Why ‘Cover Me Up’ Is the Truest Love Song Jason Isbell Will Ever Write

“It’s not easy to sit down and open yourself up and say, ‘This is how much I love you,’ you know? It’s scary to do that.”

Jason Isbell told this to NPR Music in 2013, shortly before the release of Southeastern, the record that marked the beginning of a new era for the Alabaman troubadour and his tenure as this decade’s best American songwriter. The song he was talking about, “Cover Me Up,” was a bold choice for Southeastern’s lead-off track: Solemn, stripped-down, and slow, it floors listeners with its stark vulnerability and the strength of its romance as Isbell unfolds his love for Amanda Shires, the fiddle player he married just days after he finished recording the album earlier that year. Southeastern is Isbell’s “sober” record, the one he wrote following a stay in rehab after years of hard-partying took their toll on the musician’s personal life (and professional one, too). As such, it stuns with its clarity and ability to cut to the core of his sentiment in a chorus or less, and “Cover Me Up” is the beacon of this. (The “I sobered up / and swore off that stuff” line in the song doesn’t fall on deaf ears, either.)

It came as no surprise when “Cover Me Up” was recognized at the 2014 Americana Music Association Awards for its ascent to modern classic status. It earned the distinction of Song of the Year, and Isbell took home the additional honors of Album of the Year and Artist of the Year after he and Shires performed the ballad for a rapt crowd at the Ryman. Isbell may need another shelf for his statuette collection soon, as Southeastern’s follow-up, the remarkable Something More Than Free, netted him two golden gramophones at the 2016 Grammys, one for Americana Album of the Year and one for American Roots Song of the Year with “24 Frames.”

He, Shires, and the 400 Unit, Isbell’s band, have been touring in support of Something More Than Free following the Grammy win, and the setlist of their current show is split between its track list and the rest of his catalog. While “Flying Over Water,” “Elephant,” and other selections from Southeastern go over brilliantly with Isbell fans, “Cover Me Up” is what brings the house down — and its current form serves as a reminder that a great love only deepens with age.

As such, the context of “Cover Me Up” has changed, for this tour especially. Isbell always plays “Cover Me Up,” even if Shires isn’t present, but to see the two of them play it together is to watch a man waltz with his muse live and in the flesh. It’s one thing to hear Isbell sing about how “home was a dream / one that I’d never seen / ‘til you came along” and pray that you’ll find a love that terrifyingly transformative yourself. It’s another to watch him and Shires lock eyes shortly after he finishes his phrase and she elevates that euphoria with the might of her own voice and strings.

Those at the Ryman watched them do this back in 2014, and those who caught the most recent leg of his tour had the privilege of taking in this performance, as well. But Isbell in 2016 is further changed, and “Cover Me Up” boasts a confident shine that hits the ear as a sure-footed affirmation instead of the gamble of a love letter, one written to a still-new object of his affection that could spook and take off should the going get rough. Isbell and Shires are parents, now, and their baby, Mercy Rose, comes along for the tour bus ride. Another addition to their touring life flies as the splendid backdrop for their live show: three stained-glass cathedral window tableaus, each featuring an anchor and sparrow, the same image Isbell and Shires sport as twin tattoos that represent Isbell, Shires, and the baby. (Isbell’s lucky socks — which he wore for his wedding, the AMA Awards, and the birth of Mercy — are emblazoned with anchors, too.)

Isbell’s adoration for Shires has always had a front-and-center prominence during his performances, but now, that love has deepened and swelled outside of its verses, and it’s only nourished the resonance of “Cover Me Up” years after it was written. “Cover Me Up” is the kind of timeless that’ll echo long after Mercy’s grown, the kind that Isbell and Shires will be remembered for when they’re no longer striding out onto the same stage and singing for their suppers. It’s as faithful to the connection that inspired it as it is to the truth that certain songs speak to us in perpetuity because they touch on scary and unknown and incredible so beautifully. While Something More Than Free may carry Isbell through the end of this tour and the next one, “Cover Me Up” will carry him into the folklore of American music — except now, “This is how much I love you” is something he can, and does, say so effortlessly.


Lede photo of Amanda and Jason after his 2016 Grammy wins by Danny Clinch.

