ashville, Tenn. - The Time Jumpers have never had a hit record, perform in the same small club where they started nine years ago, and play songs that are 60 years old.
And yet they're so hip the stars come out to hear them.
Norah Jones, Bonnie Raitt, Sheryl Crow, Robert Plant, Reba McEntire and Vince Gill have all dropped by their standing Monday night shows at the Station Inn, an unassuming little stone building with plywood floors and mismatched tables and chairs.
The group - all 11 of them - play a jazzy, big band-flavored style of country music called Western swing. The sound is peppy and textured with triple fiddles, twin guitars, accordion, stand-up bass, drums, two female singers and a pedal steel that whines and rumbles like a speeding train.
The musicians - who in their day jobs are crack studio players who've worked with such artists as Sting and Faron Young - took turns soloing to polite applause at a recent show. They laughed and winked and enjoyed the crowd, which ranged from a smattering of young kids out with their parents to senior citizens out for a good time. A few danced beside the bar where a large cowbell hung.
"Kids, this is all new music. This is what's going to replace hip-hop," fiddler and frontman Kenny Sears cracked as the band launched into a spirited take of Nat King Cole's "Route 66."
A wiry man with a cowboy hat and an auctioneer's command of the crowd, Sears said the idea for the Time Jumpers sprang from backstage jam sessions at the Grand Ole Opry.
"We formed seeking therapy," he explained. "We all spent our working hours trying to figure out what people wanted to hear on their records and trying to give them that. So we decided we would get together and play fun music and play all we wanted to play, where it would be legal to overplay if we felt like it."
The band doesn't tour (11 people traveling the country to play clubs doesn't make financial sense) and certainly doesn't play to get rich (Sears said he pockets about $100 a night).
They do it largely because they love Western swing, a musical style that peaked in the '40s with the folksy Texas band leader Bob Wills. Wills incorporated jazz, blues, ragtime and Mexican music to fill dance halls and ballrooms across the Southwest.
"It's wonderful music," said the band's rhythm guitarist, "Ranger" Doug Green. "Both feet are planted in tradition, yet you can be as free with it as you want to. We all enjoy hearing what each other come up with."
The Time Jumpers found an unlikely home in the Station Inn, a storied bluegrass club where Bill Monroe, Ralph Stanley and most everyone else in the genre has played or hung out. The place might fit close to 200 people if no one has to get to the bathroom in a hurry.
The band plays the club every Monday night, their only gig of the week. The owner, J.T. Gray, said he couldn't resist booking them; they were just that good. Judging from the size of his crowds, he's got to be glad he did.



