WATCH: Max Gomez, ‘Make It Me’

Artist: Max Gomez
Hometown: Taos, NM
Song: “Make It Me”
Album: Me & Joe
Release Date: September 22, 2017
Label: Brigadoon Records

In Their Words: “This song is an important one to me. It tells a tale as common as the hearts we break. The underlining message is positive and hopeful. In the video we shot, we went with a less-is-more approach. We captured some of the surrounding beauty in and outside of where I live in Taos, New Mexico. We filmed in the dead of winter. We wanted real snow and we got it.

The bottom line is the song. The song tells any story you want it to, but to me it tells of true love. The undeniable, scared-to-lose-it kind of love that can’t be faked. The rarest kind.” — Max Gomez


Photo credit: Kim Hays

WATCH: Korby Lenker, ‘Uh-Oh’ (featuring Caroline Spence)

Artist: Korby Lenker (featuring Caroline Spence)
Hometown: Twin Falls, ID
Song: “Uh-Oh”
Album: Thousand Springs
Release Date: July 14, 2017
Label: Soundly Music

In Their Words: “I wrote this song with Holiday Mathis about the feeling of being in love. It’s only happened for me twice, that sense of being so connected with someone it’s electric. Like, actual electricity. It leaves a mark on you forever.

A lot of my songs have some kind of twist in them or maybe a slightly complicated idea, but for this one, I just wanted to express something really simple. We only used three instruments and a lot of space, and Caroline Spence’s delicate burn of a voice. Caroline and I got together a few weeks ago to shoot the video, directed by Cody Duncum. The whole thing was filmed in one take, and speaking of twists, we added one at the end.” — Korby Lenker


Photo credit: Anthony Shafer

WATCH: Matt Woods, ‘Fireflies’

Artist: Matt Woods
Hometown: Knoxville, TN
Song: “Fireflies”
Album: How to Survive
Release Date: October, 2017
Label: Lonely Ones Records

In Their Words: “It may come as a shock to folks who have been listening to my music for some time to find a genuine love song on this new album, but even the lonely-hearted find some inspiration from time to time. To the dear faithful listener, don’t fret: There are plenty more sad songs to come.” — Matt Woods


Photo credit: Beau James

LISTEN: Flagship Romance, ‘Nemesis’

Artist: Flagship Romance
Hometown: Jacksonville Beach, FL
Song: “Nemesis”
Album: Tales from the Self-Help Section
Release Date: August 4, 2017
Label: Gatorbone Records

In Their Words: “Sporting a Deadpool onesie and the beginnings of a full-on anxiety attack, I wrote this song in an empty beachside apartment with a category 4 hurricane in striking distance. It was a creatively cathartic experience of airing my grievances about myself to the tune of open G. It’s not only a testament to how many of us can be our own worst enemy, at times, but it also found its place as the lyrical poster child to our forthcoming album, Tales from the Self-Help Section.” — Shawn Fisher


Photo credit: Miguel Emmanueli

WATCH: Modern Mal, ‘S.O.S.’

Artist: Modern Mal
Hometown: Lovells, MI
Song: “S.O.S.”
Album: The Misanthrope Family Album
Release Date: May 12, 2017

In Their Words: “What we love about certain songwriters is their ability to say a lot, without an excess of wording. Writers like Fats Domino, Johnny Cash, and Hank Williams could convey a feeling or mood without having to say much at all. ‘S.O.S.’ was Brooks’ attempt at writing a ‘pop’ song using that same method. Brooks wrote this song about me, actually, which makes it sort of personal and extra sad from my perspective. But It’s about moving on from someone who you thought loved you as much as you loved them. The layered harmonies at the end are intense. I think we have 10 different vocal tracks going on there.” — Rachel Brooke

Healing the Heartbreak: A Conversation with Chastity Brown

“All my life, I was afraid of everything, and I wouldn’t touch what was beautiful to me,” sings Chastity Brown on “Drive Slow,” the first track on her new LP, Silhouette of Sirens. Appropriately, it’s a song filled with motion: an automotive chug toward the horizon, a call to move on and leave our ashes behind. But, like Brown herself, it’s more complex than just that. There are moments to stop, plant your feet, and savor the stillness, a rearview mirror filled with memories both sweet and sinister.

