistry with him the same way I had with [Medeski, Martin & Wood]. I recognized the brother-ness of him, the familiarity. It just became obvious: ‘Let’s do something.’”

By 2011, the brothers decided they needed a drummer and Rix entered the fray.

“We were starting to play larger venues and we wanted to go up to another gear sonically,” Oliver says. “When we met Jano, we didn’t know he played keyboards just as well as he plays drums, or that he could sing so well.”

“There’s a lot of fluidity that I didn’t realize was going on until I started playing with you guys,” Rix says to the brothers. “And that’s what I liked about it. It was an intangible thing. You could just feel your way through things.”

“That’s also part of a blues-country tradition — phrases, pregnant pauses for dramatic effect, the way you deliver a lyric,” Chris adds. “Or in orchestral music, you want to let ‘this’ hang out there for a moment. That’s the natural thing to do when you’re paying attention to melody and lyrics.”

Chris see his time playing as a power trio with Medeski, Martin & Wood as paving the way for the Wood Brothers. Now, when asked if he’s come full circle, he can’t help but smile.

“It just comes down to ‘this moment,’ right? That’s all you have to work with,” Chris says. “It’s so simple when you start saying it out loud: ‘Can you enjoy yourself right now?’ The hardest part is remembering that that’s the truth.”

Pushing into late fall, the Wood Brothers will hit the road on a tour that kicks off in Knoxville on Nov. 6. They also just announced their return to Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium for a headlining gig March 5.

Trending Stories

“It’s hard to imagine it happening any better,” Oliver says of the band’s trajectory. “We haven’t been spoiled by major success — I think that would ruin it.”

“Slow rise to the middle,” Chris chuckles. “That’s our mantra.”

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.rollingstone.com ’

Tags: The Wood Brothers
Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

Best Australian and New Zealand Music of the Week: BOY SODA, WHO SHOT SCOTT, Inertia and More
Music

Best Australian and New Zealand Music of the Week: BOY SODA, WHO SHOT SCOTT, Inertia and More

June 7, 2026
msg entertainment, msg ice cream truck, scream truck msg
Music

Seeing One Of Madison Square Garden’s 57 Live Concerts This Summer? Come Hungry.

June 7, 2026
Split Image Of Cover Art For Vybz Kartel, Shaboozey, and Steve Lacy
Music

New Music Friday: 30 Hip-Hop, R&B Releases You Need On Your Playlist

June 7, 2026
Citizen release new music video for 'Halcyon Blues'
Music

Citizen release new music video for ‘Halcyon Blues’

June 7, 2026
Olivia Rodrigo Premieres Duet With Robert Smith, 'What's Wrong WIth Me
Music

Olivia Rodrigo Premieres Duet With Robert Smith, ‘What’s Wrong WIth Me

June 7, 2026
Edgerton stately home Banney Royd to host classical music events in stunning historic surroundings
Music

Edgerton stately home Banney Royd to host classical music events in stunning historic surroundings

June 7, 2026
Next Post
3 relief options that could be perfect Hunter Harvey replacements for Royals

3 relief options that could be perfect Hunter Harvey replacements for Royals

The Death of Movie Star Mystique

The Death of Movie Star Mystique

Recommended Stories

Emilie Kiser Breaks Silence On 3-Year-Old Son's Drowning Death

Emilie Kiser Breaks Silence On 3-Year-Old Son’s Drowning Death

August 29, 2025
Paula Deen ‘Felt Like a Turd’ After Giving Ellen DeGeneres a Problematic Gift: ‘Didn’t Say a Word’ – National Enquirer

Paula Deen ‘Felt Like a Turd’ After Giving Ellen DeGeneres a Problematic Gift: ‘Didn’t Say a Word’ – National Enquirer

September 22, 2025
Harry Styles drops new music teaser in cryptic voice note

Harry Styles drops new music teaser in cryptic voice note

January 15, 2026
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

USA TODAY

Your June 7 AI horoscope: Emotional breakthroughs, money moves & destiny vibes

June 7, 2026
A simple recipe, but with a royal flair #udaipur  #recipe  #mewar  #rajasthan  #royal

A simple recipe, but with a royal flair #udaipur #recipe #mewar #rajasthan #royal

June 7, 2026
Twins baseman Royce Lewis’ alarming struggles continue vs. Royals after return from Triple-A

Twins baseman Royce Lewis’ alarming struggles continue vs. Royals after return from Triple-A

June 7, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land