Hannah Juanita Tennessee Songbird Self Release
The 2021 debut album HARDLINER introduced me to the music of Tennessee-born and bred Hannah Juanita. That album’s title and a number of the songs, which drilled into lousy life choices and relationships, pointed to a high-spirited artist with endless potential. Kicking off her career playing at the Honky Tonk Tuesday Nights at The American Legion in Nashville was the stepping stone for Juanita to support slots in recent years for Jesse Daniel, Nick Shoulders and the like-minded Katlin Butts. Having witnessed her early live shows and, more recently, her performance at the 5 Spot in 2023, the adage ‘whirlwind’ comes to mind. That progression is mirrored in TENNESSEE SONGBIRD, a ten-track collection that hits the mark as a cracking modern honky tonk delight. Juanita’s high-pitched and sparkling vocals are well-suited to songs that combine traditional country anthems and tender ballads.
She’s out of the blocks at some pace and setting her stall with the opener Hardliner Blues(‘I’m a honky tonkin’ baby with the hardliner blues’). The track includes some killer guitar breaks from Mose Wilson, who produced the album, and equally fine pedal steel courtesy of Eddy Dunlap. Other big hitters and Music City household names that contributed are Chris Scruggs (guitar), Dennis Crouch (bass), Bruce Bouton (dobro), Micah Hulscher (keys), Billy Contreras (fiddle) and Fred Eltringham (drums). The album's production, led by Mose Wilson, was a collaborative effort involving those Music City household names, each contributing their unique talents to create a rich and classic country sound.
Riley Downing, of The Deslondes fame, also joined the party, duetting on Granny’s Cutlass Supreme, his lived-in, gruff, whiskey-soaked vocal the perfect foil for Juanita’s thrilling falsetto. The song, laced with humour, was written in memory of Juanita’s glamorous grandmother (‘She’d put on her bikini and make a big martini. Lawd, you ain’t never seen nothin’ like the sheen on granny’s Cutlass Supreme’). Equally fun-filled is Loose Caboose, which reads like it could also be about her grandmother as a young woman in her heyday.
She takes her foot off the gas on the somewhat autobiographical and slow-paced title track. The unbridled Honky Tonkin’ for Life sums up the album’s core thrust (‘Well I’ve done a million things, finally found my dream. Reckon I’m a honky tonk girl, I’m up there on the stage, two-step night and day’). Mother Country Music is a toe-tapping sonic delight in the Tammy Wynette style, and Fortune reaches the sweet spot between traditional and modern country.
This year has gifted us with many exceptional ‘real’ country albums by female artists. Wonder Women Of Country, Emily Nenni, Sarah Gayle Meech, Kiely Connell, Kelsey Waldon, Kayla Ray, Eliza Thorn, Kaitlin Butts, and India Ramey immediately come to mind but repeated listens to TENNESSEE SONGBIRD has me thinking that by the end of the year, it’s most likely to be the jewel in the crown for me.
Declan Culliton
Wild Ponies Dreamers No Evil
As pillars of the local East Nashville scene for two decades, Doug and Telisha Williams (Wild Ponies) have previously released five albums. DREAMERS, a unique addition to their back catalogue, features twelve songs in their distinct country-folk style, a sound that is sure to captivate and intrigue listeners.
Very much a community effort, co-writers on the album include Ben Glover (Breathe), Nora Jane Struthers (Love You Right Now), John Hadley and the late Dave Olney (Morning Comes) and Chuck and Mira Costa (Night Sky). They travelled farther afield to work with songwriter and activist Chely Wright (Wind Love and Water). Alongside Telisha's bass and Doug's guitar, they were joined by some of the finest local players in longtime collaborator Fats Kaplin (pedal steel, banjo, strings), Ross McReynolds (drums), Ellen Angelico (guitars) and Joshua Grange (pedal steel).
