Rolling Country 2024

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To wit, with author's permission:

1. Fanny Lumsden "Millionaire": I still don't have a great idea of what passes for country music in Australia, but both this song and another a few rungs down by 36-year-old New South Wales native Lumsden suggest the genre's given a wider berth there than here -- to include hard-jangling summery '80s post-Paisley Underground modern-rock pop, at very least. Can't recall much country sounding like that even back then -- even early Rosanne Cash or Carlene Carter never got MTV play the way, say, the Bangles did, and "Millionaire" actually seems closer to that band. It's easily one of sunniest and most optimistic records I heard in 2023, certainly from an economic standpoint. Lumsden says she got her first job when she was 15, working on weekends, and "we didn't make much but even ten bucks would make you feel rich." Actually being a millionaire was never her life goal, see. I wonder how teenage employment down under compares to the US, where it peaked my high school senior year 1978 (I had busboy, dishwasher, Fotomat, golf caddie and newspaper delivery gigs myself), then fell gradually over the next few decades, only to finally recover slowly after bottoming out with the Great Recession of 2008. Three years after her first job came Lumsden's first car, a lime green Daewoo Cielo the lyrics say even though in the video she apparently drives a Toyota Seleka. (I'm no expert, but I can read.) I guess part of what makes this "country" is that she's singing about being "kids out in the sticks," the sticks in the video being "the land of the Wiradjuri people," who she thanks in the credits, paying "our respects to elders past, present and emerging." It's unclear if anybody in the video (or Lumsden herself) personally qualifies as indigenous, and I'm not sure if that matters; in a year when 60 percent of Australians voted against giving Aboriginal people a constitutionally mandated advisory voice in Parliament, I suspect it might. But even that doesn't cut into the uplift I get from this music, set in a country where the west remains wild.

2. Devon Cole "Hey Cowboy": Canada also defines "country" wider, I've long suspected. Here Alberta pop-rock singer-songwriter Cole, 24 years old with a psych degree from Kingston, Ontario, compares her boots to those of a dude she meets in a cowboy bar, taking him home then riding away into the sunset after he serves his purpose -- which, judging from the lyrics and sound effects, involves at very least some light bondage and a cracking whip. First song I've ever heard mention Burt's Bees. And the video honors alternate lifestyles. YouTuber alexaderford5371: "as a bisexual man, this video had me gasping for air, please dont assault me like this again." Youtuber skydivertanner: "I had a performance idea for my fiance who does drag. When I came youtube to see if there was a video, it did not disappoint!!!! Now I feel he HAS to perform this song in drag." Your move, American country.

3 -4. Megan Moroney "I'm Not Pretty" and "Lucky": "I'm Not Pretty," where the Savannah, Georgia 26-year-old's ex-boyfriend's new girlfriend scrolls through the Savannah, Georgia 26-year-old's "Insta-graham," might be the closest any song on this list came to being a legit Billboard hit -- and at #38 Hot Country, #30 Country Airplay, it still wasn't all that close. Said girlfriend keeps reassuring herself that Moroney's not pretty, that (in a reference to a 2021 should've-been-hit by Priscilla Block) Moroney's one of those girls who peaked in high school (with an "emo cowgirl" sticker on her locker door judging from the video!), that she (again according to the video) can't sing and only writes about ex-boyfriends and uses too much makeup and could use a stylist. One way to deflect criticism, I guess -- especially criticism your major influence Taylor Swift had to deflect first -- is to head it off at the pass. So Moroney (whose name gets misspelled on purpose once in the video) blesses her rival's heart. It's somehow sad but resilient; I wish the video didn't necessitate blondes beating brunettes in a baking contest, but I'll let that slide. The singer accuses her nemesis of "overanalyzin' like the queen of the Mean Girls Committee"; in "Lucky," one of the year's sprightliest straight-up sawdust-dancefloor boot-scoots, she tells the ex who's about to get lucky with her (because she's drinking, probably spicy margaritas judging from the other video) to "come over and don't overthink it," though I may be overanalyzing/overthinking to connect the two. (My theory: Megan herself does both.) "Lucky," like Olivia Rodrigo's "Bad Idea, Right?," is about hooking back up with somebody who you broke up with. For some reason its opening melody reminds me of Dion's "The Wanderer," and its "tell me whatcha gonna do" Greek chorus of Alice Cooper's "Teenage Lament '74." Either way, Meg's "only ambition is to make a bad decision," clearly a proud and popular choice with young county women these days.

5. Shy Carter & Frank Ray "Jesus at the Taco Truck": This could easily have come off condescending and corny. Doesn't hurt that it's sung by two people of color -- one a 39-year-old whose dad is Black, who grew up in Memphis on Three 6 Mafia, and whose credits include records with Chingy, Meghan Trainor, Faith Hill and Gloria Trevi; the other a Freddie Fender-and-ranchera-inspired 36-year-old ex-cop from New Mexico whose birth name is Francisco Gomez and who's landed two previous songs on country radio. But what helps more is that it hits so many bases without pulling punches, from just 20 seconds in: "I asked him how it's been in Tennessee, he said some people here want to crucify me." "The only way he could get in was to walk across the Rio Grande, I saw all the scars on his feet and his hands." (Stigmata!) "I know I'm gettin' into Heaven, but it was hella hard gettin' into Texas." No doubt -- what with the governor defying feds by slicing up refugees with sunken razor wire across state-trooper-patrolled border waters, not to mention the criminal on the verge of returning to the presidency, in his best Hitler imitation, pledging to round up into gigantic concentration camps those dark-skinned people he calls vermin poisoning the blood of America. A mainstream county song so blatantly pro-immigrant in 2023 is a miracle in its own right, even if the melody didn't reel you in.

6. Caitlin Cannon "Amarillo and Little Rock": Pretty much a straight line due east, just under 600 miles in an eight and half hour drive. Cannon, who's been tearing up the Americana circuit she's too lively a singer and tunesmith for this decade both solo and with her duo Side Pony (one album each), breaks down (figuratively) and fails to abide by a traffic stop (literally -- well, her protagonist anyway) somewhere between. Though probably not in Oklahoma City, which is near the halfway point. Where she's pulled over, seems like, is the middle of nowhere. Whatever speed she's been going wasn't fast enough to catch up, just like every other Middle American balancing hay by the roll or bale with covert cash crops. The trooper trying to meet his ticket quota checks her driver's license and asks why she's so far from home (where she wasn't long enough to call it that) or if she's sober ("I really don't knowww, sir.") Heck, only reason she stayed in the South in the first place was the low property tax. Okay, and maybe the pills.

Mackenzie Carpenter craves venison burgers.
7. Mackenzie Carpenter "Huntin' Season": A marriage song! About occasional time away not being a bad thing! Because absence makes hearts grow flounders, I mean fonder! Basically, Carpenter (a Georgia 24-year-old whose late-year country retooling of "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" didn't quite cut it) looks forward to Hubbie going hunting so she "can shop online, drink all the wine, binge a whole season of The Real Housewives," not to mention "stay up all night talkin' bout our feelin's" and leave the toilet seat up. (Wait, I thought guys did that?) Excellent "deer" puns and drunken slurring of the title. And "doncha come back without a 12! Point! Buck!" makes for a super fun yellalong.

8. Breland "Cowboy Don't": New wave 1979 rockabilly, á la Moon Martin or Dave Edmunds -- except as a country dance song in 2023, sung by a Black man wearing nerdy glasses who says he enjoys doing stuff cowboys don't. For instance his boots are made not for walkin', but for knock-knock-knockin', and "the back road'll get you where you're goin' by the end of the night, but thе highway'll save a couple of minutes wе can spend on the side." Anti-rural country! The video also seems to identify dominoes, DJing, basketball, twerking, eating corn on the cob and soaking in wading pools as activities cowboys avoid. That other things cowboys won't are sexual is, at least, implied.

Cowboys probably don't wear plaid shorts, either.
9. Robyn Ottolini "Sad To Work": Monday morning and she's still mourning. Got dumped over the weekend though she "would've made a good wife," but can't use that as an excuse to stay home from the "shitty ass restaurant" (or bar, it looks like, in the video.) "Gotta be nice to people knowin' you're with her for eight straight houuuuurs, smilin' and noddin' and sayin' yessir." So if the fries are running a tad late be polite to your waitress, advises Ottolini, another twentysomething (28) from Canada (Uxbridge, Ontario), and one of the more promising post-Swifties of recent years. File this selection's service-industry drudgery alongside "9 to 5," "She Works Hard for the Money," "Mr. Sellack" by the Roches -- only from a more heart-achey angle.

10 - 12. Cecily Wilborn "Pickup Truck" and "Southern Man"; O.C. Soul "I'm Packing My Clothes": All Southern Soul is country, in a sense -- no other genre, for instance, devotes so much time to songs about trail-riding. (Well okay maybe zydeco, but trail rides are where the two styles meet.) But some Southern soul is more country than others. Cecily Wilborn of population-3000 Marianna, Arkansas makes my list primarily by virtue of subject matter: How can a song about a pickup truck, especially how men with pickup trucks exude an irresistible attractiveness to women, be anything but country? Even if it opens with spoken monologue in the style of '60s/'70s/'80s soul diva Barbara Mason, and Wilborn says she and her new pickup man dance to her favorite song "Let's Get It On." "Southern Man" (not the one by Neil Young) is along the same lines: His allure comes from how he's not afraid of hard work, loves his mama and attends church, treats his stepkids like they've been his from the start, leaves his workboots by the door and loves to dance, not to mention "by the way he wears his pants" and how "he gotta smooth walk, he kinda grrrrrowl when he talk." The sultry groove, eventually, seems to take in the Staple Singers' "Let's Do It Again." OC Soul is no grrrrrowler himself; he's way too relaxed for that, tender even when he's on the way out the door with his luggage packed because he "can't do it no more." But "I'm Packing My Clothes" sounds country to me the way, say, Bobby Bland's "Members Only" (later covered by boondock booster Billy Joe Royal with happiest girl in the whole U.S.A. Donna Fargo) or James Brown's "How Do You Stop" sound country. It would have fit right in on Dirty Laundry: The Soul of Black Country, which the German label Trikont compiled back in 2004. Its unashamedly amateurish eight-minute (including intro and outro) video, though, is just bizarre, especially since at the end you realize that the guy packing his hobo backpack with clothes and alcohol while his wife looks on and at one point blindfolds him (??) is not OC Soul at all.

