- PHOTO BY RYAN WILLIAMSON
- Aaron Lipp's repetoire of bluegrass, folk, country, and rockabilly has propelled him to the forefront of the Finger Lakes roots music scene.
His house, a two-story number he began building from the ground up six years ago that doubles as a recording studio called Temple Cabin, was hard to spot on its perch on a steep hill in the middle of a forest.
- PHOTO BY RYAN WILLIAMSON
- Lipp plays his resonator guitar at home in Temple Cabin Studios, where he records and produces music for himself and his friends.
“The setting absolutely has so much to do with the sounds that come out of here,” Lipp said. “Because all music is is emotion, vibe. When you listen to music, that’s all you’re getting from it.”
Born in Prattsburgh to a carpenter-musician and a nurse, the 32-year-old Lipp is among the preeminent roots musicians in the Finger Lakes, and is fresh off the release of a new solo album, “Nothing to Lose,” a collection of laid-back rock and folk that he called “probably the most original thing I’ve ever done.” It’s as close to a pop record as you’ll get from him.
“There are a lot of people who are going to listen to that, and it’s going to be not what they expected,” he said. “And that’s what I want.”
Today, he plays bluegrass and folk with Bobby and Douglas Henrie and Mount Pleasant String Band, rockabilly with his band The Slack Tones, and roots music with Ben Haravitch and Dirty Blanket’s Max Flansburg as the Temple Cabin Band.
On Oct. 13, he is scheduled to play Bop Shop Records in Rochester with Southern singer-songwriter Ric Robertson.
Lipp is a multi-instrumentalist — he plays guitar, banjo, organ, fiddle, and drums — who doesn’t fit neatly into any conventional country-musician stereotype and tries like hell to avoid being pigeonholed into any one genre by playing with people’s expectations.
“I don’t even like the word ‘genre,’” Lipp said.
- PHOTO BY RYAN WILLIAMSON
- "If you have a good sound at the source, and you put a nice microphone on it, you can't go wrong," Lipp said at Temple Cabin Studios in Naples.
“If you have a good sound at the source, and you put a nice microphone on it, you can't go wrong,” he said.
His goal with each recording, he said, is to capture everything as it is in the room — the emotion, the vibe — whether he is producing for himself or other musicians.
Haravitch, who met Lipp six years ago when he sought him out for banjo lessons, recalled Lipp’s approach to teaching as steering clear of mechanics and technique and focusing on harnessing the spirit of the music.
“He’s just sort of like the burner that moves the energy around in the stew, as the stew is cooking,” Haravitch said of Lipp’s place in the Finger Lakes music scene. “He’s like the flame beneath it all.”
Given his library, Lipp’s musical influences aren’t surprising.
A metal head in his youth, he learned the guitar by playing along to songs by Rage Against the Machine, Nirvana, and Green Day. Later he was turned onto classic ’60s rock and psychedelia through Jimi Hendrix, Grateful Dead, and Jerry Garcia.
Eventually, he was bit by the bluegrass bug and delved into vintage country sounds and old-time music.
- PHOTO BY RYAN WILLIAMSON
- "The setting absolutely has so much to do with the sounds that come out of here," Lipp said. "Because all music is is emotion, vibe."
“I mean, there is no end to making original music,” he went on. “There is no end, ever. We can only get better within ourselves.”
Daniel J. Kushner is CITY’s arts editor. He can be reached at dkushner@rochester-citynews.com.
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Aaron Lipp has 'Nothing to Lose' - Rochester City Newspaper
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