Band of Cardinals opens the album and is a high-powered, copybook, classic folk-rock track. Recalling the 70s Richard and Linda Thompson sound, its origin came from a translation by Telisha of a Portuguese poem. The autobiographical title track - with nods to John Prine - in many ways represents the individualistic lifestyle the couple have enjoyed and continue to enjoy. Their daughter Iris was the catalyst for the stripped-back Heartbeat, which recalls a harrowing time when they thought they may have lost her before birth. The appalling school shooting in Parkland, Florida, in 2018, which took the lives of fourteen students and three staff members, was the motivation for the forthright Bury The Young. Wind Love and Water, written with Chely Wright in her New York apartment, is a powerful reminder of nature’s simple healing powers.
Doug and Telisha Williams's often unconventional life experiences and non-traditional family values provide them with unlimited writing material. They are well known for their weekly Wild Ponies Happy Hour Show on WSM, regular Trail Ride facilitators for their friends and fanbase, becoming parents and foster parents, and their previous mobile food catering business, which all suggest a partnership that is always open to new and fulfilling challenges.
DREAMERS is a powerful statement of acceptance, freedom, and having the courage to be true to oneself and exist happily in an increasingly messed-up world. Doug and Telisha Williams are doing just that on their own terms, and on an album that navigates a range of emotions, they have created a body of work that will most certainly enhance their already lofty reputation.
Declan Culliton
Mike Montrey Band Love, Time & Mortality Self Release
Singer-songwriter, musician, producer, and teacher Mike Montrey reflects on a range of real-life issues he encountered over the past decade on his latest and sixth album. Family bereavement, fatherhood, divorce, mortality, and the challenges of kick-starting his music programme for adults with disabilities all played their part in creating the stimulus for the album's ten tracks.
Montrey's memories of his deceased mother, particularly her love of stained glass, inspired Stained Glass Window Panes. This country-tinged track, adorned with slick pedal steel licks, encapsulates the album's core message of cherishing every moment ('Slow it down, there ain't nothing at the end of the middle of the end anyhow. Slow it down because it's gone before you know it'). This sage advice is echoed in Fortune Teller and Holdin' On To Nothin, the latter featuring Jen Augustine's superb backing vocals, as they delve into the fragility of relationships. The allure of temptation, a force often irresistible and alluring, is explored in The Devil Caught Me Napping, and the album also includes a cover of Bob Dylan's Emotionally Yours.
Montrey's well-worn baritone vocals, complemented by Augustine's timely vocal injections, are undeniably impressive. The collective effort of the band members also brings a warm and free-flowing musical feel to the tracks, creating a relaxing and comforting atmosphere. Jack Stanton's pedal steel, Santo Rizzolo's drums and percussion, Mike Noordzy's bass, Nicole Scorsone's violin, and John Ginty's organ and piano all play a crucial role in shaping the album's sound.
LOVE, TIME, AND MORTALITY is a profound meditation on life's challenges and the unforeseen. It addresses the tight-rope balancing act of holding on to life at often challenging times, inviting the listener on a contemplative journey. In doing so, it offers a splendid listening experience.
Declan Culliton
Ben Arsenault Make Way For This Heartache North Country Collective
There has been some mighty fine music in the roots/country area for a very long time. Witness Sean Burns’ recent LOST COUNTRY release that explores some largely undiscovered gems from Canada’s country music past. Now here, taking a similarly traditional path, we have Ben Arsenault releasing his second album, on which he works closely with other like-minded souls such as producer and bassist Erik Nielsen (of the City & Colour band), John Sponarski and Matt Kelly, the latter two along with drummer Leon Power are also involved in a collective know as Wild North (who released their debut album in 2019). Pedal steel comes courtesy of Austinite and Jesse Daniel sideman, Caleb Melo and the aforementioned Kelly. Others involved include fiddler Kendal Carson, the keyboards of Darryl Havers and guitarist Aidan Ayers.
