While the Avett Brothers have relished the success of their major-label hit, 2009โs I and Love and You, bassist Bob Crawford says the trio will always uphold core principles: honesty in songwriting, devotion to family, and a passion for playing at music festivals.
One festival in particularโthe three-day Sixth Annual Mountain Jam at Hunter Mountainโhas them pretty ecstatic. โWeโre psyched to be playing there,โ says Crawford. โMichael Franti, Les Claypoolโpeople will sample different flavors and everyone does their own thing.โ
Doing your own thing isnโt a novel concept for the Charlotte, North Carolina, outfit. Since their 2001 debut, the Brothers (Crawford, vocalist/guitarist Seth Avett, vocalist/banjoist Scott Avett) have utilized nearly every genre in their arsenalโblues, folk, punk, popโto create a twangy, hybrid sound thatโs almost unmistakable. Itโs carried the band through five full-length albums and two EPs for the Ramseur Records label, eventually earning them a huge break at Columbia Records under super-producer Rick Rubin.
โI think he just gets it,โ said Crawford of Rubin in an interview last year. โWhat little bit of music you can have to support the words, he sees the same thing that he saw in Johnny Cashโฆhonest American music.
โThe key to our songwriting is that each word holds weight,โ insists Crawford. โJust call it an economy of words. We know what each song should be.โ
For the Brothers, confidence is an essential ingredient to making things workโin their personal lives as well as professional. All three are married, with Scott and Crawford each fathering a young daughter.
Admittedly, the distance from family has put a smidgeon of sadness on their otherwise terrific world tour. โWeโre not home enough,โ says Crawford. โThe fans are great, but touring sometimes takes its toll and we miss our families.โ
So how about a social life?
โItโs pretty low-key,โ says Crawford, who admits to favoring healthy diet and exercise over typical rock โnโ roll excess. โWe donโt have a problem partying occasionally, but weโve seen what other bands do and weโve made our own mistakes. Three years ago we started to calm down and take care of ourselves.โ
Though the band clearly yearns for the comfort of the Carolinas, they donโt often hesitate to find homes away from homeโone of which has been upstate New York. From gigs in Poughkeepsie to Woodstock to Ithaca, the Brothers take solace in the New York crowds that, Crawford says, show as much love as the ones down south.
โWeโve always been embraced here,โ he says. โThere were the Grass Roots festivals, the Blue Heron festivals, gigs at Cornell. Everyone is alike and shows the same enthusiasm.โ
That enthusiasm, says Crawford, is much of the band looks forward to at Mountain Jamโan event to be filled with veteran superstars such as Levon Helm, Derek Trucks, and Alison Krauss, as well as buzz-worthy newbies such as Van Ghost, These United States, and The McLovins.
Still, the notion of making it big might be forever lost on the Avett Brothers.
โWe see a friend on the street and heโs like, โYouโve made it,โ but we never feel it,โ says Crawford. โWhat have we made? For us, itโs always about whatโs next.โ
Mountain Jam will be held at Hunter Mountain June 4 through June 6. www.mountainjam.com.

This article appears in May 2010.









