Rolling Country 2024

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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

a whole generation of people just think of them both as "Spotify Roots Music Playlist Music" i think

it's a bummer - no slag on yr daughter, of course. it's just the way kids are coming up.

alpine static, Monday, 19 February 2024 21:58 (seven months ago) link

i have noticed a surge in Reddit posts in recent years that ask "what genre is this?"

alpine static, Monday, 19 February 2024 21:59 (seven months ago) link

oops, i hit send too soon

anyway, i just think streaming playlist culture is increasing the desire in people's brains to put the music they listen to into one of the genre categories they see every time they open the app.

i can see how this is somewhat contradictory with my post about Kahan and Bryan (i.e. lumping them together) but at the same time, they kind of feel like two different symptoms of the same disease or something.

alpine static, Monday, 19 February 2024 22:01 (seven months ago) link

I know my kids get defensive when they play something new or unfamiliar to me and I ask them where they learned about it. They don't believe me when I insist I'm just curious. Like, they don't listen to the radio. There's no MTV. There are literally endless Tik Tok posts they scroll through, so it's a miracle anything sticks. Stuff like Noah Kahan, sure, I guess I get it. It's super marketable/accessible. But Zach Bryan's whole deal is kind of an earnest, no frills middle aged (in spirit) red dirt dude with a truck vibe, not some floppy hat Vermont hippie. But maybe I'm hearing them both wrong.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 00:48 (seven months ago) link

fwiw the other night her playlist included Zach Bryan, Noah Kahan and Tyler Childers, which to me all sounds like different denomination coins maybe jingling in the same pocket, as opposed to her main currency of Taylor Swift and cohort (Gracie Adams, Sabrina Carpenter, Lana del Rey).

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 00:53 (seven months ago) link

Isn't the common denominator there though that Zach Bryan's earnest and anti-ticketmaster spirit started independent style and he's not a radio friendly country singer singing just about drinking beer and his pickup truck. She can hear Bryan, Kahan, Swift and even del Ray as folk.

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 05:16 (seven months ago) link

I think she does! She was telling me that Lana del Ray has a lot in common with Springsteen. I asked her in what way, and she said they both exude a similar Americana esthetic, or something like that.

Lately she's been complaining that the kick-off to Zach Bryan's (never-ending?) tour here next week is three sold out nights at the United Center where the cheapest secondary market tickets are about $200 each. I told her, please don't feed the beast, that's a rip-off. Suppress that fomo and see how things shake out the morning-of.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 13:55 (seven months ago) link

I'm going one night. Believe our upper deck tix were ~$120 face value.

Indexed, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 16:58 (seven months ago) link

Beyonce first Black woman on top of hot country singles chart but....Chris Molanphy, chart historian notes:

As a chart historian, I have misgivings about her topping it out of the gate, when I know country listeners are still listening to more Kane Brown, Nate Smith, Jelly Roll, and Lainey Wilson.

On the other other hand, Beyoncé has already made remarkable inroads with country listeners... As Rolling Stone pointed out last week, for more than a decade, Beyoncé’s songs have been covered by numerous country stars, ranging from country-era Taylor Swift to Sam Hunt, Lady A to Maddie & Tae, Maren Morris to … even Nashville royalty Reba McEntire, who took on Bey’s belter “If I Were a Boy” way back in 2010. Not only did Reba score a top 25 country hit with her take on the slow-burning gender-bender, but she even performed it live on the CMAs, six years before Bey performed “Daddy Lessons” on the same awards show to a more mixed response.

This, in the end, may be the best and most important thing about Beyoncé topping the country chart: It reminds the country audience they already love this artist’s music, and it signals to those leery of genre trespassers that she belongs. It vindicates other Black country performers like Giddens, Rissi Palmer, and Tanner Adell and perhaps clears a path for them on the charts. And the chart is ultimately serving as a productive feedback loop, compelling the Nashville establishment to take this song, this artist, and the very idea of a Black female country star seriously. Even if Bey’s imperial position on the Hot Country chart raises some well-founded skepticism, I am grateful the queen is on that throne.

https://slate.com/culture/2024/02/beyonce-texas-hold-em-country-song-billboard-hot-100.html

curmudgeon, Thursday, 22 February 2024 19:00 (seven months ago) link

I don't mean to be controversial or insensitive but does anyone actually believe this "clears a path" for someone like Giddens to score a Hot 100 Country hit? And how exactly does this "vindicate" her work? The mass approval of another black female artist's work makes her own worthwhile?