Some of the songs have been part of Arsenault’s live set for some time, while others are new versions of earlier material like Too Late and Does A Man Know? He also includes new songs such as Never Been The Boss and I’m Changing Too, which touch on the timeless and perennial themes of heartbreak and its continuing presence. Facing that with some conviction and understanding helps these songs to be grounded and ultimately, in their delivery, balance the despondency with some upbeat musical arrangements. This was likely influenced, to some degree, by the music he created for a number of years with the band Real Ponchos. The drummer from that band Emlyn Scherk appears on several tracks on this album too.
Arsenault’s voice is another bonus, with its overtones of classic country stylings but with his own way of revealing the poignancy of the material. Grand Forks tells of a selfish attitude towards a relationship, wherein the blend of organ, guitar and pedal steel does much to set the tone of grievous wrongdoing. Too Late tells how the situation of trying to make things work out are “too late now and it was too late then, and its always been.” The title track swims in its knowledge that another exchange will doubtless not end well. You begin to feel sorry for Arsenault, although when the music turns out this good you want his pain to continue.
And it does, as he wonders is his demeanour as obvious to others as it is to him, You Can Tell That I’ve Been Lonesome finds him wanting to be acknowledged for his downbeat state. Never Been The Boss ruminates on never feeling in control of such situations. “There ain’t one thing worth fighting for’ is a thought which finds him down in the darker sides of life in Basement Blues. Further bouts of wondering and self realisation ask the question Does A Man Know? and does so with steel guitar drifting through the song’s quiescence. However hope has the tendency to offer the possibility of a new liaison and the fact that this time he may be prone to come on strong, such is the reason to get Carried Away. ‘Used to stay out all night shaking my hips’ was how the protagonist in the final upbeat track, I’m Changing Too. Well, we can hope that he doesn’t change musical direction as he thinks of becoming a better man and moving on from his old ways. It finishes this ten track album, which has paired a producer who has the sensibility to make this sound right with a top notch singer and writer and some equally appropriate playing. You will therefore want to make way for this album in your collection of similar albums, delivering the timeless ethos of classic country in a timely and excellent package.
Stephen Rapid
Matt Mason Time’s All I Got 91 Ranch Outpost
The new album from Matt Mason is a good one, however I can’t tell you who produced, played on or wrote the songs, as after extensive a search online I couldn’t find any of these credits. Mason himself, I can see from streaming sites, is the primary songwriter throughout. The production and playing is also effective in delivering the material in what’s a largely country/roots rock manner, held together by Mason’s conclusive vocals throughout, something that proved him a near winner on the talent show Nashville Star in 2006. He also did well on CMT’s Next Superstar, following which he got a deal with Warner Brothers. However, after a period of initial releases, he later moved to putting out his music independently. He has had five of those out prior to this new release.
All the material is aided by a solid rhythm section with a guitar player who is equally convincing with more than enough twang to make sure you get the overall picture. However, it is the songs that are the attraction, along with Mason’s impressive vocal, that suggests that, even in a solo live situation, they would stand up. This is an eight track mini-album that runs just under 30 minutes.
Many of the songs deal with the adjustments that have to be made as one gets that little older, and the things that feel good in life may not necessarily be the ones that are good for you in the long run. The title track, which closes the album, sets that out in a slow paced, hard-edged manner. Elsewhere, Mason decides he needs to be Gettin’ Off The Fence after having realised the hurt he has caused those close to him, and that he needs to stop by getting off the fence and "stop swinging off the gates of hell.” Similarly, as with other songs here, Roll No More balances the love of a woman with the lure of hard liquor and this "rolling stone don’t roll no more ... giving up the bar stool for an easy chair.” This may have come from the hard lessons of pushing a partner to the limit, but that realisation has set in and is given understanding with Scars From The Flame and This One’s Gonna Hurt.
