
50. The Black Lillies: Runaway Freeway Blues
Given the arena-sizing of folk-rock over the last several years, youโd almost expect the opening trackโs tethered-in-place acoustic guitar figure and faint four-on-the-floor kick drum pulse to build to a real geyser of a chorus. But โThe Fallโ isnโt that sort of song, and The Black Lillies arenโt that sort of band. Theyโre a storytelling, occasionally funky, Appalachian-pop outfit, which would make them not at all hard to pick out of a contemporary roots band lineup populated by stompers and shouters. Songwriting fiddler frontman Cruz Contreras delivers the tunes on Runaway Freeway Blues with the cracked, southern-accented croon of a guy whoโs dabbled in indie rock yet camped out in country. And the performances get warmerโas opposed to just, you know, louderโwhen Trisha Gene Brady adds her dusky, blues-inflected harmonies.

49.ย Courtney Jaye:ย Love and Forgiveness
It took two previous tries and a few unsuccessful run-ins with the major label machinery but Nashville based singer/songwriter Courtney Jaye has finally embraced her inner pop lover. On her third album, she goes indie and ramps up the hooks, sing-along choruses, guitar riffs and general ear-catching vibe to emulate a combination of the Banglesโ Susanna Hoffs and Sheryl Crow at their most tuneful. These ten songs fly by in just over a half hour, each one a condensed hit single waiting to happen, if radio played music this organically vibrant anymore. Hints of country with sweet pedal steel appear on the irresistible โSummer Rain,โ as perfect a seasonal gem as Johnny Riversโ identically titled (but different) tune or Seals & Croftsโ โSummer Breeze.โ But although there are hints of C&W, this is closer to Fleetwood Mac than Dolly Parton. The performances were recorded live in the studio, adding a sense of urgency and a rootsy groove difficult to capture with multiple overdubs. Producer Mike Wruckeโs (Dixie Chicks) expansive but never bombastic approach focuses on Jayeโs expressive voice and melodies you can sing after the first spin. Albums that immediately feel familiar, even short ones like this, are difficult to find. But if youโre in the market for the perfect soundtrack to a cloud-free sunny day,ย Love and Forgivenessย is your ticket to a 30 minute smile.
For his third album, Jonny Fritz stuck to his real name and released the most starkly grown-up LP of his career. Fritz has always been more interested in Sunday morning than Saturday night, and Dad Country finds the Montana native doing what he does best: expanding the definition of acceptable country music subject matter. His fragile tenor is frightened and worried as he sings about nasty illness (“Fever Dreams”)ย and trash collection (“Trash Day”) with the type of blues normally reserved for songs about rambling, cheating and boozing. Fritz has always been a hard artist to market and even hard to categorize, and heโs started to put those frustrations down on paper. โSocial Climbersโ and โWrong Crowdโ are chilling tales of isolation and frustration, and โHave You Ever Wanted to Die” finds the Nashville humorist wondering if his quirky uniqueness is worth it after all. He still writes the occasional ode to oral sex, but thereโs little to laugh about on Fritzโs arresting ATO debut.
47. Steve Martin & Edie Brickell, Love Has Come For You
On paper, this unlikely partnership between funnyman comic, actor, playwright, author and most significantly, Grammy Award-winning banjo player Steve Martin with hippie-ish, New Bohemian pop vocalist Edie Brickell, is an unlikely pairing. Add veteran producer Peter Asher (Linda Ronstadt, James Taylor, Bonnie Raitt) for even greater commercial โ and editorial โ prospects. Martin, whose expert banjo playing nobody at this stage would describe as a โvanity project,โ wanted to shift from the more notes per second approach that much of bluegrass adheres to, in favor of a sparser, more defined sound. That keeps the drama high and the ego low on these evocative songs. Much of the material has a darker edge that Martinโs playing enriches. Those unfamiliar with Brickellโs previous work, and even the singer-songwriterโs fans, will be entranced by her distinctive rounded, innocent yet mature voice. She brings sly, unassuming gravitas and the occasional lighter touch to the affiliation. Asherโs deft work provides breathing room between the instruments, Martinโs subtle playing leaves the showboating behind and the trio delivers a modest gem. The final product is informed by bluegrass yet expands the genreโs somewhat narrow boundaries while maintaining and even enhancing a reverence to its rustic roots.

46.ย Amanda Shires:ย Down Fell The Doves
Down Fell The Dovesย is Amanda Shiresโ fifth LP, and the record is her most fully realized collection to date. With songs full of wistful regret and eager longing,ย Down Fell The Dovesย finds the Texas singer-songwriter-fiddler in complete control of her ever-developing narrative voice. The albumโs sound, aided by longtime Bright Eyes producer Andy LeMaster, provides a rich, orchestral backdrop for Shiresโ eclectic material.
Shires, who is currently pursuing a masters in creative writing, creates characters that are are well-rounded and complex, and she writes about marital infidelities and suicidal tendencies with a devastating sympathy. She tackles mournful Memphis soul and jittery folk-pop with equal ease. โA theme? I guess thereโs a lot of wrecking and ruinationโ Shires has said of her latest album. Onย Down Fell The Doves,ย Shires finds tenderness and beauty in the ruin and destruction all around her, and the result is one of the most diverse, affecting Americana releases of the year.
He hasnโt hit it big . . . yet . . . but that hasnโt stopped Americana singer/songwriter Tim Easton from churning out ten solid, superbly crafted albums that have flown under the popular radar. Constant touring both in the States and Europe have honed his live show to a rugged, professional edge which makes anyone who enters a club not knowing Easton, leave a raving fan. His love of rootsy rocking has peeked out of most of his previous releases but a recent move to Nashville inspired this new set of predominantly rockabilly material. And itโs another winner. Recorded in five inspired days with veteran producer Brad Jones, Easton leads his stripped down band featuring rollicking standup bass through fiery originals that wouldnโt sound out of place on an old Sun Elvis record. His grainy voice with a smidge of ’70s Dylan is perfect for this style and he sings with the crackling enthusiasm of the ’50s rockers that have clearly inspired him. Even though rockabilly dominates the sound, Easton leaves room for the tough Tony Joe White styled grunge swamping โThey Will Bury You,โ the back porch acoustic country blues of โGallatin Pike Blues,โ the dreamy yet vitriolic ballad title track aimed at an old flame and a sweet closing Appalachian instrumental with fiddle dedicated to Levon Helm. Itโs all crisply recorded, letting you hear the sparks that obviously flew in the studio.

