Dec
MAGNET Magazine names Mumford & Sons' 8-Song Daytrotter session the best of 2012

Best of 2012: Indie Roots
- Mumford & Sons Daytrotter Stopover Sessions (Daytrotter)
- Old Crow Medicine Show Carry Me Back (ATO)
- Lake Street Dive Fun Machine (Signature Sounds)
- Various Artists The Hunger Games: Songs From District 12 And Beyond (Universal Republic)
- The Lumineers The Lumineers (Dualtone)
- Black Prairie A Tear In The Eye Is A Wound In The Heart (Sugar Hill)
- Rayna Gellert Old Light (Story Sound)
- J.P. Harris & The Tough Choices I’ll Keep Calling (Cow Island)
- Jay William Henderson The Sun Will Burn Our Eyes (self-released)
- Joan Shelley Ginko (Ol Kentuck)

Click here to join Daytrotter today in order to download the Mumford & Sons and Friends Daytrotter session. They have a holiday special going on and, if you buy an annual membership for only $24, you automatically get a $20 credit toward anything in the Daytrotter store!
Oct
Daytrotter Presents...The Stopover Sessions
From the Mumford & Sons Official Website:
Friday 5, October 2012

The location is Dixon, Illinois and the date is August 2012. Mumford & Sons are in town for a Stopover show…
The buzz of the crowds and the stands and the bands they’ve asked to play fizzes around them. The weather is hot and they seek a little refuge indoors, finding an empty high school auditorium.. Daytrotter are in the premises, recording equipment in tow.
It being the only multi-day Stopover date Marcus, Ben, Ted and Winston find themselves in a rare position of circumstance; a quiet space, all their instruments plus a whole load of talented musician folk on hand and with a little time to spare. So Daytrotter hit record and thus, here we have today… The Stopover Sessions.
They consist of a mixture of originals, covers (Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan) and interpretations of traditional folk songs and include recordings by not only by Mumford & Sons but also contributions from HAIM, Abigail Washburn, Apache Relay, Dawes, Gogol Bordello, The Very Best and Nathaniel Rateliff., laid down either in the auditorium or the lounge of the band’s tour bus.
Daytrotter members can now download all of these sessions over here. If you’re not a member it’s still possible to stream the tracks by signing up for a free trial.
The Stopover Sessions come in a number of parts; Mumford & Sons and Friends, Stopover Sessions Part 2 and Stopover Sessions Part 3, Gogol Bordello’s Stopover Session and The Very Best’s Stopover Session.
Enjoy,
M&S HQ x
Oct
In addition to the Mumford & Sons and Friends Session that was released on October 1, 2012, Daytrotter has just released Parts 2 and 3 of a series of sessions that were recorded in Dixon, Illinois during Mumford & Sons’ Gentlemen of the Road Stopover on August 18, 2012. The sessions feature musicians who were a part of the day-long festival:
Stopover Sessions, Part 2: HAIM and Abigail Washburn
- Keys to the Kingdom (Abigail Washburn)
- Honey & I (HAIM)
Stopover Sessions, Part 3: The Apache Relay, Nathaniel Rateliff, Taylor Goldsmith
- Cornerstone (Apache Relay)
- If I Had No Place to Fall (Nathaniel Rateliff)
- The French Inhaler (Taylor Goldsmith)
More GOTR Stopover Sessions are coming, so stay tuned for updates as they’re made available!
Oct
Mumford & Sons and Friends Daytrotter Session
Words by Sean Moeller, Illustration by Johnnie Cluney, Recording engineered by Mike Gentry in the Dixon (Ill.) High School Auditorium and on the Mumford & Sons tour bus, August 18, 2012 during the Gentlemen of the Road Stopover in Dixon, Illinois.
The things that everyone can understand and appreciate, when considering other people - strangers or friends, are shortcomings. It’s in them where we’re able to see each other as more alike than we are different. It’s in our shared shortcomings - because when we face them, they’re almost all identical - that we’re able to show ourselves as the most human, the most empathetic, the most noble and the most compassionate people we’ll ever be. It’s when someone loses a loved one to some heartbreaking disease, or simply to the arms of another - when things have not turned out right, for one reason or another, that we lower our voices, loosen our heartstrings and put an arm around a fellow aching body.
These are the people we are when we listen to Mumford & Sons songs. These are the people who write those songs - Marcus Mumford, Ben Lovett, Winston Marshall and Ted Dwane. They are the framers of a compassion that encourages other wounded and wandering souls not to give up on love, but to be wary of it as well - to learn from it. They encourage others to stand tall and to pick themselves up from the ground, dust all of the shit from themselves to get to that upright and venting/marveling at the brightness of a night’s moon again. They are a troop of never-say-die-ers, willing to go back into the trenches with the hands and the fire they were born with, along with the people that they know they will always love.
The folks that these men sing about present their burdens and their woes and they then raise a glass to overcoming them all, in heroic fashion. They are determined to not lead dim lives. They are determined to stir up as much energy and life, happiness and occasional sadness, all in the name of the richness and sweet complexity of existence that they’ve always felt they should have if they were only to get one thing. Mumford, the head of the hopeless wanderers guild, sings on “Not With Haste,” “Do not let my fickle flesh go to waste/As it keeps my heart and soul in its place/And I will love with urgency/But not with haste.” With those words, Mumford & Sons have cast themselves as men of distinction - those who will burn all nights completely, who will always kiss with their eyes close when they decide to kiss and who will lose many fights, but will never lose the battle.
