Ten Years After a Breakout Album, Caitlin Rose Resurfaces With “Only Lies”

It’s hard to believe, but Caitlin Rose released her debut record Own Side Now domestically a decade ago. With the help of ATO records, she has returned with a deluxe, ten-year anniversary edition of that heralded collection. Plus, it comes completely remastered with not only a fresh sound, but also her first new songs in eight years: “Whatchoo” and “Only Lies.” Breaking a long drought of music releases from the Nashville-based Texan, these two tunes remind us of what it is about Rose’s music that we love so much. Her directness and dry melancholy give her songs a familiar and relatable quality. Along with the album and the new songs on it, Rose released a performance video of “Only Lies,” which she and Jordan Lehning recorded for a telethon in 2020.

“We were definitely in a rush to get it done, but we’d been doing a lot of demos and still having fun toying around with different mics. As soon as he busted out that RCA KU3A it was like I’d just met a ghost,” Rose says. “It turned out to be his great uncle’s mic who was a Hollywood sound guy in the ’50s and even worked on some Hitchcock. The fact that it had shared an era and a soundstage with some iconic films definitely added a mood to this, but it is funny considering we just shot this on an iPhone.”

The lyrics and video for “Only Lies” are done so straightforwardly that together they feel like a conversation with yourself in the mirror, addressing truths and pains with a matter-of-fact pragmatism that characterizes much of Own Side Now. She notes, “In 2008 I was leaning hard into ‘classic’ and ‘cosmic country,’ George Jones, Gram Parsons, early Ronstadt recordings, in a very unironic way. Even though it wasn’t my only influence, I felt pressure that country was what I was supposed to be doing. My take on it was no doubt kind of quirky, but it came naturally to me. It was easy and fun but I knew I still hadn’t found my own direction.”

Speaking about “Only Lies,” she continues, “Jordan Lehning, who co-wrote the song, inspired me to dig deeper, musically, melodically. He pulled me out of a creative rut I didn’t even know I was in. It was an uncomfortable growth period, and while he didn’t produce Own Side Now, he was still a huge influence on my own artistic evolution. To me, the song itself is a perfect take on the end of a romantic relationship that exists within a creative one. A necessary emotional cynicism that gets you through to the other side.”


Photo Credit: Danielle Holbert

LISTEN: Jordan Lehning, “The Quarry Song”

Artist: Jordan Lehning
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “The Quarry Song”
Album: Little Idols
Release Date: August 7, 2020

In Their Words: “Once I realized ‘The Quarry Song’ would [not] act [as just] a standalone song about a breakup, but as a chapter to a bigger story, I was able to zoom out and understand more about the potential for the rest of the record. Treating the record as a film with scenes and arcs was incredibly informative to the pacing and sequence of the final product. In particular, there are interludes between the songs. ‘The Quarry Song’ is preceded by ‘Hey Boy,’ where the two main characters are lying in their own beds at their respective homes pining over one another telepathically. But after that song, during the interlude, we can hear her emotions shift. A longer interlude than exists in the rest of the record occurs. She pushes and pulls her emotions apart, and after some time has passed she reluctantly agrees to meet our hero one last time in ‘The Quarry Song.’” — Jordan Lehning


Photo credit: Laura E. Partain

LISTEN: Justin Wade Tam, “Colors of My Mind”

Artist: Justin Wade Tam
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “Colors of My Mind”
Album: A Place to Land (EP)
Release Date: October 25, 2019
Label: Tone Tree

In Their Words: “‘Colors of My Mind’ is in part about how a consistent space can foster creativity and peace. For me, that place is my living room, where I’ve been writing songs for nearly 13 years. It’s a quiet, contemplative room with natural light that shifts nicely throughout the seasons. I’ve written the better part of five albums within those four walls, so I wanted to capture it musically. My friend Jordan Lehning produced this song beautifully and insisted that we record it live. You can hear the reflections of the live studio in the recording, which to me sounds very reminiscent of my living room and the peace of simply sitting quietly and creating.” — Justin Wade Tam


Photo credit: Jacq Justice

LISTEN: Andrew Combs, “4×10”

Artist: Andrew Combs
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “4×10” (Loudon Wainwright III cover)
Album: 5 Covers & A Song
Release Date: July 27, 2018
Label: New West Records

In Their Words: “This song sparked the initial idea to record a collection of covers. Jordan Lehning (producer) and I had a bonding moment over this tune and how perfect we thought it was. In fact, we even thought of doing the whole EP of just Loudon songs. In my opinion he is one of the few writers who can cover the territory of familial relationships in such a shrewd and comfortable manner. It’s an important topic in life, but a hard thing to write about. He inspects, with a critical eye, the relationship of husband and wife / father and mother, what can happen when things go wrong between the two parties, and how those emotions and experiences can be ingrained in their children.

In the end, like many of us, he surrenders to the idea that he has inherited some faults of his folks, ending the last verse as he started the song, saying “its not strange, no mystery / you and I are history.” In this moment the word “history” references the end of a relationship but also how we are all continuing traditions, positive or negative, carried on from our parents. What a beautiful and cyclical way to bookend a song. I could go on and on about Loudon’s words — every line probably deserves analysis. This has become one of my favorite songs of all time.” — Andrew Combs


Photo credit: Balee Greer