But Brown likes to move, no doubt — right now, she’s just completed a run in Denver, where she’ll be singing in Ani DiFranco’s back-up band later in the night. She certainly likes to move on, too, and Silhouette of Sirens finds the Minnesota-residing, Tennessee-born artist pondering perseverance: how to overcome and heal a broken heart with an understanding of all the many ways one can be shattered in the first place.

Now signed to Red House Records, Brown crafted Silhouette of Sirens with her longtime writing partner, Robert Mulrennan, and the result is a set of songs that exist in the perfect sweet spot between roots inspiration and modern sensibilities. And with plenty of soul-bearing honesty, too. “I try to find a way to sing where I’m not having a therapy session,” says Brown. “But I think there is a lot of longing on this record.” These aren’t songs to be heard prone on the couch anyway. “Pouring Rain” has a soul-filled groove, and “Carried Away” is a delicate but sweeping mid-tempo ode to rising up and over what sets us adrift.

You just got back from a jog — does running help you think creatively?

It helps me calm down. I think I have such high anxiety that it clears out the cob webs. I don’t do it to be entirely healthy. I just have to have something to take the edge off.

It’s been quite a bit of time since 2012’s Back-Road Highways, your last release. So much has changed since then: You have a new label, you’re five years older, we have a new president. How do you reflect back on it all?

There are mile markers that I think are physical: a record label, for one. I finished the album two years ago and, at that point, I had taken two years to make it. That was the longest I had taken for anything. And, at that time, I was also turning 33. I’m not religious or anything, but I was like, “This is my Jesus Christ year. This is my Buddha year.” Thirty-three is where you go big or go home. And I gave myself permission to actually be ambitious and gave myself permission to get what they call in the music business a “team.” To make the album, I had emotionally gone through a really dark time without realizing it, and that influenced the work. I was separating all the dark shit going on in my head with these songs I was writing with my writing partner. It wasn’t until after I finished that I was like, “Holy shit, this actually digs deep into my subconscious and exercises some demons I wasn’t ready to acknowledge.”

How so?

The music reflected itself back to me and, in one part, let me know I was quite broken, and in another part of the album, let me know I wasn’t that way anymore. It’s a fucking therapy session, but I can’t say what it feels like to be different. Though I know I’m literally in a different place than when I was making it.

Was it difficult to give up your independence and sign to a label?

Yeah, I’m a little bit — and I think my band mates can vouch for the fact that — I am a little bit controlling. But at the same time, this isn’t really possible to do alone. I had to ask people for their gifts and talent. It was difficult to relinquish some of that, but we all work really well together. I’m a 34-year-old woman who is not going to be told what to do. Working with these people on collaboration, I don’t feel like it’s me telling them what to do or the opposite. But I do have clear goals, and it wasn’t just a spur-of-the-moment decision. It was thought out, and I have to trust them. And I do.

You mentioned the album was finished two years ago, so do these songs still feel fresh to you?

I was expecting them to be old by now, but they’re not old to me. Maybe it’s just my relationship with them. For 2016, I got the incredible opportunity to tour with Ani DiFranco, and that was the real test of these songs. And I feel like they can hold their own. I still love them. But after you create, and you go on the road, and you geek out, the songs are still evolving. All I did is capture where these songs were at the time. But now I’ve changed, shit’s changed. They augment with me.

Who were you then versus now?

What I was experiencing during that dark time was having a really dark childhood. I think because of that — and the album is not about that at all — but I feel really sensitive to other people’s stories, and what I had realized is, that time period in my life broke my heart. As a child, my heart was broken, and it has taken me so long to mend that and allow love in my life. So the overall theme came out that there are different types of heartbreak. Of course there are love songs, but there are other things that break your heart. There is more to life than songs about coupled relationships — though I love those — but this is a little bit broader. A macro view of different types of heartbreak informed by my own personal heartbreak.

You’re singing with Ani tonight and you’ve opened for her in the past. That must have been an amazing, informative experience.

Yeah. Shit. I’ve said this before: It’s the most generous thing that any artist has done. She’s showed me how it’s done, in a different way. I’ve been touring for 10 years, but there are different things at her level, which you can only see from there. In the folk world, it’s generational, passing things down. It’s huge to me, how generous she’s been. And it’s a good affirmation that someone I respect gives me a thumbs up.