It’s this spirit that the lads from London brought to their Gentlemen of the Road Stopover show in Dixon, Illinois, just over one month ago, inhabiting three campgrounds, a high school, a river and entire sleepy city to put their values on display. It was quite the showing, on a picturesque day and night, under a spectacular sky. It was a show that was epic for its continual moments of brilliance - the kind of moments that can’t be taken for granted and everyone there was aware of that. These songs were recorded in high school auditorium, inside a castle-like building, that was ringed with a stone carving of a dog chasing a rat, along with busts of Mark Twain and Abraham Lincoln and they were recorded in the lounge of the band’s idling tour bus, both pre and post show. The songs selected - one from the band’s new album “Babel” and a collection of traditionals and covers by The Stanley Brothers, Bruce Springsteen, Guy Clark, Roger Miller, Bob Dylan and others go even further in showing the thrust, the focus and the importance of one of the world’s great young bands.
Track listing and players:
- Not With Haste
Recorded in the Dixon High School Auditorium; Players - Marcus Mumford, Ben Lovett, Winston Marshall and Ted Dwane. - Little Birdie
Recorded on the Mumford & Sons tour bus pre-Gentlemen of the Road set; Players - Marcus Mumford, Ben Lovett, Ross Holmes, Abigail Washburn and Nathaniel Rateliff - Angel Band
Recorded on the Mumford & Sons tour bus pre-Gentlemen of the Road set; Players — Marcus Mumford, Ben Lovett, Ross Holmes, Abigail Washburn and Nathaniel Rateliff - Not In Nottingham
Recorded on the Mumford & Sons tour bus post-Gentlemen of the Road set; Players - Marcus Mumford and Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes. - Reincarnation
Recorded on the Mumford & Sons tour bus post-Gentlemen of the Road set; Players - Marcus Mumford and Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes. - I Was Young When I Left Home
Recorded on the Mumford & Sons tour bus post-Gentlemen of the Road set; Players - Marcus Mumford and Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes. - Partner Nobody Chose
Recorded on the Mumford & Sons tour bus post-Gentlemen of the Road set; Players - Marcus Mumford and Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes. - Atlantic City
Recorded on the Mumford & Sons tour bus post-Gentlemen of the Road set; Players - Marcus Mumford and Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes.
Click through to listen and download now.
Aug
Mumford & Sons, Dawes, Haim, The Apache Relay, Abigail Washburn, Nathaniel Rateliff, and many other artists at the GOTR Stopover in Dixon, Illinois cover “With A Little Help From My Friends” by The Beatles on August 18, 2012.
Mar
what's the name of the band that performed before Gill Landry and Abigail Washburn?
The concert last night (March 6th) featured Gill Landry, Abigail Washburn, and Mumford & Sons (with special guest Jerry Douglas).
The concert tonight (March 7th) features Apache Relay, Dawes, and Mumford & Sons.
Tomorrow night (March 8th), the concert will feature Willy Mason, Dawes, and Mumford & Sons.
Mar
Mumford & Sons jam with Abigail Washburn, Sarah Jarosz, Béla Fleck, and The Punch Brothers at the 2011 Telluride Bluegrass Festival NightGrass concert on June 18, 2011.
Photos copyright James Minchin III.
Click here to check out more photos of Mumford & Sons in Telluride by Mr. Minchin that were published by RollingStone.
Feb
Mumfordandsons.com Blog Update: SUPPORT FOR RYMAN AUDITORIUM SHOWS ANNOUNCED
From the Mumford & Sons Official Website:
We are extremely pleased to have secured the fantastic talents of the following artists as support at the Ryman Auditorium shows in Nashville in March (click their names to find out more)…
Tuesday 6th March
Wednesday 7th March
Thursday 8th March
Some friends old, some friends new = guaranteed good times. To check ticket availability for the shows click here.
x
Jan
Thistle And Weeds
“Thistle and Weeds,” Live at the 2011 Telluride Bluegrass Festival
-Mumford & Sons, with special guest Jerry Douglas on dobro
Click here to download this track and the rest of Mumford & Sons’ entire performance at the 2011 Telluride Bluegrass Festival, featuring appearances by Jerry Douglas, Béla Fleck, and Abigail Washburn!
Nov
Mumford and Sons cover “Angel Band” by the Stanley Brothers from the middle of the audience at their Telluride Nightgrass concert, with special guests The Punch Brothers, Bela Fleck, Sarah Jarosz, and Abigail Washburn. What a beautiful collaboration.
Marcus requested that all cameras be shut off for this… To our benefit, whoever recorded this video clearly paid special attention to that request (read: sarcasm).
Oct
The boys thank Abigail Washburn & The Village for opening the show; I completely fell in love with them when they killed it with “Keys to the Kingdom”. Then, I believe it’s # 983 of banter theater before launching into another new song called “Nothing is Written”. 2011 Telluride Bluegrass Festival Nightgrass Show (best night ever).



