Whitney Rose of Texas

It’s a long way from Prince Edward Islands, Canada to Austin, Texas. But honky-tonkin’ chanteuse Whitney Rose has not only packed her boots and moved south, she’s managed to soak up huge slumps of her new home state’s rich musical culture and heritage.

Rose’s new EP, South Texas Suite, is a romantic and nostalgic love letter to the Lone Star State, penned by someone of profound Texan insight.

Following her acclaimed 2015 album Heartbreaker of the Year, produced by Raul Malo (The Mavericks), Whitney Rose headed to Texas on what was supposed to be a two-month residency at Austin’s The Continental Club. Smitten by the town’s friendly atmosphere and vibrant music community, she had no intentions of leaving. Since then, she’s toured with Sam Outlaw, made her European live debut and signed with Thirty Tigers-distributed Six Shooter Records.

Rose recorded South Texas Suite over two days at Dale Watson’s Ameripolitan Studios, accompanied by ace players such as Redd Volkaert, Merle Haggard’s former guitarist; Earl Poole Ball, who spent two decades tickling keyboards for Johnny Cash; Kevin Smith, now playing bass in Willie Nelson’s Family Band; and Tom Lewis, who’s drummed with the Mavericks. Even though it’s only 6 songs and 25 minutes short, it covers two-steppers, Tex-Mex, Western swing and barroom waltzes.

We took the opportunity to chat with Whitney Rose while on tour through Scandinavia.

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Who is Whitney Rose – can you please introduce yourself?

I’m a gal from Prince Edward Island and now I Iive in Texas. I write and sing songs and get up to no good most of the time. My first crushes were Dwight Yoakam and David Bowie.

Congratulations with a new EP. What do we get and what’s it about?

Thank you! You get a mini collection of tunes that I either wrote or love relating to my new home state of Texas.

Can you tell the story behind the wonderfully drawn album cover?

I got sick of seeing my own face on album art and elsewhere so I wanted to do something different. I guess it’s still my face… kind of.

What inspired you the most when you started writing the songs that ended up on South Texas Suite?

The simplicity and pride of Texas. And two-stepping.

What can you share about the recording process and working with this material in the studio?

Recording this EP is something that will stay with me until the day I die. The musicians who were recruited are all world class and brought so much experience collectively to the studio. I learned a lot in those two days and had to pinch myself a few times to remind myself that yes, that is indeed Johnny Cash’s piano player (Earl Poole Ball) playing my songs. We recorded at my pal Dale Watson’s place so everything was very relaxed, too. Just a great experience overall.

What kind of feelings or sentiment do you wish leaving for the listener?

It’s a record advocating simplicity and autonomy. So I guess I want people to feel at peace and to be their damn selves!

Please describe a preferred setting to ultimately enjoy the album?

Anywhere as long as there’s something to drink and something to smoke! And if you can, listen to it on vinyl – that’s how it sounds best.

You’re stranded on an island for an indefinite period of time, only allowed to bring one book, one album and one other person. Who and what would you bring?

I’d bring “How To Not Go Crazy Stranded On An Island For An Indefinite Period Of Time” (assuming it’s been written) for a book, Pieces of the Sky by Emmylou Harris for a record and Mammy Darlin’ (my grandmother) for a companion.

What’s coming next for Whitney Rose?

I get back to Texas in June then I go on the road again. Then I get back to Texas again, release a record in the fall and then go on the road again! Wanna come?

Whitney Rose, Gamla Mai 2017 (Bjørn Hammershaug)

Bjørn Hammershaug

Sam Outlaw: Bringing Back Bakersfield

Sam Outlaw might bear a name that conjures a gruff, bearded biker type à la Waylon & Willie.

But this here Outlaw is rather a sharp looking former salesman who makes classic California country and is just about to release his highly-anticipated sophomore album, Tenderheart.

The Bakersfield Sound, popularized by Buck Owens and Merle Haggard in the late 1960s, evolved directly at odds with the string-based Nashville Sound blossoming at the same time. Enter Gram Parsons, The Flying Burrito Brothers, Emmylou Harris and the Eagles, who turned Los Angeles into a hotbed of country-rock in the 1970s. In the early 1980s, Dwight Yoakam came west and made a career with his punk-infused honky tonk, even singing with Buck Owens on the “Streets of Bakersfield”: ‘I came here looking for something/I couldn’t find anywhere else…’

But not too many followed, and the country gold rush turned towards Nashville where it has remained. Now, Sam Outlaw might not be able to revitalize the California country sound all by himself, but he’s doing a tremendous job in reinvigorating its roots. Far from the premises of Nashville’s bro-country, he’s exposing a tender heart beating for country’s neo-traditionalists, smooth countrypolitan and L.A.’s legendary singer-songwriters.

