Adam Carroll

‘Far Away Blues’ is the third studio album from San Marcos, TX. based singer/songwriter Adam Carroll and his debut for Blue Corn Music. ‘Far Away Blues’ showcases the idiosyncratic songwriting style that has endeared Adam to both younger and older Texas music fans and has prompted critics to compare Carroll with John Prine, Butch Hancock, Townes Van Zandt, Todd Snider and Bob Dylan.

‘Far Away Blues’ is once again produced by the legendary Lloyd Maines(Dixie Chicks, Pat Green, Joe Ely), and retains the intimacy of Carroll’s previous albums while filling the sound out significantly. The songs on ‘Far Away Blues’ are Carroll’s strongest to date and deal primarily with the concepts of community and family. Adam’s grandfather, Ray Davidson, contributes to the family vibe by adding his saxophone to the mix.

Texas songwriting legend Ray Wylie Hubbard lends his pen and voice to the cause by co-writing ‘Last Day of Grace’ and duetting with Adam on the song. ‘Far Away Blues’ represents a huge leap forward for Carroll, who has spent the last five years on the road building a large and loyal fan base. He will be touring nationally to support the album.

Sarah Borges

PANDEMIC BE DAMNED, TOGETHER ALONE,
THE BOLD NEW ALBUM FROM SARAH BORGES,
WRINGS LIGHT FROM LOCKDOWN

Recorded remotely with longtime producer Eric “Roscoe” Ambel (Joan Jett & the Blackhearts, Steve Earle & the Dukes) and members of NRBQ
and The Bottle Rockets, Borges’ latest brims with gutsy life and beats the odds.

BOSTON, Mass. — One way or another, Sarah Borges connects, with casual mastery — whether it’s with her collaborators over nearly 20 sparkling years of music-making, or through the vivid portraits of people’s lives (occasionally her own) she’s sketched in scores of emotionally resonant songs.

But most of all, Borges has built a loyal following by connecting, through her own charismatic, down-to-earth spirit, with her audience — from longtime fans from back when she released her terrific Silver City debut in 2005, to newcomers just now joining the party.

In the early months of 2020, the life-altering global pandemic began to hit hard, and for performers, the crisis not only suddenly, jarringly halted tours or any shows large or small, but also quashed the creative chemistry that comes from musicians getting together and jamming in the same room.

As an artist whose lifeblood flowed from these real-life exchanges of camaraderie and community, the Boston-based Borges was faced with perhaps the most daunting question of her professional career: How to connect and continue as a vital and viable working artist amid a frightfully uncertain future fraught with unknowns.

That’s where the aptly named brand new album, Together Alone — due out February 18th on Blue Corn Music — comes in. In a true-life twist on the old saying, “when life gives you lemons …,” a homebound Borges did the one thing she knew how to do better than almost anything else. She picked up her guitar and started writing songs such as “Wasting My Time,” which serves as a thematic linchpin of sorts for the new album. Set to a measured, ruminative gait and carried on dark currents of electric guitar and Hammond organ, the lyrics feel like a gathering storm:

“It’s been a while now since I’ve seen my friends / Don’t know when I’m gonna see ’em again,” she sings, with the kind of pensive ache her twang-and-torch-lit voice was born for. “Without them around / It’s harder to pretend that I know where I’m going.”

With the new normal being an isolating life in lockdown limbo, the song seems to wonder whether time, in this context, is actually wasting us, rather than the other way around. It was, for Borges, a scary proposition. But the solitary confinement that necessitated writing alone also felt liberating.

“I think my self-editing tool is always fierce, and it’s what prevents me from being more prolific,” Sarah says. “I feel like I’m always writing in blood, like I have to stick to what I wrote the first time. But when you’re home alone, and it’s a pandemic, and you don’t know if anyone will ever even hear the songs, all bets are off. You can write what you want and feel free to cross it out as many times as you want.”

Even the job Borges took as an airport courier during the pandemic to keep the bills paid and home hearth burning proved creatively useful. The temporary gig translated into a boisterous new track, namely the lighthearted rave-up, “She’s a Trucker,” based on the multi-Boston Music Award winner’s four-wheeling across state lines, carrying occasionally strange cargo.

Recently, she says with a laugh, “I drove to Albany to deliver an airplane engine piece, and another day it was ocular tissue — totally weird, random stuff. But all that time, I was thinking about my music. With anything you love to do, you always have to find a way forward if you can.” Besides, she adds, “there aren’t many lady truck driver songs, so I thought I’d try my hand at one.”