Jiraya Uai & MC Toy both point at Jiraya Uai.
13. Jiraya Uai & MC Toy "Joga a Bunda": Rednex-style hoedown parts in a Brazilian favela/baile-funk carioca context, with "Hwa! hwa! hwa!" vocal percussion, laughs incorporated into the mix, and cowboy-hatted wolves in the video. That said, I'll turn this over to Frank Kogan, writing about Uai's "Hoje Tem Rodeio, Baile De Favela" with MC Tarapi, in his November blog post "The Ministry of Funny Beats": "Google Translate says 'Today there's a rodeo, a favela dance,' and perhaps the cowboy hats are meant to signal sertanejo, a rural-identified genre I have no sense of. The music on this seems pretty radical and experimental. What puts this in the funny category is its folkish-countryish tendency, the snaking gtr line and the two (!) harmonica parts (one sucking in and the other blowing out). And to call the guitar 'folk' or 'country' fails to communicate the psychological sense it has for me: it's the sort of line I'd have sold my kidney to write in 1979 when I was listening hard to Miles Davis's On The Corner and even more to 'Give It Up Or Turnit A Loose'–era James Brown and trying to twist those into something stranger and more destabilizing, aspiring to create a kind of no wave that wouldn't necessarily be abrasion so much as the feeling when you suddenly go into a roller-coaster drop."

14 - 15. Elvie Shane "Forgotten Man"; Elvie Shane feat. Jenna McLelland "Jonesin'": Nobody in country rocked harder than Elvie Shane this year, starting with his six-minute version of "Sympathy for the Devil" on the Rolling Stones tribute compilation Stoned Cold Country back in March. The standalone singles he's snuck onto streaming services since pick up where Eric Church left off a few years back, in terms of pumping up volume with a chip on the shoulder. "Forgotten Man" is convincing working-class resentment: Shane inherits the blue on his collar and red on his neck from his dad, who wore his workshirt's name patch like a badge of honor; he can't keep up with gasoline inflation or banks pissing away his I.R.A. or gentrification "sending rent through the roof." He hints he's in the rust belt, and when he says of his "little white house with a flag in the front" that "way that it is, is the way that it was," you're not sure whether he's stubbornly stuck in another century or just can't afford renovations. "Sent me off to school, tried to turn me to a scholar" (but he clearly resisted) might refer to the singer's actual stint at Western Kentucky University, from which he dropped out. Needless to say, in the Trump age, this kind of populist indignation carries more than a hint of threat, even more than during Church's or Montgomery Gentry's heyday. So it's worth noting that in the video, not everybody is white or male, and at least one teacher and one nurse balance out all the assembly liners and firefighters and farmers. Lots of farmers. John Mellencamp would approve. Which is to say, this song is not "Try That in a Small Town," nor even "Rich Men North of Richmond." It's smarter, not as bigoted. Also: fatter drum fills and bigger guitar bwaaaangs than you'd expect in this genre. "Jonesin," not as overtly inebriant-oriented as Jamey Johnson's 2006 "Keepin' Up With the Jonesin'" but still about how Shane can't get no satisfaction 'cause he's addicted to the edge and a hell too hot and heaven too high, propelled by AOR electropercussion and climaxing with swirling guitar effects, might be even louder.

16. Renee Blair "SPF Me": Give or take a grossout redneck comedian or two who nobody'd ever want to go to bed with anyway, this is as explicit as country music gets. A whole lot of epidermis gets massaged, in other words, even if it's to apply suntan oil, and I doubt the title's "F Me" ending is accidental. "Lather me up with that Australian Gold...might get a little bit messy": Good, since country too often avoids messes. My only complaint is the gratuitous wolf-whistle after Blair asks her paramour to untie the strings behind her (itsy bitsy teenie weenie yellow polka dot?) bikinki. Trivia note: Turns out Blair, a Dixie Chicks- and Nelly-inspired St. Louisian who co-wrote Hardy and Lainey Wilson's "Wait in the Truck" and whose debut album Hillbetty is due in 2024, shares her name with a character played by Rosemary DeWitt in the 2011 romcom A Little Bit of Heaven!

17. Luke Combs "Joe": Forgoing alcohol has been a go-to aging male country theme for decades now -- off the top of my head, I'm pretty sure Ronnie Milsap, T. Graham Brown, Gene Watson, Montgomery Gentry, Jamey Johnson and Tim McGraw have all produced plaints along those lines, and heck maybe you could trace them all back to the hangovers hurting more than they used to and corn bread and ice tea taking the place of pills and 90 proof in Hank Williams Jr.'s "All My Rowdy Friends Have Settled Down" way back in 1981. Or even further, maybe. I appreciate the struggle and sentiment, and as somebody who has hugely reduced his own consumption in recent years, I even relate to it to a certain extent. But it's also kinda predictable, and I have to admit that my long-standing grudge against cults like AA and even Smart Recovery leaves "What do you want, a medal?" in my arsenal of reactions. But not to this song, easily my favorite on a big album by a big guy who seems like a good guy to boot. (Released prior to Gettin' Old, "Joe" actually reached #22 on Billboard's streaming-dependent Hot Country Songs chart, but didn't touch the airplay tally.) Joe who did county time for a fuckup or two gets hired down at the Texaco, never shows up late or drunk, and his pals come by and ask how it's going and he tells them "sleepin' pretty good, stayin' dry." Mainly, Luke Combs' humility is so believable you just wanna hug the big lug.

Left to right: Bentley's bellybutton, Lainey's back.
18 -19. Hot Country Knights feat. Darla McFarland (aka Lainey Wilson) "Harassment"; Lauren Alaina feat. Lainey Wilson "Thicc As Thieves": Funny how Lainey Wilson showed up as a guest on two different country songs this year about voluptuous gluteal curves, both the supposedly satirical one and the (comparatively) serious one. Also they both reference "Baby Got Back," of course. (And maybe both contradict what I just said two minutes ago about country not getting explicit, but never mind.) Fronted by Dierks Bentley under the pseudonym Douglas "Doug" Douglason with an alleged Terotej "Terry" Dvoraczekynski on fiddle, Hot Country Knights are billed as a '90s country parody even though three years past their debut The K is Silent I still can't pinpoint what '90s country they're supposed to be poking fun at. "Baby's Got Her Blue Jeans On" by Mel McDaniel came out in 1984, if you're wondering. "Harassment" (as in "...everything to me") has all the jokes you'd expect about one-crack minds and anacondas and "Fat Bottom Girls" and pirates digging up booty on the beach, plus at least one fake blooper about anal sex and a #metoo joke at the end, but it makes me laugh anyway, in part because it works better musically than any of Bentley's non-spoofs the past few years, in turn in part because he sounds like he's having a blast. In the video he even bares his belly under a cutoff Florida T-shirt. "Thicc as Thieves" is just two ladies admiring each other's womanly brickhouse figures ("Busting out the tin like some Pillsbury biscuits, how we got in ‘em that’s some tae bo fitness," etc.), and ends referencing Luke Bryan's bro-country mainstay "Country Girl (Shake it for Me)." Let's just say I'm an admirer of this particular aesthetic.

20. Brennen Leigh "Running Out of Hope, Arkansas": Could easily have paired this with "Amarillo and Little Rock" (both about Arkansas and running out of hope) or even "Sad to Work" (both about crummy jobs -- Leigh rings up diesel, cigarettes or Mountain Dew at a service station.) But where Caitlin Cannon's always been on run, Leigh's "never been past Little Rock and I'm damn near 33," and where Robyn Ottolini's conception of country starts around Taylor Swift, Leigh sounds as traditional as anybody listed here. This is quite the front-porch lower Appalachian foot-stomper. The main drag's all boarded up, her friends are all married or in jail, and she's finally fleeing the holler, with her landline disconnected and mail forwarded nowhere.

21. Priscilla Block "Fake Names": Let's see here: Eve as played by Joanne Woodward in 1957 had three personalities or at least "faces"; Sybil in Flora Rhetta Schrieber's 1973 book had 16 that later turned out to be fake; SheDaisy in 1999's almost-top-10-country "Lucky 4 You (Tonight I'm Just Me)" had at least 32 (the one assigned that number "wants to do things to you that'll make you blush"). Priscilla Block, the 28-year-old from Raleigh who's had a couple minor country hits this decade (this sadly not being one of them) calls hers "alter ego"s and treats them like get-out-jail-free-cards. Alphabetical roll call: blacked-out Britney who pukes on your expensive boots ("rowdy ostrich" runs $645 on the Lucchese site and that's not even near the highest-priced); Elvira who goes home with the doorman; bat-shit crazy Hurricane Hayley from Alabama; Navy pilot Mary Jane; Rhoda who winds up in North Dakota; brain surgeon Tawanda. So....six. At least. All of whom appear to pop Pedialyte bottles for morning hangovers, and wish they could escape their small town (which may or may not be Harper Valley) where the PTA (which may or may not include book-ban bigots Moms For Liberty) should calm down. Let's hope the threesome scandal in Florida expedites that outcome.

