LISTEN: Sarah Morris, “The Longest Night”

Artist: Sarah Morris
Hometown: Shoreview, Minnesota
Song: “The Longest Night”
Album: Here’s to You
Release Date: May 5, 2023

In Their Words: “‘The Longest Night’ is the last song we recorded for the album. Written over the ending days of 2020, and the first few moments of 2021, I was circling around a wave of realization of how much had changed; how much we had lost over the past year. We had just journeyed through the holidays, and the solstice. I liked the idea that we had possibly reached our darkest day and were now heading toward the light.

“In our local music community, among the many profound losses, one of our friends became ill and eventually passed. She was diagnosed almost in tandem with the pandemic hitting, but weeks before that, she’d released a new album. She’d been at my house, singing a song for my YouTube series. I kept thinking about how much I didn’t know at that moment we were singing together. About how often that happens to us — the not knowing.

“We went into RiverRock Studios on my birthday to record this track — producer Dave Mehling, guitarist Thomas Nordlund, and myself — and we recorded it live. After sitting with the recording, Dave asked bandmates Lars-Erik Larson and Andrew Foreman to add drums and bass — not the most traditional path to a band recording, but Lars and Andrew know my music so well, I think they added the just-right pieces.” — Sarah Morris

sarahmorrismusic · The Longest Night

Photo Credit: Emily Isakson

LISTEN: Angelica Rockne, “Crystalline”

Artist: Angelica Rockne
Hometown: Corralitos, California
Song: “Crystalline”
Album: The Rose Society
Release Date: May 5, 2023
Label: Fluff and Gravy Records / Loose Music

In Their Words: “I wrote ‘Crystalline’ (along with the title track) after a breakup while living in Oakland. Things felt disorienting, a feeling I had come to know well, with my constant movement. Any time I’ve found myself living in a city, I know it’s only a matter of months before I’ll have to retreat somewhere expansive once more. So I try to take it in as much as I can: the old punk house with folks passing through from their freight train circuit, the jazz club where I waitressed, the art groups I posed for. I’m always looking for unrelated worlds I can peer my head into for novelty and because I’m allergic to inertia. Sonically I feel like ‘Crystalline’ is a traveler’s song with its constant percussion and fluid piano, while lyrically it explores the landscape of an abstract mind. At the core, it’s about purification — love and thoughts that could become crystalline. There is a confluence of narratives: one in which the patriarchy is dissolved; another about a friend who’s in prison, speaking to their experience. These themes merge and arrive at a sense of inner freedom.” — Angelica Rockne

Fluff and Gravy Records · Angelica Rockne – Crystalline

Photo Credit: Elisabeth Kokesh

Artist of the Month: Rodney Crowell

Throughout Rodney Crowell’s best work, there’s a rhythm — one could say a heartbeat — in the way he sings and writes about love and mistakes. You can feel the pulse inside of his poetry, an undeniable energy that marks this Texas native as one of the most intriguing and important country and Americana songwriters of his generation. He can be sentimental but rarely sappy, always ready to reassess a situation through a song without making you feel like you’ve heard it before. His albums reveal themselves further over time, rather than chasing a trend.

Longtime fans of Crowell’s work are likely to keep his new album, The Chicago Sessions, in rotation alongside classics like Diamonds & Dirt or The Houston Kid. (Even the album’s cover image is a throwback to his 1978 debut.) Compelling new songs like “Making Lovers Out of Friends” are delivered in a voice that’s weathered but not weak, yet he also offers salutes the late great Townes Van Zandt with a poignant rendition of “No Place to Fall,” composed decades ago by Van Zandt from the perspective of a sad wanderer who’s looking for someone to count on.

For The Chicago Sessions, Crowell counted on producer Jeff Tweedy and recording engineer Tom Schick to frame the collection in a manner that feels eloquent as well as immediate. Crowell and Tweedy also team up to sing the album’s lead single, “Everything at Once,” and the mutual admiration is evident.

Upon its release, Crowell noted, “It occurred to me that Jeff and I are both songwriters, and we ought to write something together for this album. We could have harmonized on it and gone down an Everly Brothers route, but ultimately we decided to just sing in unison and throw it out there like an all-skate. I love that we didn’t get too precious about it.”

Tweedy added, “The way that Rodney writes is deeply connected to a classic era of country songwriters that I’ve always loved. In my estimation, it’s as close as I can get to working with Townes Van Zandt or Felice and Boudleaux Bryant — people who crafted songs with a very specific sensibility. And I like being near that.”

