Raul Malo has been swimming against the currents of Nashville ever since he arrived in town a decade-and-a-half ago with his Latin-tinged country-rock band, the Mavericks. And his latest solo album, Lucky One, drives that point home anew.
Raul Malo has been swimming against the currents of Nashville ever since he arrived in town a decade-and-a-half ago with his Latin-tinged country-rock band, the Mavericks. And his latest solo album, Lucky One, drives that point home anew.
The trend currently dominating major label countryโa designation Malo once shared, though heโs now signed to California-based indie Fantasy and his recent output has been as much Latin-, jazz- and pop-inflected as countryโis to model itself after 1980s-era soft rock. Malo skipped that decade altogether when he wrote and recorded his new batch of songs, and drew inspiration from late โ50s and early โ60s pop, r&b, rockabilly and rock and roll instead.
โI think I certainly borrow from the past,โ he offers. โBut I think you kind of have to borrow from the past to look to the future. Itโs a weird thing. I mean, I hear so many records that emulate some of the worst music Iโve ever heard in my life. If Iโm going to borrow from something, I go further back. But then you also want to put your own spin on things and not be too retro, because I think that thatโs boring too.โ
Maloโs not just paying lip service there. On his new album, he blends vintage rock and rollโs simple, energetic pleasuresโbuoyant melodies and plenty of bopping and shufflingโwith peppery Latin grooves and dramatic vocal performances.
Lucky One boasts another glaring point of divergence from contemporary country. Most acts hire a guitarist to fill every nook and cranny with busy licks, but Maloโnot previously known for his guitar workโdid the job himself. The result is a lot of lean, tasteful single-string work. Malo even has a low-string Duane Eddy moment during โLonely Hearts.โ
โBasically, Iโm covering up for my lack of talent by playing all those low notes,โ he jokes. โI know where my bread and butter isโitโs not in my guitar playing. People donโt come out to the shows to hear me play guitar.โ
โHonestly, [producer] Steve Berlin was instrumental in this,โ Malo continues. โWhen he heard the demos, he asked me, โMan, whoโs playing on these demos?โ And I said, โWell, basically itโs me.โ And he just said, โWe donโt really need to hire a guitar player.โ I was like, โWell, okay. I mean, if you really think these guitar parts work.โ Iโm not one of those blazing guitar player guys, but I can come up with guitar parts. And sometimes thatโs just good enough. And sometimes thatโs even better. Finally I have a record that has, like, air.โ
Before Lucky One, Malo essentially recorded four straight albums of cover materialโThe Nashville Acoustic Sessions, Youโre Only Lonely, After Hours and Marshmallow World and Other Holiday Favorites. Other than a 2003 Mavericks album, this is his first original set in a good, long time. The stylistic range he packed into the twelve songs is true-to-form.
โI try to put the best songs I can on the record, and if theyโre all different then so be it,โ Malo explains. โUnless weโre doing some Bulgarian classical folk music, I think itโs related anyways. And part of it goes back to [the fact that] I grew up listening to all kinds of music. I remember listening to everything from The Beatles to Glen Miller to the Eagles to the Police on AM radio.โ
Not that the resulting varietyโyet another thing about Maloโs music thatโs contrary to the mainstream these daysโis all that calculated.
โThere has been nothing thought-out or planned in my life,โ he marvels with amusement. โAre you kidding me? As a matter of fact, it has driven many a manager crazy, many an accountant crazy. I wouldnโt have it any other way. I donโt want to know what Iโm doing next year. I donโt even want to know what Iโm doing tomorrow.โ
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AGE: 43
HOMETOWN: MIAMI, FLORIDA
WHAT SONG DO YOU WISH YOU HAD WRITTEN?
I wish I would have written “Stardust” by Hoagy Carmichael. It is perfect through and through…