I'm very happy to see Beyonce break this glass ceiling but I'm skeptical that the country establishment is ever going to embrace progressive artists and people of color; rather, I think Beyonce has validated/vindicated the genre among millions of fans who might otherwise never engage with it. Bringing new fans to country music will help diversify its listenership and in time could prove more consequential in breaking its long history of discrimination.

Indexed, Thursday, 22 February 2024 19:57 (seven months ago) link

Good points re Giddens.

Meanwhile, longtime journalist Ron Wynn (who is Black) is hoping in a public Facebook post that :

For me, if all this conversation regarding Black heritage and traditions in country can get fresh exposure for such long overlooked and wrongly obscure/or forgotten people as Stoney Edwards, Big Al Downing, O.B. McClinton, and Ruby Falls (to cite just four), then it's worth it.

He's hoping , but am sure he knows it's not too likely

curmudgeon, Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:23 (seven months ago) link

just found out about this -- Brennen Leigh, Kelly Willis, and Melissa Carper collaborating on a project. six song EP en route.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fw7fiWqfpnU

omar little, Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:50 (seven months ago) link

yeah i agree that the idea that beyonce opening doors for black women in country music comes off like a pipe dream. to me the song is working specifically because of the tension between beyoncé and the establishment, there is a frisson there that i think is exciting to people mostly in the beyhive of course but prob from the country side in some respect too. i think people are somewhat overstating nashville's aversion to interlopers... i mean look at recent huge novelty hits/country collabs by people like nelly, bebe rexha, blanco brown, dan + shay featuring bieber etc. i think that nashville, certainly when viewed as the capital of country music commerce and not as a euphemism for country music culture, enjoys a track from an outsider that genuinely engages with and celebrates country, and becomes a hit. nashville loves hits! the whole city is built around the notion of the Hit Record. so i think the idea that nashville is going to build barriers between itself and beyonce instead of being excited about the potential brand synergy and $$$ is to misunderstand what drives decisions in the music business. i mean, she already performed at the CMAs 5 years ago doing a song that felt much more like a one off genre trifle than this. nashville may still be tribal, but it's not stupid.

to me what zach bryan has done to the country music establishment, which is prove that you can become bigger than just about anybody in nashville w/ little more than an acoustic guitar and a youtube account, is much more important for the future diversity of country music, precisely because it completely neutered nashville as a center of power. now, we'll find out whether country audiences are willing to embrace non-white musicians in the same way, and obv any pessimism regarding that would be well founded. but i do think that, in the long run, the simple forging of a pathway to country music success (via traditional social media channels) that never has to travel thru nashville is moreso going to be the thing that sparks the real change people are looking for, rather than hoping that i.e. beyoncé is suddenly going to get the establishment to throw the doors open to people it has been resisting for years. but that doesn't make for as easy as a narrative as mapping it along black/white or male/female binaries. this was the major problem i had w/ that emily nussbaum piece recently -- its heart was in the right place but it had no understanding of country music as a business or a culture, and how both of those things have already been irrevocably altered in the last two or so years primarily by bryan

slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:51 (seven months ago) link

Rolling Stone on the musicians who played with Beyonce

When Randolph arrived in L.A. a few months ago, he found himself in a room with Giddens, producer and instrumentalist Raphael Saadiq (playing drums and bass), and keyboardist Khirye Tyler. Beyoncé was there too.

That’s Robert Randolph, sacred steel & jam band player

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/beyonce-country-songs-players-robert-randolph-rhiannon-giddens-1234967138/

curmudgeon, Friday, 23 February 2024 18:30 (seven months ago) link

Anyone listening to the new Leslie Stevens album? Just a few tracks in but it’s nice. More polished than last releases (said without a value judgement either way atm)

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Tuesday, 27 February 2024 16:27 (seven months ago) link

First Stevens song on new one "Big Time , Sucka" has a nice countrypolitan lush pop feel

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 27 February 2024 20:23 (seven months ago) link

xpost Musgraves kind of became a country(ish) superstar without Nashville, too, right?

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 27 February 2024 20:56 (seven months ago) link

Yea kinda , but maybe Jordan S could add more

curmudgeon, Thursday, 29 February 2024 17:16 (six months ago) link

My pal/hometown hero Adeem is back with what they call "the Gay 90’s Country Bop you didn’t know you needed." Catchy. "He wants a one-night stand/I want a life full of nights with him."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDZFW-uQnBU

https://popcon2024.sched.com/event/1aBzI/will-the-canon-be-unbroken-a-roundtable-on-country-music-criticism

This discussion with Charles Hughes, David Cantwell, Jewly Hight, Justin Hiltner and Moderator RJ Smith took place today at Pop Conference in Los Angeles. I am not there

curmudgeon, Friday, 8 March 2024 21:18 (six months ago) link

It's not quite country per se, but anyone who likes what Waxahatchee has been doing the last few years should check out the new Hurray for the Riff Raff record.