44.ย The Head and the Heart:ย Letโs Be Still
In 2011, Seattleโs The Head and The Heart captured an impressive number of hearts and ears via their self-funded, self-recorded, self-titled debut. They sold 10,000 copies of the album before even signing with Sub Pop, and afterward, became one of the labelโs fastest selling debuts. Given that the Billboard charts continue to stack up with like-minded earnest, folky Americana recordings โ certainly the first time in decades a trend of this sort has been so dominant โ the band arrived at exactly the right time. With a bigger budget to work with and broader goals in mind, The Head and The Heart ride that momentum into a more ambitious, yet still warmly organic second album, Letโs Be Still. Sometimes the results of their bigger-budget approach are quite stunning, as on the slow build and gentle roll of album standout โJosh McBride,โ which features guest vocals by fellow Seattle singer-songwriter Brian John Appleby. And sometimes the results are an awkward fit, like โSummertime,โ which seems to pluck a dated, mid-โ80s keyboard patch sound and shoehorn it into one of the bandโs characteristic indie folk pluckers. Yet the distance between these extremes isnโt terribly vast, the band ping-ponging between Mumford-ized stompers like โShakeโ and gorgeous country-rock ballads like โCruel.โ Itโs in the latter when the band is at their best, their warmly gentle approach a much more natural fit than the makeshift hootenannies they sometimes engage in. And itโs only natural to want to get those feet stomping and hands clapping. But itโs unnecessary; what The Head and The Heart do best are ballads, even if they canโt help themselves from venturing into other arenas now and again.

43.ย Kris Kristofferson:ย Feeling Mortal
Kris Kristoffersonโs songwriting gift has always been his unique ability to combine a country writerโs knack for witty turns of phrase with his own personal penchant for soul-baring confession. That gift hasnโt diminished in the least, a fact that is proven again and again onย Feeling Mortal. Produced by Don Was, Kristofferson croaks his way through these bare-bones songs with typically gruff profundity. Whether heโs contemplating his own mortality on the title track or โCastawayโ or bemoaning lost loves on โMy Heart Was The Last One To Knowโ or โStairway To The Bottom,โ thereโs not a word that he utters that sounds even remotely false. Elsewhere he gives a rowdy eulogy for Rambinโ Jack Elliott that serves double-duty as a portrait of the roving musicial/outlaw lifestyle that Kristofferson has embodied with more authenticity and panache than all the pretenders in his wake.ย Feeling Mortalย may start out with a guy on his last legs, but, by the time itโs through, it sounds like Kris Kristofferson has been through the rejuvenation machine.
Even with three previous albums, it has never been easy to understand Matt Costa. Signed by Jack Johnson to his Brushfire imprint, the West Coast born and raised Costa seemed to be infatuated with a Zombies/Searchers styled Brit Invasion sound one moment only to shift into a Donovan folk picker the next. His retro/UK approach and production was so convincing, youโd have to read his bio to know he wasnโt born and raised in England. Not much has changed on his fourth release, except that he recorded it in Scotland with producer Tony Doogan (Belle & Sebastian) making its Brit pop qualities even more prevalent. The sumptuous production on songs such as the Bacharach /David styled โEarly Novemberโ with its cheesy horns and strings and the T. Rex thump of โGood Timesโ really seem transported from an early ’70s era Costa is too young to have experienced firsthand. His twee side is evident on the lovely ballad โClipped Wingsโ that, with its fluttering flute, sounds like a pretty good Donovan outtake circa โWear Your Love Like Heaven.โ The frisky strings and high vocal harmonies of โShotgunโ are straight out of the ELO catalog of ear candy hits. Everything is meticulously arranged, often with strings, horns and layered backing singing. They effortlessly capture a sweet, innocent, truly captivating folk pop whimsy that never seems forced, pretentious or outdated, even with its obvious reverence for an earlier time.

41. Charlie Worhsam: Rubberband
Itโs standard practice in country music for younger artists to ask vets they admire to join them on a track, the goal being embrace-by-association. The pairings donโt always add up, but Mississippi-born, Berklee School of Music-educated Charlie Worsham really knew what he was doing when he got both Vince Gill and Marty Stuart to guest on his song โTools of the Trade.โ It makes sense for people to think about Worsham the way they think about those two. He shares their roots music rearing and his debut album proves he has good instincts, songwriting and multi-instrumental chops and the knack for sounding of his moment, in his element and comfortable in his skin, all of which could be said of a young Gill and Stuart in their days. Worsham spends most of Rubberband relishing how it feels to relish being young and full of promise and possibility. Even if it sounds like thatโd make for a hermetic listening experience, the way he pulls it offโwith a light touch, open-faced songwriting and real lift to the hooksโis really very accessible and appealing.