Not Priscilla Block's real name.
22. Fanny Lumsden "When I Die": More twanging, clanging, ringing hard pop-rock -- guitars at points could pass for the new wave pub-powerpop of Bram Tchaikovsky or the Records (though I suppose it's more likely they're shooting for Tom Petty's early Heartbreakers), who in turn probably aimed for the Byrds. About how deaths should be toasted wake-style, not mourned: "We're gonna shoot my ashes into the sky...so plee-ee-ee-ee-ee-eeze don't cry, cause I lived a good life," clang clang. In the video -- filmed, this time, "on Ngarigo land," which is to say Australia's southeastern corner, right across the Bass Strait from Tasmania -- Lumsden's surrounded by old guys happy just to be there; judging from YouTube comments, one is her dad.

23. Sunny Sweeney & Jamie Lin Wilson "Red Dirt Girl": I probably don't listen to Emmylou Harris as much as I should, so excuse me for being oblivious to this song until this version even though Harris recorded it way back in 2000. Also excuse me for being confused because "red dirt music" is what cigar aficionados call the dusty, dusky, windswept, parched and underproduced regional Americana honky-tonk style of Texas and Oklahoma, and this song is about a girl and her best friend Lillian from a town called Meridian, which the lyrics suggest is in Alabama but Wikipedia tells me is "the eighth most populous city in the U.S. state of Mississippi". Maybe Emmylou meant Meridianville, instead? Heartbreaker of a tale either way, at least as Texans Sweeney and Wilson tell it -- especially when Lillian's brother doesn't come back from Viet Nam and she herself perishes at 27 with five kids, from the whiskey or the pills or "the dream she was trying to kill." Or just as likely, from all three.

24. Abby Anderson "Heart on Fire in Mexico": Most somber song on this list, partly because maybe the only one in a minor key. Starts with a "dark-haired Juarez beauty" tending bar, then knocked up from a one-night stand with a soldier she never sees again. She winds up abandoning her kid, who grows up angry in foster homes. Or as YouTube viewer Evija3000 put it, "The story goes through generations and initially you might think the heart on fire belonged to the girl who got pregnant, but in the end it actually fits the daughter much more because the mom ended up just running away, but their daughter had to live with the consequences. Because of one reckless night a little girl had to grow up in the system and become stronger and smarter than both of her parents." Anderson, who wrote it, has Instagrammed that the daughter is her own mom. In the tradition of the Supremes' "Love Child," the Roches' "Runs in the Family," Elvis's "In The Ghetto."

25. Brad Paisley feat. Volodymyr Zelenskyy "Same Here": Hard not to have a soft spot for how Paisley still does his quixotic damnedest to keep the liberal dream alive in Nashville country music. First verse: Californians? They go to the corner bar and brainstorm the state of the world, just like us! Second verse: Mexicans? They tear up at weddings, just like us! Third verse: Ukranians? They love their families and flag and losing football team, just like us, even though it's a different kind of football! Then he talks to President Zelenskyy on the phone -- back in February, when most Republicans could still be reasonably assumed to want to help Ukraine out! Now though? Fat chance! At least not ones in Congress holding financial support hostage to extreme immigration restrictions. And to be honest, recent news reports of Ukraine yanking otherwise exempt men off the street and forcing them to enlist probably aren't helping. Or the hypocrisy of funding bombs for the oppressors in one war and the oppressed in another. But hell, just two years ago, Toby Keith of all people took it for granted in "The Worst Country Song of All Time" that country fans would naturally despise Vladimir Putin. Those were the days.

26. Sara Petite "Bringin' Down the Neighborhood": From San Diego and on her seventh small-label studio album, she'd place higher with this celebration of wasted friends in low places if it didn't lose so much momentum with the spoken sermon section aimed no doubt deservedly at dissemblers three-quarters of the way through, and to a lesser extent with her awkward "whoooo!" exclamations whenever she mention police sirens. Still, it's a barrel-of-monkeys corker over a barrelhouse groove, and the part about how "we got a lot of magic mushrooms, pills and pot" (and Mama's "hopin' our asses don't get caught") really does flash me back to Singin' Bear's psilocybin in "Hoodoo Bash" on Michael Hurley and the Unholy Modal Rounders' 1976 Have Moicy!, as unruly as disreputable backwoods parties get.

The stars of David at night are big and bright.
27 - 31. Lola Kirke "He Says Y'all"; MaRynn Taylor "Shakin in My Boots"; Catie Offerman feat. Hayes Carrl "Ask Me To Dance"; Shania Twain "Giddy Up!" ; Sophia Scott "No You Didn't": Dance songs! Or rather (after "Hey Cowboy" and "Lucky" and "Huntin' Season" and "Cowboy Don't" and "Thicc as Thieves" etc.) more dance songs! Though the only one that precisely spells out instructions in its video is the one where the London-born, New York-raised actress daughter of longtime Free/Bad Company drummer Simon Kirke falls for a fella with a hillbilly drawl because she likes her boots clean and boys dirty, and dances with stars of David on the seat of her pants and her friend Tim twinky in pink by her side. ("Step forward right, double clap, step back left, single clap, grapevine to the right..." -- which apparently means crossing one leg behind -- "...6, 7, 8, big step left, drag your right toe," and so on.) MaRynn Taylor, for her part, spends her video getting gussied up, trying on lots of different outfits while hoping her date is "pickin' up what my mind is two-steppin' on." Offerman's "gettin' bored and the night's gettin old" and hopes she didn't get dressed up for nothing, but somehow dueting with fellow Texan Hayes doesn't make her boot-scoot too Americana for a YouTube commenter to rave that "it feels like '90s country." Shania, of course, is '90s country, so she rents "a car with the '90s on" while heading out west to Arizona from small-town Oh-Hi-Oh atop a modified Bo Diddley beat, which a multi-racial contingent in sundry laundromats, convenience stores and diners, including one woman in a wheelchair, slide left and right to in the video. Sophia Scott's in denial after making bad decisions (see I told you they were popular) the night before; her number's off an album called Barstool Confessions but she's apparently not quite ready to offer any just yet.

32. Alana Springsteen "Twentysomething" : 23 to be exact, and says people her age don't eat or sleep enough, leave clothes in the dryer but need air in their tires, and are lucky if they've got half a tank and fifty bucks in the bank. So, clearly another post-Swifty. Wonder if anybody's pointed out to her that her lastnamesake Bruce Springsteen, who she's not related to though she recently covered "I'm on Fire," also rhymed growing up with throwing up (or some conjugation of those verbs) at her age. Near as I can tell, Adny Shernoff wasn't quite 20 when he rhymed them in the Dictators' "Master Race Rock." ("It's the dues you've got to pay for eating burgers every day," he explained.) Still, what great company!

33- 35. Jordyn Shellheart "Tell Your Mother I'm Fine"; Brettyn Rose "Boys Night"; Taylor Edwards "Petty" : Three more twentysomething women deal with breakups, and what gets said in the aftermath. Jorydyn Shellheart, who has written songs recorded by stars like Little Big Town and Cody Johnson, receives sweet texts checking up on her from her ex's mom, who may not know the whole truth about her no-good son; it extends the lineage of Dr. Hook's "Sylvia's Mother" and OutKast's "Ms. Jackson," but the cracks in Shellheart's voice are what put it over. Brettyn Rose worries not so much about what her ex told his friends, but how the rumors about what happened late one night spread from that point, in a cadence recalling a young Suzanne Vega; "don't know why they gotta be so petty," she frets. But Taylor Edwards opts to turn the tables and be the petty one instead; "it's kinda working for me," she grins, as she heads home with her ex's buddy. Of the three, she's the only one who sounds particularly happy about her situation.

36. The Nude Party "Ride On": What used to be called cowpunk, with some Stones r&b in its shamble. Old vaquero Alfredo riding bulls in the Mexican rodeo, grocery store greeter Juanita nearing 95 working 9 to 5, this North Carolina sextet playing rock'n'roll for a dollar to pay a two-dollar toll all won't quit, though they might be better off if they did. A couple minutes in, the singer turns into Lou Reed. Got to #20 on Billboard's Adult Alternative chart ("sometimes they play us on the radio," the lyrics humblebrag), and it's not even the best song on the album. Which might not even be their best album. I'm way outside the Americana loop, but how are these guys not bigger there?

37. Zac Brown Band feat. Jamey Johnson and Marcus King "Stubborn Pride": Southern rock with soul backup, seven minutes long. Opens teasing you into thinking you're about to hear "Knockin' On Heaven's Door." Video naturally rendered in sepia. Jamey Johnson gutbusting that he was always 12 steps behind. Gypsy hearts tamed by womenfolk. Marcus King's blues guitar solo telling the real story.

38 - 39. Kassi Ashton "Drive You Out Of My Mind"; Karley Scott Collins "Heavy Metal": “In country music, the space in which women are allowed to feel sexy about themselves, for themselves, is very small,” central Missouri's Ashton confided in statement later in 2023, when she covered "Genie in a Bottle" by Christina Aguilera. “I hope this widens it.” How often do you hear a country singer admit how narrow country is? But to my ears, Ashton's been testing those limits with the rough huskiness of her singing alone for a couple years now, at least since "Heavyweight" in 2021. Nobody in the genre right now has more full-bodied pipes. So it's interesting that Karley Scott Collins, a moonlighting Florida actress, might be giving Ashton a run for her money in a single similarly called "Heavy Metal" -- not about that music although her dad brought her up on Guns N' Roses and Alice In Chains, but about a wedding ring weighing a woman down.

