Friday, March 20, 2026

Continuing the ‘creative fire’: Wood Brothers release ‘Puff of Smoke,’ stop in Wilmington this week

The Wood Brothers perform at Greenfield Lake Amphitheater on Thursday, Aug. 14. (Photo by Laura Partain)

From a purely geographical perspective, it was all but certain that Boulder natives Chris and Oliver Wood would start a jam band.

Their father, who played alongside artists like Joan Baez during the nascent 1960s folk scene, had instilled in them what would become a lifelong passion for music of all kinds. And the Boulder area became famous for birthing the jam-band genre and is still home to both veteran and up-and-coming jam bands.

Rather than start their own band in the vein of Leftover Salmon and String Cheese Incident, the two brothers set out in different directions — both musically and geographically — for more than a decade before reuniting to form the Wood Brothers. The group will perform at Greenfield Lake Amphitheater on Thursday, Aug. 14.

The trio has been touted by All Music critic Steve Leggett as an “Americana version of jazz, or country with an edge, or folk with some rhythmic bite, or maybe secular gospel with a touch of swing.” But the two brothers’ first forays into the realm of professional music didn’t sound much like any of those things.

Chris Wood, whose duties include playing bass and singing, headed east to make a name for himself in the New York City jazz scene — or at least that was the plan.

“I’d trained really hard playing jazz music and being a good soloist, all the techniques that you need to have,” he said in an early May interview. “I was young and naive, and all I thought was: ‘Well, you go to New York City and you become a sideman for a famous jazz musician.’ But when I got there in the ‘90s, I found that the actual jazz scene wasn’t a very warm, creative, open-minded kind of scene, to put it mildly.”

Instead, the bassist found what he was searching for in the much more eclectic new-music scene. He called it an “incredible ecosystem” in the East Village.

“I was just this young, naive, white kid from Boulder, Colorado, who ended up playing in a radical Jewish music festival and the Black Rock Coalition,” Chris said. “I was playing every style of music. Some of it was very weird and experimental. Some of it was rock and roll. Some of it was R&B. It was everything. They were all very versatile and creative musicians, and that was the scene in which Medeski Martin & Wood were formed.”

A primarily instrumental group, MMW soon drew national attention as they pushed as many envelopes as they could — exploring different genres, finding new ways to mix genres and, as Chris puts it, “learning what it means to be a genre.”

Oliver, meanwhile, found a prominent role in an entirely different sound. Traveling south and ending up in Atlanta, he built a following with his hard-touring band King Johnson, which released six albums of blues-infused country, R&B and funk.

“It was just something that was inside of him and natural for him,” Chris said of the influences, “because he put so much of his heart into it.”

It wasn’t until the two bands played on the same bill that the idea of finally joining forces came into being. 

“I had this fantasy image in my head of like: ‘What if Robert Johnson and Charles Mingus had started a band? What would that sound like?’” Chris said.

He recalls the first time the reunited brothers played together in the same room. 

“It was just this weird feeling, like, I was looking in a kind of mirror when I was playing with him,” he said. “I just saw the way he approached the instrument, like the musical choices, his style. There was something sort of almost creepily familiar.” 

Soon, the siblings had turned their attention to starting the Wood Brothers. Over the course of nine albums and more than two decades, that musical familiarity has continued to grow. As a trio with drummer/keyboardist/vocalist Jano Rix, they’ve earned a Grammy nomination for Best Americana Album, reached number one on “Billboard” magazine’s Top Heatseekers chart, and built a loyal fanbase by touring across the United States and abroad.

The Wood Brothers’ new album “Puff of Smoke,” released on Aug.1, is as eclectic as ever, from its pan-American influences to a Fender Rhodes keyboard and analog synth that Rix used to create an “underwater calliope” sound.

One listen to the opening track “Witness” and you’ll get the idea, or at least some of it. Oliver’s lead vocals on the verses are straight out of the Dr. John swamp-rock playbook, complete with references to the Seventh Son and the Hoodoo Man. From there, it segues into Caribbean-style acoustic interludes, choruses with catchy vocal harmonies, and an extended instrumental break.

The album also includes tracks recorded with “Big Mike,” the affectionately named single microphone that the three musicians gather around at centerstage to play a few all-acoustic songs during their live shows. Oliver plays a national steel guitar with a built-in speaker cone that amplifies itself. Chris plays an upright bass with gut strings, while Jano beats on a shuitar; Chris describes it as a crappy old guitar the percussionist modified to sound like a weird drum kit.

With or without Big Mike, the trio continues to find ways to challenge themselves, both live and in the studio. An example from “Puff of Smoke” is the song “Pray God Listens.” The trio was in the studio, sitting in a circle to work out an arrangement, when their engineer walked in and insisted they record it on the spot. And that’s what made it onto the record.

From Chris’ perspective, an artist’s relationship to control and, to an extent, their willingness to let go of remains an important part of the creative process. He cites the French poet Paul Valéry, who said, “a poem is never finished, only abandoned,” at which point the artist should make no further changes.

“The initial writing of the idea is where all the creative fire is,” Chris said, “but then as you start editing and agonizing over this word or that word, there’s a certain point where you’re like: ‘This is stupid. I give up. This is fine.’ And that’s kind of what happens with the songs on a record. You work on it to the point where you’re feeling the returns diminishing and diminishing and diminishing. And then you realize you’re worrying about things that only you will ever notice. And that’s when you just let go.”

Tickets to the Wood Brothers show can be accessed here for their Thursday, Aug. 14, performance.


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Shea Carver
Shea Carver
Shea Carver is the editor in chief at Port City Daily. A UNCW alumna, Shea worked in the print media business in Wilmington for 22 years before joining the PCD team in October 2020. She specializes in arts coverage — music, film, literature, theatre — the dining scene, and can often be tapped on where to go, what to do and who to see in Wilmington. When she isn’t hanging with her pup, Shadow Wolf, tending the garden or spinning vinyl, she’s attending concerts and live theater.

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