Soundbites: Umphrey's McGee Loves Burlington

Published: April 17, 2024

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Rock and roll and adulthood are strange bedfellows. One minute, you're a kid in a stinky, sweaty room filled with beer bottles and roaches (both kinds), huddled with some friends and playing music. The next thing you know, you're a "professional musician" traveling 200 days a year, the stinky rooms have turned into studios, and you have a family waiting for you after the tour. You'd be surprised how quickly it happens. Just ask Joel Cummins. The keyboard player and founding member of jam-prog band Umphrey's McGee of South Bend, Ind., has been at it for 26 years, since he and his bandmates met as students at the University of Notre Dame in December 1997. "It's hard to look at things from now to then, honestly," Cummins admitted as we caught up by phone. "I think we maybe had a five-year plan at some point? We were just trying to put one foot in front of the other and make music. It's always been simple in that way, at least." Thirteen studio albums and more than 2,000 live performances later, that method has clearly worked for Umphrey's, as the band has risen to great success in the jam and progressive-rock worlds. Their beyond-eclectic sound, covering funk, metal, new wave, country and everything in between, has inspired a dedicated fan base across the country. But they seem to have a special bond with Burlington: According to Cummins (with the help of fan site allthings.umphreys.com), Umphrey's have played in the Queen City area 24 times. They'll make it 26 with two shows this week at the Higher Ground Ballroom in South Burlington: Wednesday and Thursday, April 24 and 25. "It's a little wild to realize how long we've been doing this," Cummins said. "The biggest difference now is that we go on the road to catch up on sleep and focus on the music, because when we get home we all get assaulted by our children! It used to be the other way around: We'd party on the road and come home to recover." Cummins thinks the life changes have actually helped the band focus more on chemistry and the instrumental interplay and improvisation that Umphrey's are known for. As he and his bandmates age, their musical tastes and styles have inevitably shifted. "We've gotten better and better at listening to one another and interacting in the songs," Cummins said…
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