Ten years after a band of college friends played their first show in Lubbock, Texas, Flatland Cavalry have finally stopped moving to take a look around. Released in early November, their latest album, Flatland Forever, is a 25-song chronological opus, sampling key tracks from their six acclaimed albums. But, as with most things the band does, it isnāt your typical āgreatest hitsā package.
Also finding space for a few unreleased gems, Flatland Forever traces the contours of a remarkable roots music rise. This Cavalry has ridden to the rescue of countless country fans, pushing an indie ethos deep into the mainstream while retaining a self-contained spirit, and the Forever project offers new listeners an easy way to get up to speed.
Their 10 years have seen Flatland gather 500 million streams and a Gold certification for the tender āA Life Where We Work Out,ā while establishing their live-band cred alongside the genreās best and brightest. 2024 alone saw them score their first ACM Awards nomination (for Group of the Year), plus high-profile Hollywood placements in Yellowstone, Twisters, and more.
They also marked their first headlining shows at iconic venues like Red Rocks Amphitheatre and Ryman Auditorium, and they made a triumphant return to Texas on December 31, headlining Fort Worthās Dickies Arena for the first time. Then itās on to the Flatland Forever Tour ā kicking off February 7 in Atlanta ā with a new setlist to match the album in scope and satisfaction.
It definitely seems like a good time to take stock of how far Flatland Cavalry has come, and in a conversation with Good Country last month, lead singer and songwriter Cleto Cordero does just that. Breaking from a peaceful morning in Nashville which found him āsitting like a hippie or a cat and letting the sun hit me in the face, just breathing,ā Cordero explains where Flatland Forever came from, and what it feels like to pass a true milestone.
Why donāt you start by telling me how youāre feeling these days. This is definitely a milestone that most bands never even imagined theyāll reach. So howās it feel?
Cleto Cordero: It feels really good. It feels like a lot of hard work paying off and proof that persistence can get you where you aspire to go. Itās been a long journey, but you wake up one day and itās like 10 years later and heck, man, youāre walking in the dream that was just in your head 10 years ago. So it feels good. Itās affirming.
Thatās a beautiful thing for sure. It’s been ten years since the band started. I just wonder, are you still feeling inspired by music making?
We stay pretty busy on the road, so it is challenging to find that zen where, to me, the songs come from. But thatās why Iām seeking it. Thatās why I’m sitting in the sun in my library. I just listened to a meditation last night and it was a lecture by Neville Goddard, and he’s talking about being still ā itās like the old biblical scripture, “Be still know that Iām God.” I think as much as we move and shake and hustle and bustle, that place where songs come from in my heart seems harder to hear. So I have to seek that inspiration and try to convene with it every day.
Tell me a little bit about Flatland Forever and the idea behind this. It seems like the key for you guys was to make it more than a greatest hits package, right?
The idea was initially brought to me by Matt Morris at Interscope Records, who we began working with last September. He had an idea like, āYāall have so many great songs. And for someone that doesnāt know who Flatland is, itās kind of a lot to chew on. Maybe thereās a way we can put all the songs in one place on a compilation.ā And as he was saying that, I told him I had an idea for an album that I want to make one day called Flatland Forever. I was like, āThatās literally what I envisioned it to be.”
So his idea and mine kind of melded together and then I didnāt want it to just be stuff that we had already released. I wanted to throw in some unreleased songs or stuff that we had recorded but never shared, and it morphed into this smorgasbord of old and new.
As you were putting it together, did you notice any creative growth? As you went back through these older songs, how did they line up with the new stuff?
I mean, a [new] song called āThree Car Garage,ā thatās something I could imagine myself writing last week or something. ā¦ I think if you listen to the start of the album and then you make your way on to the very end, it will be a journey hearing us evolve sonically and lyrically and all that stuff. … But I wrote that one when I was in college and I had skipped class one day and I was just sitting in my garage.
I took a look around and the books Iād been reading at the time, like, āwrite about what you know,ā so I just took a look around and thatās literally the vantage point of me sitting in the garage. But thereās also some other meaning to it as well, because the bridge is like, āIf youāre bored and got nothing to do, change your point of view.ā It captures a youthful spirit. Iām glad it came out 10 years later ā whenever we sing it, Iām like, āOkay, thatās young, hopeful, optimistic, enthusiastic Cleto.ā
Since the album covers the bandās whole history, does it also kind of capture the spirit of a live show?
It does. The good thing about having a lot of songs to play is you have a lot of variety, but then we’ve been on this Wandering Star Tour and I really want to give those songs a chance. But yeah, the idea of Flatland Forever is this compilation thing, so our next tour will be named after that and I feel like we can play anything from the vault in any order. ā¦ Itās making me think a little bit, creatively. Like, I can start off the show with “Sleeping Alone” or it can be totally different every night and any song.
Whatās it feel like to get to go to Fort Worth to Dickies Arena and headline?
A dream come true. Weāve worked really hard for 10 years to get to a place where we can fill up a room with hopefully 10,000 people. I mean, we played Fort Worth the last two years in a row, two nights each at Billy Bobās ā which is like 5,000 people [each night]. Our booking agent told me last New Yearās Eve, āHey, the next time you play Fort Worth, itās going to be at the arena.ā And so this date has been a year in my brain. Itās been the little lighthouse on the coast. All the shows we played this year, to me itās all like, āWhat have I learned? What can I apply to this big show on New Yearās Eve?ā And hopefully, Lord willing, I do envision that for us ā to put on an arena show and take it everywhere.
āA Life Where We Work Outā is now Gold-certified. Congratulations on that. What does that accomplishment mean to you?
I feel lucky and grateful, because that song was written about a relationship that I had messed up. Now itās like a mistake I had made and how a mistake can turn into a Gold record is pretty ironic and kind of crazy. But I donāt say that at the expense of the other person on the other end of that relationship. It was just a dumb, young college kind of thing. But how that turned into a Gold record, meeting my wife, and our biggest song. I think God [or] the Universe has a sense of humor. You know what I mean? Even if we screw it up ourselves so badly, it still can turn into something golden. So I feel really lucky and grateful.
My favorite part of the record is what you guys end up doing with āMornings With You.ā Including the work tape and then also the fully fleshed-out version is really cool. Are you trying to show fans something with that?
Yeah, so before a song gets recorded, thereās always a work tape cut first, or else weāll forget it. ā¦ And no one ever gets to hear that. I just wanted to share that with the fans, and thereāll be a deluxe version of the record that comes out. ā¦ Itāll have commentary about the work tapes and more acoustic versions and stuff. So itāll be more that kind of stuff.
I will just leave you with the big picture. What do you hope your fans are going to take away from Flatland Forever?
The takeaway is that a little band made of college kids followed their dreams and, 10 years later, they have a small little pile of work that theyāve worked towards year after year. Thatās the amalgamation of it. And if anything, itās just a testament that if you pursue your dreams and work hard and donāt give up on it, then you can literally do anything that you aspire to. Thatās what I hope people can take away. And the last song, āChasing a Feeling,ā talks about that.
Photo Credit: Fernando Garcia