40. Sabrina Estevez "Vintage": A slow drag -- the "vintage" San Antonio's Estevez croons about dancing to in the kitchen is "old country songs, George Strait to Jones," but the sound here is older. Maybe not as old as the mariachi her grandpa used to play, but still lost in the '50s tonight, as Ronnie Milsap put it in a 1985 Five Satins update. Almost four decades later --- farther from Milsap than his nostalgia was from "In the Still of the Night" -- the stillness can still give you shivers. Given that San Antonio was once known for Mexican American female doo-wop groups (Roulettes, Uniques, Dreamliners), there's every reason to believe Estevez is carrying on a local legacy.


thanxx again to xxuxx for 'llowing repost, and be sure to check the original for tons of links and some good pix of picks etc.:
https://accidentalevolution.wordpress.com/2023/12/26/40-best-country-singles-of-2023/

dow, Tuesday, 2 January 2024 03:08 (eight months ago) link

Have never been a fan of the Zac Brown Band country-rock , southern rock bar band sound

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 2 January 2024 05:32 (eight months ago) link

More from the embers of RC '23---thanks, Indexed!

Long-running country blog That Nashville Sound's top albums and songs of 2023
https://thatnashvillesound.blogspot.com/2023/12/that-nashville-sounds-top-country-and_31.html
https://thatnashvillesound.blogspot.com/2023/12/that-nashville-sounds-top-country-and.html

dow, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 03:57 (eight months ago) link

I like Gabe Lee's voice a lot but that album left me totally cold. Felt like paint by numbers John Mellencamp pastiche to me.

Indexed, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 20:15 (eight months ago) link

Utterly gutting single from the Nashville Sound list

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ruVowvb-YJQ

"I’ve got bruises on my skin and a bite mark on my thigh
From a prince who turned to pauper when the wicked clock struck midnight
I wanted him to like me so that I could like myself
What does it say about me if I let him cross my boundaries"

Indexed, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 22:05 (eight months ago) link

Hadn't heard of Julie Williams, thanks.

SCM's exhausting rundown
They/I don't call it Slaving Country Music for nothing.
Also: I gave up last fall when Trigger and his lariat commentariat verbally stormed the CMT Video Awards, once again going for their favorite poster demon bitch, Maren Morris, and of course all those drag queens and other groomers, plus Trigger on false country music, then revving up perhaps to appoint subcommittees on instruments, chords, etc.

dow, Thursday, 4 January 2024 00:32 (eight months ago) link

We don't post our year-end roundup until the first week of January; unranked list of 60 best country singles of 2023 is here. Playlist is at the end of the post for those disinclined to read the various essays.

Top 30 country albums of 2023 kicks off here. Again, with a playlist at the bottom of the post.

jon_oh, Saturday, 13 January 2024 13:53 (eight months ago) link

Had no idea Jaime Wyatt released a new album this year -- thanks!

Indexed, Sunday, 14 January 2024 17:02 (eight months ago) link

The traditionalist factions took issue with the change in style on the Wyatt album, but I dug it.

Full list of t30 albums, with a playlist, is live now. Wrote a long essay on Jason Hawk Harris' album.

jon_oh, Sunday, 14 January 2024 20:23 (eight months ago) link

Thanks! Lots I haven't heard.
Commentary, incl. much by Carlene, on June Carter Cash, re new doc:
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/17/june-carter-johnny-cash-documentary-movie
review:
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/17/june-review-country-music-legend-who-was-much-more-than-johnny-cashs-wife

dow, Wednesday, 17 January 2024 18:34 (eight months ago) link

Finished listening to everything from 2023 that I wanted to. Here's my rundown...

Albums
AOTY: Margo Cilker - Valley of Heart's Delight (fav track: "I Remember Carolina")

Also Great:
Jess Williamson - Time Ain't Accidental (fav track: see below)
Nick Shoulders - All Bad (fav track: "It's the Best?")
Kelsea Ballerini - Rolling Up the Welcome Mat (fav track: "Mountain with a View")
Pony Bradshaw - North Georgia Rounder (fav track: "Foxfire Wine")
Brennen Leigh - Ain't Through Honky Tonkin Yet (fav track: "Running Out of Hope, Arkansas")
Various Artists - I Am A Pilgrim: Doc Watson at 100 (fav track: Nora Brown - "Am I Born to Die")
Charles Wesley Godwin - Family Ties (fav track: "Family Ties")
Bella White - Among Other Things (fav track: "Rhododendron")
Ashley McBryde - The Devil I Know (fav track: "Coldest Beer in Town")
Zach Bryan - Zach Bryan (fav track: "I Remember Everything" feat. Kacey Musgraves)

Solid/Honorable Mention:
Lori McKenna - 1988 (fav track: "Happy Children")
Florry - The Holey Bible (fav track: "Drunk and High")
H.C. McEntire - Every Acre (fav track: "Shadows" feat. SG Goodman)
Megan Maroney - Lucky (fav track: "I'm Not Pretty")
Tyler Childers - Rustin in the Rain (fav track: "Rustin in the Rain")
Turnpike Troubadours - A Cat in the Rain (fav track: "Brought Me")
Drayton Farley - Twenty on High (fav track: "Stop the Clock")
Whitney Rose - Rosie (fav track: "Can't Remember Happiness")
Amanda Fields - What, When and Without (fav track": "2 Steppin'")

Tracks
SOTY: Jess Williamson - "Hunter"

Also Great:
Julie Williams - "The Prince"
Allison Russell - "The Returner"
Aly & AJ - "Blue Dress"
Jordyn Shellhart - "Who Are You Mad At?"
Emily Ann Roberts - "Whole Lotta Little"
Luke Combs - "Fast Car"
Fanny Lumsden - "Millionaire"
Rachel Baiman - "Annie" feat. Erin Rae
Iris DeMent - "Workin on a World"

Solid/Honorable Mention:
Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit - "Strawberry Woman"
Cody Johnson - "The Painter"
Chris Stapleton - "White Horse"
Molly Tuttle - "El Dorado"
Stephen Wilson Jr. - "American Gothic" feat. Hailey Whitters
Laura Cantrell - "Bide My Time"
Lainey Wilson - "Wildflowers and Wild Horses"
Joy Oladokun - "Sweet Symphony" feat. Chris Stapleton
Gabe Lee - "Drink the River"
Esther Rose - "Chet Baker"
Cory Hanson - "Housefly"
Colter Wall - "Evangelina"
Colby Acuff - "White Western Pines"
Brit Taylor - "No Cowboys"
Jason Eady - "Way Down in Mississippi"
Dean Johnson - "Faraway Skies"
Maren Morris - "Get the Hell Out of Here"
Alex Hall - "Women and Horses" feat. Brandy Clark
Josie Toney - "City Girl Blues"
The Malpass Brothers - "I've Got Her on My Mind Again"
Katie Pruitt - "Blood Related"
Morgan Wallen - "Last Night"

Indexed, Wednesday, 17 January 2024 23:21 (eight months ago) link

sweet list! thanks for sharing.

sean gramophone, Thursday, 18 January 2024 02:11 (eight months ago) link

Love that Margo Cilker album a lot.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Thursday, 18 January 2024 02:12 (eight months ago) link

Indexed - not trying to poke holes or anything, but none of the tracks on your album of the year were among your 30ish favorite songs of the year? Just curious if that's really the case or you just kept her off the tracks list or something.

alpine static, Thursday, 18 January 2024 06:32 (eight months ago) link

Here (as in my other ILM voting) I try to keep them as wholly separate lists. Anything on my albums list has many tracks that I love; I use the Tracks list to highlight artists whose albums didn't quite hold up for me or who released a great single/EP. There are occasional exceptions where one of my absolute favorite tracks (e.g., "Hunter") has to be mentioned, but I rarely will have more than a couple repeats on my ballots.

Also, missed this track -- should be in my "Also Great" list:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMXI2QzeBHg

Indexed, Thursday, 18 January 2024 15:46 (eight months ago) link

Also going to take this opportunity to share this one from my extended Tracks list bc I think it'd be a hit here. Rippin guitar record.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nuz1vufyMYA

Indexed, Thursday, 18 January 2024 15:50 (eight months ago) link

Got it. Thought that might be the case.

At the same time, I could see someone holding the opinion that Cilker's album is terrific because it's full of great songs that are all similarly great - but none that stop you in your tracks or whatever.

But your answer makes more sense. :)

alpine static, Thursday, 18 January 2024 15:51 (eight months ago) link

https://wapo.st/47OD392

Brittney Spencer

curmudgeon, Friday, 26 January 2024 16:21 (eight months ago) link

Ned R mentioned her on Bluesky.

Freelancer Emily Yahr for Washington Post says - Brittney Spencer makes ‘universal’ country music. Nashville’s listening.
In a genre that has historically sidelined Black singers, she broke through with a viral video and a debut album that blends country sensibilities with rock and R&B.

curmudgeon, Friday, 26 January 2024 16:23 (eight months ago) link

Jon Pareles in NY Times re Sarah Jorosz, Americana singer trying a Nashville pro approach sorta this time--

In modern Nashville, songwriting is often a matter of professionalized co-writing: planned, mix-and-match collaborations by appointment, musicians sharing a room to come up with sturdy material.

It’s a method that Sarah Jarosz had largely shied away from until she made her seventh studio album, “Polaroid Lovers.” The LP, arriving Friday, includes songs she wrote with behind-the-scenes Nashville stalwarts including Jon Randall, Natalie Hemby and the album’s producer, Daniel Tashian, who worked on the country-psychedelia fusion of Kacey Musgraves’s “Golden Hour.”

