The
music of Ann & Will Rowland
Kristi Kates - The Northern Express (June 2007)
What
goes into putting a folk duo together? For Ann and Will Rowland, it
was falling in love. While Will was playing tenor banjo with his brother
and dad, churning out old Roger Miller tunes, folk songs, and sad
country ballads, Ann was tackling her first guitar, a pink Harmony
that she got at a yard sale. As time went on, Will performed in a
variety of bands, influenced by James Taylor, Crosby Stills and Nash,
and Cat Stevens - and soon found himself switching from banjo to guitar
when The Beatles came along.
Ann, influenced by the likes of Emmylou Harris, Sally Rogers, and
Jimmy Driftwood, started writing her own songs and began playing the
coffeehouse/folk festival circuit. A few more years, and Will and
Ann would fortuitously meet - forming both a marriage and the musical
duo that they’ve become today. “After we met, one thing
led to another, and we got married,” Ann explains, “but
we didn’t really settle into playing music together as a duo
until much later. We had performed with another couple for a few years,
but circumstances changed, and we decided to pare things down and
just be ‘us.”
RECORDING
The Rowland’s recorded a couple of CDs, - namely Ready for the
Storm and Stuff That Works - and released them in 2002 under the “band”
name Floodgate; in 2006, they would record two more discs, dropping
the Floodgate name and settling for a name that suited them better
- the simple and direct Ann and Will Rowland. “We dropped ‘Floodgate’
for a number of reasons,” Ann chuckles, “the greatest
of which was the plethora of ‘floodgates’ out there -
everything from financial institutions to heavy metal bands - that
were just not us.
Fast forward to today, and Ann and Will Rowland are one of the most
respected folk music husband-and-wife duos in Michigan. Will now plays
both six and 12-string guitar, bass, mandolin, and even pulls out
the banjo from time to time, while Ann has stuck with her guitar work,
has added lap dulcimer, and is working on claw-hammer style banjo
“although right now, we’re not subjecting anyone to that
yet but our cat,” Ann laughs.
While the two musicians share a love for music and their marriage,
their styles are quite different, so it took some work to blend their
sounds together, but that same diversity makes their live performances
even more dynamic. Will’s style is quite energetic and detailed,
while Ann’s is very laid back and more folky; she has helped
draw him towards more roots music, while he has encouraged her to
step out and sing more harmony vocals and other challenging parts.
“We like to mix it up,” she says.
OBSCURE
COVERS
Currently working to integrate more original songs into their sets,
the Rowland’s also perform a large range of covers, but not
the typical ones you might be used to hearing. “We do play a
lot of covers,” Ann explains, “but they’re mostly
obscure enough that the majority of our audiences associate the songs
with us. We are careful to credit the songwriters, but we also try
to put our own stamp on every song that we do.”
Many of the Rowland’s’ song choices are so catchy, their
audiences even sing along. “And we certainly don’t mind
when listeners become familiar enough with our music to do that,”
Ann says, “but we also like to think that the songs we choose
and the songs we write have enough to say that the listen-and-appreciate
type audience leaves a concert with something to think about, even
if they’ve not heard the songs before.” Those audiences
have enjoyed the Rowland’s’ music all across Michigan.
They’ve been a fixture at such summer festivals as Blissfest
and the Hiawatha Music Festival, have played downstate at such venues
as the Trinity House in Livonia, Mama’s Coffeehouse in Birmingham,
and at the well-received house concert series Music in the Burbs in
Bloomfield Hills. They’ve opened for the likes of Ricky Skaggs,
John MacCutcheon, and Peter Ostroushko, too - but one of their favorite
places is closer to their Northern Michigan hearts, namely the Peace
Coffee House in East Jordan. “Every concert has a memorable
moment, but the Peace Coffee House always has a great audience,”
Ann enthuses. And this summer will introduce even more folks to the
Rowland’s’ music. They’ll be performing numerous
engagements at The Terrace Inn in Petoskey through the summer and
at the gazebo in Boyne City on July 11. But with so much on their
musical burners (“there are a bunch of things cooking right
now,” Ann says,) the best way to keep track of the Rowland’s’
show is via their website, www.annandwillrowland.com - because if
you’re a fan of heartfelt folk music, then this duo is one you
won’t want to miss.