Berkley (Portland, OR)
Vaquero (Big Secret Records)
Singer/songwriter - FFO: Paul Simon, Pete Yorn, America
FCC friendly
***WAV files available here***
Go-to tracks: "Vaquero," "Blue Dreamers," "Two Johnnies"
Berkley is Andy Jones (he/him)
Vaquero = vuh-ker-oh
“Earnest and immediate […] with shades of Americana and ’70s Laurel Canyon rock & roll." - Bandcamp
“The vocals are timeless and the guitar playing is excellent.” - Americana Highways
Second albums are what songwriters agonize over. The follow up to a debut obliges them to up the ante whether they’re agile enough to or not. That ability to rise to the occasion defines Portland, Oregon songwriter Berkley’s (Andy Jones) sophomore LP Vaquero. But the songwriter wasn’t planning on having it in him.
After a short promotional tour of his debut Pueblo, and appearances on local Portland compilations, Jones was spending most of his time in his basement watching western movies and TV shows. Such was his way of processing his grief in the wake of losing his grandfather Pete Ramirez Lopez to cancer.
Sure, he was writing songs, but only as a means to work through his feelings and understand family dynamics that changed in the face of death.
Paired with a self-guided course in Mexican folk and mariachi music — the music his maternal grandparents passionately shared with him — Jones was led to interrogate his biraciality in new ways, concluding that he had never defined what it meant to and for him.
He played new tunes at performances around Portland and Colorado, but wasn’t chasing the recording thrill yet. Then he hastily applied for an arts grant, thinking any funding would be useful later when the next album revealed itself to him.
With just a handful of demos and a vision board, Jones was awarded the highest amount granted to produce an incomplete album that addressed the ideas he wrestled with in his basement. With the cosmos vibrated, more fell into place. Producer Gus Berry (Still Woozy) stepped in to help usher the album to completion. Jones gained more supporters in songwriter Sam Weber (Madison Cunningham) who would take on a guitar/piano role, first-call session drummer Micah Hummel (Anna Tivel), and LA/Portland jack of all music Tejas Leier Heyden (Junaco). That’s an album revealing itself.
In five days, Jones and the band recorded 12 cuts live with no click and minimal overdubs, keeping the best whole takes for the final vinyl pressing (two of the songs were released separately on the Preludio 7” in March). The songs show Jones expanding familiar acreage into a new frontier of groove-driven acoustically grounded music.
On Vaquero, Jones’s signature progressive flourishes and expansive influences keep him out of the heritage revivalism pack as he ventures into the new (for him) territory of country-tinged, folk-leaning tunes. The lyrics are sharper this time around, exchanging Impressionism for clear images and a point of view that ties his personal experience to the universal. Jones also loosened his self-imposed reins on his guitar playing and singing — he’s showing off in the right places now.
The album’s woodgrain title track drifts from jaunty to intimately confessional with a flint-and-steel instrumental hook. “Blue Dreamers” harkens to Pueblo with a relentless drum machine beat keeping time for guitar heavy glory. “Two Johnnies” is a smoky dream of a song that exemplifies the untread sand Vaquero stakes its claim in.
Regarding album cuts, “Nowhereseville,” among others, portrays Jones as Tom Petty’s heir apparent while “Pioneer” veers from campfire introspection into early Wu-tang Clan-influenced sampling and electronic atmospheres reminiscent of M83. The song also exchanges modern folk rock's woodwind proclivities for Portland's - and arguably Oregon’s - most celebrated harmonica player, David Lipkind trading solos with Jones on guitar.
“The Kid” goes all in on the western approach from subject matter to musical textures: nylon guitars with Spanish guitar licks and mariachi strumming dance with exotic percussion that are part clave, part jazz - yet another examination of Jones’s biraciality and breadth of taste. Vocalist Madison Berry-Sellers appears throughout the album but makes her mark firmly here.
“Born On The Plain,” inspired by his grandfather’s early life working the fields with his migrant parents, views the transience of life from the perspective of a settler witnessing the devastation a lone rider brings to town.
”El Dorado,” maybe the LP’s most adventurous track with a generous swath of Moog synthesizer (is it more Mort Garson or Roger McGuinn?), finds peace with family before it’s too late while the album’s closer, the 12-stringed “Metaphysics,” considers that it may never be too late.
It’s a lot of ground to cover — the myth of the American west, death, joy in grief, reconciliation — but that’s Vaquero’s gambit. Unbeknownst to Jones, his Berkley persona was ready for it.
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NOTES ON BERKLEY
“[Berkley] has found a way to blend all the genres he's ever loved into one fluid, smooth sound, combining the simplicity of acoustic guitar with modern touches of electronic elements.” - Denver Westword
“Melodic, accessible yet dreamy and reflective, both chiming and utterly charming, it will appeal to fans of […] Laurel Canyon icons.” - The Big Takeover
This album is funded in part by the Portland Regional Arts & Culture Council.
Vocal, guitar, synthesizer, percussion: Andy Jones
Guitar, piano: Sam Weber
Bass, pedal steel: Tejas Leier Heyden
Drums, percussion: Micah Hummel
Harmony: Madison Berry-Sellers, Gus Berry
Programming, synthesizer: Gus Berry
Harmonica: David Lipkind
All songs written by Andy Jones
Produced by Gus Berry and Andy Jones
Engineered and mixed by Gus Berry
Mastered at Sky Onion Mastering by Gus Elg
Recorded at Dead Aunt Thelma’s, Portland, OR
press photography: Natalia Qubti