Friendly Fire has an interesting lyric about saying things that can’t be taken back; like a bullet from a gun and the effect that may have in injuring someone close to you who was not the intended victim, revealed when the smoke has cleared. It is a well expressed duet sung and written with Ella Mae Mason. The song E is about a confrontational situation that is not going to end well, judging from this selection of song lines: “That needle’s pushin’ ninety-five … I see the whites in your eyes … Don’t think that you’re livin’, man … We might both end up in hell … But you’re sure as hell goin’ first.”
This is an album I have enjoyed listening to and it’s easy in some ways to see why Mason didn’t quite take off to the heights with the Warner's deal, but equally his music is not the kind of easy listening, positive love songs with the edges shaved and smoothed off that was the requirement back then. But the Indiana native is now doing it his way and he has the time, so hopefully it pays off for him as he is another talent that has the potential to create his own audience and then build from that base.
Stephen Rapid
Michael McDermott Lighthouse On The Shore/East Jesus Pauper Sky
Here is a man who has lived, loved, loathed and listened to the lessons that life has taught him. This is Michael McDermott taking stock of where he is today and what he has gained and lost to get to this particular place. It finds him on an even keel and turning his experience into two albums’ worth of remarkable songwriting, something that anyone who has encountered his music either live or in a recorded format will already know, but these albums represent an ideal time to appreciate what McDermott has to offer the world. His body of work stretches back to the early 90s - much of it I have to admit I have not heard but my journey began with WILLOW SPRINGS back in 2016 and also released that year was the album SIX ON THE OUT by the Westies, a band fronted by McDermott.
Ostensibly there is a sense of duality, of light and shade, with one album given the tag of electric and the other acoustic but that is not strictly the case. For example, LIGHTHOUSE ON THE SHORE, which fits the latter definition, is far from a stripped back recording featuring as it does Matt Thompson on bass, Will Kimbrough on guitars, John Deaderick on keyboards, Katie Burns on cello and Heather Lynne Horton on fiddle and vocals, all of whom (bar Burns) also appear on the “electric” album EAST JESUS. However, the key instrument on the quieter album is the piano, in a series of unfeigned ballads of love and loss. There are topics he has touched on before that are deeply imbedded in his psyche, such the relationship he had with his father which is explored through the well written understanding of I Am Not My Father, through to the love expressed in the title track and the opening song, Bradbury Daydream.
As well as being a compelling lyricist McDermott writes memorable melodies that often reveal themselves over time and allowed for a more lasting listening involvement. Lighthouse On The Shore makes this sense of redemption, recovery and belief clear “You found me shattered beyond repair / When I was falling you were there / I see the healing in your eyes / And you lifted me up when I was capsized.” Then you can’t escape the passion and pain that is McDermott’s strong vocal delivery. Yet throughout, this is a team effort with the musicians all making their presence felt in a way that is often understated but always understanding of the songs’ needs. Another affirmation of all that is positive here is the song Count Your Blessings, which as well as recognising such benedictions asks that you also “say a prayer for the broken hearted.”
We then turn to the second set of songs that is, again, co-produced by McDermott with Steven Gillis, who is also the drummer on this set of tracks; while the Lighthouse album saw Deaderick also adding some additional production alongside McDermott. For this recording also on board are guitarist Grant Tye, with some additional drums from Gerald Dowd. While there is an obvious lift in terms of the sound, tempo and intensity it loses none of the intimacy of the acoustic set, rather it takes those sentiments and amplifies them. A Head Full Of Rain asks you to not let your light be taken away and to remember that “when all you seem to see is pain … remember / There’s blue right above the clouds.” The title track considers what forces there are around us all and to be wary and aware of their negativity, warning never to lose vigilance as “The greatest mistake anyone can make / Is believing the war is over.” A sentiment now more relevant than ever. A more personal danger takes shape in Berlin At Night, with a cognisance that you might hold the hope that there is a person who can save you, yet that he can see “the fire fading in your eyes and that “there’s a distance growing and I don’t know why”, an awareness that things may not always work out as you hoped.
