“Taking vintage blues and jazz, swing, old-timey country and folk as their templates, this super-cool duo pens authentic sounding material that appears as if plucked from the Alan Lomax archives, but also bears the gritty qualities of their punk rock background. ” – David Morrison of Folk Radio Uk’s Top ten albums of 2017
The Burying Ground formed in 2014 as a duo, but Woody Forster and Devora Laye have been playing together since 2009 as members of The Dire Wolves, an acoustic blues string band and darlings of the East Van punk scene. They are steeped in influences from 1920’s Ragtime, Country & Western, Mississippi Blues and New Orleans Jazz.
Woody’s complex blues guitar and rags are punctuated and raised high by Devora’s tightly syncopated washboard, with playful rolls and staccato jumps and stops. Their solo and combined vocal styling is deeply resonant and heartfelt. Devora’s sound when masterfully bowing the saw is transportive.
The Burying Ground has been charming diverse crowds, across all ages and musical tastes, in large and small venues throughout Western Canada and the United States. They lend new life to old songs also perform original tunes. Woody and Devora’s songwriting illuminates the human experience that reflects the modern day, touching on mental health, the trauma of war, social justice and good old-fashioned lost and found love. It is today’s commentary on a framework of vintage music.
Their three radio-charting albums speak for themselves, all lively, true, meaningful and memorable from start to finish – Big City Blues (2015); Country Blues & Rags (2017); and The Burying Ground (2017).
At home, on the road and in the studio Devora and Woody are accompanied by a rotating cast of masterful session and backing musicians who include:
Wynston Minckler – upright bass
Bonnie Northgraves – trumpet
Josh Doherty – harmonica, backing vocals
Clara Rose – fiddle
Joseph Lubsinky-Mast – upright bass
Marc Lindy – tuba
Jack Garton – trumpet
Trent Freeman – fiddle
Kathleen Nisbet – fiddle
Candice Roberts – vocals, clarinet
As a full band they have a lively and gritty sound with tight harmony and a driving rhythm section reminiscent of the music of the juke joints and jazz halls of the 1920’s and ’30s. The band moves effortlessly between toe-tapping dance music, the yearning of country blues and the embellishments and energy of ragtime and jazz.