Same here. For that reason and many more, we’re proud to reveal Rodney Crowell as our BGS Artist of the Month. In a few weeks, we’ll share our exclusive interview about his new work, plus we’re diving into our archives for our favorite tracks and videos from his admirable career – like his 2017 Sitch Session performance of “East Houston Blues.” Meanwhile, enjoy our BGS Essentials playlist for Rodney Crowell.


Photo Credit: Claudia Church

LISTEN: Brandy Clark, “She Smoked in the House”

Artist: Brandy Clark
Hometown: Morton, Washington; Nashville, Tennessee
Song: “She Smoked in the House”
Album: Buried (produced by Brandi Carlile)
Release Date: May 19, 2023
Label: Warner Records

In Their Words: “I was driving around listening to a lot of Merle Haggard. I got stuck on ‘Are the Good Times Really Over for Good’ for weeks. That song really makes me think of my grandparents and that generation. I just couldn’t get away from it. So I started on a song called ‘They Smoked in the House,’ but I just couldn’t connect with it in the way that I needed to. I remembered someone once telling me that to be general, you must be specific and so I pivoted and started working on ‘SHE Smoked in the House.’ The ‘SHE’ is my grandma Ruth. To this day, my grandma Ruth is my favorite character to ever walk the planet. Looking back, I wrote this song because I was missing her and the things that she valued in life. I never thought that it would ever be on a record. It was for me….but now it’s for you, too.

“This album is a return home to me in many ways. Musically it’s the rawest I’ve been since 12 Stories and maybe even rawer. When Brandi and I sat down and talked about working together, one thing that really intrigued me was her saying ‘I see it as your return to the Northwest.’ (Since the two of us are both from Washington state). That comment inspired so much for me. It took me back to where and how I grew up. ‘Northwest’ and ‘She Smoked in the House’ were both a result of that early conversation. Working with another recording artist on this project was such a gift that I didn’t even know I needed and changed the way I want to write songs and make records moving forward. My hope is that anyone who hears this album will feel the heart that I put into every note of it.” — Brandy Clark


Photo Credit: Victoria Stevens

WATCH: Mya Byrne, “I’m Gonna Stop”

Artist: Mya Byrne
Hometown: San Francisco, California
Song: “I’m Gonna Stop”
Album: Rhinestone Tomboy
Release Date: April 28, 2023
Label: Kill Rock Stars Nashville

In Their Words: “Sometimes, I’m lucky enough to catch fire — I’ll be in the middle of a rehearsal or even a live solo performance, and get a feeling in my gut, like when you know it’s time to say ‘I love you’ to someone you haven’t said it to yet — and I’ll improvise a complete song into my recorder. And that’s what happened here, in a full-rock session. I had a ton on my mind that day, specifically how much I still felt connected to a former partner from years before, and how so many of my other relationships had, in some way, replayed that. I liked the idea of taking a break from being in love with people, acknowledging how a first kiss can drive an entire new relationship, and how, at least for that time frame, it might be a good idea to just go back to how I was as a child, before certain kinds of relationships were present in my life, before I so often was driven by the excitement of those new relationships, to get some perspective.” — Mya Byrne


Photo Credit: Tui Jordan

BGS 5+5: Autumn Sky Hall

Artist: Autumn Sky Hall (she/her/they/them)
Hometown: Sacramento, California; now New Cumberland, Pennsylvania
Latest Album: While We’re Here EP
Personal Nicknames: My nickname’s Otto 🙂

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

The year I wrote “I Woke Up,” a song inspired by getting into a lot of Heart that year, we played before them at BottleRock. We had no idea it was gonna happen until we got there that day to play, and their gear boxes were behind our gear. I was absolutely beside myself. I don’t remember that show, set or day AT ALL, I was OVERWHELMED with joy. My entire body just buzzin’ and beaming and shooting lightning bolts of glee. Crying. Zero regrets. If y’all are reading this, I love y’all!

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

I’m a person who’s annoyingly sensitive to being in new places, so I bring things to ground me. Everywhere I go, I have the same orange-smelling room spray I use. I bring my blanket from home. I have the same picks from my house, names of friends back home signed on my guitar case, a pin that says “Lord of the Strings” so I can remind myself of Lord of the Rings, my first happy place as a kid. I also like to be alone for at least a good half an hour so I can do some breathing before I feel like myself. It’s all really important to me so I approach the set in the right frame of mind and bring the right vibes. I’m always in the back taping flowers to things, humming, having a blast, feeling at home.