On “Polaroid Lovers,” Jarosz reaches toward a broader audience while still maintaining her individuality. The songs are more plugged in, muscular and reverberant than her past albums, which were intimate and largely acoustic. But her particular perspective — at once clearheaded, thoughtful, vulnerable and open to desire — comes through.

curmudgeon, Sunday, 28 January 2024 16:54 (eight months ago) link

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/24/arts/music/sarah-jarosz-polaroid-lovers.html

Pareles in NY Times re Jarosz link

curmudgeon, Sunday, 28 January 2024 16:55 (eight months ago) link

Thanks for the heads up, this is a really enjoyable record, plus I see that she is playing here in a couple of weeks.

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 28 January 2024 19:29 (eight months ago) link

The Jarosz album isn't my favorite of the year so far-- that's the new Lizzie No, with Willi Carlisle and Randall King not far behind-- but it's awfully good. Other early favorites are the Brittney Spencer, Hannah Kaminer, Colby T Helms, and Chatham County Line.

jon_oh, Monday, 29 January 2024 15:29 (seven months ago) link

I liked the Colby T. Helms but holy moly that's the most "sounds like" another artist I've heard in some time. He's going to have to push past his lifetime of listening to Childers somehow.

alpine static, Monday, 29 January 2024 16:30 (seven months ago) link

Just saw hype for the return of Brooks and Dunn, with their 1st album in 12 years - Reboot

curmudgeon, Thursday, 1 February 2024 16:58 (seven months ago) link

Their album titled Reboot came out in 2019? Or is there a "career reboot" album on the way?

jon_oh, Thursday, 1 February 2024 17:32 (seven months ago) link

reboot rescootin boogie

omar little, Thursday, 1 February 2024 17:39 (seven months ago) link

yep

NEW ALBUM ‘REBOOT’ AVAILABLE NOW
Brooks & Dunn’s collaboration project REBOOT is available now! Click below to buy or stream at your favorite retailer.

LISTEN NOW
https://smarturl.it/brooksdunnreboot

REBOOT – Track List:
1. Brand New Man (with Luke Combs)

2. Ain’t Nothing ‘Bout You (with Brett Young)

3. My Next Broken Heart (with Jon Pardi)

4. Neon Moon (with Kacey Musgraves)*

5. Lost and Found (with Tyler Booth)

6. Hard Workin’ Man (with Brothers Osborne)

7. You’re Gonna Miss Me When I’m Gone (with Ashley McBryde)

8. My Maria (with Thomas Rhett)

9. Red Dirt Road (with Cody Johnson)

10. Boot Scootin’ Boogie (with Midland)

11. Mama Don’t Get Dressed Up For Nothing (with LANCO)

12. Believe (with Kane Brown)

Produced by Dann Huff
*Produced by Dann Huff and Kacey Musgraves
https://www.brooks-dunn.com/brooks-dunn-buckle-up-for-the-reboot-tour-2024/

dow, Friday, 2 February 2024 02:28 (seven months ago) link

... Yeah, that's the one that's been out since 2019. Super uneven in terms of the collaborators' pulling their weight.

jon_oh, Friday, 2 February 2024 03:35 (seven months ago) link

From ny Scene ballot comments:

Brooks & Dunn's Reboot is 12 of their hits rerecorded with popular young 'uns, mostly one at a time, except for LANCO (sic, sorry), a man band. Wiki sez their greatest hit was featured on ABC's The Bachelor, and I believe it: this version of "Mama Don't Get Dressed Up For Nothin'" sounds like Hall & Oates wannabees (incl. B&D) making thrift store yacht country with Casio cowbells, but not as well-done as that could be. (Midland's a band too, right? Adding nothing much to "Boot Scoot Boogie," but once again, and as usual on this set, neither do B&D). Programmed beats do signify on "Neon Moon," which is now mostly Kacey Musgraves keenly keening for certainties or at least passing solace---her most and only compelling performance ever, far as I've heard. B&D seem to be living the dying of "You're Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone" all over again, or still, and Ashley MacBryde keeps the ballad momentum building, ditto Kane Brown on "Believe." Damn that could have been so blustery, but it's not. Reminds me of my favorite line in "Red Dirt Road, " where they learned that "happiness on Earth was not just for high achievers." Such a relief! Cody Johnson does no harm to that one. Oh, and good, if slightly too long, re-reboot of BW Stevenson's 70s hit, "My Maria," with Thomas Rhett.

dow, Friday, 2 February 2024 18:28 (seven months ago) link

saw kacey cover "neon moon" live when she was touring right before golden hour & it was really wonderful, the version that ended up on this album is disappointing overall but especially in comparison

slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Friday, 2 February 2024 18:38 (seven months ago) link

Looks like I thought it was her at her best, but my take on KM has gotten to be more the reverse of most listeners', maybe applying to this track as well.
From Scene ballot comments re 2012:

Kix Brooks' New To This Town brings that well-known early 00s bluesy boogie, Southern Rock as mainstream country thang, plus weekends in Memphis, even "let's put some Otis Redding on" w Cropperesque licks on or leading into the steel guitar. "There's The Sun" is a pool party w the Hi Rhythm Gang (in effect).(Saturday soul sunshine in Kelly Clarkson and Vince Gill's hand-in-hand single, "Don't Rush"; if only their singing was as strong as the groove.) Brooks' title track is like why has no one ever done this before, although it might be risky on a mainstream country album, what will the Chamber of Commerce think of somebody who wishes he was new to this town, cos he's sick of this town, cos he knows it too well, and vice versa. of course because it is mainstream, has to be tied in with a relationship, every street is where they used to walk happy together, and she's still around etc., but that's a good subject too ( could incl they still have the same friends, but that could lead to a sequel). Mostly songs about cutting loose, the other obligatory homefires songs usually fit in better than expected, and the closer, "She Knew I Was A Cowboy", is more affecting than 90 percent of all songs containing the word "cowboy", Ah believe. (no songs about kids, he doesn't push his luck that far). Lots of good video soundtracks here, re what I still think of as the early 00s-type marketing.

dow, Friday, 2 February 2024 19:00 (seven months ago) link

Musgrave's "Neon Moon" >>>> B&D's

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 2 February 2024 19:01 (seven months ago) link

and I'm not a KM fan

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 2 February 2024 19:02 (seven months ago) link

it's a lovely song, km version rules (although I've long overplayed it)

corrs unplugged, Saturday, 3 February 2024 22:24 (seven months ago) link

Late honky tonker James Hand got auto-compared to Hank Williams, and the few uptempo tracks on Charley Crockett's trib Ten For Slim can seem Hank Yoakam, in a good way of course, but Crockett def gets Hand's catchy ballads, bringing out a somewhut early-Willie, thus Floyd Tillmanesque, not to mention Gary Stewart, winsome doom (sucks for him, relatable fun for us)---can especially imagine Stewart doing this, although it's unmistakably crunchy Crockett: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=svlmMjMzheY

dow, Sunday, 4 February 2024 00:46 (seven months ago) link

Hand's own Master of Depression was the re-titled (for a signature sadcore cutie, done right by Charley), and otherwise slightly tweaked 2022 10th Anniversary Edition of Mighty Lonesome Man(originally and duh-named for one of the few clunkers [as written and unredeemed] on Crocket's alb).
From Scene ballot comments again, here's what I said about the first edition:

James Hand's Mighty Lonesome Man tracks the fine print white line of life's little ups and downs with mighty fine timing--unafraid to venture beyond deft wordplay into details that could easily keep him orbiting in mental and emotional rituals eternally--but 12 items, 34 minutes, as Windows Media Player sums up, hand him off, pass him along in the alone-together jukebox of honky tonk pop (where he can be a-t with Billy Joe Shaver, for instance). Good in the background or foreground; I'm tempted to say he'll be there when you get there--he's a stand-up guy--but whatcha say James? "Let's do it now, before they use a plow, 'cause then I won't be no earthly good to you."

And yes, he'll be there on record; there was also at least prob most, previous release (on Rounder), which I still haven't heard.

dow, Sunday, 4 February 2024 01:09 (seven months ago) link

10 for Slim was 2021; 2022 'sJukebox Charley is mostly good-to-amazing, and starts well, with "Make Way For A Better Man." Track Two brings the cuckold's commiseration:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mtlHw-Z7mFQ

dow, Sunday, 4 February 2024 01:30 (seven months ago) link

Current fave on Jukebox Charley: "I Hope It Rains At My Funeral"----people don't cover Tom T. Hall much these days, do they?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mtlHw-Z7mFQ

dow, Sunday, 4 February 2024 01:34 (seven months ago) link

Sorry! Here tis:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vEPkG4A1Z3k

dow, Sunday, 4 February 2024 01:36 (seven months ago) link

The new Sierra Ferrell single still doesn't capture how good she is live
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3FQpE99zCo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2W8kCk1qnU

papal hotwife (milo z), Tuesday, 6 February 2024 10:15 (seven months ago) link

enjoyed that dollar bill bar a fair bit

corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 6 February 2024 11:00 (seven months ago) link

Lainey Wilson won best country album Grammy for her Bell bottom Country one. It was her first Grammy

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 6 February 2024 17:34 (seven months ago) link

.@KaceyMusgraves becomes the first artist in HISTORY to win all four country categories at the #GRAMMYs. pic.twitter.com/c007bKMsfY

— Kacey Musgraves Access (@KaceyAccess) February 6, 2024

Indexed, Tuesday, 6 February 2024 20:33 (seven months ago) link

Of course she's also got an AOTY award.

