Rolling Country 2022

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Agreed that the Plains record feels like a split, but I do think Williamson's songs work just fine next to Crutchfield's. I mean ... they have different writing styles, but to me they blend pretty well.

(That said, Crutchfield is on an incredible hot streak right now. Hope a new Wax record is coming sooner than later.)

alpine static, Thursday, 27 October 2022 18:41 (one year ago) link

New Ashley McBryde out!

― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, September 30, 2022 7:45 AM (three weeks ago) bookmarkflaglink

Just getting to this, and am surprised there hasn't been more discourse here. I did not foresee her making a Dennis Linde-inspired world-building concept album about fictional town of misfits. Going to let this soak in.

Indexed, Thursday, 27 October 2022 20:09 (one year ago) link

Great closing run with the make-Linda-proud version of "When Will I Be Loved" > "Bonfire at Tina's" (Can anybody write a singalong anthem with more depth than McBryde?) > "Lindeville". Great record. Should be on the radar of those who like the small town stories of Brandy Clark, early Kacey, etc.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4i1JAjbpZG4

Indexed, Thursday, 27 October 2022 20:53 (one year ago) link

Unfortunately, it doesn't work for me. don't find the dudes compelling as singers. More troubling is how uninhabited this so-called town is: all the details amount to the kind of "color" I expect from a creative writing workshop.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 27 October 2022 21:01 (one year ago) link

I don't mind the separate vocalists -- reminds me of Anais Mitchell's Hadestown -- but know what you mean about the concept. Would have expected you to at least fall for a "When Will I Be Loved" this true to Ronstadt's version.

Indexed, Thursday, 27 October 2022 21:42 (one year ago) link

trying to revive the Keith Whitley thread if anybody's interested. deeply under his spell right now

Heez, Thursday, 27 October 2022 21:55 (one year ago) link

Luke Bryan brought Florida governor Desantis onstage to push hurricane relief, and while the Jacksonville, Florida audience was happy to see the guv there, lots of folks on twitter are not

curmudgeon, Sunday, 30 October 2022 03:14 (one year ago) link

that Tyler Childers song is a joy

corrs unplugged, Monday, 31 October 2022 08:01 (one year ago) link

two weeks pass...

New Wilder Blue is great

― Mule, Tuesday, March 29, 2022 5:32 AM (seven months ago) bookmarkflaglink

Only 8 months late but to this but it is indeed. A very spirited, musical, and sharp update on the classic country rock sound of The Eagles. Love the playing and harmonies.

Indexed, Monday, 14 November 2022 18:22 (one year ago) link

How does ILM feel about Zach Bryan's American Heartbreak?

Indexed, Monday, 14 November 2022 21:49 (one year ago) link

i just discovered it today (i am a rap dilettante) - seems... too long? but the "vibe" is good. are any of the songs ~actually~ amazing? "orange" almost gets there, but...

sean gramophone, Monday, 14 November 2022 22:03 (one year ago) link

I listened after hearing so much about it and thought the songwriting was just OK ... some sort of amateur-ish lines? and i generally don't care about lyrics very much ... admittedly, I gave it like one listen while raking leaves and texting with my brother, so probably not a full and fair assessment.

alpine static, Monday, 14 November 2022 22:54 (one year ago) link

2 hours is A LOT to wade through, so this is an admittedly rushed take, but I'm completely floored by/enamored with it -- the sheer industry is a marvel. Albums like this -- Sandinista, 69 Love Songs, The White Album, Emancipation?? -- are usually made by established, successful artists and say something about their restless, relentless artistic energy and talents. They communicate an ability to do anything.

While all these tracks slot within established country and heartland rock traditions, this is no less wide-ranging or ambitious. There are arena-ready rockers, acoustic sketches, radio sing-alongs, red dirt Americana numbers, and a cover of "You Are My Sunshine" for good measure. That he appears to have written every note and lyric aside from that one cover is so incredibly at odds with the vast majority of two decades' worth of male-dominated country...it makes me giddy.

