Video of The Day: The Connells on Shaped By Sound

There’s something quietly radical about the endurance of The Connells. In an industry that chews up regional bands and spits them out as trivia questions, they have persisted—less as nostalgia act, more as a living argument for melody, craft and community. Their appearance on Shaped by Sound, the PBS North Carolina series devoted to the state’s rich musical ecosystem, feels less like a retrospective than a homecoming.

The show’s format—interweaving live studio performances with intimate conversation—suits them. From the opening notes of “Scotty’s Lament” (00:33), you’re reminded that the Connells’ power has never been about bombast. It’s about architecture. Two brothers—guitarist and songwriter Mike Connell and bassist David Connell—alongside a tight circle of friends from Raleigh, built one of North Carolina’s most enduring bands not on spectacle but on structure: chiming guitars, melodic bass lines, and choruses that feel both inevitable and earned.

PBS NC wisely lets the songs breathe. “Carry My Picture” (05:37) shimmers in the studio lights, its emotional directness framed by Doug MacMillan’s unmistakable voice—clear, yearning, unforced. Keyboardist Steve Potak adds texture and lift, while guitarist Mike Ayers and drummer Chris Stephenson lock into a groove that’s crisp but never clinical. Trumpeter Mike Mole, a later addition to the lineup, colors the arrangements with subtle brass flourishes, a reminder that this band has always been willing to expand its palette without abandoning its core.

That core, as the full conversation reveals, was forged in Raleigh in the early 1980s. A group of friends playing local gigs, hauling gear into clubs, refining songs night after night. They were part of a regional circuit that rewarded perseverance more than hype. The Connells didn’t arrive fully formed; they were shaped by the rooms they played, the audiences who showed up, and the belief that songcraft mattered.

Then comes the moment casual viewers may be waiting for: “’74–’75” (11:22). The band’s surprise overseas hit—particularly in Europe—remains one of the great stories of American alternative rock’s second tier. Released in the mid-1990s, it didn’t explode immediately at home. But abroad, the song connected, its nostalgic meditation on lost youth and passing time resonating across language barriers. On Shaped by Sound, the performance feels less like a victory lap and more like a reckoning. The arrangement is lean; the melody carries the emotional weight. When MacMillan sings about photographs and the quiet ache of growing older, the years between then and now collapse.

What’s striking in the interview segments is the absence of cynicism. There’s no bitterness about near-misses or industry vagaries. Instead, the Connells speak about the slow accumulation of work—about studio memories, about learning how to layer guitars without cluttering a mix, about the discipline of editing a song until only what matters remains. They talk about how “Seven” (17:28) and “Over There” (22:40) fit into their evolving catalogue, each song a chapter in a longer narrative rather than a bid for reinvention.

This is where Shaped by Sound’s broader mission comes into focus. The series—produced by PBS North Carolina in partnership with the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources and presented by Come Hear North Carolina—spotlights artists across indie rock, hip-hop, R&B, alt-country, jazz, bluegrass, and folk. We highly recommend the episodes on Wednesday and Superchunk. By placing the Connells within this living, breathing statewide scene, the show resists the myth that meaningful music only comes from coastal capitals. North Carolina is not just a backdrop; it’s an incubator.

For the Connells, community is not branding. It’s origin story. Two brothers, a handful of friends, and a city that allowed them to grow at their own pace. That ethos still animates the band. You can hear it in the way the guitars interlock without competing, in the steady pulse of the rhythm section, in the democratic space each member occupies. No one is posturing. Everyone is serving the song.

In an era of algorithmic playlists and disposable singles, The Connells’ appearance on Shaped by Sound is a reminder that durability is its own form of rebellion. Songs built carefully, performed faithfully, and shared within a community can travel far—sometimes all the way across the Atlantic—and still return home intact.

Cool Show Alert: The Connells on December 20th in Raleigh, NC!

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The Connells in Concert for your musical pleasure!

THE CONNELLS – SIXTEEN TONS – HANNAH ELSIE CHAPMAN
Live at The Lincoln Theatre! Friday, December 20th, 2013

7:30pm Doors
8:30pm Show

Tickets: http://www.etix.com/ticket/online/performanceSearch.jsp?performance_id=1761055&cobrand=lincoln

THE CONNELLS
http://www.theconnells.com/

Hometown institution The Connells bring their distinct brand of guitar-oriented, melodic, power pop to The Lincoln Theatre for their annual holiday party! With new material in the works and most of their catalog now available through Amazon and iTunes, the band continues to play throughout the southeast US at festivals, fundraisers and clubs. The Connells current lineup features:

Mike Connell – Guitar, Vocals
David Connell – Bass
Doug MacMillan – Vocals
Mike Ayers – Lead Guitar
Steve Potak – Keyboard
Rob Ladd – Drums
Joel Rhodes – Trumpet

SIXTEEN TONS
https://www.facebook.com/sixteentonsnc

“Five men, one mission: musical stratospherics, stellar arrangements and guitar heroics. Coming soon to a theater near you!” Sixteen Tons is a brand new ensemble from North Carolina composed of an all star lineup of veteran musicians including:

Rod Abernethy – Guitar
Jon Heames – Bass, Bass VI
Mike Krause – Guitar
Chris Stephenson – Drums
Bo Taylor – Guitar

They have performed and/or recorded with a wide spectrum of established artists from North Carolina and beyond including Arrogance, Paul Rothchild (The Doors, Bonnie Raitt), John Anthony (Roxy Music, Queen), David Lord (Peter Gabriel, Tori Amos, Tears for Fears, The Pretenders), Let’s Active, Motocaster, Tonk, Bandway, Tift Merritt, Caitlin Cary (Mary Chapin-Carpenter, Ryan Adams), Big Al Anderson (NRBQ, World Famous Headliners), Chris Stamey, Thad Cockrell, International Orange (Ben Folds Five, The Old Ceremony, Bus Stop), Andy Kuncl, The Connells, John Howie Jr. and the Rosewood Bluff and members of Patty Griffin, Levon Helm, The Jayhawks and the Dex Romweber Duo among others.

HANNAH ELSIE CHAPMAN
http://www.soundcloud.com/hannahelsiechapman

Known for her multi-faceted artistic expression and fearless individuality, emerging musician, photographer and actress Hanna Elsie Chapman is just as likely to capture imagery through her lens and jump into character as she is to compose a piece of music. Angelic and hypnotic, bold and melodic… Chapman challenges her listeners to see ones vulnerability in lifes fleeting moments . “I am always absorbed in some medium of person-to-person communication. Striving for artistic expression is like burning into nothingness during atmosphere re-entry; vulnerable, risky, terrifying and necessary” says Chapman. Make sure to arrive in time to see Hannah kick the night off at 8:30!

Hannah Elsie Chapman – Piano, Vocals
Neal Chapman – Guitar

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LINKS/ INFO:
http://www.waltermagazine.com/artist-spotlight-david-connell/
http://www.mkrause.com/
http://www.rodabernethy.com/
http://www.hannahelsiechapman.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xT4CC5qJ11Y
http://www.lincolntheatre.com/

The Lincoln Theatre
126 E. Cabarrus St.
Raleigh, NC 27601
(919) 821-4111

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