Jessica Lea Mayfield * The Wooden Sky
at
recordBar
Showtimes
Jessica Lea Mayfield
Tell Me
“I’m actually really shy,” insists Jessica Lea Mayfield. “Not musically, but personally.”
This uncommonly mature 21-year-old singer-songwriter’s Nonesuch debut balances the warm-hearted
with the cold-blooded. Tell Me is a stunningly forthright 11-song set that addresses late-night longing,
serial heartbreak, and intoxicatingly dangerous liaisons conducted in dimly lit barrooms or roadside
motels. By the end, the only heart intact is Mayfield’s own. It’s as if she’d stripped the sentimentality and
ruefulness from a bunch of classic country songs, leaving only stark emotion. The Black Keys’ singer and
guitarist Dan Auerbach, who produced and engineered Tell Me at his Easy Eye Sound System studio in
Akron, Ohio, matches Mayfield’s candor with eerily minimal, brilliantly constructed tracks that keep her
mesmerizing, unadorned voice front and center.
Kent, Ohio native Mayfield, at least as she portrays herself on record, could have walked out of a darkly
dramatic Black Keys murder ballad like “Ten Cent Pistol.” In fact, many of the duo’s fans first learned of
Mayfield through a soulful duet with Auerbach, “Things Ain’t Like They Used To Be,” that memorably
closed the 2008 Black Keys disc, Attack and Release. Auerbach discovered Mayfield through her 2005
EP White Lies, self-pressed in a single run of 100 copies, that she’d cut at home with her brother, David.
Auerbach was impressed enough with this bedroom recording to contact Mayfield via her Myspace page,
leaving a simple message: “Hi, my name is Dan, and I play with a band called The Black Keys out of
Akron.”
Together, they embarked on recording Mayfield’s bare-bones first album, the independently released With
Blasphemy So Heartfelt, which garnered an 8.2 rating on Pitchfork and uniformly enthusiastic reviews
elsewhere. NPR’s World Café declared she has “a mature sound that seems evolved beyond her years,”
while the New York Times added that her sound is “guarded, insinuating, mesmerizing…music that lets
you hear all its details.”
“I really like what Dan brings to the table,” Mayfield says of her ongoing collaboration with
Auerbach, “the atmosphere he creates. He brings something that sounds the way I feel, that goes well with
my songwriting. He does things that I wouldn’t necessarily do, which I really like. It’s always good to
have someone whose opinion and musicianship might be different than your own.”
Her brother David, whose contemporary string band, Cadillac Sky, also is produced by Auerbach, was
a significant contributor to Tell Me, too. He co-wrote the drum machine-driven title track with Mayfield
and gave her the deceptively upbeat “Blue Skies Again,” co-written with Josh Joplin. As Mayfield
explains, “I usually start writing everything by myself. For the new record, I would finish the songs and
bring them to my brother and say, ‘Hey, how would you want to help me make this better?’ He’s one of
my favorite musicians and songwriters in the whole entire world. I grew up idolizing him, among other
people, and he’s the one who I still look up to today and think, man, I want to write songs as good as he
does. I was so excited for this album because he was able to come into the studio and record and write
with me. He wasn’t out touring or recording on his own.
“There are so many things about this album that I was excited about,” Mayfield continues, “and
one of them was to have my live band members”—guitarist Richie Kirkpatrick and drummer Scott
Hartlaub—“plus my brother David and Dan Auerbach in one room together, collaborating and working.
The last album was basically just me and Dan. This was the perfect studio band. Everyone created the
new album together and it just sort of happened naturally. Listening to it now is like opening a present.”
On her previous album, the vicissitudes of love were also a recurring theme—but on that effort it was her
own pain she was exorcising. This time the tables have turned: “It used to be me getting my heart broken;
now it’s about me breaking other people’s hearts. It’s not something I sat down and intended to do—to
write an album of songs about being mean to boys. But it’s kind of what was going on. You meet a boy
at a show and then they’re like ‘Oh my God, I fell in love with Jessica Lea Mayfield last night…’ They
obsess over you, so eventually you have to write a mean song about them. I guess it’s all I can do. I’m not
going to get married and have someone’s baby. I have a career.”