No Depression nailed this point just perfect when they reviewed his debut album Angeleno back in 2015: ‘With that voice, the hat and those looks, Sam Outlaw could be a straight-up mainline Big Country Star. He could be wowing the Nashville scene, starring at the Grand Ol’ Opry, working up to headlining that city’s Bridgestone Arena. He could sing about beer, trucks and gals, finding love and, better still for songwriting inspiration, when love walked out the door. He could buy a ranch and ride horses. Game over. Success. But that ain’t the story so far.’

No, Sam Outlaw seems to have other plans. Still based in the town south of Bakersfield, he uses L.A. as a backdrop for his exquisite songwriting, as demonstrated in new standout tracks like “Bottomless Mimosas,” “Bougainvillea, I Think” and “Dry In the Sun.” The new album marks a progression in his songwriting efforts, but it remains rooted in the same environment as his critically lauded debut, and it was made together with many of the same folks that collaborated on Angeleno, including harmony singer Molly Jenson, Taylor Goldsmith (Dawes) and Bo Koster (My Morning Jacket).

And when it comes to his name, Outlaw is as authentic as it gets, that being his mother’s maiden name. We chatted with Sam Outlaw about his upcoming album, dropping this Friday via Six Shooter and Thirty Tigers.

* * *

Congratulations with a new album. What do we get and what’s it about?

Thanks! Tenderheart is about matters of the heart and how our choices lead us down one path or another. We’re all on a journey to find our truest self, and while we can’t always control what happens to us we have a choice in how we behave. After a while behaviors become habits and habits ultimately determine the state of our hearts. This album tells stories from my past, present and maybe even my future.

What is the biggest difference between Tenderheart and Angeleno?

Angeleno had a pro producer (Ry Cooder) and was tracked at a fancy studio in North Hollywood. I self-produced Tenderheart from a small house in the San Fernando Valley.

What inspired you the most when you started writing the songs that ended up on this album?

Los Angeles inspires me. The aesthetic of the city – past and present – and the stories I find in this place. I wanted to show off my softer side but also went full rock on a few tunes. Los Angeles is the birthplace of Country Rock and that legacy is all about combining styles and trying new things.

Did you have a clear idea or vision on how Tenderheart should be from the get-go, or did it develop along the way?

Both. Some of the songs had been played a lot on the road so we had them pretty figured out going in. Some of the songs got finished in the studio. We’d choose arrangements on-the-spot and I’d finish writing the lyrics after the basic tracking was complete.

What can you share about the recording process and working with this material in the studio?

Basic tracking was knocked out in 2.5 days, but then I had to go back on tour. I finished the record whenever I’d get home from tour and have a day or two off. Took a while to finish just because I was touring so much. My engineer is a genius named Martin Pradler. He’s the guy that Ry works with a lot and he engineered Angeleno. I asked Martin to co-produce Tenderheart with me because he’s so much more than just an engineer. He helped shape the sounds and even played some percussion and synth stuff. He’s also tight with Mike Campbell from the Heartbreakers so we had some pretty cool guitars lying around the house.

What kind of feelings or sentiment do you wish leaving for the listener after hearing it?

The songs and records I enjoy the most are the ones where it seems like the songwriter is writing about themselves but also somehow writing about me. I was experiencing lot of different emotions when I wrote these songs and when I tracked them so I suspect the listener will pick up on that.

Please describe a preferred setting to ultimately enjoy the album?

Best bet is always to pick your favorite room, smoke a little weed and listen through your best headphones. Next best option is to hit the road and turn up the car stereo.

What would be the headline of the worst review?

Like, if someone hates the album and writes a scathing review? If my music creates intense emotions, good or bad, at least it’s getting to somebody. Maybe the worst review would be purely apathetic. Something like “Sam Outlaw’s new album is so forgettable I had to immediately re-listen just to write this headline”.

What’s in your opinion is the most perfect album ever made and why?

Fuck man, I hate these questions, ha ha. Too many to choose from but I’m still over the moon for Kendrick Lamar’s 2012 album good kid, m.A.A.d City.

How do you view the status of the album format in 2017?

Gone are the days of going to a store, buying a CD, cracking the case and leafing through the liner notes. I kinda miss my Discman.

Bjørn Hammershaug
Originally published on read.tidal.com, April 2017.