Indexed, Tuesday, 6 February 2024 20:34 (seven months ago) link

One more thing about xetcpost Charley Crockett: on a previous RC, I found myself disappointed by The Man From Waco, which I took as an art project deconstruction/rehash of The Red-Headed Stranger, which I had never actually listened to. You could indeed call Crockett's album a deconstruction--of a revenge killer, or the mindset and possible behavior patterns of someone so inclined---who is also smilin' onstage, an embodiment of "Cowboy Candy" ("I hope I got enough")---always fearful, always travelling, running from and toward, but mainly around and around, to a woodblock beat, in his cage of ritual, connecting and mostly low-key-sliding dots on the map (for instance, he's also "The Man From Atlanta," chasing his gal, or anyway reciting where she was born and grew up and ran off to, as he follows (his tail)---though a sense of context accrues, despite the possibly nonlinear sequence, the variation of production touches from track to track, as well as the settings, the recurrence.
One nice afternoon, for instance, he seems to see her around them ol cottonwood trees, driving that "ol' blue truck---it wadn't much, but she loved it, kinda like she did me": aw shucks---but on this album, the keyword seems to be "drove." She drove the blue truck that wadn't much, and also the narrator who always feels his inadequacies/low ratings---later, long after dark she slides through a brief nightmare in a "Black Sedan."
It's the process of breakage, fear and rage and blood being spilled---he doesn't enjoy it---but he'd rather run and feel all the shit he's been feeling than turn himself in to the shady spooky normcore people--at one point he processes himself into "Tom Turkey," the Dylan song, with some lyrics added by Crockett, but still "Billy you're so far away from home," with his friend Pat Garrett leading the eternal replay posse.
There is no other mention on here of anybody being on anybody's trail. There is a sweet-sounding mention of "July Jackson," "a woman with a couple of kids," and a more successful revenge killer, whose cool incl. statement of self-satisfaction, when questioned before the whole town (no mention of court; is this a lynching?). Not only her husband, the girl he was with turns up dead, this time under merely suspicious circumstances----"but that's not how the paper read." Why wouldn't they try to pin it on her? Is it some kind of cover-up? Did the narrator spot something suspicious anyway? What does he know about it and how? Is this whole songful situation another reverie only? He's gone to "Trinity River" to wash his filth in the dirty water of dreams, he's been pretty up front about that---also to "Horse Thief Mesa," seeking a "Grand Finale." Ha.

Does the ever-frontin' candy cowboy habitually dream all this other, or is it his past, his future, or does the killer dream of being up in lights (and still feeling inadequate/played), or does someone else dream of both?
Crockett kind of undersells, justs suggests all of this, in the course of all these details, and many more, always musical, sliding by: a tad simple-subtle for me, but now I got it and he's got me.

dow, Tuesday, 13 February 2024 19:03 (seven months ago) link

Paramore singer Hayley Williams decried a Tennessee House of Representatives dustup this week where a Republican lawmaker blocked a resolution honoring the Grammy win of Black musician Allison Russell while allowing a similar resolution honoring Paramore to go forward.
...Artists like Russell and Americana Music Association award-winner Margo Price were active participants in protests against the House's April 6, 2023 expulsion of Jones and Rep. Justin Pearson, D-Memphis. The pair were expelled for breaking House decorum rules to lead a brief gun reform protest from the chamber floor after the mass shooting at The Covenant School. An effort to expel Rep. Gloria Johnson, D-Knoxville, failed by one vote.

https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/politics/2024/02/16/paramore-hayley-williams-decries-tn-republican-leadership-after-allison-russell-resolution-dustup/72614456007/

dow, Sunday, 18 February 2024 03:01 (seven months ago) link

I've been a bit perplexed by my kid's love of Zach Bryan. From my perspective I couldn't figure out why she (and I guess many of her peers) was jibing with this guy's relatively raw downbeat tales of hardship, but then she revealed she thinks of him as someone like Noah Kahan, who I hear as more run of the mill slickly produced singer-songwriter. I was a bit surprised she couldn't or didn't hear a difference. She considers both of them just broadly "folk," but I hear someone like Kahan as more akin to (fellow Bryan collaborator) the Lumineers, just kind of milquetoast and at least seemingly outwardly kinda safe and inauthentic. Anyway, found it interesting.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 19 February 2024 17:16 (seven months ago) link

New Adeem album is out and is good. This song about parenting got me all teary on first go-round. Second go-round too.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0YAbaIqa7U

Also got some rockers on it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ga2IO5zq8dg

Dawn Landes has a new album out called "The Liberated Woman's Songbook":

The album reimagines music from the women’s liberation movement, with songs featured in The Liberated Woman’s Songbook, originally published in 1971. Landes, along with producer Josh Kaufman (Bonny Light Horseman, Bob Weir, Cassandra Jenkins) highlights 11 musical stories from the canon of women’s activism, from 1830 to 1970. These messages are just as timely today as they were then.

https://dawnlandesofficial.bandcamp.com/album/the-liberated-womans-songbook

I've not kept up with Landes but love her voice and have seen her perform with Hem. Found out about this from Natalie Weiner & Marissa Moss's newsletter:

I have been meaning to spotlight this for weeks — what a wonderful conceit for an album, and so well-executed! I have been thinking a lot about how country/folk artists can tap into the genre's long, well-established radical, progressive songwriting tradition — how thinking about how evergreen those sentiments and ideas are can make them feel even more potent. Landes really delivers here, from both a conceptual and research angle (there are a few familiar chestnuts here, like "Which Side Are You On?", but many are new to me) and a musical one. — NW [Agreed, I love this record - MM]

Indexed, Friday, 10 May 2024 14:35 (four months ago) link

three weeks pass...

Oho,thanks.

The Border is legendary country artist Willie Nelson’s 75th solo studio record of new material. Produced by Willie’s longtime collaborator, Buddy Cannon, The Border features four newly penned tracks by the pair combined with a half dozen tunes from some of their favorite songwriters including two cowritten by Rodney Crowell plus Shawn Camp, Mike Reid and Bobby Tomberlin. Backed by some of Nashville’s finest musicians, the album is another instant classic to follow up their last album of new material, A Beautiful Time which won Best Country Album at the 2023 Grammys.

Track Listing:

Side A:
1. The Border
2. Once Upon A Yesterday
3. What If I’m Out Of My Mind
4. I Wrote This Song For You
5. Kiss Me When You’re Through

Side B:
1. Many A Long And Lonesome Highway
2. Hank’s Guitar
3. Made In Texas
4. Nobody Knows Me Like You
5. How Much Does It Cost

dow, Thursday, 6 June 2024 00:53 (three months ago) link

Kiss Me When You’re Through is kinda wild

corrs unplugged, Friday, 7 June 2024 06:19 (three months ago) link

New West is honored to join with family and friends of Justin Townes Earle to share ALL IN: Unreleased & Rarities (The New West Years) will be released on August 9, 2024..
...ALL IN is a fitting tribute to Justin’s considerable impact and artistic legacy. The 2xLP/19-track set features 12 previously unreleased recordings and 6 never-before-heard songs written and recorded during Justin’s final years. A unique talent steeped in the storytelling of honkytonk country and rural blues, he possessed the rare ability to build upon the music that came before him while creating something distinctive and forward thinking.

ALL IN will be available available across digital platforms, compact disc, and standard black vinyl. A deluxe, limited & numbered edition on Gold Nugget colored vinyl will be packaged in a rigid slipcase alongside a 52-page hardbound book, featuring unpublished images by the acclaimed photographer Joshua Black Wilkins.


(can pre-order)

His cover of F. Mac's "Dreams" is first single, would rather hear an original, but
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqvO0KHf6ZY

dow, Wednesday, 12 June 2024 00:06 (three months ago) link

Jeremy Tepper, a musician, journalist, executive, program director of SiriusXM’s “Outlaw Country” channel and for decades a leading light of the Americana/ alt-country movement, died Friday of a heart attack. Singer-songwriter Laura Cantrell, Tepper’s wife of 27 years, confirmed the news on social media. He was 60

From Variety

curmudgeon, Saturday, 15 June 2024 20:34 (three months ago) link

Got a promo email for Washington state college football player turned country singer Tucker Wetmore and listened to “Wine Into Whiskey” and “Wind Up Missin’ You” and was not dazzled by either. Not terrible, just standard pop country

curmudgeon, Monday, 17 June 2024 15:18 (three months ago) link

x-post -

https://wapo.st/45NXEuR

Jeremy Tepper obit

curmudgeon, Thursday, 20 June 2024 04:53 (three months ago) link

Tucker Wetmore

How is this not the product of Random Country Music Singer Name Generator on the fritz?

Ha, exactly

curmudgeon, Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:38 (three months ago) link

I see you Tucker Wetmore and raise you Corb Lund.

