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On the Town: Tipping Point

Wednesday, April 26, 2017


Shelby Means and Joel Timmons released Tip My Heart this winter. Photograph courtesy of Sally & George

April 26, 2017

Tipping Point
A romance—and an album—years in the making formally debuted in February. Here, get to know country duo Sally & George before their Party at the Point performance on May 12


written by Devin Grant

When two established musicians join forces, the results are often magical. Think June Carter and Johnny Cash, Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, and Charleston’s own Cary Ann Hearst and Michael Trent (aka Shovels & Rope). And now, meet Sally & George—actually Shelby Means, former bass player for Grammy-nominated Nashville bluegrass outfit Della Mae, and her fiancé, Joel Timmons, vocalist and guitarist for Holy City mainstay Sol Driven Train.

The pair met at a music fest in 2012, but it took a couple years for them to partner up—romantically, and then musically, forming Sally & George and naming it for Means’s “very dapper” maternal grandparents. “We ended up getting a lot of their hand-me-down clothes at the same time we were figuring out a band name, so it fit,” says Means. “Our music is a little bit retro, just like they were.”

In February, the duo introduced its first album, Tip My Heart. A beautifully lighthearted yet fully realized document of their blossoming relationship, it was recorded in Wyoming, Nashville (where Timmons now lives), and at Shovels & Rope’s home studio on John’s Island.

The results bring to mind everything from the rollicking Texas vintage rock of Buddy Holly (check out the title track, which NPR highlighted on “Songs We Love”) to hints of great songsmiths such as John Prine (on “Pipedream”) and Gram Parsons (“Nashville Beach”). Think of outside-the-box male-female duos such as Timbuk 3 and Blue Mountain, and you get an idea of what Sally & George are pursuing.

“I tend to approach song-writing like writing a book report,” says Timmons, “while Shelby is much more fantastical and romantic.” Means weighs in, “The words don’t always make sense, but they hopefully capture how I was feeling at the time.”

Now touring the East Coast, the band stops in town on May 12 to open for Sol Driven Train at Party at the Point.


To learn more about Sally & George, visit their website here.

To read more from the April issue, click here.