Mitch Barrett
Berea, KY      Folk / Americana / Acoustic Rock
    • Songs
    • Drop in the Bucket
    • Young & Cool
    • Gimme Gimme Gimme
    • Paper Bags & Cardboard Boxes
    • Viola
    • Sacred Yard
    • Pearl
    • Playlists
    • Bookmarked
    • Recently Played
    • Bookmarked
    This playlist is empty.
Loading...
Loading...

Artist Info

Members: Mitch Barrett - Vocals, Guitar, Dulcimer, Banjo & Owen Reynolds - Upright Bass
You can also find us at: Facebook_16x16 Bebo_16x16 Artist website_16x16
Label: Redbird Records

Join the Mailing List


Join the Street Team  
Privacy Policy

Mitch Barrett

As the founder and lead-singer of the recently dis-banned Zoe Speaks Band, Mitch Barrett is one of Kentucky's most talented contemporary singer-songwriters. Remaining true to his traditional roots his original work has created a contemporary understanding that reaches beyond his Appalachian heritage to the music that today is being called “Americana”.

 

His Berea, Kentucky home has always been his songwriting Mecca and an unbroken source of harmony and muse. His songwriting talents have been recognized in the past few years with him winning the Merlefest “Chris Austin Songwriting Competition” twice, the prestigious Kerrville New Folk Competition and in 2006 taking first place (out of over 900 entries) at the Rocky Mountain Folks Festival in Lyons, Colorado.

Mitch has played festivals and concert halls from coast to coast, The Freight & Salvage, The Birchmere, Woodsongs Old Time Radio Hour, Kerrville Folk Festival, Bean Blossom, Merlefest and the Kennedy Center Stage in Washington DC.

He is also a versatile and riveting teller of Appalachian tales. Ears pick up and eyes widen when he begins his eclectic mix of myth, tall tales and folklore, allowing him to tell stories to audience, both young and old. His storytelling resonates with humor and poignancy and always leaves his audiences laughing, thinking and wanting more.

At any given performance his show can be filled with Jack tales, tunes on the banjo, dulcimer, and guitar and a lot of great reflection about his life and the traditions of the mountains.

 

Mitch has performed with Mark Schatz, Si Kahn, and Dirk Powell. He has shared the bill with notables: Arlo Guthrie, John Prine, Richie Havens, Tom Paxton, and Dar Williams, Dave Mallett & Doc Watson.

 


 

In the Press

Back from the Holler
by Jim Newsom - October 3, 2006

Family is important to Mitch Barrett. Ask him to name the primary influences on his music and his life, and the answer always comes back to his family and his roots in the Appalachian foothills of Kentucky.

“I grew up in a holler that my great-grandfather settled in,” he said recently. “My family's been here for several generations. I've raised my kids here. This place is very important to me. Most of my songs are linked somehow to my family or my interpretation of the world from the eyes of a contemporary Appalachian. We have a lot of issues going on—mountaintop removal, for example. So my songs are about this place that I'm from.”

Barrett will bring a guitar case full of those songs with him Saturday night when he performs at the Virginia Beach Central Library for Tidewater Friends of Folk Music. Though he makes his home in the bluegrass state, he's no stranger to local folk aficionados. He was one-half of the popular local duo Mandala in the 1980s and early ‘90s with musical partner Martin Swinger.

“We played around there for close to eleven years beginning in '82,” he said. “Martin's sister was the records keeper at Norfolk General Hospital. So we came and crashed on her floor.

“We got started by going around and playing. Do you remember Clancy's, next door to Bobby McGee's? We'd pack this squid bar with sailors from South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee. And we were singing the music they grew up with. It was Friday night and we'd pack the place. And that was the beginning.

“We were playing seven nights a week. I realized later that we were in the middle of a folk boom, but we didn't know it at the time!”

The mountain call of home was too strong to resist, however, and Barrett returned to Kentucky. Swinger joined the fertile folk scene in Maine.

“I was trying to be closer to raising my son,” Barrett explained, “and closer to my parents. Coming back here, I got involved with the arts council, playing music, doing songwriting workshops and storytelling workshops in schools, and performances. And that's what I've done full-time since I left there.

“It's a good place, there are lots of opportunities. You've got to be versatile to make a living playing music anywhere, but thankfully the arts and folk music go together well. Almost all of us folksingers out here are working in the arts in some fashion. I know I'm lucky; I consider myself blessed. I've got four beautiful children. And now I'm going through another big change in my life, playing out on my own.”

That big change is a personal one. For the last ten years he's been performing as part of Zoe Speaks, a duo with his wife Carla Gover. When we spoke, however, it appeared that both the musical partnership and the marriage would be splitting up. Nonetheless, in the midst of his own personal sadness, Barrett looked forward optimistically.

“I've continued to play solo all along, just to keep myself going and keep my chops up. I've entered a lot of songwriting contests—I just won the Rocky Mountain Folks Festival songwriting contest. It was cool. There were about 900 songwriters in one place, and I won first place. So I've got an hour paid on the main stage next year!”

And he's got that profound sense of family and rootedness to give him strength through difficult passages. He's carried that with him his whole life.

“My grandparents were a big influence on me,” he said. “I tell people about growing up here and they think I'm lying. I was born in 1960, but by '68 a lot of folks out in the country didn't have TV. It wasn't that TVs weren't available; they just didn't see the need.