Indexed, Monday, 11 March 2024 17:55 (six months ago) link

definitely seconded. I had never really vibed with the little bit of HFTRR I'd heard before but I'm loving this new one, maybe my favorite of the year so far. and St. Cloud is a top 5 record of the 2020s for me, so yeah, checks out.

Evans on Hammond (evol j), Monday, 11 March 2024 18:36 (six months ago) link

saw Zach Bryan last night, never seen a crowd this intense in my decades of going to shows

normally a crowd singing along to every song at top volume would annoy the shit out of me but it was so earnest I kinda loved it

Murgatroid, Monday, 18 March 2024 14:56 (six months ago) link

It's not quite country per se, but anyone who likes what Waxahatchee has been doing the last few years should check out the new Hurray for the Riff Raff record.


Ahh, thanks for rec! I’m same as Evol. St Cloud easily my favorite album of the 2020s so far and eagerly looking forward to the new one. And I recall sampling the last HftRR album a couple years ago and not connecting to it. But two songs into the new one and it’s my sweet spot. Reminds a little bit of Kathleen Edwards too.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Monday, 18 March 2024 16:00 (six months ago) link

I will co-sign all of the HftRR endorsements: Haven't been on board with them prior to this record, but it's one of my favorites of the year thus far and is, to my ears, operating well within the country space.

Country Music Hall Of Fame inductions were announced this morning: James Burton as the Musician, John Anderson (!!!) as the Veteran Era pick, and Toby Keith as the Modern Era pick. They made sure to clarify Keith's eligibility, as the voting results had already been tallied prior to his death.

jon_oh, Monday, 18 March 2024 16:02 (six months ago) link

Not sure if this is the right thread for it, but new Rosali is out today and its sounding great. No Medium was one of my favorite albums of 2021.

o. nate, Friday, 22 March 2024 18:03 (six months ago) link

Mixed feelings about the new Sierra Ferrell. I had mixed feelings about her debut too and I like this one more, but she still lapses into a pastiche sound that doesn’t totally resonate with me.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Monday, 25 March 2024 15:57 (six months ago) link

saw Zach Bryan last night, never seen a crowd this intense in my decades of going to shows

normally a crowd singing along to every song at top volume would annoy the shit out of me but it was so earnest I kinda loved it

― Murgatroid, Monday, March 18, 2024 9:56 AM (one week ago) bookmarkflaglink

I was meant to go a couple weeks ago and came down with a terrible stomach bug just hours before the show and had to bail. The videos my friends sent made me think I may have dodged a bullet. Bryan was barely audible over the fans around my friends, who, while earnest, could not carry a tune. I don't know how this trend started at his shows, but I'm torn between happy for his fans that they've found a communal space to share their love of music and shake-my-fist-at-the-sky-old-man annoyed that you pay $130 to sit in the upper deck of an arena and listen to a bunch of drunk 20-somethings scream over the artist you're ostensibly there to hear. The cynic in me thinks there are people attending these shows who've learned every lyric to every one of his songs so that they can demonstrate to everyone else they're a true fan. The music fan in me absolutely loves that he's inspired that kind of devotion; the kind of deep, repetitive listening required to learn lyrics to that degree has escaped me since high school. I just listen to too much music now to absorb lyrics like that, and I recognize that my cynicism somewhat spawns from this.

Indexed, Monday, 25 March 2024 16:11 (six months ago) link

Oh no, more musical interest would spoil the primal purity ov his stained class testimony. But whoever else gets something out of it besides him, like mass group therapy/catharsis, good for them.

dow, Monday, 25 March 2024 18:01 (six months ago) link

They're gonna need it, whether Trump's Second Coming goes off as planned or not.

dow, Monday, 25 March 2024 18:03 (six months ago) link

i saw him last summer at a sold out show from the upper deck and... i think judging the quality of a performance vis a vis the surrounding crowd via cell phone video audio might not be the most prudent strategy...

slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Monday, 25 March 2024 18:18 (six months ago) link

No doubt, but I've never made it all the way through the massive live album either. So far.

dow, Monday, 25 March 2024 18:54 (six months ago) link

tbf my friends also told me directly that they had a hard time enjoying the show. One of them said "I could barely hear Zach."

Indexed, Monday, 25 March 2024 19:11 (six months ago) link

I had no trouble hearing him, I guess it depends on the volume of the crowd around you and the venue itself etc.

Murgatroid, Monday, 25 March 2024 20:52 (six months 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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