The Womack Family Band

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The Womacks
Background information
OriginNorwalk, Ohio, United States
GenresAmericana, folk rock
Years active2008 (2008)-2015 (2015)
LabelsFar Around Music, Untitled Records
Past membersHaley Heyman
Noah Heyman
Tony Schaffer
Cory Webb
Kevin Obermeyer
Emily Keener
Seth Bain
Tommy Christian
Cory Boomer

The Womacks were an Americana music quartet from Norwalk, Ohio. The group consisted of Haley Heyman (guitar, mandolin, keyboards, vocals), Noah Heyman (guitar, mandolin, bass guitar, banjo, vocals), Tony Schaffer (piano, guitar, bass guitar, alto saxophone, trumpet, clarinet, vocals), and Cory Webb (drums).[1] The band's unique and varied sound could be attributed to the group's three distinct songwriters,[2] which allowed a new lyrical perspective with each song.

Formation and band name[edit]

The members of The Womacks gradually came together around multi-instrumentalist Tony Schaffer, who had been performing with Americana Singer-Songwriter and fellow Ohioan Chris Castle. Schaffer and Noah Heyman started performing together as an acoustic duo in 2008, adding vocalist Haley Heyman to the line-up within six months. That same year, the trio became the featured weekly act at the Office Bar in Norwalk, Ohio, where they met bartender and drummer Cory Webb. Initially called "The Womack Brothers Family Band," the "Womack" of their name was meant to be a tongue-in-cheek nod to fans of singer-songwriter Tommy Womack and was initially coined by Schaffer and Castle as a bar-band alias. The name was changed to "The Womack Family Band" after Haley joined the group.[1] The name, which was used as the title for the band's 2010 debut,[3] would last until 2014, when they shortened the band name once again, this time to "The Womacks".

Debut album[edit]

Folk Alley named The Womack Family Band their featured artists of July 2010.[4] The group released their self-titled debut disc The Womack Family Band on September 15 of the same year, at the Winchester Music Hall (Lakewood, OH).[5] The debut record consisted of 15 songs, written by Noah and Haley Heyman, and Tony Schaffer, the group's three primary songwriters,[6] and included songs like "When The Winter Breaks", "Hold On", "Bloodline Blues", and "Sysiphus Stone".[7]

"From Chestnut" EP[edit]

The band's next release was an EP titled "From Chestnut". The entire disc was, like the debut, recorded entirely in the Womacks home studio on Chestnut Street.[8] The collection was released in September 2011 and included songs like "Sara", "Sugar Honey", and "Nothing".[9]

The Blue Room[edit]

The Womacks' second full-length release as The Womack Family Band, The Blue Room, was also recorded at Chestnut and was released in 2012. They named the album after the common room they shared in their home. Songs include "Sun Shine Down My Way," "A Silver Line of Peace," and "For Lysie."[10][11]

"WFB," name change and "The Great American Treat"[edit]

The band's next release would mark a transition in their career. The quasi-self-titled "WFB" EP[12] would be released under the new moniker of The Womacks. Recorded in their new base of operations, a ranch the band affectionately called "Higbee" in Monroeville, OH, the EP's release was celebrated with a large-scale all-day music festival at the ranch declared "The Great American Treat." The event, which included camping, food and art vendors, and a robust lineup of other local acts, was held Fourth of July weekend 2014.[13]

Collaboration with Emily Keener[edit]

Over the course of the following year, the Womacks would collaborate with fellow local musician Emily Keener. Keener, who had performed at the 2014 Great American Treat, recruited the band to support her 2015 release East of the Sun, which would ultimately be released as her second, and the Womacks third, album under "Emily Keener and the Womacks" in March 2015.[14] Keener would become a contestant on the reality competition show The Voice the following year.

The Second Annual Great American Treat and Break-Up[edit]

The band celebrated a second year of the Great American Treat festival in 2015, once again in July, but this time with a larger two-day event. The event, once again hosting a number of other bands and artists as well as the previous year's amenities, was again held at the Womack ranch. The band's live performance, which this time included Keener, would prove to be their last live performance. On August 25, 2015, the band shared on their public Facebook page that Haley Heyman had left the band for personal reasons, and thus, because "the Womacks without Haley is not the Womacks," the band would dissolve. They concurrently announced and released an EP called "Live Treats," initially to be released at the July event, which the band described as including "the 8-member incarnation" of the band, which included the band's original four members and Keener, as well as Seth Bain, Tommy Christian, and Cory Boomer.[15]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Aaron Freeder, Adam Wagner, Ivan Sheehan; Ohio Authority (Cleveland, Ohio) August 8, 2011 [1]
  2. ^ "MFT :: Band :: The Womack Family Band". Musicalfamilytree.com. Retrieved September 27, 2012.
  3. ^ Laurie Wanninger, Cool Cleveland (Cleveland, OH) May, 2011
  4. ^ "OpenMic | Featured Artists". Folk Alley. Retrieved September 27, 2012.
  5. ^ Jim Vickers; Cleveland Magazine (Cleveland, OH) September 2010
  6. ^ "CD REVIEW: The Womack Family Band's debut album « CoolCleveland Blog". Coolcleveland.com. May 1, 2011. Retrieved September 27, 2012.
  7. ^ &#8250 The Womack Family Band. "The Womack Family Band [Explicit]: The Womack Family Band: MP3 Downloads". Amazon. Retrieved September 27, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ "The Womack Family Band: From Chestnut — Recoil Magazine". Recoilmag.com. Retrieved September 27, 2012.
  9. ^ &#8250 The Womack Family Band. "From Chestnut: The Womack Family Band: MP3 Downloads". Amazon. Retrieved September 27, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Jason D. 'Diesel' Hamad (September 27, 2012). "Review: The Womack Family Band: The Blue Room". No Surf Music. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
  11. ^ The Womacks. "The Blue Room on Bandcamp". Retrieved March 23, 2024.
  12. ^ The Womacks. "WFB on Apple Music".
  13. ^ "The Womacks Host Outdoor All-Day Music Fest To Release New EP". Cool Cleveland. June 2014. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
  14. ^ The Womacks. "Emily Keener and the Womacks' "East of the Sun" on Apple Music".
  15. ^ The Womacks (August 25, 2015). "The band's public break-up post and announcement of their final EP". Retrieved March 23, 2024.