Indexed, Monday, 24 June 2024 19:17 (three months ago) link

I've not kept up with Landes but love her voice and have seen her perform with Hem. Found out about this from Natalie Weiner & Marissa Moss's newsletter:

Just now signed up---thanks, Indexed! https://www.dontrocktheinbox.com/

dow, Wednesday, 26 June 2024 02:48 (three months ago) link

Lorrie Morgan's back---on Cleopatra---but looks like it might be okay:

This album is very special to me,” shares Morgan. “Sadly, it turned out to be the final producing credit by my longtime friend and collaborator, Richard Landis, who passed just before its completion. Dead Girl Walking ties together a career journey from my career-making album, Something in Red, to the top 10 album, 'War Paint,' both produced by Richard and up to this new album. Richard also co-wrote the Billboard-charting single "If You Come Back From Heaven." Also in 1994, Landis was one of 14 producers to receive a CMA Album of the Year award for 'Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles,' and produced me on the last track on the album, my cover of "The Sad Cafe." Richard’s brilliant, creative touch is all over this album..."
Dead Girl Walking’ Track List:
1. “Hands On You” (Ashley Monroe, Jon Randall)
2. “Dead Girl Walking” (Kelly Lang)
3. “Me And Tequila” (Ashlee Hewitt, Matthew Morgan)
4. “I Think It’s Jesus” (Kelly Lang)
5. “Mirror, Mirror” (Kelly Lang, Lorrie Morgan, Mark Oliverius)
6. “Days Like These” (Kris Bradley, Marty Morgan)
7. “What Will I Do?” (Mickey Newbury)
8. “I Think You’re The Greatest” (Marty Morgan, Johnny Garcia, Katrina Burgoyne)
9. “I Almost Called Him Baby By Mistake” (Larry Gatlin)
10. “You Send Me” (Sam Cooke)

Got good players, such as Dan Dugmore, Pat Buchanan.

Listen/download/purchase ‘Dead Girl Walking’ orcd.co/lorriemorgan_deadgirlwalkingalbum

also:

Morgan launched her ‘War Paint with Lorrie Morgan’ podcast in 2023, featuring guests including Larry Gatlin, Jessie Keith Whitley, Morgan Whitley, Pam Tillis, Vince Gill, and Nancy Jones, with many more to come. Listen to ‘War Paint’ wherever podcasts are found. (We suggest Audible, Apple, iHeart, or Spotify!) The program has been picked up for broadcast television, launching on The Heartland Network July 12, 2024.

dow, Wednesday, 3 July 2024 01:00 (two months ago) link

Trying that link again:
https://orcd.co/lorriemorgan_deadgirlwalkingalbum?ct=t%282024-07-01_LorrieMorgan_DGW_album-out-now%29

dow, Wednesday, 3 July 2024 01:04 (two months ago) link

Took me too long to get to the Adeem record but glad to be late to the party. He hopscotches around in styles picking up bits of Dwight Yoakam, John Prine, and Jason Eady, both their sounds and narrative styles. All of it's done so well. "Nightmare" is the track I keep coming back to, its upbeat pace and strong back beat a perfect match for the anxiety-inducing message. (I'm also a sucker for the overlapping male/female vocals, which amps the thing up even more.)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6qyY85AEGY

Indexed, Wednesday, 3 July 2024 14:51 (two months ago) link

get to White Trash Revelry, too. it is excellent.

alpine static, Wednesday, 3 July 2024 15:24 (two months ago) link

I don’t love the new Kaitlin Butts album all the way through, but I do appreciate her ambition and guts to make a country album in the form of musical theater.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Saturday, 6 July 2024 17:00 (two months ago) link

thoughts on the new Zach Bryan?

as usual, a bit too long (as opposed to way too long), he needs to stop with the spoken word poems, a few cringey tracks, a few keepers, starts a bit weak, ends v strong, the Springsteen track is a tantalizing look if he went full pop

Murgatroid, Saturday, 6 July 2024 22:13 (two months ago) link

my favourite LP he's done so far

sean gramophone, Sunday, 7 July 2024 02:14 (two months ago) link

don't think it's as consistent as the S/T or has the highs of American Heartbreak

Murgatroid, Sunday, 7 July 2024 05:37 (two months ago) link

I absolutely love the Kaitlin Butts album-- every one of her big swings connects-- but I'll concede that it's not going to be to everyone's liking.

What I wrote about the Bryan set:
Z. Bryan, ... (***): CTRL+V: A few stunners to justify the roar of the crowd ("28," "Oak Island"), and a whole lot that could've been cut for concision and quality. Lack of growth is troubling, but with a vocal cult of devotees and little self-reflection, where's the motivation to do, be better?

jon_oh, Sunday, 7 July 2024 14:52 (two months ago) link

Ashley Monroe has released three new tracks thus far in 2024, with very little fanfare. The best of the three is a cover of a Fred Eaglesmith rarity ("I Like Trains"), but all three are strong.

The opening (and best) track on the uneven Lorrie Morgan set mentioned upthread is a cover of Monroe's "Hands On You," incidentally.

jon_oh, Sunday, 7 July 2024 14:59 (two months ago) link

xp agreed, the Kaitlin Butts is one for the ages. I was very high on What Else Can She Do, but Roadrunner! surpassed any expectations I had and then some.

Indexed, Monday, 8 July 2024 15:56 (two months ago) link

Keep listening to Roadrunner! I hear bits of Kacey’s Pageant Material, Miranda’s Platinum, and Elizabeth Cook’s Balls. Similar to those, it’s dressed up as a throwback — in this case, country & western — record but is thoroughly modern. Though her voice struggles to keep up with her ambitious writing, in places, when she softens it, it can be startling.

Favorite tracks: “Roadrunner!”, “Come Rest Your Head (On My Pillow), feat. Vince Gill”, “Spur”, “Elsa.”

Indexed, Thursday, 11 July 2024 14:04 (two months ago) link

Tracking the new box office smash Twisters through tornado territory, Midwest and Deep South audiences eating it up even more ravenously than projected, Deadline gets to:

Of all the marketing lynchpins that heightened the movie’s profile was its country-infused soundtrack. What a pop Dua Lipa-Billie Eilish laced soundtrack did last summer for Barbie, a country fried one was essential for Twisters with 29 tracks by such artists as Luke Combs, Jelly Roll, Miranda Lambert, Lainey Wilson, Bailey Zimmerman, Kane Brown, Thomas Rhett, Shania Twain, Charley Crockett, Flatland Cavalry, Tyler Childers and Megan Moroney.
29 tracks of today's heavy hitters and hopefuls---any of yall heard it? (Or seen the movie?)

dow, Sunday, 21 July 2024 17:38 (two months ago) link

Speaking of Barbie, when Uni was meeting with record labels, they decided to work with Atlantic’s West Coast President Kevin Weaver over a Nashville-based company, as the exec was coming off the success of the Barbie soundtrack. Weaver has also assembled such soundtracks and cast albums as Hamilton and The Greatest Showman.
Does his homework

Combs’ “Ain’t No Love in Oklahoma” was released on May 16, the lead single off the Twisters soundtrack. The song was tied to the second trailer launch and ultimately busted into Billboard’s Top 10 Country Airplay chart. Combs performed the song during his summer tour which further propelled it to 120M+ global audio streams to date and 36K+ creations on TikTok totaling more than 225M views. As we told you over the weekend, Powell, Daisy Edgar-Jones and Anthony Ramos showed up on stage Friday night at Luke Combs’ concert at Jets stadium.

In total, the Twisters soundtrack has amassed 175M+ streams to date since dropping on May 29. Uni released one song a week for the past 10 weeks — plus a song a day this past week. The Jelly Roll Twisters song “Dead End Road” was used in the TV trailer for the pic. Other music highlight included a pic partnership with Bobby Bones, the No. 1 iHeart network country DJ.


from
https://deadline.com/2024/07/box-office-twisters-middle-america-red-states-1236016845/
by Anthony D'Alessandro

dow, Sunday, 21 July 2024 17:49 (two months ago) link

A little too much of that mebbe---but what I had meant to say: today's revive of Prine thread reminds me of Todd Snider's "Handsome John," on the somewhut misleadingly, imposingly (wryly?) titled First Agnostic Church of Hope and Wonder, alb otherwise more suited, in a fine wine way, with words worth checking on AZlyrics, for the Country Funk thread---whereas this is just voice and piano, rolling on, fond but never overselling,"I didn't know him as well as I tell everyone I did":
http://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-e&q=todd+snider+handsome+john#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:238f7e88,vid:WnKWetl2rtE,st:0

dow, Sunday, 21 July 2024 18:12 (two months ago) link

Another one about friends etc.: Jessi Colter, "Angel In The Fire," and I'm influenced by the video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HOHUCGgXKO8

dow, Sunday, 21 July 2024 18:25 (two months ago) link

Chris Willman on next Miranda:

Miranda Lambert has set a release date, title and tracklist for her first album under a new deal with Republic Records. “Postcards From Texas” will be out Sept. 13, and in the meantime, the country star’s fans can collect “Alimony,” a track issued concurrently with the album news on Wednesday.`

The 14-track album is self-produced by Lambert along with frequent collaborator and fellow Texan Jon Randall; she co-wrote 10 of the tracks, although the album-closer is reserved for a David Allen Coe classic, “Living on the Run,” from the country outlaw hero’s 1976 album “Longhaired Redneck.”

“Alimony” was co-penned by Lambert with two of country’s most in-demand songwriters, Shane McAnally and Natalie Hemby, as was another track with an obvious Texas theme, “Looking Back on Luckenbach.”


more:
https://variety.com/2024/music/news/miranda-lambert-album-postcards-from-texas-alimony-republic-1236082610/

dow, Thursday, 25 July 2024 01:46 (two months ago) link

Oops, just saw newsletter. She adds:

Each song is a letter from me to you. Xo, Miranda

PS: It’s Honky Tonk as Hell.

dow, Thursday, 25 July 2024 02:10 (two months ago) link

From an earlier interview with Willman, re moving to Republic/Big Loud, setting up her own imprint, Big Loud Texas, and I'm mostly interested in how she wants to cultivate new artists

I’ve got a meeting today for the Big Loud Texas label side of it, which is also really fun. I’m loving getting to learn that side of it and really kind of step into the role of being an artist (advocating) for the artist. Because I’ve been through pretty much all of it, so I can understand the phases and what goes on in an artist’s brain; I’m just there to help and it’s been really cool.

Anything you would say about releases that are coming through your label?