Did you have conversations with her about what it means to be a politically engaged artist?

Well, I don’t think we talk in terms of what things mean. We were out on the road when Trump was elected president, and what we talked about was how to act, and in what capacity. We have such a privilege, all across the country: When you step on stage, you are the loudest person in the room. I feel like Ani teaches by showing. She stands in her integrity so fiercely, it made me want to articulate even more what matters to me. Like how Black Lives Matter has been a huge cornerstone in what I talk about from stage the past year-and-a-half, and it will be until I feel like folks get it. You’d be surprised how many “liberal” audiences have a rebuttal to that.

Really?

I remember in Utah, I was talking about this Nina Simone song and I said, “I play this because Black lives matter.” And this woman was like, “All lives matter!” I want to use compassion to educate people, but at the same time, God, that woman fucking infuriated me. But it wasn’t the time. Going back to what to do as an artist during these times, it’s to use your voice in the capacity of your life. I’m from Tennessee; I have family members who voted for Trump. And those are family members I love, and I can’t pretend that they are evil. But I can get down and dirty in a difficult conversation, trying to figure out where they are coming from.

Have you written any overtly political songs?

I have, but none that I would play out. One of the titles was like, “Fuck You Pieces of Shit!” An ongoing rant. I was like, maybe I can kind of hone it in! But I have been creating. A lot of people are saying, “What are artists going to say as a comeback to all this?” And I’ve heard some incredible work that’s going after how fucked up our government is, but there are other things to focus on. Like the beauty of being a brown woman and celebrating that. There was a time after so many police shootings, all the songs I was writing were really angry. But Solange [and her 2016 LP, A Seat at the Table] was a great reminder of “Yo, let’s talk about our beauty.” And we should.


Photo credit: Wale Agboola

MIXTAPE: It’s a Cheating Situation

About two weeks into February, you’ll find that darlings in love glow; strong, single types treat themselves; and the unlucky who’ve been wronged get a brutal reminder of that wronging. Who needs all those normative flowers, heart-shaped boxes, chocolate-dipped strawberries, and bubbly? Who needs that ungrateful someone who-shall-not-be-named with the wandering eye? We’ll take depressing songs about heartbreak and infidelity instead, thanks. At least, that’s what we’ll keep telling ourselves.

Ricky Skaggs: “Don’t Cheat in Our Hometown”

Ricky started performing this song with Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys back when both he and a young Keith Whitley were in the band. (The best iteration of the Clinch Mountain Boys ever? Yes.) Now, it would seem like the subject of this song would go without saying. While we do not condone philandering, we do recommend sticking to this rule of thumb, if you find yourself thinking it’s smart to break his heart and run down his name. (As a bonus, check out the album artwork from Ricky’s eponymous country record. It is everything.)

Darrell Scott: “Too Close to Comfort”

There’s one line in this song that bugged me for a while: “Lying with strangers one more last time.” It felt clunky, the grammar felt off. Then one day, it just hit me. There have been plenty of “last times” before this one. It’s the singer’s last “last time.” Just once more. Anyone with first-hand experience of the foolin’ around kind knows that with this line — hell, the whole song — Darrell Scott delivers songwriting gold, once again.

J.D. Crowe & the New South: “Summer Wages”

It would seem that there’s a much higher rate of friends stealing friends’ girls in bluegrass music than other genres. Tony sings this with such conviction; it really is one of the best existentially sad songs of bluegrass. “Never leave your woman alone when your friends are out to steal her. She’ll be gambled and lost like summer wages.”

Dolly Parton: “I’m Gonna Sleep with One Eye Open”

Dolly has no shortage of cheating songs in her repertoire. (Let’s be honest: “Jolene” would’ve been too easy a choice.) It’s nice to hear a woman sing cheating songs because, despite the greater number of songs sung by jilted men, we know infidelity isn’t really a gender issue; it’s pretty much just a human one.

Flatt & Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys: “I’ll Go Stepping Too”

Just a classic. Lester’s drawl, Earl’s banjo, the iconic fiddle turn-around kickoff … you gotta love it all. Equal footing in an unfaithful relationship might not be the best approach, though. Just make sure you put out the cat before you go stepping, too.

