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Old-time and traditional music stay exciting for their contrasts. Exacting instrumentation honed through mentorships and late-night jams at fiddler’s conventions tangles with a community-sourced inventiveness that influences variants and new sounds.
Joseph Decosimo is a master of this genre for this very reason, blending deep technique with an openness and curiosity that keep his music crackling with life. A “marvelous fiddler” (No Depression) and banjo player who braids “exultation and veneration” (INDY Week) into his music, on his third solo album
Fiery Gizzard Decosimo gathers a close-knit ensemble of friends from his musical career to infuse his interpretations of fiddle and banjo pieces with a contagious communal joy.
As an artist working with traditional music from the South and Appalachia, Decosimo chooses songs based not only on historical significance and lineage but also his own sensory approach. For
Fiery Gizzard, his ear was tuned to otherworldly tones and mystery, sourcing from field recordings such as Virginia fiddler
Luther Davis’ hypnotic version of "Shady Grove" while amping up the music’s psychedelic potential. On the middle Tennessee banjo composition “Flowery Girls,” a VHS of bluesman
Abner Jay inspired Decosimo to rig up a pickup inside a fretless banjo and play it through a tube amp to capture some of Jay’s edge and funkiness. But to round out the sound and keep it kinetic meant galvanizing a genre-eschewing crew to jam out– and not in a “spaced-out drooly” kind of way, he laughs, but as a sort of “responsive conversation.”
Decosimo has always been a community-minded artist. He began playing as a seventh grader in Tennessee, fostering relationships with older players at jams and in homes, a learning mode natural to his inquisitive nature and desire for musical connection. A folklorist by intuition, he later became one by profession, studying with old-time legend
Clyde Davenport, teaching in East Tennessee State University’s renowned bluegrass program, and receiving his PhD at the University of North Carolina with a dissertation titled “Catching the ‘Wild Note’: Listening, Learning, and Connoisseurship in Old-Time Music.” In North Carolina, Decosimo kicked about in the verdant environment of Durham and Chapel Hill’s folk and indie scenes, collaborating with artists including
Alice Gerrard,
Hiss Golden Messenger, and
Jake Xerxes Fussell. This community has influenced his own music, including his “sublime and strangely heartening” (Bandcamp Daily) 2022 release
While You Were Slumbering and
Beehive Cathedral, Decosimo’s 2024 “Appalachian mountain music treasury” (New Commute) trio album with
Luke Richardson and
Cleek Schrey for
Dear Life Records.
Continuing on this path,
Fiery Gizzard is home base for a loose outfit of mostly Tarheel-based musicians from within and beyond traditional music. Inspired by a tour with fiddler
Stephanie Coleman (
Nora Brown), guitarist
Jay Hammond, and synth builder and multi-instrumentalist
Matthew O’Connell, Decosimo assembled studiomates based on close friendships and comfort. Coleman, O’Connell, and Hammond contribute to
Fiery Gizzard, along with bassist and producer
Andy Stack (
Helado Negro,
Wye Oak), horn player
Kelly Pratt (
Beirut,
David Byrne),
Mipso and
Fust’s Libby Rodenbough,
Joseph O’Connell (
Elephant Micah), and trad/experimental artist
Cleek Schrey. Decosimo’s fiddle and banjo work is virtuosic, intricate and simple simultaneously, a testament to his many years of study. On some tracks, his playing or lovely, plain-hearted singing is the centerpiece, such as on his interpretations of Texan street preacher Washington Phillips' 1929 recording "I Had a Good Father and Mother" or the Eastern Kentucky fiddle barn-burner “Glory in the Meetinghouse,” famously played by Luther Strong for Alan Lomax. But there’s also a trusting open-door policy, like where Southern Appalachian tune “Ida Red” relaxes into Coleman’s sweet, confident fiddling and Hammond’s loping guitar.
As a bandleader, Decosimo’s confidence and enthusiasm for the music reveal the heart of traditional music and how it can come to life through community. Fiery Gizzard is Joseph Decosimo as a powerful champion of traditional music – a sponge who soaks up as much as he squeezes out, a responsive artist who makes his genre accessible, and a magnet who can bring musicians of all sorts into his orbit with his same passion.