ARTIST OF THE MONTH: Jim Lauderdale

If you’re not familiar with Jim Lauderdale, then consider him the ambassador of Americana.  The ten-time host of the Americana Music Association Awards (which just wrapped at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville last week) has become the face and voice for the ever-growing genre through his involvement with AMA, his roots satellite radio show with Buddy Miller, and as emcee of Music City Roots, an Americana variety show broadcast live on TV, radio, and online every week.

 
And that doesn’t even touch on his songwriting and performing skills.  Lauderdale has penned hits for the Dixie Chicks, Patty Loveless, George Strait, and Ralph Stanley, and released nineteen of his own albums.  His twentieth, Carolina Moonrise, pairs him with Robert Hunter (The Grateful Dead) and takes him back to his bluegrass roots.

In addition to his long list of other accolades and activities, Jim also happens to be The Sitch’s ARTIST OF THE MONTH, and told us all about his earliest bluegrass aspirations….

BEGINNINGS…

Well I started playing bluegrass banjo when I was 14.  I actually aspired to be a bluegrass musician.  My style is typically in the Scruggs style but I tried the Bill Keith style as well.  Then when I was 17 I started dobro and guitar, and as time went on, I realized I would never be as good a banjo player as my heroes and started putting my focus on rhythm guitar.  Kind of left the banjo behind.

Growing up in North Carolina and South Carolina, there was all sorts of music going on.  When I was 13, I started helping at this college radio station in SC and built up a big collection of albums.  My listening habits became pretty eclectic.  I was a big fan of rock, and soul and R&B and blues. Eventually my dreams led me to just making bluegrass records and being a singer.  After years and years, I wasn’t having any luck with bluegrass but managed to get a country record deal.

Eventually I got the opportunity to write a song for Ralph Stanley, and even got to sit in with Ralph at Merlefest.  That was a real turning point for me… developed the confidence I needed to pursue my love of bluegrass.  Eventually Ralph and I recorded an album together called “I Feel Like Singing Today”.  We even got a Grammy nod for that, and won a Grammy for our second album together “Lost in the Lonesome Pines”.  And after all those years of playing with him I started doing my own solo bluegrass albums.

INFLUENCES…

When I was young, I got to go to the Union Grove Bluegrass Festival in North Carolina, and there were some folks selling albums out of the back of a station wagon, and they were from a little startup label called Sugar Hill Records. That day I bought my first Don Stover album, and Seldom Scene album.  I was already listening to Bill Monroe, Ralph Stanley, Flatt & Scruggs, and The Kentucky Colonels.  There was something in Clarence and Roland White’s albums that I was just mesmerized by.  In high school, I was introduced to Gram Parsons, and was already crazy about George Jones, Buck Owens, Johnny Cash, Merle Haggard.  Muddy Waters, Son House, and Robert Johnson are the blues players I listened to a lot — they were a big part of my musical upbringing too.

I’m actually – as we speak – in the studio working with my friend Buddy Miller. Buddy and I actually met when we were young and living in New York, playing various bar gigs.  We’ve been friends for a long long time.  Still live really close to each other too and have been wanting to do this for quite a while, so it’s kind of full circle for us.

PLANS… 

Definitely in the world of bluegrass, I plan on putting out as many bluegrass albums as I can for a while – it’s something I always aspired to so the opportunity to do it is something I don’t take for granted.

I actually just hosted the Americana Music Awards and Buddy lead the house band.  The new bluegrass record, Carolina Moonshine, will be out in a few weeks and I’ll be doing sporadic gigs, then playing IBMA conference and Fan Fest here in Nashville.

I have a radio show on WSM in Nashville, but also Buddy and I have a our own show on Sirius/XM which is aptly called “The Buddy and Jim Show”.  It’s pretty eclectic, but it’s focused on roots music.  So far we’ve brought on Lucinda, Emmylou, Tim O’Brien, and a bunch of other greats.  And I also host Music City Roots in Nashville, which streams online live from the Loveless Barn every week.

I’ll just keep doing that and heading to whatever festivals will have me.

Jim Lauderdale‘s new bluegrass album Carolina Moonrise comes out next week.  You can find out more about Jim and his music at www.jimlauderdale.com.