Sam Outlaw: Hillbilly Deluxe

(Først publisert i januar 2016, i forbindelse med hans første Norgeskonsert i april 2016.)

‘Outlaw combines Glen Campbell’s ‘70s crossover-country, James Taylor’s breeze-borne melodicism, and George Strait’s neotraditional ranch-hand aesthetics into a laid-back blend.’ (Popmatters.com, The Best Country Music of 2015)

Det første vi legger merke til er navnet. Hvor kult er det ikke å spille countrymusikk og faktisk hete Sam Outlaw? Få karakterer har en like sterk posisjon i amerikansk westernmytologi som outlawen, selve symbolet på en som hever seg over loven, dyrker frihetsidealet og går sine egne veier på tvers av normer og regler er liksom grunnfestet i fortellingen om det autentiske Amerika og selvsagt en egen retning innen countrymusikken.

Men Sam er ingen egentlig Outlaw. Han ble døpt Sam Morgan hjemme i Sør-Dakota, og tok sin avdøde mors pikenavn da han peilet inn mot musikken. Naturlig nok. Han er heller ingen lurvete omstreifer fra Sør-Dakota. Outlaw har bodd i det sørlige California det meste av livet, stiftet familie og skaffet seg en godt lønnet stilling i reklamebransjen. Alt lå til rette for et A4-liv, da han etter å ha bikket 30 bestemte seg å bytte ut jobb og dress med gitar og Stetson på fulltid. Det kler ham særdeles godt, det er som om musikken har levd i denne mannen i alle år og bare ventet på å komme ut.

Outlaw har ikke den typiske hipster-tilnærmingen til countrymusikken, han står nærmere fars gamle musikksamling bestående av stil-ikoner som Charley Pride, Don Williams og Glen Campbell enn kule, skjeggete rabbagaster, og har allerede rukket å spille med veteraner som Clint Black, Asleep at the Wheel og Dwight Yoakam. Særlig sistnevnte er en naturlig referanse, ikke bare i stil og stemme, men også med tanke på hvordan Yoakam bygget karriere som country-artist med base i et eklektisk Los Angeles. For Sam Outlaw og musikken fra det sørlige California så nært sammenknyttet at han like gjerne kaller sin egen stil for ’SoCal Country’.

Sør-California forbindes vel ikke først og fremst for countrymusikk, så slik sett er Outlaw en outsider, men som han sa i et nylig intervju med Taste of Country: ’I might be some dork in a cowboy hat, but if I move to Nashville, I’ll be just another dork in a cowboy hat.’

Områdene i og rundt Los Angeles har da også sine country-tradisjoner, ikke minst med Bakersfield-soundet (Merle Haggard, Buck Owens) som var en forløper for outlaw-countryen – og som sentrum for framveksten av folkrocken på slutten av 1960-tallet med navn som Flying Burrito Brothers, The Byrds og Linda Ronstadt i sentrale roller. Outlaw forsyner seg av begge disse retningene, legg til en bris av mild vestkystpop (Jackson Browne, Eagles, Poco) og moderne, kosmopolitisk påvirkning, så bør han være rimelig godt plassert. Han står på stødig grunn et sted mellom Bakersfield og Laurel Canyon, mellom Glen Campbell og Glen Frey. Det er da heller ikke de mest progressive kreftene som får utløp hos Sam Outlaw, men han framstår som en tradisjonalist som evner å virke både forfriskende og fornyende for dagens ører.

Med dette frodige bakteppet har han gitt ut bemerkelsesverdige Angeleno (sluppet i USA i sommer, ute nå i Europa), et album som knytter countrymusikkens røtter og vestkystens tradisjoner sammen i en moderne setting. Outlaw fikk samlet et herlig lag til innspillingen, inkludert Taylor Goldsmith (Dawes), Bo Koster (My Morning Jacket) og Gabe Witcher fra Punch Brothers, samt ingen ringere enn Ry Cooder og sønnen Joachim som begge spiller og produserer her. Få har omfavnet Los Angeles’ multikulturelle south-of-the-border tilknytning i like stor grad som Ry Cooder, og hans grenseløse holdning kan spores for eksempel i det mariachi-draperte åpningssporet ”Who Do You Think You Are?”

Angeleno er gjennomgående nydelig framført og arrangert, og ikke minst bestående av et sett selvsikre låter av lang holdbarhet, framført av stemme som bærer i seg Californias mange fasetter, både dens solfylte, håpefulle glans – og de knuste drømmene som ligger igjen bak fasadene.

Bjørn Hammershaug