Speaking of hands, Sarah received a huge one in the person of her longtime mentor Eric “Roscoe” Ambel, the venerable producer and guitarist who’s played with everyone from Joan Jett & the Blackhearts to Steve Earle and the Dukes. More recently, Ambel’s been Sarah’s band mate and co-conspirator in addition to his usual job running his Cowboy Technical Services Recording Rig studio in Brooklyn, N.Y.

“Sarah and I had just come back from an incredible musical experience on the Outlaw Country Cruise, in February [2020],” recalls Ambel of the traveling multi-artist, fan-filled getaway. But as the pandemic permeated life and gigs were canceled, the water-bound jaunt started to feel like it was the last good time anybody was going to have for a very long time. To get a sense of just how good a time was had, check out the rollicking new tribute to the cruise, “You Got Me on the Boat,” a sunny slice of hedonistic escapism co-written with Sarah’s boyfriend, Bottle Rockets bassist Keith Voegele, who contributes bass and vocals across several of the album’s tracks. That all changed when the state’s powers-that-be locked down the studio.

With the pandemic scuttling any chance of working live at CTS, the two were forced to brainstorm what Ambel amusingly refers to as the “MacGyver Method” of recording songs, referencing the hit ’80s TV series. Except that the idea involved a hell of a lot more than a rubber band, stick of gum, and a strategically employed paper clip.

Here’s how it worked: One by one, Borges would send along her home-recorded guitar and vocal demos — with Sarah singing into her iPhone, and utilizing her clothes closet as a vocal isolation booth — to Ambel’s home recording setup. He’d listen carefully to the rudimentary tracks, and then sort out who in his musical Rolodex might play what, where, when, and how.

The tricky part, Ambel says, was that “I had to think of not only great players, but great players that could do a very good job recording themselves at home.” Among those ready, willing, and able was Voegele, residing in Springfield, Illinois. Another was Keith Christopher, Ambel’s longtime Yayhoos band mate currently playing bass with Lynyrd Skynyrd and living in upstate New York. A talented trio of drummers scattered from New York to Nashville also sent in dispatches.

To ensure a rapport between far-flung musicians that felt organic, “I got songs to them in a very specific building order. Basically, we all went back to the ’70s in recording style, working on one song at a time until it was complete. Time and geography didn’t really matter,” says Ambel. “It was exciting to be on the virtual receiving end of all these great songs and performances.”

One unforeseen benefit to recording remotely: “I’ve gotten a lot more confident playing solo through writing this record,” says Borges. “Because I wrote on acoustic guitar, the songs had to be able to stand on their own enough to make a demo. Plus, my callouses have gotten much better!”

Given the circumstances, it’s all the more remarkable that roughed-up romps like “Lucky Day” (a metaphorical love song about how the search for true romance can prove as elusive as a winning lottery ticket), have the bracing, flesh-and-blood feel of like-minded musicians in sync. The chemistry doesn’t sound remote at all.

Paramount to the entire enterprise, of course, were the fresh ideas Borges put to paper and the spirited music she envisioned in the first place. “Sarah’s a fearless writer and performer,” says Ambel, “and she’s a very good musician.”

“It feels like me,” says Borges, who calls making the record nothing short of “a lifeline.” “The record feels really comfortable, like a second skin already. It’s a good representation of who I am, both musically and personally.” In fact, contemplative tracks such as “Something to Do” and “13th Floor” are candid reflections that cut to the marrow of who she was, and who she’s always becoming.

“On ‘13th Floor,’ I was thinking about risk,” says Borges, “I’m still trying to sort out what six years alcohol-free means to me, and I still draw on some of those feelings from ‘drunk-town’ for songs. And ‘Something To Do’ — recorded almost entirely during lockdown — harkens back to those days when calling a random number on a bar wall might have seemed like a good idea.”

Ironically, to find inspiration for the album’s final song, Together Alone, that had no lyrics or music attached to its title, Borges and her band hit the road for a few select, socially distanced dates in the Midwest this autumn. The shows, her first in more than a year, proved challenging amid varying statewide vaccine or mask mandates (or lack thereof). But she didn’t return home empty-handed.

The title track “Together Alone,” written across, and about, dividing distances on the road, is a bittersweet lament of loss, memory, and separation rendered in waltz time. “It’s the little things I’m missing / Now that they’re gone,” Borges muses over a mournful melody. “Lines across faces, and photos from places / Our shadows growing long.”

