.Strangers No More

Well Known Strangers get personal

North Bay bluegrass music fans likely know the name Hellman. Warren Hellman founded the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco, and his son Mick Hellman and the family continue to run it. In addition, the Hellman musical family boasts bands and artists like Mick’s daughter Avery Hellman (Ismay) and the group the Well Known Strangers, formed by Mick and his other daughter, Olivia Hellman.

“The original idea was to back up my daughters and help them spread their wings musically,” says Mick Hellman.

The Well Known Strangers started as a barroom-ready country-rock band. “Our favorite thing was playing these kind of rowdy songs,” says Hellman, who plays drums in the group. “We had a term for this, which was ‘brutal country.'”

After releasing a self-titled EP of mostly covers, the Strangers broadened their scope, both musically and thematically, for their new LP, TMI, which the band plays on Sunday, Oct. 20, at Twin Oaks Roadhouse in Penngrove.

The album’s array of Americana tunes, largely written by Olivia and the band, get personal quickly. The title track, a stomping, blues-tinged number, is Olivia’s response to all the things men tell her when they’re drunk. The song “Look Me in the Eye” is a Generation X–inspired dirge about political disenfranchisement and frustration, and the album’s final track, “A Song For My Daughter,” is a letter Mick penned to Olivia in the wake of a family tragedy.

Despite the heavy theme, TMI is a raucous, exuberant album that maintains a rough-around-the-edges vibe while also offering robust harmonies and a newly developed musical tenderness.

Shortly after recording the album, Olivia moved to Nashville to further pursue her career, and Amber Morris, who appears on TMI as a guest vocalist, now fronts the band when they play live. Hellman says the group stays together, in spite of his daughter’s absence, because of strong chemistry and camaraderie.

“What we are talking about doing (at the show in Penngrove) is honoring the discontinuity that happened between losing Olivia and gaining Amber, to put the album in the context of the changes that are being made,” says Hellman. “And to celebrate the new material we are working on with Amber, where the focus—instead of [on] the brutal country vibe—is more country soul.”

Well Known Strangers perform on Sunday, Oct. 20, at Twin Oaks Roadhouse (5745 Old Redwood Hwy, Penngrove. 3pm. $10–$25. 707.795.5118).

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