I also like most of the production and playing -- the restraint especially. A lot of it just lets Bryan be, with his vocals and guitar front-and-center, instead of stuffing the thing with too-bright drum fills and the like. But there's also a free-spirited, "try everything" approach throughout, with fiddle, horns, electric guitar, backing vocals, and even a song with auto-tune, and hell, most of it works pretty dang well.

The most obvious antecedent to my ears is Turnpike Troubadours. His earnest rasp can sound awfully similar to them at times, especially on those more Americana-tilted tracks. I'm also reminded of Tyler Childers in places. But Bryan isn't nearly as literary or pretentious as those artists can be. His lyrics are more rudimentary, but I guarantee they are far more relatable to the average kid in rural America than a lot of what else they're spoon fed.

Indexed, Tuesday, 15 November 2022 20:07 (one year ago) link

Caitlin Rose finally released her long-time-coming third album. More country-adjacent, but figured some of you would know her and be interested.

https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/caitlin-rose-cazimi/

Indexed, Friday, 18 November 2022 14:16 (one year ago) link

oh man this is so good, thank you

sean gramophone, Friday, 18 November 2022 15:07 (one year ago) link

This song came out in February (album in April) but is new to me, and I don't believe she has been mentioned in this thread -- it is the most stunning country song I have heard this year. The patient way it builds to its ripping climax, her fiery vocals percolating throughout.

Whole album is very very good -- crazy sharp lyrics and stories, super well constructed songs. Dabbles with cosmic country and outlaw country; lots of twang; produced by Oran Thornton who co-produced Angaleena Presley's Wrangled.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSeCpIg6llI

You go too far
And you get too close
And you hide your scars
When you put on your show
There's nowhere to run
You run through my veins
And I hold my tongue
Swallow my pride
And stay

Blood you're the jury and judge
The tie that binds
And pushes and shoves
Forgives and forgets
Bonds and cements
A counterfeit love
Blood, merciless flood
Draggin' my name through the mud
And awful things swept under the rug
For blood

Indexed, Saturday, 19 November 2022 15:22 (one year ago) link

sounds great, thanks for the tip

corrs unplugged, Sunday, 20 November 2022 11:05 (one year ago) link

Been listening to this on repeat, and cannot get enough. Could one word -- "stay" -- do any much work in telling a story? The way they use the double-instrumental solo instead of a bridge stretches time and allows her to start the final chorus from a lower dynamic before building up to the utterly righteous Draggin'.

Indexed, Monday, 21 November 2022 16:06 (one year ago) link

this is nice

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Monday, 21 November 2022 21:43 (one year ago) link

holy shit

werewolves of laudanum (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 21 November 2022 22:53 (one year ago) link

that's a good song but it didn't really hit me until i clicked through to this live version. man.

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

Tracer Hand, Monday, 21 November 2022 23:44 (one year ago) link

Ah that's great and didn't know Angaleena cowrote it!

Indexed, Tuesday, 22 November 2022 16:01 (one year ago) link

Think the verse melody is more or less a lift from "Happy Xmas (War is Over)"

Indexed, Tuesday, 22 November 2022 16:04 (one year ago) link

We don't usually talk about reissues here, but this is worth a mention (Steve Young could sometimes *over*-over-sing-mebbe incl. title track of this 'unbut I still 'ppreciate that he pushed past the boundaries of taste, unlike what the tag of "singer-songwriter" was so often soft-selling in late 60s & 70s especially). From Real Gone Music:

https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0810/5567/products/fe3df88f429a2ffe5f2bdc188b0e86c5_1024x1024.jpg?v=1663960284

Folks can argue if Steve Young’s debut Rock, Salt and Nails is the first “outlaw country” album, but there is no argument that it’s one of the best. Featuring a star-studded line-up of like-minded players like Gram Parsons, Gene Clark, James Burton, Chris Ethridge, and Bernie Leadon, this 1969 record starts out with Young’s impassioned interpretation of the O.V. Wright/Otis Redding classic “That’s How Strong My Love Is,” which offers an emphatic bookend to Parsons’ own country-soul masterpiece “Dark End of the Street,” recorded the same year with the Flying Burrito Brothers. The rest of the record (produced by Tommy LiPuma) is a beautifully-paced blend of covers and originals, highlighted by Young’s immortal “Seven Bridges Road,” memorably covered by The Eagles among many others. Rock, Salt and Nails has somehow never been reissued on vinyl in the U.S.; our pressing comes in natural, “rock salt” vinyl.