If you had to write a mission statement for your career, what would it be?

I hate to see marginalized folks being pitted against each other. It makes my heart hurt. Folks struggling with discrimination already have to struggle more and have less access, I think they shouldn’t have to ask or be made to jump through hoops to be pulled to the front and given spotlights. Your art, like you, is already worth existing.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

It absolutely kills me that this is true, but as someone who’s just okay without practice and so much better with practice, you have to practice. Annoying, right? I’m so sorry.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

I love to take unfinished songs out on a little song walk by the river, where no one can make fun of me vibing and singing it over and over a hundred times, trying to get into the feel and mood and think of something to add to the harmonies, or to sing along and add a bridge. It allows me to clear my brain and really listen to my narrative voice. I’m more honest, and also more kind, to myself there. It just puts me in the mood I want most to write songs from. Realistic but not bitter, truthful but not cruel. Carefree but not careless.


Photo Credit: Rebecca Crowther

WATCH: Jake Ybarra, “BloodFire”

Artist: Jake Ybarra
Hometown: born in Harlingen, Texas; raised in Greenville, South Carolina; living in Nashville
Song: “BloodFire”
Album: Something in the Water
Release Date: April 7, 2023
Label: Charlotte Avenue Entertainment

In Their Words: “I’m really happy with how the video for ‘BloodFire’ turned out. We tried a couple of different things but the big bonfire in tandem with the moonlight that evening just really brought the video together. We wanted the video to match the intensity of the song and I think we accomplished that goal. ‘BloodFire’ was really an exercise in writing to the music. I had a riff that I really liked and I heard it in my head as a driving rock and roll song. However I didn’t want to sacrifice storytelling in order to make the song work. I wanted to still tell a story but I wanted it to match the intensity of the music. So I ended up writing about this intense person who has maybe been hurt in the past and just isn’t going to take crap anymore. It was a fun song to write and a really fun one to play live.” — Jake Ybarra


Photo Credit: Charlotte Avenue Pictures

LISTEN: Michelle Malone, “Super Ball”

Artist: Michelle Malone
Hometown: Atlanta, Georgia
Song: “Super Ball”
Album: Fan Favorites Vol. 1 Unplugged
Release Date: May 12, 2023
Label: SBS Records (distributed by BDS Ent/The Orchard)

In Their Words: “Stuck inside for the better part of a year, I took to playing acoustic in my living room, and began livestreaming to the masses, lol. Old and new fans tuned in, and I received numerous requests for the songs that eventually found their way onto Fan Favorites Vol. 1 Unplugged. These songs are essentially my greatest hits.

“‘Super Ball’ (originally from Hello Out There, 2001) is one of my favorite songs. I don’t think I wrote it — I channeled it. It has its own magic that I feel came through me. I have seen it lift an audience and transform the energy in the room nightly. I feel it’s about believing in yourself, someone or something. Just when you can’t anymore, this song is proof that you can. It is transformative and exemplifies humanity daily — we are so resilient. It is a tiny miracle, and I am grateful to have received it.” — Michelle Malone

Michelle Malone Music · SUPER BALL UNPLUGGED

Photo Credit: Jolie Loren

With Honesty and Openness, Iris DeMent Keeps ‘Workin’ on a World’

Rattled by the 2016 election and its aftermath, singer-songwriter Iris DeMent did what folk singers are supposed to do: She picked up her pen. But it took until February 2023 for Workin’ on a World, her seventh album, to reach listeners — and it might not have happened at all if her stepdaughter Pieta Brown hadn’t intervened. Brown (whose father is DeMent’s husband, Greg Brown), had cowritten “I Won’t Ask You Why” and “The Sacred Now” with DeMent and knew several tracks had been recorded before the project hit a pandemic-induced pause. When Brown inquired about the album’s status, DeMent confessed she’d stalled out and given up.

Brown asked to hear what DeMent and co-producers Richard Bennett and Jim Rooney had recorded, then declared an album did, indeed, exist, and helped shepherd it to completion. Then she joined DeMent on tour, opening a series of dates that included a March stop in Austin at which DeMent introduced her new work to a sold-out audience — who were particularly amused when she sang “Goin’ Down to Sing in Texas,” an oh-so-sharp skewering of open-carry laws, male privilege, one-percenters, racism and “war criminals who get to walk around free/like that president who lied about WMD.” (The Chicks, who famously called out that president, earn her thanks).

