Aug 5, 2017
Saturday Night Music: Son Volt Performs Uncle Tupelo Classic
Labels:
Saturday Night Music,
Son Volt,
Uncle Tupelo
Archives: How Nashville Will Respond to Sturgill Simpson
From Jan 17, 2017
Top 10 Ways Nashville Will Respond to Sturgill Simpson's Popularity
10. Sign Virgil Simpson, Sturgill's tonedeaf cousin
9. More songs about DMT
8. Ban pitch correction in lieu of barely discernible enunciation
7. Request Florida-Georgia Line try some of that "authenticity" stuff on for size
6. Vow to release another dumb bro-country song for every
8. Ban pitch correction in lieu of barely discernible enunciation
7. Request Florida-Georgia Line try some of that "authenticity" stuff on for size
6. Vow to release another dumb bro-country song for every
Facebook rant Sturgill goes on, out of spite
5. Kidnap Dave Cobb; force him at gunpoint to produce Rascal Flatts next album
4. Quietly invite Sturgill to play the CMAs; never let anyone know
4. Quietly invite Sturgill to play the CMAs; never let anyone know
about his 5 minutes of laughing on voice mail reply
3. Scour the hills of Kentucky for a salt-of-the-earth type who writes great songs;
3. Scour the hills of Kentucky for a salt-of-the-earth type who writes great songs;
2. Get Cole Swindell to cover "You Can Have the Crown" …very poorly
1. Just do whatever the fuck they were gonna do in the first place because
1. Just do whatever the fuck they were gonna do in the first place because
they still don't know who Sturgill Simpson is
Aug 4, 2017
New Video: The Steel Woods "Straw in the Wind"
Labels:
New Videos,
The Steel Woods
You Were Always on My Mind
Labels:
Kermit,
memes,
Satire,
Willie Dog,
Willie Nelson
Album Review: Tyler Childers - Purgatory
Tyler Childers taps into the dark side on Purgatory
by Robert Dean
After years in the shadows, Tyler Childers is finally emerging. On his official debut record, Purgatory, Childers is ready to step out and into the sunlight, and boy, is he gonna need a pair of shades. In contrast to that bright light of likely success, he's bringing along with him a deep look into the darkness of life.
One thing Tyler Childers is not is your typical country singer. Even at just 26, he’s already a battle-tested road warrior, having logged a lot of miles and while out there, tallied up many sins. Tyler Childers isn’t banking his career on wack songs about trucks and little shorts. Instead, he’s logged down his transgressions, his adventures, and gives them out as cautionary tales via the tracks on Purgatory. When you’re writing about long nights, casual cocaine use, or swallowing a handful of pills, that ain’t the stuff Jason Aldean is singing about. It takes bravado to confront those topics and sing them with mastery. That’s the difference between the songwriters who get out and live, their songs carry weight because they’re genuine, not some crap that a songwriter in an office dreamt up.
While all of the playboys in tight muscle tees and cowboy hats pack the arenas on the message of their bullshit persona a few suits crafted, guys like Tyler Childers live what they dream about. You can buy an “outlaw” branded tee shirt, but until you write some songs about being whacked outta your mind on the shit and ripping down some back road in intimate detail, brother you’re just posing.
Childers is cut from the same cloth as artists like Bruce Springsteen and Jason Isbell; and despite his spacey eyed producer Sturgill Simpson being an influence, the two artists aren’t similar in sound, only in honesty and spirit. Don’t let the album credits fool you. Tyler Childers is his own man.
Purgatory is an incredible welcome to the world for Tyler Childers because under Simpson’s watchful eye, the songs they’ve collected feel like a testament to the hard life, but one that’s not met with dire pessimism, but instead with baring down and letting the knuckles get white.
"Feathered Indians" is a big-hearted, open-armed love song that doesn’t feel dismissive to the rest of Childers’ tracks because of the raw honesty that’s laced throughout the narrative. Directly following the joy of that previous track, "Tattoos" feels like the aftermath of that love taking a swan dive …and without much grace. Right there, plainly and simply, shows what Tyler Childers is capable of as a tactician of the human experience: he’s managed to draw you in with a romantic escapade of close encounters of a belt buckle pressing against a thigh, following it with a whispered dirge, calling back to when times were good.
The main thread that runs through Purgatory is its sheer authenticity. There’s no doubting the songs come from a real place, or that they at least were constructed through the haze of hard living, always with a strong sense of storytelling. Either way, real or make believe, the stories that Tyler Childers tells on Purgatory aren’t far-fetched concepts, but looks into the all too familiar hard lives in a small town.
To say that Tyler Childers taps into the past, and the darker side of country music, is understatement – this is a continuation of the dark masters, and Tyler Childers has surely been welcomed into the family.
by Robert Dean
After years in the shadows, Tyler Childers is finally emerging. On his official debut record, Purgatory, Childers is ready to step out and into the sunlight, and boy, is he gonna need a pair of shades. In contrast to that bright light of likely success, he's bringing along with him a deep look into the darkness of life.
One thing Tyler Childers is not is your typical country singer. Even at just 26, he’s already a battle-tested road warrior, having logged a lot of miles and while out there, tallied up many sins. Tyler Childers isn’t banking his career on wack songs about trucks and little shorts. Instead, he’s logged down his transgressions, his adventures, and gives them out as cautionary tales via the tracks on Purgatory. When you’re writing about long nights, casual cocaine use, or swallowing a handful of pills, that ain’t the stuff Jason Aldean is singing about. It takes bravado to confront those topics and sing them with mastery. That’s the difference between the songwriters who get out and live, their songs carry weight because they’re genuine, not some crap that a songwriter in an office dreamt up.
While all of the playboys in tight muscle tees and cowboy hats pack the arenas on the message of their bullshit persona a few suits crafted, guys like Tyler Childers live what they dream about. You can buy an “outlaw” branded tee shirt, but until you write some songs about being whacked outta your mind on the shit and ripping down some back road in intimate detail, brother you’re just posing.
Childers is cut from the same cloth as artists like Bruce Springsteen and Jason Isbell; and despite his spacey eyed producer Sturgill Simpson being an influence, the two artists aren’t similar in sound, only in honesty and spirit. Don’t let the album credits fool you. Tyler Childers is his own man.
Purgatory is an incredible welcome to the world for Tyler Childers because under Simpson’s watchful eye, the songs they’ve collected feel like a testament to the hard life, but one that’s not met with dire pessimism, but instead with baring down and letting the knuckles get white.
"Feathered Indians" is a big-hearted, open-armed love song that doesn’t feel dismissive to the rest of Childers’ tracks because of the raw honesty that’s laced throughout the narrative. Directly following the joy of that previous track, "Tattoos" feels like the aftermath of that love taking a swan dive …and without much grace. Right there, plainly and simply, shows what Tyler Childers is capable of as a tactician of the human experience: he’s managed to draw you in with a romantic escapade of close encounters of a belt buckle pressing against a thigh, following it with a whispered dirge, calling back to when times were good.
The main thread that runs through Purgatory is its sheer authenticity. There’s no doubting the songs come from a real place, or that they at least were constructed through the haze of hard living, always with a strong sense of storytelling. Either way, real or make believe, the stories that Tyler Childers tells on Purgatory aren’t far-fetched concepts, but looks into the all too familiar hard lives in a small town.
To say that Tyler Childers taps into the past, and the darker side of country music, is understatement – this is a continuation of the dark masters, and Tyler Childers has surely been welcomed into the family.
Labels:
Album Reviews,
Robert Dean,
Sturgill Simpson,
Tyler Childers
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