https://realgonemusic.com/products/steve-young-rock-salt-and-nails-lp?rs_oid_rd=198337294826197

dow, Tuesday, 22 November 2022 19:41 (one year ago) link

Whoah---Oklahoma Red Dirt Country Singer Jake Flint, 37, Dies A Few Hours After Getting Married! Was he good? And what is a Red Dirt Country Singer?

dow, Tuesday, 29 November 2022 22:34 (one year ago) link

Red Dirt Country is contemporary Honky Tonk Country from Texas/Oklahoma, named for the soil in the latter state.

an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Wednesday, 30 November 2022 00:17 (one year ago) link

Saw that Caramanica picked American Heartbreak as his AOTY. Would be interested to know if anyone else here took to it (or not) and why.

Indexed, Wednesday, 30 November 2022 16:12 (one year ago) link

He loved it. I still need to listen to Zach Bryan more.

Not from an end of year list , but in a concert review Washington Post ‘s C Richards calls Kelsey Waldon his fave country album of the year

https://www.washingtonpost.com/music/2022/12/06/kelsey-waldon-concert-review/

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 6 December 2022 20:28 (one year ago) link

About half of the new Waldon is seeming pretty strong musically, but the rest tends to be settings for tired platitudes (making her Appalachoid voice go positively quaint at times), which she seems to regard as hard-won wisdom, shared with us in a down-to-earth way: she's always had that likable manner, and whatever gets her through the night--she's mentioned problems with the bottle---but as a listener, I'd rather she didn't rely entirely on what sound like originals. Previously, as discussed on Rolling Country over the years she's had a way with covers, even did an all-oldies EP: a tad uneven, as always w her, but bracing enough, and certainly more substantial than typical quarantine stopgaps.

Good melding of covers and originals on Melissa Carper's Ramblin' Soul: yes, she's ramblin' through Nashville (with for inst. Chris Scruggs and Sierra Ferrell), Memphis, NOLA, Austin, Houston, and San Antone (or anyway I can imagine Doug Sahm singing all of this): musically, and that's where it counts. Her voice and the overall honky tonk shothouse living room space heater indie budget atmosphere keep it ramblin' country soul. She sounds *kind of* like Parton w/o the hard sell, relaxing on the axis, but reflecting, even yearning a bit, with memories and insights all coming back around to the present,swirling like whatever's in her glass. I'm also thinking about the better originals of Dan Hicks and The Hot Licks, Asleep At The Wheel, although there are a couple of clunkers, pro forma retro. But most of it works for sure, without reaching the sneaky imaginative peaks (among other peaks) of last year's Daddy's Country Gold. Strong closer and theme song: "And when we're holdin' each other so tight/It's like a romantic old movie/That only comes in black and white/No, they don't make 'em like they used to/That's why I'm holdin' on to you."
https://melissacarper.bandcamp.com/album/ramblin-sou

dow, Thursday, 8 December 2022 21:26 (one year ago) link

sorry, here's the link: https://melissacarper.bandcamp.com/album/ramblin-soul

dow, Thursday, 8 December 2022 21:33 (one year ago) link

Also greatly enjoying current Willie, Miranda, Caroline Spence, (most of) Sunny Sweeney. The very consistently sombre-to-low-key production style of Humble Quest pulls even one of the best songs, "Background Music," toward the background of my attention/sympathy span(yes, Crisso/McCain and I value her poptastics of yore)(or at least get a little louder, faster, something, sometime).

dow, Thursday, 8 December 2022 21:44 (one year ago) link

"sombre"? Sombrero? Oui, but make it 'somber."

dow, Thursday, 8 December 2022 21:49 (one year ago) link

As Tipsy Mothra posted on Rolling Obits:

Longtime Nashville country music writer (and musician) Peter Cooper, at just 52 from a head injury.

https://www.tennessean.com/story/entertainment/music/2022/12/07/peter-cooper-acclaimed-country-music-journalist-and-musician-dies-at-52/69707124007/

I previewed the show when he and Eric B. came to Columbus OH in 2010---good, and good alb"

Eric Brace and Peter Cooper
Saturday @ The Red Door Tavern
Singer-songwriters Eric Brace and Peter Cooper have fancy resumes in journalism, but don’t hold that against them. You Don’t Have To Like Them Both finds the intrepid reporters tracking a community of frequently melancholy, always observant and opinionated souls, walking space and time after midnight. The vocal and instrumental harmonies of Brace, Cooper, and others gleam like headlights, while their rolling country stroll can get droll, though never really laid back. “We used to fly like we had wings/When we were easier to please.”

dow, Friday, 9 December 2022 01:09 (one year ago) link

Brennen Leigh did nice old school duets record w/Jessie Dayton back in the 2000s.

― an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, September 15, 2022 10:01 PM (two months ago) bookmarkflaglink

she also just made a good western swing album with Asleep at the Wheel: https://brennenleigh.bandcamp.com/album/obsessed-with-the-west

― alpine static, Thursday, September 15, 2022 10:54 PM (two months ago) bookmarkflaglink

That Brennen Leigh & A@tW album is fantastic; she did a whole album of Lefty Frizzell covers a couple of years ago, too, and it was definitely worth checking out. And I've been a Willis fan since her major label run in the early 90s. She's long been one of the very best there is.

― jon_oh, Friday, September 16, 2022 7:26 AM


Thanks for all that, yall! Starting w Obsessed..., and esp. 'preciate how she follows the more varigated turns, observant reflections, like the title track, with the faster realness of "Comin' In Hot"--also (let me count the ways) the generous, still hopeful "Same Dream" is almost clipped by bee-beep "Tell Him I'm Dead," trad-recalling twilight eerie realness (somewhat Sam Shephardesque?) "Coming Off Onto Sunset Boulevard" gets charged by the equally cogent content of "You're Doing It Wrong," and so on: with bippity-boppity standard Western Swing frameworks, but also more blunt(ly thought out, experience-based) complaints than Tommy Duncan etc. usually delivered. Reminding me of Susannah Clark's "I'll Be Your San Antone Rose" as answer song.
Other cool stuff too, like the way she trades lines, sung and spoken, with Emily Gimble, who I
d like to hear more (looks like only '22 track is on a Merle trib, will check her 2018 Certain Kinda as well). Johnny Gimble's granddaughter, yeah. Also plays with the Wheel (who are very good here, duh).

dow, Saturday, 10 December 2022 00:14 (one year ago) link

Leigh and Carper's hooks have been duking it out in my head all weekend--time to set them both against xpost Live Forever: A Tribute To Billy Joe Shaver Sandy voice x adhesive accompaniment of the pop master in hobo's clothing were adequate & then some on his original tracks, so this is one of those tribs where it's more about what the songs can do for cover artists (incl. those who could use some better material) than vice-versa/just wanna hear something new by reliable faves.
In the first category, Edie Brickell and Nathaniel Rateliff are so far seeming a tad too merely modest & hopeful; in the second, Miranda's kinda close to that vocally, but does present quite rollicking studio band. Amanda Shires seems like she's going to do likewise, but after the pickers launch into a yowly tomcat hoedown, she jumps on top, getting louder and stronger.
Willie Nelson's fiery, exhorting his fellow organisms and himself all through "Live Forever" and "I Been To Georgia On A Fast Train," ditto Margo Price & Joshua Hedley, on the subtly building "I'm gonna rig up my old truck," and take ass to town, to carouse or whutever: point is, agency is refound, or looked up in the phonebook of mind, at least.
Deepest takes: Rodney Crowell's fluid "Old Fivers and Dimers," Allison Russell's slow burn "Tramp on Your Street."

dow, Monday, 12 December 2022 20:15 (one year ago) link

absolutely terrific album just recently released ... surprised to see no mention of it here, given the recent feature story in the New York Times:

https://adeemtheartist.bandcamp.com/album/white-trash-revelry

this is gonna cause late-season trouble in my 2022 top 10!

alpine static, Monday, 12 December 2022 20:53 (one year ago) link

^ nice. Thanks for the tip.