DeMent boldly speaks her mind throughout Workin’ on a World, mixing indictments of oppression, greed and the cult of personality with praise for righteous “Warriors of Love.” She also ruminates on love and loss, and addresses God frequently — not surprising for the youngest of a 14-child family raised in the Pentecostal church. But instead of drearily lamenting a world in turmoil or patly claiming prayer is the answer, she strives to induce hope. When she sings “workin’ on a world I may never see,” she’s reminding activists to keep fighting for future generations.

Back home in Iowa several days after her performance, DeMent discussed the facets of a career that took flight 31 years ago with her debut album, Infamous Angel. Two Grammy nominations, one Americana Music Association Trailblazer Award and dozens of collaborations later, she still likes to let the mystery be, so to speak, when it comes to certain aspects of her songwriting process. But when it comes to inspirations and emotions, she spoke just as she does in her songs — with honesty and openness.

BGS: You’ve said this album came about because you wanted to cut yourself a path through the wilderness of despair. Was there any other sense of mission involved?

DeMent: Initially, it was just a level of despair that was not sustainable, and I had to apply myself to something constructive. Beyond that, it was like, I want to fix things. I care about people here; I care about my children, I care about your children, I care about the world. So I want to see it be improved. And I can’t think of a more useful way to spend my time. The best way I know how to do it is to write songs. Because I know from my own experience, songs can energize me and give me hope and confidence to go do my job. I feel like the best thing I can do is contribute to other people — whatever their job is, some inspiring music can help ’em get it done, as we know.

I went through a phase; I did a lot of political, local things — which is incredibly important, don’t get me wrong. But I can’t do both; I noticed that. They’re two different sides of the brain. And I was either doing the phone banks and all that business, or I was gonna be a writer/singer. At some point, that became clear to me. A few people helped me figure that out: “Iris, that’s your gift, stop underrating it and go.” So I just went back into the songs, and as a result, there’s this record. It would not have happened otherwise. I decided to go back to believing in the value of singing some songs.

Did you originally have a target date for an album, or were you just kind of hoping to do something and then Pieta said, “Here it is”?

I think when I was a lot younger and just coming out of the chute, I probably had targets then, because there’s kind of that thing when you’re young; you’ve got to get your ball rolling. I certainly felt that. I had a really intense sense of momentum and urgency, and I don’t think you’ve got to be a songwriter to have that; it’s a time in life thing, in my opinion. And I’m glad to have had that. It was its own, exciting, awesome, wonderful time. But that started shifting, and rather than fight with that, I accepted it. And I’m really glad I did, because I feel like my music’s gotten better; my singing has gotten better.

I feel like allowing myself to relax a little bit, to trust that the songs will evolve as they need to as long as I keep showing up often enough, in my opinion, has worked. A lot of people who talk to me are really focused on these gap periods and all, which to me are not gap periods. It’s the time it took, plain and simple. There’s a lot of records out there; there’s a lot of music. I’m not interested in taking up somebody’s heart and mind space unless I really feel like I have something to say that warrants that.

If I were thinking in terms of a career, I’d have put out a lot more records. Because I’ll build up an audience, then I won’t put out a record for six years. A handful of people stay with me and a lot of others drift off somewhere else. That’s how that works. If I’d even put out a mediocre record here and there, I think I would have kept a lot of folks. People, if they don’t hear from you, they forget about you, by and large. But I’ve been really fortunate that I’ve had enough people who haven’t that I can still go out and play.

I posted a picture from your show on social media, and so many people responded, it was an obvious indicator that they have not forgotten you. Your sold-out show was another. That must be heartening.

Oh, sure. When you feel like you’ve got something to say that you believe somebody needs to hear, it’s a wonderful feeling when that actually happens. I’ll admit it’d be discouraging if I went out there and the rooms were half full. That said, that has never stopped me before, and never will. I’ve always thought that way. I used to get this vision when I started out; I’d conjure up a desperate person, and I have a model in my mind of who this desperate person is, which I won’t get into. But I conjure a picture of them. They walk in, they sit on the back seat, and I’m singing to that person. Nobody knows them. Nobody knows their name. They’re gonna wander out that door, but they’re gonna take something from that room that they needed, and it’s my job to give it to ’em. Yeah, my feelings and my ego and all that stuff come into play, but I’ve gotten really good at overriding all that and thinking of the mission that I’m on and the job that I have to do that isn’t about numbers. It’s about hearts; individuals. I gotta go there with ’em and let the rest go. That rest of it is just not my business.

The list of albums and tracks you’ve contributed to is really astonishing, but you’re probably best known for your duets with John Prine. How did those tend to come about?

