Following his acclaimed arrival in 2015, modern soul rocker Anderson East has seen just about every kind of success there isโfrom stately headlining shows and the fawning attention of tastemakers, to a 2019 Grammy nod for his No. 1 single at AAA radio, โAll On My Mind.โ But over time, a stifling sort of pressure began to build.
Following Maybe We Never Die in 2021, the Alabama native took a creative beat. He focused on private life and kept busy as a co-writer and producer, more than a bit disenchanted with the grind of an artistic career. But now he seems officially re-enchanted, after making a record the way he used toโjust for the thrill of it.
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โI am comfortable that it exists,โ he explains in a thoughtful, if guarded, admission. But thatโs not actually the non-statement it seems. What he means is Worthy (released May 30) was released because itโs a deserving batch of new tunes, not because โit was timeโ for a new album.

โUsually putting a record out, you have this anticipatory โฆ not really fear, but just kind of nervousness that you hope people like it,โ he says. โAnd with this, Iโm like, โI like it.โ And Iโm OK with that being enough.โ
Still soaked in soulful Muscle Shoals influence, but more refined and totally at ease with its spacious hollows, Worthy lives up to its title. Co-produced with longtime friend (and Grammy factory) Dave Cobb, Eastโs smoky vocal rasp feels fine-tuned and passionate, with a warm mix of rhythmic groove, tender emotion, and bright horns giving off the rich sound of classic vinylโeven in MP3 format. And with help from Natalie Hemby, Lori McKenna, Trent Dabbs, and more, its songs dig deep into the philosophic firmament.
Like the title suggests, many explore a quest for inner peace and optimism, snatched from the jaws of the commercial-art cycle. But East says it wasnโt coming from a โdestructiveโ headspace. Just one that needed a refresh.
โIโd gotten to the place where I just wanted to get back to really enjoying what I was doing, instead of feeling like I had to continue, for the sake of keeping everything in motion,โ he says.
Worthy began as an excuse to help Cobb, Eastโs longtime mentor, break in his new studio in Savannah, Georgia. The pair had already created Eastโs previous three albums together, so the collaboration was no surpriseโbut what came out was. Always attracted to Cobbโs unstructured, first-take approach, East had no production schedule and wasnโt even worried about recording something โworthyโ of release. He and some friends just drank coffee and picked a few songs from the vault, โnot trying to force a square peg in a round hole.โ
โWhen youโre first starting to make records, thatโs how it is,โ he says. โBut then, after a while, youโre expected to just keep putting one out. With this, I was like, โI donโt know if I even want to make another record,โ and having that approach was kind of liberating.โ
He finally decided that, yes, this was in fact the next Anderson East record with โNever Meant to Hurt You.โ A slow-grooving confession, drenched in organ and strings, with Eastโs vocal rising from the floor to a crescendo of gutsy soul, he says the track felt โthree-dimensional,โ with all the sonic separation of a live show and a raw, โlivingโ texture.
โI was like, โDamn, thatโs what I wanted to hear,โโ he recalls. โIt reminded me of everything I loved, and I just felt really comfortable, like, โIf thatโs what this is, then yes, Iโm just going to surrender to whatever is coming out.โโ

Tracks like โIโd Do Anythingโ (co-written with Aaron Raitiere and Ashley Monroe) feel like a quiet, tender pleaโbut itโs actually more like a pledge to stay in the romantic moment.โIf you read it on the page, it does kind of seem like this desperate thing,โ East says. โBut I take it as this reassuring kind of statement. Itโs like, โTrust me, I got you. You got me. Letโs just live in this being a good thing.โโ
Elsewhere, the title track, โWorthyโ (co-written with Dabbs) pairs a throbbing Swampers beat with hot brass and a hint of psychedelia, for an anthem of reclaimed passion. Feeling loose, relaxed, and rawโthe epitome of what East has learned from Cobb over their 10 years togetherโthe track became the central spoke of an album โreally just worthy to be listened to.โ
Tunes like the resilient โBefore It Gets Betterโ (co-written with Hemby and Cobb) explore the positive side of an entropy equationโfans can look back to the pandemic for its inspirationโand โReasonsโ burns with vocal fire. And on the Beatles-esque melodic standout, โFool Myselfโ (co-written with Dabbs and Maddie Medley), East accidentally put his new revelation to music. It was originally intended for another artist, but captured the way heโd been so tightly wound for so long.
โ[I had been] putting myself at the center of everything and thinking I can manipulate the world into how I wanted it to be, instead of just leaning into whatever punch there was,โ he explains. โI think it was probably me telling myself, โItโs all right to take a deep breath.โโ
That breath becomes a therapeutic sigh of relief on the final track, โRight Where You Belong.โ Delivered like an intimate musical โsecret,โ with just a hushed vocal and delicate organ, East reassures himselfโand all who listenโof the fundamental right to just beโฆno matter what others expect. โIt is its own life force,โ he says. โThat resonates with me so much.โ
With that wisdom in mind, East is not trying to tell listeners what to think about Worthy. He just hopes it helps lighten the load.
โI donโt really have any advice for that,โ he says. โWeโre not trying to solve world hunger or world peace or anything. Hopefully, people just find themselves in it.โ