John Prine: “It’s a Cheating Situation”

John Prine and Irish folk singer Dolores Keane hit the nail so solidly on the head. They sing to the humanity we overlook in wandering spouses or significant others. “It’s a cheating situation. Just a cheap imitation. Doing what we have to do. When there’s no love at home.” This one was written by Moe Bandy, who happens to be so adept at penning cheating songs, we had to include him later on in this list, too.

Nickel Creek: “Can’t Complain”

This song feels like a sort of roots music trance experiment — with its title as mantra. To the offending party, cheating often feels like an inevitability, but does that absolve the sin? In retrospect, do the circumstances change the nature of the outcome? Or perhaps the crux is that, despite the way things end and the bridges burnt, maybe it’s all still worth it. There’s a redemptive message we can get behind.

The Kendalls: “Heaven’s Just a Sin Away”

Now this is a song with a hook. Yeah, it’s a little weird to hear a father and daughter sing in harmony about forbidden love, but let’s just gloss over that and enjoy it for what it is: a killer, old-fashioned, bittersweet, real country, cheatin’ duet with some sick twin electric guitar. Bonus: Check out their tune “Pittsburgh Stealers.” Once again, a cheating song, but with steel mills and, yes, football wordplay for a hook. Simply masterful.

Shania Twain: “Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under?”

Two words: guilty pleasure. This is like the country version of “Mambo No. 5” … “List a bunch of women’s names!” But damn, it’s an earworm. End of caption.

Moe Bandy: “I Just Started Hatin’ Cheatin’ Songs Today”

Listening to heartbreak song after heartbreak song can be particularly painful when you empathize a little too strongly with them. Throw-a-bottle-at-the-jukebox painful. But those moments are when we find the therapeutic power of song at its strongest. It is comforting to know there are other sad bastards out there taking out their hurt on depressing records, too, right?

Doyle & Debbie: “When You’re Screwin’ Other Women (Think of Me)”

The reason we had to put this song last on this list is because it renders all of the other songs above null and void. This is the only one that matters. This is the magnum opus of cheating songs done up right by America’s number one country sweethearts. Happy Valentine’s Day, y’all.


Photo credit: KTDrasky via Foter.com / CC BY

LISTEN: Robt Sarazin Blake, ‘Couples’

Artist: Robt Sarazin Blake
Hometown: Bellingham, WA
Song: “Couples”
Album: Recitative
Release Date: April 7, 2017
Label: Same Room Records

In Their Words: “We come from couples and spend our lives dancing in and out of coupleness. When coupled, we learn to think as one. When un-coupled, we must deal with those who are. I think this could go on forever. Happy Valentines Day.” — Robt Sarazin Blake


Photo credit: Jon Witsell

LISTEN: Moonsville Collective, ‘Always Enough’

Artist: Moonsville Collective
Hometown: Long Beach, CA
Song: "Always Enough"
Album: Moonsville I
Release Date: January 13, 2017

In Their Words: "I wrote 'Always Enough' for my wife. It’s about love, it’s about marriage — about how simple and also how challenging it can be, and how both of those things make it beautiful. I think, when you get married, if you want to be married for your lifetime, two people have to become one person. But when the going gets tough, it’s often easier to run away from someone than to run into them. Being honest about your weaknesses, meditating on love … it's a song about always finding one another, and the peace that comes from connection.

Many of the songs we've written in the past are belters. Live, we're a raw, high energy band, and we write a lot of songs that get folks moving. But it just so happened that many of the tunes on this EP are a bit more melancholy. With 'Always Enough,' I hear some of our affinity for Dylan’s Blood on the Tracks coming through. That record is one of my wife's favorites. Also Simon and Garfunkel, some of Tom Waits’ ballads maybe … basically songs sung in a lower register, quieter. It’s another side of the group’s personality that we don’t always put forward." — Corey Adams (vocals, guitar, banjo)


Photo credit: Martin Vielma

WATCH: Audrey Spillman, ‘Goodnight, Goodbye’

Artist: Audrey Spillman
Hometown: Nashville, TN
Song: "Goodnight, Goodbye"
Album: Thornbird
Release Date: September 16

In Their Words: "'Goodnight, Goodbye' is a song about someone not being able to allow themselves to give in to what they feel because of their fear, and the person on the other end of that fear is asking them to give them just one more try to get them to release that fear, in order to fully love and let go." — Audrey Spillman


Photo credit: Will Holland