Quicksand has some interesting sonics in the arrangement that balance with the more upfront Stones-ish rock of Lost Paradise and the rock sensibility that is underpinning other tracks, something that allows one to listen to the songs without particularly dissecting the words, but simply enjoy the band on its own terms. Charlie Brown likens the protagonist to the hapless cartoon character stumbling along after a break up. Another such individual from another set of pages is mentioned in Behind The Eight, wherein he asks where has Holden Caulfield gone? It also asks a different conundrum in “Why do they call it Good Friday / When a good man died.” This is the work of a man who has not given up both trying to figure himself out as well as the world around him, especially for those who continue to live out in the margins. In the final song Whose Life I’m Living McDermott ponders “I don’t know whose life I’m living / All I know is it don’t feel like mine.” All we can offer in response is that it is a life that has been giving for a long time and which, despite it all, continues to be a creative and hopeful one. Both these albums offer solid proof for this and help explain why a revered writer like Stephen King has long recognised McDermott’s talent. The time is right now for many others to do so too.
Stephen Rapid
Dave Edmunds Swan Songs Omnivore
This double album collects 29 songs released by Edmunds in a solo capacity, as a member of Rockpile, or as a companion to Nick Lowe. In may ways, these tracks today represent an object lesson in rock ‘n’ roll and roots-inspired music that has the energy and directness of punk, starting out at pretty much the same time as that movement did but with a greater sense of structure and melody. Edmunds is known as much for his production techniques and as a musician as an artist in his own right, though he had hits prior to these tracks as a member of Love Sculpture and with solo chart hits such as I Hear You Knocking in 1970. Anyone who hankers for that 50’s influenced sound will remember the many great songs he released and here are the A and B sides of these Swan Songs singles released from 1976 to 1981. The band was signed to Led Zeppelin’s own label on the instigation of Robert Plant, in the main due to his own love of early rock ’n’ roll.
The production, largely hankering back to an earlier time, stands the test of time, perhaps more so than some later solo releases in the 80s, which filtered with the synth-oriented sounds of the time. Here there is a timeless quality which might succeed in attracting some newer listeners who are unaware of the tracks from their previous contemporary releases. It is a non-stop run of memory inducing moments of simple direct, foot-tapping enlightenment. Who can resist Here Comes The Weekend, I Knew The Bride, Deborah, Get Out Of Denver, Girls Talk, Queen Of Hearts, Crawling Form The Wreckage or The Creature From The Black Lagoon?
Certainly we could do with more music like this in the charts today but, in truth, times have moved on and its likely to be seen as an exercise in nostalgia rather than the distillation of how rock should be divorced from online trends and tendencies. It can also be recognised as an object lesson in brevity, beat and back catalogue benefits. Edmunds and Lowe (often with Billy Bremner and Terry Williams) were a strong partnership when they had the same objectives, though later they began to have the oft-cited ‘creative differences’ and the five years of working together never quite paid off in sales terms (or ‘A1 on jukebox but nowhere on the charts’ as one of their own songs succinctly puts it). Ultimately, they both sought out other musical endeavours, but they left behind these indelible moments of rock music that deserve to be heard again by old time fans and a newer audience alike. For all you cats out there, the race is on!
Stephen Rapid
RR Williams Unremarkable Lives Self Release
This is an album of real substance. Nine songs that play out over thirty-four minutes and this solo project is named in honour of Reginald Roy Williams, the father of artist Mike Williams. As a tribute to his memory, the album is a fitting paean to his passing . Mike Williams has a great voice with a passionate delivery and opening song Tightrope has a driving beat with organ swells, harmonica and guitar resonant in the mix. Photographs is a song that reflects upon younger days and teenage angst mixed with regret ‘Sometimes the past comes rushing in, and sometimes the wrong feels right.’