Indexed, Monday, 12 December 2022 23:00 (one year ago) link

damn - definitely into this. Thx!

werewolves of laudanum (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 01:11 (one year ago) link

Yeah---and even if the songs weren't good, the autobio is excellent in itself.

dow, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 01:31 (one year ago) link

Also thanks to this thread, I just now listened to all of xxxxetcpost(s) Zach Bryan's American Heartbreak for the first time. 34 songs, 2 hours and 1 minute by Spotify's count, so I thought I might break it up into two (or more) sessions, but no prob. Detailed turns of words and music---sometimes plot twists, ripping the Band-Aid off---replenished and pulled me right through it all, like it does the semi-beautiful loser narrator---sometimes alarmingly, when I get the impression that he's throwing himself once again at and through (also at) a bright blue winter sky wall---with relationships like vines, and space heater electrification: country as hell, and with a musical valentine to closing time itself, "when the world gets close," looping through "a wild man's weary ways" to a spot of morning light when you're always/so far looking good and "The Road I Know" as his final reward (on the album).

dow, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 22:24 (one year ago) link

And I 'ppreciate that he doesn't blame other people more than himself--it's much less about brooding on a barstool than keep a-goin', one hand on the wheel, the other holding a drink (phone on in holder, so can record life's demos on the fly).

dow, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 22:28 (one year ago) link

From Big Ears Festival newsletter:

Rarely do we find Big Ears Festival artists featured in year-end lists for best country albums. Adeem the Artist is an exception, landing on many end-of-year lists including Billboard Magazine staff picks for 2022 for their new record "White Trash Revelry." As a resident of Knoxville, Adeem's singular talent captured our attention a while back and now the whole world is catching on. A couple of weeks ago, Grayson Currin penned a wonderful profile for the New York Times.
Much More:https://bigearsfestival.org/event/adeem-the-artist/

dow, Wednesday, 14 December 2022 03:22 (one year ago) link

xp+xxp, great posts! It's sprawl is a big part of its appeal for me. Unruly in the best sense of the word. Take its 12 best tracks, and it may not make my top ten of the year. As it stands, it'll definitely rank.

Indexed, Wednesday, 14 December 2022 15:17 (one year ago) link

Wilson's 2021 album is one of the decade's best.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 14 December 2022 15:43 (one year ago) link

Who Wilson? Lainey Wilson? Or someone else I'm overlooking?

alpine static, Wednesday, 14 December 2022 23:46 (one year ago) link

Lainey's 2021 album was def. in my Top Ten, as I think I listed and described way upthread. still gotta check this year's follow-up.
Also need to find my copy of this 2012 Top Ten pick, which got its Tenth Anniversary reissue this fall:

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 alone-together 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."

dow, Thursday, 15 December 2022 03:21 (one year ago) link

Oh yeah: came out Oct. 14, up to 15 tracks now, and he's also on this Johnny Cash trib, with Austin Lucas, Chuck D feat. Bob Log III, Left Lane Cruiser, Charlie Parr, and a bunch of people I never heard of, which isn't unusual for tribs:
https://www.savingcountrymusic.com/johnny-cash-tribute-james-hand-reissue-coming-from-hillgrass-bluebilly/

dow, Thursday, 15 December 2022 03:35 (one year ago) link

Another one that works in the foreground and background (somewhut simultaneously, since headphones suddenly expired and I'm listening on tiny laptop speakers), is the new Lainey, whose voice thrives on rockin'-country/not country-rock sound designs, which also inform well-paced ballads, poignant enough despite titles like "Weak End"(with "leak in" and "bleed in" enhancing been-there tone), "You And Me and Jesus," and even "Heart Like a Truck."

dow, Thursday, 15 December 2022 20:47 (one year ago) link


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