John wrote liner notes on my first record. I became acquainted with him through Jim Rooney, who was friends with John, long before I met John. And then when my first record came out, John asked me to go out and open for him, which, of course, I gladly did. Right up till the end, I would always do a couple of shows a year with him, at least. Did quite a lot of shows throughout the years prior to that. And one thing led to another. We got to record those duets together. I just loved John like crazy, and I think he loved me. Singing with him was its own unique thing that’ll never happen again, and I’ll miss that forever.

You cite quite a list of heroes on this album. Did you have to leave many out?

Always. There’s always people. “Warriors of Love,” I could have made it 10 verses long.

How did you choose?

Oh, I couldn’t even begin to explain that. It’s just, you’re sitting there trying to get somewhere and your gut says, “I think this is the direction to go.” Obviously, the people I chose are more universally known. And that helps because you don’t have to write, “here’s the history of this person,” so you can bring people up to speed. Most people are far less familiar with (pro-Palestinian activist) Rachel Corrie than (U.S. Sen.) John Lewis or Dr. King, so that was a little bit of a stretch. But I think I gave enough details to make that picture fairly clear. And there’s lots of information out there if people want to gather it.

With “The Cherry Orchard,” you’re continuing the Russian literature connection you made on your last album (2015’s The Trackless Woods, on which she set poet Anna Akhmatova’s translated words to music; the song is inspired by Anton Chekhov’s play). You’ve got a Russian-born daughter, and you seem relatively steeped in that culture. What drew you to it?

Our daughter was 5½ when we adopted her from Siberia. She’s almost 24 now. So we had a little Russian speaker in our house. There was a lot of mystery there; she had a lot of qualities that were clearly unique to her culture. I can still see them today. So I wanted to understand as much as I could, which is still very minimal; I’m not going to pretend. But I wanted to find a way into that world to the degree that I could. So that’s what I did. I did those Anna Akhmatova poems and took a couple of Russian literature classes. And I found that I love the Russian writers. I must have some sort of natural affinity for the world that made my daughter.

Have you ever seen Chekhov’s plays performed?

I saw Uncle Vanya in Chicago. I cried through the whole damned thing. My husband and my daughter were by my side; they were just looking at me, like, “Is Mom having a breakdown?” I had the same reaction to The Cherry Orchard. I was in my class, this university class with, like, 12 people; I could hardly sit in my chair. There’s just something about the merging of intense elements in so much of Russian life and literature that something in me relates to. I actually had a lot of that in my own family history. Intense drama, poverty, violence, you name it, the whole male-female dynamic, the hierarchies. There’s something in it that is very familiar to me. I’ve just connected with a lot of that literature. Like, just in my body, I mean.

At your show, Pieta said the songs on this album feel really important, and she’s right. They do. You tackle some big topics, and you’re not afraid to name names and focus on divisive issues. I loved hearing you sing “Goin’ Down to Sing in Texas” in Texas, but putting a song like that out in today’s world, do you worry about blowback?

No, I worry about what would happen if I stay quiet. I worry about what will happen if I don’t speak up about these things. I’ve crossed over to that. When I was younger and wrote about the Vietnam War on “Wasteland of the Free,” I wasn’t worried. But then I became the target of a fair amount of hatefulness, to put it mildly, and that was surprising to me. But I’ve got my eyes pretty wide open about what’s going on here now.

No, I don’t feel worried about that. I feel worried about the people who will be hurt if I stay silent. My takeaway from my upbringing and the teachings of Jesus … you’re supposed to care about something bigger than you and invest yourself in it. I wouldn’t go so far as to say, “Oh, I don’t have fear.” Of course I do. But I do feel like that’s what we’re called to do. There’s a power and a confidence and a peace that can come with that as well. I feel that.


Photo Credit: Dasha Brown

LISTEN: Esther Rose, “Dream Girl”

Artist: Esther Rose
Hometown: Born in Detroit, raised in Columbiaville, Michigan
Song: “Dream Girl”
Album: Safe to Run
Release Date: April 21, 2023
Label: New West Records

In Their Words: “This song is for anyone who’s been made to feel less than their male counterparts. Don’t listen to them, dreamgirl! About halfway through making the album in New Mexico, producer Ross Farbe and I took the songs back to New Orleans. We recruited Silver Synthetic to be my backing band on a couple of songs. It feels like a sonic bridge, connecting my past to my present. I am a huge fan of this band and it was dreamy to hear my songs come to life with their soft rock vibes.” — Esther Rose


Photo Credit: Brandon Soder