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Our Favorite Songs and Recordings Featuring Billy Strings

Nov 19, 2024

Itā€™s hard to imagine Billy Strings as anything other than the glass-shattering guitar virtuoso heā€™s become. Over a decade, heā€™s flipped, rearranged, and altogether transformed bluegrass music. He leads with instinct, allowing the music to speak on a much deeper level than many of his contemporaries. Four albums deep into his career, in addition to a live album and several collaborative projects, Strings immerses himself in the tradition of string music while bringing a fresh, exciting perspective to the classic structures of flatpickinā€™.

Our November 2024 Artist of the Month, Strings continues cementing his legacy by stretching boundaries and pushing progressively forward. With a foot firmly rooted in the past, always feeling ripped from another era, the musician remains intently focused on breathing life into the genre for modern audiences. As much as heā€™s built upon his growing solo catalog, heā€™s also known to frequent other artistsā€™ work and inject his unique charms into their shared musical performances.

Strings has remained committed to bluegrass and jamgrass through the last 10 years and more, while often stepping outside these tight genre boxes for some playful excursions. From appearing on a Dierks Bentley song to teaming up with a rap juggernaut-turned-country-star Post Malone, the Michigan native keeps an open musical mind and heart. Heā€™s an unstoppable force, always willing to try something new.

Below, weā€™ve put together nine of Billy Stringsā€™ best features, both on his own projects and on othersā€™ releases, too.

ā€œThings to Doā€ with Zach Top

Zach Top recently released a three-track collaborative EP with Billy Strings as an Apple Music exclusive. ā€œThings to Doā€ sees the duo injecting the track with a healthy helping of pep. The pair swaps off verses, each bringing their strengths to the performance.

ā€œGirl, it just ainā€™t right / Youā€™re burning up my daylight,ā€ they sing. On a wide stretch of musical canvas, Top and Strings paint with vitality and urgency. The special release also includes a cover of Ricky Skaggsā€™ 1983 classic ā€œDonā€™t Cheat in Our Hometownā€ and ā€œBad Luck,ā€ another Top original, which appeared on his 2024 studio album Cold Beer and Country Music.

ā€œCalifornia Soberā€ featuring Willie Nelson

On the eve of Willie Nelsonā€™s 90th birthday, the country legend hopped aboard ā€œCalifornia Soberā€ with Billy Strings. The rollicking track celebrates weed in moderation, finding the pair giving up late-night parties and weekend binges for a chiller sort of high.

In classic Nelson fashion, dusty strings give an air of a traveling tune and barreling down the highway at 100 miles an hour. The one-off collab single (written by Strings, Aaron Allen, and Jon Weisberger) demonstrates someone maturing and realizing that some vices should be left in the past. But regardless, the duo still cheekily admits: ā€œthe devil on my shoulder always wins.ā€

ā€œM-E-X-I-C-Oā€ with Post Malone

Post Malone dove head first into country music with the release of 2024ā€™s F-1 Trillion. Featuring everyone from Dolly Parton and Tim McGraw to Luke Combs and Lainey Wilson, the collaborative set made quite a splash ā€“ seeing the rapper swerve into modern country with his own special twist. ā€œM-E-X-I-C-Oā€ is a certified barn-burner, among the projectā€™s standout moments. Credit should be given generously to Billy Strings, who infuses his twangy, finger-pickinā€™ bluegrass style into the explosive, toe-tapping experience.

ā€œThe Great Divideā€ with Luke Combs

ā€œThe Great Divideā€ arrived in 2021 as a cautionary tale during troubling sociopolitical times.

ā€œWeā€™re striking matches on the TV / Setting fires on our phones,ā€ warns Combs in the opening line. The singer fuels those flames throughout the song, sending smoke signals as things methodically escalate. ā€œWeā€™re all so far, far apart now / Itā€™s as deep as it is wide / Weā€™re about to fall apart now,ā€ the lyrics burst like dynamite.

The song isnā€™t all doom and gloom, though. Later on, the lyrics detail how many strangers love one another despite glaring differences. Several years later, the song rings even more eerily poignant than ever before.

ā€œDooleyā€™s Farmā€ with Molly Tuttle

A long-time fan of The Dillardsā€™ classic, ā€œDooley,ā€ Molly Tuttle updates the story to reflect an elderly manā€™s penchant for growing weed. ā€œDooleyā€™s Farmā€ is a slower ditty, unlike the giddy-up pace of the Dillards’ song, and darker in tone and feel.

Strings lends his voice for spooky backing vocals, poking through the track like a ghost in the night. Their performance is found on Tuttleā€™s 2022 album, Crooked Tree.

ā€œYou can hide by day, but the night will find you / They caught Dooley in the moonlight,ā€ whispers Tuttle over the gentle cry of a fiddle.

ā€œToo Stoned to Cryā€ with Margo Price

Margo Price had been wanting to record ā€œToo Stoned to Cryā€ for years, ever since hearing its writer Andrew Combs perform the lonesome ballad. Working with Beau Bedford, she convinced the producer to put his magical touch on the song. When it came to enlisting a duet partner, Price turned to Billy Strings, who turns in a sinewy and evocative lead performance.

ā€œThere’s whiskey and wine and pills for the pain / Fast, easy women and a little cocaine,ā€ they sing, their voices tangling like barbed wire. With its frayed, tired edges, the song proves to be an ample showcase for both singersā€™ talents. Itā€™s as classic as you can possibly get these days.

ā€œI Will Not Go Downā€ with Amythyst Kiah

On her 2024 album Still + Bright, Amythyst Kiah reaches into the depths of her songcraft for a cinematic stunner. With Billy Strings in tow, ā€œI Will Not Go Downā€ pounds with alarming emotional urgency. Taking cues from such film staples as Avatar: The Last Airbender and Lord of the Rings, Kiah mounts an expedition across space and time, metaphorically speaking, as she slays dragons and seeks lifeā€™s simple truths. Strings supplies a startlingly resonant knit of guitar work that punctuates Kiahā€™s flame-throwing vocals.

ā€œMuscle Carā€ with Andy Hall

Two musical forces collide for a bedeviling five-minute epic on “Muscle Car.” With no vocal line, the composition here sizzles and pops, as it transmits its very own story through the power of instruments.

Andy Hallā€™s 2023 album, Squareneck Soul, delivers a torrential downpour of raw storytelling. Hall (of the Infamous Stringdusters) expertly offers up rip-roaring string work, matched with his companions’ equally engaging performances. The track also features Sierra Hull (mandolin), Wes Corbett (banjo), and Travis Book (bass), who all band together for one of the decadeā€™s finest bluegrass moments.

ā€œBells of Every Chapelā€ with Sierra Ferrell

Sierra Ferrell pulls Billy Strings along for a charming lovesick gallop with ā€œBells of Every Chapel.ā€ Found on her 2021 album, Long Time Coming, the mid-tempo track sees Ferrell peering through rose-tinted glass, examining unrequited love that squeezes your heart.

ā€œThey were ringing so clear/ But you couldn’t hear/ And your heart could never be mine,ā€ she sings. Old-timey in spirit, the song soars higher and higher with Stringsā€™ choo-choo train flatpicking.

(Editor’s Note: Continue exploring our Billy Strings Artist of the Month content here.)


Photo Credit: Alysse Gafkjen

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