“Put Me In, Coach!” Getting the Mojo Treatment at IBMA
- Brent Davis

- 57 minutes ago
- 4 min read

Figuratively speaking, Stephen Mougin wears a lot of hats. (Literally, he’s nearly always seen in a black pork pie number). He’s a songwriter, producer, studio owner, radio host, solo performer, and, since 2006, he’s been singing and playing guitar with bluegrass legend Sam Bush.
But every year attendees of the International Bluegrass Music Association’s conference pack a convention hall room to see Mougin (“Mojo,” nearly everyone calls him) in a different role as he conducts his band coaching session.
“It's one of the favorite things that I get to do in my professional career,” he says. “I started as a music teacher, and I was a choir director for three years before I moved to Nashville to play full time. I love teaching. I don't have a lot of time for it these days with everything else that's going on. So, the band coaching scratches that itch for me in an intensive, focused way.”
Often Mougin knows nothing about the band that has volunteered to be coached in the open session. He might stop them before they’ve completed the first line of their song. He may comment on something very specific--the way they use the microphone or explain that fill-in licks should always come between vocal lines. Other observations are more philosophical.
“One of the things that I focus on with all the bands--especially younger
bands--is to play it like you love it. Whatever song you're playing, it has to be your favorite song at this moment. Because if you're playing it as if it's not your favorite song, it's going to sound that way.”

He also stresses that great musicians are good listeners.
“You spend most of your time focusing inward to make sure you're playing the right chords or that you're playing in time or any of those kinds of things,” he explains. “And the real hurdle is the moment when instead of looking in or listening inward, you're listening outward, where what you're doing is basically on autopilot. And all it is doing is reacting to the things around you. And that's when the real music starts to happen.”
Mougin can’t recall when he started doing the sessions at IBMA. (“It’s been more than a decade, I think.”) He began working with youth bands and then invited older musicians to take part. In 2023 Fox Crossing Stringband volunteered for the public critique. In fact, banjo/dobro player Cassie Lynn Wright says the band profited from being in front of an audience.
“Getting Stephen's ideas in a conference session also allowed us to see and feel the audience's reaction instantly,” Wright recalls. “There’s nothing like the feeling of trying something new, stepping out of your comfort zone, and seeing Mojo and the whole room light up because everyone can feel that it’s working.
“After playing together for a while, you naturally settle into certain 'roles' or 'grooves.' Mojo’s coaching made us realize that those are actually all choices, and many of which we’d been making without even realizing it. By suggesting different approaches and explaining the 'why' behind them, Mojo helped us unlock new ideas to improve our music.”
Under the Rocks, a band from British Columbia, Canada, participated in last year’s coaching session at IBMA.
“I saw Mojo post on Instagram that he was looking for a band for his workshop,” says Chris Baxter, who sings and plays banjo and mandolin with the band. “I DM’d him right away thinking this would be an awesome opportunity to learn some tips from one of the best. Gratefully, he accepted.
“I’d met Stephen before, but didn’t really know him. What we got out of it was learning how to be more dynamic in a song during a live performance. We learned small tricks like watching each other's lips while singing so that our phrasing all matched. And playing slow songs with the same energy as ripping tunes.
“Going into it I think most of us didn’t really know what to expect. We weren’t apprehensive, rather excited for the opportunity to gain some real skills that would hopefully take our performances to the next level.”
Mougin does some coaching sessions during the year between conferences. But his other myriad activities--he recently began hosting “Mojo’s Mixtape,” a weekly show on Sirius XM focused on 1980s and ‘90s bluegrass music --keeps him busy.

“I learned a long time ago the secret to success in the music business is to do a lot of different things, so something's happening all the time,” he says. “I don't have a ton of time for band coaching. It’s not something I've ever really put a lot of effort into advertising or publicizing or trying to market. It's something that folks have seen at IBMA, and they reach out.”
And it’s not just new or up-and-coming bands that attend the coaching sessions. Veteran musicians are interested, too.
“A lot of times we're talking about basics, but I have professionals who come every year and sit and listen and tell me the things that I reminded them of are not particularly new,” Mougin explains. “But, you know, it's good to have a little-touch up every once in a while on some things that you can think about differently and find ways to improve what you're doing.”




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