Kentucky band Wayne Grahamโformed by brothers Kenny and Hayden Milesโreleased their newest album, Bastion, on September 6. The album blends genres seamlessly across nine tracks, pulling from indie, jazz, avant-garde improvisation, and Appalachian tradition to create an utterly unique sonic experience. With friends like Tyler Childers and Tommy Prine, and Kentucky contemporaries like S.G. Goodman, Cage the Elephant, and Ian Noe, Wayne Graham are just one band exploring what it means to be a Kentuckian at odds with Kentucky.
As a complete project, Bastion grapples with the question of what happens when you outgrow your small town. The Miles brothers are from Whitesburg, Kentucky, a small mining town in the eastern part of the state. Theyโve tapped into feelings of isolation, the inevitable passage of time, familial disagreements, love, loss, changes, outgrowing your roots and eventually coming back to them. Bastion weaves a complex tapestry through the small town human experience, blending the sounds of Appalachia with jazz, punk, noise, and indie.
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โOur music is the way it is because weโre from here,โ said Hayden Miles in a press release. โItโs very specifically Kentucky.โ However, as Kenny Miles stated when speaking about playing their hometown, โSometimes Wayne Graham feels like a square peg in a round hole.โ
Wayne Graham Release Bastion, Grapples with Being At Odds With Hometown
That simultaneous longing for and disconnect from their hometown is explored throughout Bastion. On one hand, the album celebrates the rich traditions of Kentucky musicโthere are nods to Protestant hymns and other Appalachian influences. On the other hand, it recognizes how the Miles brothers have grown beyond their small townโfeaturing the influences of jazz, soul, noise, Wilco, LCD Soundsystem, Loose Fur, and others.
One of the songs that notably addresses this juxtaposition is โShoot Me.โ If I were to knock on the wrong door would you shoot me, the song asks in a meandering, seemingly endless verse. โWe Couldโve Been Friendsโ also does something similar, stating the title over and over in the chorusโWe couldโve been friends / I know / We couldโve been friends.ย
Throughout Bastion there are conflicting emotions of urgency, weariness, foreboding, and confusion. Wayne Graham looked around themselves and took note of the state of things, then translated their many different feelings into many different songs. โShoot Meโ tackles racial biases and violence that often occurs in small towns, while โSwingingโ โRoundโ addresses the drag ban in Kentucky.ย
โThat song comes from a place of frustration,โ said Kenny Miles. โI started writing it around the time the drag ban was being talked about in Kentucky and Tennessee, and as I worked on it, it morphed into a song about trying to find a way to communicate with people you disagree with, even if itโs family.โ
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English rock and pop group The Hollies perform the song 'Sorry Suzanne' on the set of the BBC Television pop music television show Top Of The Pops at Lime Grove Studios in London on 27th March 1969. Members of the band are, from left, Tony Hicks, Bobby Elliott, Allan Clarke, Terry Sylvester and Bernie Calvert. (Photo by Ivan Keeman/Redferns)