“Both sets of grandparents were very traditional. They weren't big farmers, but they were self-sufficient farmers. They grew for theirselves. One of my grandfathers was a tobacco farmer—we had a huge tobacco farm and a huge vegetable farm that we sold vegetables from. So I grew up close to the land; that's where my values come from, the folks that raised me.

“Music was such a part of our life. It was a part of working together; it was a part of every family gathering. Church was the central gathering so music was definitely a part of that. My mother and I had a duo—you've heard of the wedding singer? Well, we were the funeral singers. By the time I was fourteen, I bet I'd sung at a hundred funerals. People just loved my mom's Appalachian-tenor voice with my voice. It was a big part of grieving. My grandmother always explained that I wasn't just singing, that it was actually a part of the culture, that I was helping people emote. But I said, ‘Every time I play people cry!'

“It was a great training ground for me ‘cause I could actually get in touch with the soul of the song singing the old, rich Appalachian hymns. It was beautiful to hear my grandmother and grandfather sing—they sang when they worked, they sang when they were having fun. It was just part of our lives.

“My grandmother could never believe what I did. She'd say, ‘Now what do you do for a living?' And I'd say, ‘I play music Granny.' ‘And they pay you?' She couldn't understand—everybody sings! How do you make money at it?”

Though his songwriting may be grounded in his Appalachian heritage, Mitch Barrett's music draws from a diverse wellspring of influences.

“I listened to a lot of Motown,” he said. “My mother really loved Motown, so I know that's in there somewhere; it's in the chunky rhythms I play on guitar. And the melodies come from listening to great songwriters like Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson. I listened to Dylan, too, but he was the guy you hated because you knew you could never reach that level.”

Mitch Barrett has reached a pretty comfortable level himself, making a living playing music on his own terms. He won the prestigious Kerrville New Folk Award in 1999 for “Pearl,” a song he'd written about his sister that became the title track for Zoe Speaks' first album the following year. And the title track for the soon-to-be-released CD, Drop in the Bucket, is instantly memorable. (Check it out on myspace.com/zoespeaks.)

Saturday night will be a homecoming celebration for local folk fans, welcoming back a favorite adopted son.

“A lot of clubs have closed for financial reasons,” he said. “Fortunately, the house concert scene has really grown. But the Tidewater Friends have been around so long that they're self-sustaining, I think. I'm looking forward to it.”

copyright © 2006 Port Folio Weekly.

 

“I sat in the front row for that contest and listened to all 10 performers. My jaw literally dropped when I heard Mitch. I have seen some 50 or 60 live performances this past year. I must say Mitch Barrett was my all time most favorite! I liked him so well, I personally bought 25 of his CD's to share with my music lovin' pals. Mitch will return to Salt Lake City, July 11-15, 2007 to perform at the 19th Annual Founders Title Company Folk & Bluegrass Festival at Snowbird Resort".

"Hearing Mitch Barrett for the first time was truly exhilarating. By song number 2, "Drop in the Bucket" he'd completely engaged a 5000+ festival crowd in a sing along! He's contagious."
Ruth Naccarato
- Board Member
Founders Title Company Folk & Bluegrass Festival

 


 

Discography

Soft Lies was released in the early 90's, as a snapshot of a time period in his music. It was recorded, mixed, and mastered in one 24-hour stretch, and has a decidedly folk-rock feel.

The recording Pearl hints at the traditional Appalachian music but covers varied musical territory, with nods to contemporary acoustic, pop, and folk (with Carla Gover).

Birds Fly South produced by Grammy-nominated instrumentalist Bruce Molsky, features the artists (with Carla Gover) themselves on guitar, clawhammer banjo, and lap dulcimer, along with mandolinist Mike Compton (Nashville Bluegrass Band/Oh, Brother, Where Art Thou soundtrack), guitarist Greg Martin (The Kentucky Headhunters), and others.

On this CD you'll find lively originals about truck-stop waitresses, adoption, and a mountain boy's search for spirituality, a revisiting of the traditional "Shady Grove" from the perspective of a mixed-race couple, introspective and soulful versions of classic traditional ballads, and some mountain-steeped covers of fiddle tunes and gospel songs from the artists' childhood.

The last, Zoe Speaks project "Drop In the Bucket" produced by Dirk Powell and his new solo project "Heart & Soul are both available NOW!!
Contact Mitch by emailing him at  mitchbarrettmusic@hotmail.com to make a purchase.

 

For more information regarding Mitch Barrett please visit:

http://www.mitchbarrettmusic.com

http://www.myspace.com/mitchbarrettmusic

 

 


*Clear Creek Healing Arts & Music Festival*

 

Mitch is also the co-founder of the Clear Creek Healing Arts & Music Festival which takes place during the fall in Berea, Kentucky. This year's festival held October 19th through the 21st was the fourth annual festival since it's creation. Many well known folk singers from across the country came out to perform, artists such as Ellis, Billy Jonas, Lori B., Keith Greeninger, Bryan Bowers and many more. The festival also showcased filmakers, storytellers and a belly dancing group called the Hip Gypsies. For more information about the festival please visit the following links provided below:

http://www.clearcreekfest.org

http://www.myspace.com/clearcreekmusicfest

 

 


 


Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
 

 
Advertisement728
 

Recommended

by Mitch Barrett
Joh...

John Prine

Folk / Rock / Country

Nashville, TN

Ellis

Ellis

Folk / Pop / Acoustic rock

Minneapolis, MN

 
 

Contests/Events

Cbgb
Kos_banner