“I write exactly what I feel and exactly what I say,” she decides. “I can’t write a song about something I
didn’t go through or know anything about; they all have my outlook on things. If I were practicing to use
a bow and arrow, I would still find a way to write about it in the manner that I do, with that dark sort of
spin on things.”
Tell Me may be dark, but it’s not dour: “There is a sense of dry humor in my work, especially with this
new album. There’s a lot of secret, maniacal laughter going on. Even as I was writing the songs, I’d
say, ‘Dan, I can’t say that,’ and he would reply, ‘Yeah, you can, that’s what you feel’. I’ll write something
and the moment I think I can’t sing it, then I realize, oh shit, now I really have to do this because this is a
really serious, deep emotion, something I really thought that I’m almost afraid to say. That’s what people
relate to and I know that. I have to let down my guard, even though it’s really hard to do.”
Mayfield, who was born in Ohio and partly raised in Tennessee, has been performing since she was
eight years old with her family’s bluegrass band, One Way Rider, and she was home-schooled along
the way. As she dryly puts it now, “My parents made a point not to let school get in the way of my
education.” They traveled in a 1956 tour bus previously used by Ernest Tubb, Bill Monroe, and Kitty
Wells. For a time, Mayfield adopted the stage name Chittlin. The experience was as formative as it was
unconventional: “It contributed to the way I am now, having to be somewhere different all the time,
every day. I was always being somewhere else; my sense of home and comfort was constantly being on
the go. My songwriting, the manner in which I write my songs, was really inspired by playing bluegrass
music and playing bluegrass festivals. Sometimes you will hear a bluegrass song that’s upbeat in tempo
but really sad in reality. Like, someone is cheating on their wife, ends up stabbing their wife, then killing
themselves…”
When she was 11, Mayfield’s family returned to Ohio to care for her ailing grandparents and she started
writing songs on her own: “My brother showed me a few chords, and I instantly developed this way
that I sound. As a kid, I went through this phase of rebelling and listening to rock bands. I loved the Foo
Fighters. So I have this mixture of bluegrass and all different types of music. When I think about it, I can
see and hear every band that I’ve listened to in my music. That bit reminds me of the Foo Fighters, this
reminds me of that Stone Temple Pilots song. It’s interesting to me to see what other people get out of
it when I know where it really came from. People ask me, ‘Do you listen to Lucinda Williams?’ And I
say ‘No, I’m just discovering these people. I’ve mostly listened to bluegrass and 90s rock.’”
She hasn’t lost her taste for the road, even though she’s been itinerant for a good part of her life: “I’ve
toured a lot, almost consistently for my own solo career, since I was 19. There aren’t a lot of places I
haven’t played. At this point, I know what I’m going to order off the hospitality menu of every venue in
every city before I get there. Touring for myself I’ve played medium-sized rooms, but opening for Dan or
Ray LaMontagne, Cake, Lucero, or The Avett Brothers, I played the bigger rooms. I’ve seen pretty much
all the venues there are.”
She has attempted to put down some roots, having earned enough to afford an Ohio farmhouse of her
own. But Mayfield, as the songs on Tell Me make clear, is not quite domesticated. In her rare moments of
downtime at her new house, Mayfield admits, laughing, “Sometimes I feel like I’m in that movie Home
Alone. I wake up in the morning, turn up the stereo all the way, eat leftover chicken wings and, like, drink
a beer and jump on the bed. Sometimes I go crazy like a kid because the rest of the time I have so much
responsibility.”
—Michael Hill
Jessica Lea Mayfield
Jessica Lea Mayfield (born on August 27, 1989, in Kent, Ohio) is an American singer-songwriter. She first performed with her family bluegrass band One Way Rider at the age of 8. At age 15, Mayfield recorded her first EP White Lies in her brother's bedroom, printing only 100 copies. One of those copies fell into the hands of Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys. After an introduction, Mayfield and Auerbach hit the…
The Wooden Sky
The Wooden Sky is a Canadian indie rock band based in Toronto, Ontario, that formed in 2003 as Friday Morning's Regret, but changed their name in 2007. They trace their roots back through the winter of 2003, when with a collection of songs under his arm, Gavin Gardiner began to seek out musical collaborators to help bring his sketches out from the bedroom and onto the stage. It was soon after the first snow…















