LISTEN: Sarah Lee Langford & Will Stewart, “Staring at the Sun”

Artist: Sarah Lee Langford & Will Stewart
Hometown: Birmingham, Alabama
Song: “Staring at the Sun”
Album: Bad Luck and Love
Release Date: November 18, 2022
Label: Cornelius Chapel Records

In Their Words: “‘Staring at the Sun’ is one of those songs that began on the late-night, slow-tempo songwriting couch, and the band turned it into something fit for the public. With these lyrics, I’m telling everyone to remind me not to go down that same road again when I know damn well I’ll do it anyway. These songs make me look at my life over and over, as I work them out with the band, try them out on stage, and record take after take in the studio. Then perform them fully fledged, sometimes right in front of the people who inspired them. It’s like each time the experience loses some of its charge, as I embody how I got there in the first place. People tell me these songs are relatable, so they’re not selfishly just for me, which makes them worth writing.” — Sarah Lee Langford


Photo Credit: Lisa Cordes

Will Stewart, ‘Sipsey’

When we’re children, we just want to run. Through the forest, through the grass, through the days as they tick by. We can’t get where we’re going fast enough, be it to the playground or the school dance or the simple embrace of a best friend, who can run alongside us as we skip rocks and think about the future. We count down days on Advent calendars. We are endlessly impatient. We don’t quite understand nostalgia, because we’re not interested in looking back. We want to get there, and now.

“I’d do anything to find that feeling again,” sings Will Stewart on “Sipsey,” the opening track off his new LP, County Seat. If childhood is running forward, then adulthood is, as Joni Mitchell sang, all about dragging our feet to slow the circles down. “Sipsey” — a lush, locomotive song from the Alabama-based Stewart — encapsulates not only the desire to slow time, but to reclaim it … though he’s smart enough to realize that no matter how many times we retrace the steps we once walked, the path will never feel the same again. “Sipsey” manages to be beautiful yet uneasy, a document of longing not for a place, or a person, but a feeling — a feeling of freedom, of nature, of agelessness before we were wise enough and old enough to know better. We can’t go back. But songs like this can help, a little.

LISTEN: Will Stewart, ‘Heaven Knows Why’

Artist: Will Stewart
Hometown: Birmingham, AL
Song: “Heaven Knows Why”
Album: County Seat
Release Date: April 6, 2018
Label: Cornelius Chapel Records

In Their Words: “It starts out referencing getting burnt out chasing the party, but not knowing how to stop because it’s all you know. The second verse hints at finding understanding via giving up the search for meaning and just being content with realizing that you’ll never know the answers to all the ‘big’ questions, at least that’s what I was trying to say, basically. It’s vaguely Eastern/Buddhist. With the last line, I was trying to say that I could find salvation in understanding that I have to co-exist with all the metaphorical demons/dark things that live with everyone, instead of trying to eradicate them. Existential demons will always be here and that’s okay. You just need to learn how to keep them at bay and don’t succumb. Without the dark, there’s no such thing as light.” — Will Stewart


Photo credit: Wes Frazer