Well, I don’t have any names I can say yet, but we’ve got some really cool things up our sleeve, and Dylan Gossett is our flagship artist and he’s killing it out there. I’m real thrilled to watch his star rise, and it happened really fast and I’m so thrilled that it’s part of what we’re building. I mean, our label is about a legacy of the outlaw movement that came from Texas that inspired all of us — not just country music, even. You know, Willie inspired everybody, I’m pretty sure. So I just feel like Jon and I want to keep that legacy going, and we’re glad to be a tiny part of it.

And this new crew could be a source of cover songs, which she's always got an eye for, as mentioned in here
https://variety.com/2024/music/news/miranda-lambert-republic-big-loud-wranglers-interview-1236013816/

dow, Friday, 26 July 2024 20:08 (two months ago) link

As he gears up for tonight’s first concert on his Last Call: One More for the Road Tour, Alan Jackson reveals good friend Lee Ann Womack will join him as his special guest at upcoming shows in Grand Rapids, MI (Saturday, August 24 at Van Andel Arena) and Fayetteville, AR (Saturday, September 28 at Bud Walton Arena).

curmudgeon, Friday, 2 August 2024 19:26 (one month ago) link

I missed that Charley Crockett put out a second album this year (of course he did). I like this one more than $10 Cowboy although both, for me, have begun to signal diminishing returns for this ultra prolific artist.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Saturday, 3 August 2024 16:26 (one month ago) link

Randall King - never really paid attention to him and probably just assumed he's another faceless mid-tier country dude (my bad) but ... the album out earlier this year is ... great? Am I wrong?

alpine static, Monday, 5 August 2024 22:45 (one month ago) link

or is it just good and i'm in the honeymoon phase?

alpine static, Monday, 5 August 2024 22:46 (one month ago) link

speaking of young dudes bringing the '90s vibes: new Muscadine Bloodline album is out Aug. 16

alpine static, Monday, 5 August 2024 22:51 (one month ago) link

There are a bunch of acts who have put out records in the same 90s Hat Act vein as king this year, and I think King's is the best of them. It's a great album, especially for how many tracks are on it.

Zach Top, Amanda Kate Ferris, David Serby, and Kimmi Bitter all put out strong albums with similar vibes.

jon_oh, Monday, 5 August 2024 23:43 (one month ago) link

The new Amanda Anne Platt album is exactly as good as all other Amanda Anne Platt albums.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Friday, 9 August 2024 18:27 (one month ago) link

Heard a couple of hers
from Scene ballot for 2016 albs:

The Honeycutters, On The Ropes---something of a---I don't quite wanna say "antidote"---but a refreshing change from the derivative, predictably enjoyable limits of Margo Price's debut (a Loretta Lynn knock-off would have more of a kick if emulating LL's daring-for-the-times topical testimonials, and oops here's the original back with a good new album of her own). Amanda Anne Platt doesn't sound like anybody else I can think of: she and her bandmates (especially the drummer) grab my attention right away, in a straightforward yet detailed way; obviously they've been around, gaining the confidence not to oversell the pictures from life's other side, and their well-traveled set list. However, her plain voice could use a bit more of her good overdubbed harmonies (some harmonies are also credited to the musicians, but I haven't noticed male voices yet). And she should leave more room (shut up more often) for solos, though the accompaniment gets breathing room, even swirling room at times, without things getting crowded--except, done this way, her songs can seem wordier than they might in a different kind of production. Still, track by track, I already like and am intrigued by most of it--well def keep listening, which seems to be the plan.
(One exception: will prob keep fast-fwding past the sole cover, an exceedingly long-ass version of L. Cohen's "Hallelujah"---enjoyed Willie's version, but jeeez, Rufus Wainwright's, Jeff Buckley's, who knows how-many others...this is not one if your more performer-proof songs.)

dow, Friday, 9 August 2024 20:57 (one month ago) link

Fllow-up:

Amanda Anne Platt/Honeycutters: S/T
The Honeycutters’ 2016 On The Ropes had only one problem that tipped the scales from Hon Mention to About Half Good (still 60-odd % good songwise), and that problem was that the lead singer-songwriter never shut up long enough to let the band take us a little bit further---into the thinking/breathing/sinking-in room at least or most, that’s all I ask; no set-the-night-on-fyre picking is required, though nothing against it. Here she (Anne Amanda Platt!) slaps her name in front of the band’s, and gives them and listeners enough room---Brandy Clark had to learn to do that too---and, while I still can’t find purchase in the philosophical wordmill of opener “Diamond In The Rough” grabs me at the drummer’s kick-off, and thence through the goalposts of life/the rest of the album, especially “Eden,” which starts with an appreciation of the heartland as idyll, but quickly and methodically deconstructs the narrator as she connects so many things that cling to the view; just what kind of crap is her L’il Opie’s towhead getting crammed with, over at the little schoolhouse on the prairie? “Learning How To Love Him”----not really “Again,” but she and hub are approaching what they never really had, cruising familiar sights with a gradually changing view, and she’s “sitting by your bed in a little white room.”

dow, Friday, 9 August 2024 21:03 (one month ago) link

So that was better, was really looking fwd, but Live at the Grey Eagle I just tagged as "Milk Dud" (sluggishly sincere, I think was the basic, maybe only, impressions over several listens).

dow, Friday, 9 August 2024 21:10 (one month ago) link

Although even Grey Eagle might be good for cherry-picking--- made last place in

About Half Good (60-45%), in descending order of Goodness or goodness:

dow, Friday, 9 August 2024 21:50 (one month ago) link

AAP & The Honeycutters are one of those bands that could be a bullseye for me. That kind of jangle-country is exactly what I love most. But they do just consistent stay right in the middle - nothing is bad, and nothing is really transcendently great either.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Friday, 9 August 2024 22:21 (one month ago) link

Uh-oh, that title:

We’re excited to announce the upcoming release of Willie’s latest album, LAST LEAF ON THE TREE, set to drop on November 1.

This album is more than just music—it’s a heartfelt family creation.

Thanks to the extraordinary talent of Willie’s son, Micah Nelson, LAST LEAF ON THE TREE brings a new level of artistry and personal touch to Willie’s legacy. Micah not only produced the album, he played many of the instruments, designed the cover, and created captivating visuals.

To celebrate this special family project, we’re offering an exclusive pre-order edition. This special 2xLP version will include a limited-edition woodcut print created by Micah himself.

Only available here in Willie's shop.

...Last Leaf On The Tree finds Willie covering songs from moody indie rock (Beck), psych alt-pop (The Flaming Lips) and punk-informed folk (Sunny War, Micah’s Particle Kid) to thought-provoking soul jazz (Nina Simone) and lesser-known gems from legends like Tom Waits, Neil Young, Keith Richards, and Warren Zevon.

In addition, the album features new takes on one of Willie’s oldest songs (“The Ghost” from 1962) plus a new one penned with Micah (“The Color Of Sound”) that joins Willie’s collection of Zen-soaked classics. In addition to producing, Micah Nelson plays many of the instruments and even designed the album cover. He is joined by a host of celebrated musicians plus guest spots from legendary producer and musician Daniel Lanois, John Densmore of The Doors and harmonica master Mickey Raphael, who has played alongside Willie for over 50 years. On 2xLP amber swirl vinyl with a lithograph.

Track Listing:

Side A
1. Last Leaf
2. If It Wasn’t Broken
3. Lost Cause
4. Come Ye

Side B
1. Keep Me In Your Heart
2. Robbed Blind
3. House Where Nobody Lives

Side C
1. Are You Ready For The Country?
2. Do You Realize??
3. Wheels

Side D
1. Broken Arrow
2. Color Of Sound
3. The Ghost
4. Lookin’ For Trouble

dow, Friday, 16 August 2024 01:09 (one month ago) link

I would like him to do one titled Texas, incl. "In The Jailhouse Now," "I'll Be There Before The Next Teardrop Falls, " "Spanish is the Loving Tongue," "Get It While You Can," and "You're Gonna Miss Me."

dow, Friday, 16 August 2024 01:20 (one month ago) link

two weeks pass...

Not that familiar w David Olney, but considering contributors (whose own New West albums are on related sale), this should be worth a listen.
Release date Oct. 25, on vinyl and colored vinyl as well as CD:

“Anytime anyone asks me who my favorite music writers are, I say Mozart, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Bob Dylan and Dave Olney. Dave Olney is one of the best songwriters I’ve ever heard.” – Townes Van Zandt

TRACKLIST:

Deeper Well - Lucinda Williams
Sister Angelina - Steve Earle
Voices on the Water - The McCrary Sisters
Jerusalem Tomorrow - Buddy Miller
If My Eyes Were Blind - The Steeldrivers
Women Across the River - Willis Alan Ramsey
1917 - Mary Gauthier
Always the Stranger - R.B. Morris
If It Wasn’t for the Wind - Jimmie Dale Gilmore
Running From Love - Anana Kaye
That’s My Story - Greg Brown
Sonnet #40 - David Olney
Titanic - Afton Wolfe
Steal My Thunder - Dave Alvin with the Rick Holmstrom Trio
Delta Blue - Jim Lauderdale
She’s Alone Tonight - Janis Ian
Illegal Cargo - Townes Van Zandt

dow, Tuesday, 3 September 2024 21:51 (three weeks ago) link

three weeks pass...

Luke Bryan Mind of a Country Boy album out today. He's gonna be on Good Morning America Monday Sept 30 and on Jimmy Fallon October 2. He's got a writing credit along with others on the title track, and on a song called "For the Kids." The other songs on the album appear to be written by Nashville country songwriters

curmudgeon, Friday, 27 September 2024 19:09 (yesterday) link


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