
TIM MAY - Tim May is the kind of
guy everyone likes. He's humorous, self-effacing, humble, and fun to be around.
He's also an accomplished guitar player and songwriter and a founding member of
the hot, young band Crucial Smith. May's talent and easy-going attitude serve
him well. At the first Steve Kaufman Flatpicking Camp, May was brought along to
accompany flatpick virtuoso Pat Flynn during a workshop and for a portion of his
evening concert. At subsequent camps, Flynn (who produced the first Crucial
Smith CD) brought the entire band to open and join him during his concert. At
Crucial Smith's New England debut at the '98 Joe Val Memorial Bluegrass
Festival, May (along with the rest of the band) joined in a jam session with
weekend pickers. At the '98 edition of Winterhawk--the Northeast's premier
bluegrass festival, May and his band got on stage as unknowns, only to have a
line of people at their table waiting to buy their CD and T-shirts when they
finished their set. It seems whenever May and his cohorts in Crucial Smith hit
the stage, they win new converts to their brand of tight, polished, and
tastefully executed hot picking and singing.
May was born in Texas and raised in Steens, MS, to a musical family. "Daddy
played a little guitar and fiddle, my brother played banjo, guitar, and mandolin
and my mother sang." By the time he was 11, May had fallen under the spell of
Earl Scruggs and was becoming fairly accomplished as a banjo player. "We had the
May Family Bluegrass Band when I was in high school," May explains. While it was
often tough to find bluegrass in the Steens area, making music with his family
provided great training. "It was always nice to have somebody to play with. A
lot of people don't have that," May adds, counting the blessings of his musical
family bond.
As May approached his teen years, he began to play guitar. "I still played
banjo," May says, but the guitar gradually took more and more of his interest.
"I heard people like Dan Crary, Tony Rice and had to learn how to do that," May
explains. Another significant influence on May's budding musical development was
the tight ensemble sound of groups like the Seldom Scene and J.D. Crowe and the
New South. "Even though I was into the hot pickers, I've always been into the
band, the total package," he says.
While learning, May studied records--especially Dan Crary's Bluegrass Guitar
album. "That was probably the biggest solo influence--I tried to learn
everything on it . . . 'try' is the operative word" he offers wryly. "I could
have picked up a lot faster if I had lessons or if I had the (Steve) Kaufman
books," he goes on. "I think it's great what people like Steve are doing. I
learned a lot of things wrong. I put my finger down to anchor (my hand). I had
no idea if that was right or wrong, I just knew you did that with the banjo. It
was a long process for me to sort it all out," he concludes. As for his approach
to improvisation, May says he started "to get a file, a library of ideas by
learning other people's breaks." With the band, May finds himself learning more
about musical theory so that he can communicate his ideas to the others more
quickly. "You need to know what you're doing for communication purposes," he
concludes.
By the time he arrived at David Lipscomb University, May had already performed
at the prestigious Kentucky Fried Chicken Bluegrass Festival. As a student at
Lipscomb, May became the guitar player in one of the school's recruitment bands
playing covers of country, pop and top forty tunes at functions trying to
encourage prospective students to enroll at the school. One of his fellow
musical recruiters was an electric guitarist, Kyle Wood.
Wood and May became fast friends. While they shared a passion for music, they
approached it from different angles. May was acoustic; Wood, electric. "Kyle was
into what he was doing, and I was into what I was doing," May reflects. "We
always felt it was a shame we couldn't get together and play the same music."
That arrangement soon changed. "One day he (Wood) said he was going to get a
mandolin," May explains. "I didn't know if he was serious or not. He came back
after Christmas break having learned a bunch of songs. Next thing we just jammed
forever--and still are."
With May on guitar and Wood on mandolin, the pair played around school and were
joined on occasion by May's brother. Shortly thereafter, another Lipscomb
student, Dave Holladay (bass), and a high school friend of Wood's, Chris Joslin
(banjo and dobro), joined forces with the pair and christened themselves Sam
Hill. "We found there was another band with that name" says May. Since he and
his band mates took a year off, they gave up the rights to Sam Hill. The name
Crucial Smith brings a few stories. With a typical smile across his face, May
tells the story "Bill Monroe's middle name is Smith. Anyone who is into
bluegrass knows Bill is crucial to the sound of it. It's crucial smith. It's
Bill Monroe." May winks, adding "That's the story I'm going with and you'll have
to decide if it's true."
It was another connection from the band's time at Lipscomb that brought Crucial
Smith to the attention of former New Grass Revival guitarist and session player
extraordinare Pat Flynn. After the demise of New Grass, Flynn enrolled at
Lipscomb to pursue his education. "Pat's brother-in-law saw us play and told us
we had to get with Pat Flynn. Determined to make the connection, Wood got hold
of Flynn's schedule, cornered him after a class and gave him a tape. Flynn
didn't promise anything more than a listen to the tape. A few days later he
called; they got together and soon Flynn was producing the young band and
writing with May ("Father Time").
The influence of Flynn and the sound of New Grass is profound. Crucial Smith
features tight band arrangements, hot picking, and strong vocals woven into a
contemporary sound. "We never tried to copy New Grass," May explains, "I've
always thought we copied people like the Seldom Scene and Crowe--because that's
what I grew up with. We certainly are influenced by the progressive pickers, and
New Grass too," May continues. "Pat's producing us; helping us with arrangements
has influenced us, too. It's certainly a compliment when people compare us."
May is quick to share his enthusiasm for Flynn. "His depth is really amazing. He
can do many things." May adds that Flynn's influence on his guitar playing is
"by osmosis" because they play together so frequently.
Listening to Crucial Smith--or better yet, seeing them live--one can see and
hear the benefits of playing with a close-knit group of friends. All the members
seem to shift gears as if connecting telepathically. In fact, one of their
current show-stoppers, "Game Of Chase" from their debut record, is a good case
study. The song was originally written by May for Wood's clear high vocal. "I
wrote it in the key of E, because that's Kyle's range." E is also a key the band
tends to enjoy jamming in. During one performance the band was waiting for
Holladay to retune his bass from a drop D tuning in the previous song, May
ripped into what became an extended solo jam. Once Holladay was tuned, the band
fell into a perfect groove behind May, with Wood stepping in for his vocal. The
extended intro worked so well, that it is now a regular part of the band's set.
"At this point," May says, "we have an idea of what the sound is, what a guy
might do, how he might approach a particular song or part." As a writer, May
says, "you might have a line or riff in mind, but it really comes down to the
guys getting together and everyone adding what they can. You have the structure
and let the guys go."
When not playing with Crucial Smith, May works on the restoration of antique
furniture, a trade he learned from his father. In fact, May and his father were
involved in the restoration of the Hermitage and a number of other Civil War-era
houses. May also builds instruments--he and Joslin collaborated on Chris'
banjo--including a number of guitars, mandolins, dobros and even a viola.
In addition to Crucial Smith's debut (Micah Records 1997), May's explosive
guitar can be heard on the Jim Buchanan System The System At Work--Volume 1, AMI
9701 and on Tom Saffell's Another Lifetime AMI 9801 (the latter also features
Wood). The Buchanan record showcases May's more traditional material, while the
Saffell release leans to a more contemporary, jazz influenced harmonic approach
due to Saffell's instrument of choice, an eight string banjo--seven strings with
an eighth drone string (similar to a traditional fifth string). At present,
Crucial Smith is in the studio with hopes of having a release ready for this
coming summer season.
Muriel Anderson's All Star Guitar Night benefits the
Music For Life Alliance
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