The Chase is another vision of youthful regret ‘We used to hate what we’d become, stuck in a place we’re running from.’ Lonesome harmonica and acoustic guitar echoing the stark sentiment of the song. Tulsa has a slow groove and a message of boredom in small town American heartland ‘I got time, nowhere to go and money in my pocket and nothing to spend it on.’ Storefronts is old town America as modern life bypasses the traditional values of a more innocent time ‘This used to be my block, it ain’t home to me anymore.’ Songs that are wrapped up in the blue collar heartland of forgotten townships.
Last In Line has a classic beat and a rhythm that echoes Steve Earle in his pomp, guitar motifs and harmonica delivering attitude in spades. The acoustic strum of Your Ghost shows a reflective side to the struggle and a song that questions life, death and the great beyond, channelling feelings of uncertainty ‘there’s no words to speak when you’re not there to hear.’ Plaintive piano adding to the blues. Slowly Sinking continues in a similar acoustic stripped-back mode, with a song that hopes to keep a grip upon daily routine in the midst of grief, with harmonica again picking at the heartstrings.
The title track brings everything full circle and the world-weary vocal reflects on years of learning life lessons, making the most of what we are given, while trying to get beyond the constraints of daily compromise ‘Had good intentions but now I’m losing faith.’ The sense of struggle is a theme that repeats and seeks to bind us into a common understanding that life is hard. But the hope for little miracles outside the grim march of pre-determined fate is what lifts these songs into a hopeful resolution, with the message ‘We make the most of unremarkable lives.’ A very interesting debut album.
Paul McGee
Danni Nicholls Under the Neem Plum Tree Danni Nicholls Music
Since a debut album in 2012, this English singer-songwriter has been steadily building a successful career with regular trips Stateside to gain a foothold in wider markets. Currently residing in Nashville, this fifth album release is something of a side-step into a vintage country style of music and follows on from a live album released in 2020 which captured highlights from The Melted Morning album release show Live at The Water Rats, London, April 12th 2019. Previous releases were also included on that set list with four songs performed, in addition to the nine taken from the album being launched.
One of the tracks on that album was Ancient Embers and there is a reworked version of the song featured here. Other tracks on this short album of twenty seven minutes include the classic Can’t Help Falling In Love (Hugo Peretti, Luigi Creatore, George David Weiss), a much-covered song and originally written to be sung from a female perspective before Elvis Presley took it into the stratosphere with his recorded version. Danni Nicholls has such a beautiful vocal delivery and her full range can be heard on this particular song. Also included is My Happiness (Betty Peterson Blasco, Borney Bergantine), a popular song covered by Elvis and Fats Domino among others. Between the River and the Railway is another interesting choice with Danni’s self-penned song sitting comfortably into the salubrious company.
The eight songs included are in tribute to the influence of Danni’s grandmother, Philomena Astrid Imelda Gallyot, and the title track is the story of her life and marriage in India, subsequent emigration, and a new beginning in England. The old world left behind and a future life created on new shores, all made possible by an initial courtship under a Neem Plum Tree. All India Radio station was the source of her grandmother’s deep love of Country and Western and American roots music when growing up and she passed this love down through the family generations. .
Danni also turns in very credible cover versions of Crazy (Willie Nelson), Blue Bayou (Roy Orbison, Joe Nelson), and Tennessee Waltz (Pee Wee King, Redd Stewart). Her confident delivery is matched by the peerless musicianship of Brett Resnick (pedal steel), Emerald Rae (fiddle), Shawn Byrne (bass, mandolin), and producer Sarah Peacock who also provides fine harmony vocals and piano. Danni Nicholls plays acoustic guitars in addition to her lovely warm voice and the entire album is a real delight.
Paul McGee
Hannah Juanita, Wild Ponies, Mike Montrey Band, Ben Arsenault, Matt Mason, Michael McDermott, Dave Edmunds, R.R. Williams, and Danni Nicholls