But as anyone familiar with Sarah’s songs knows, genuinely soulful music that connects with us — and connects us to each other -— can simultaneously steal, and heal, hearts. Ultimately, if Together Alone carries any message or lesson, it’s about finding the courage to face the hard times head on and not give in or up. And it’s about caring enough to bring the things that you miss, and that matter, back to life.

Austin Lounge Lizards

The Austin Lounge Lizards are arguably the perfect pairing of their hometown’s moniker, “Music Capital of the World,” and its motto: “Keep Austin Weird.” For 33 years, the Lizards have been spoofing the topics American families try to avoid at the Thanksgiving table; subjects like politics, religion, romance, the music industry, and their crazy/stupid relatives.

With pointed lyrics, precise harmonies and instrumental expertise, the band has become legendary for its satirical skewering through song. The Austin Lounge Lizards are five-time winners at the prestigious Austin Music Awards. Their version of Irving Berlin’s “C-U-B-A” was used in the Michael Moore film Sicko. The band has been featured on NPR’s Morning Edition and on the radio programs Mountain Stage and E-Town.

Ruthie Foster

Ruthie Foster’s ninth studio album represents a new high-water mark for the veteran blues artist—a collection of songs possessing pure power, like a tidal wave of musical generosity. Healing Time finds Foster pushing her boundaries as a singer and songwriter more than ever before, creating a truly live-sounding atmosphere with the help of her band, who sound refreshingly loose and lived-in throughout these 12 songs. We’ve all been in need of some healing in recent times, and Foster’s latest provides a guide for how to move through the world with equal parts compassion and resolve.

Healing Time is the latest jewel in Foster’s accomplished career, which includes multiple Grammy nominations and collaborations with fellow luminaries like Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks. For her latest, Foster contributed more to the writing process than she had on any of her previous albums, effectively refining her own songcraft in the process. “With this album, I dug deep and tried to go for the best way to write,” she explains. “This album says a lot about the period we were making it in, and how I wanted to find my way out of it.”

Work on the album began in lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, as Foster enlisted previous collaborators like Gary Nicholson and Grace Pettis to pitch in during the writing process—as well as every member of her band. “I wanted my band involved in the entire process of this album,” she explains, and they also played a large role in recreating the sound that Foster had become drawn to after spending time with her vinyl collection. “I was aiming to keep these songs sounding like they came from that era, which says a lot about where I am in my life, too.”

Veteran producer Mark Howard (Willie Nelson, Lucinda Williams) came in to bring new ideas to Foster’s table as recording began at Studio 71 West in Austin, TX, New Orleans’ famed Esplanade Studios, and Blue Rock Studio in Wimberley, TX. “Mark’s ability to turn a song’s arrangement upside down was intriguing and sometimes challenging for me,” she states. “It was a lot to wrap my head around, but he made me think outside of the box I didn’t even know I was in.”

Producer Dan Barrett, who also worked with Foster on 2017’s Joy Comes Back, then took the helm at Black Pumas co-bandleader Adrian Quesada’s famed Electric Deluxe studio in Austin. Along with several Black Pumas members, Barrett brought in a collection of Austin’s finest backing musicians, like Glenn Fukunaga (The Chicks, Shawn Colvin). “With Dan onboard we were able to find the glue to these songs sonically, and he brilliantly melded my familiar Texas blues-Americana sound with what Mark pulled out of me in New Orleans,” Foster says. “This combination gave these songs a breath of fresh air, and it all came together very organically.”

Healing Time’s title—as well as its burst-of-sunshine title track, which features pedal steel legend Robert Randolph—is a reference not only to the trials many have faced over the last several years, but also the necessity of what Foster does as an artist. “I hear fans tell me that the music we make is very spiritually healing,” she says. “The experience of dealing with my own grief after losing a band member a year before the pandemic while navigating around zoom school with my daughter and trying to figure out what to do with myself was tough but necessary. When I look at it as a whole it was all very healing for me which is pretty much how I try to live my life. There’s always time for healing, if you give it time.”

For the bright, propulsive opening track “Soul Searching,” Foster and Nicholson aimed to capture the struggle of seeing through the troubles that we sometimes face in relationships. “We were looking for something about being caught inside a shift,” she explains, “and the realization that while it worked in the beginning, it’s now changed and if you’re both able or even willing to take that trip together or not.”

The classic-sounding, twinkling pop of “Don’t Want to Give Up on You,” meanwhile, embraces a lovely melody over a deceptively simple song structure. “I wasn’t sure how to complete it,” Foster says, “but Grace helped me realize that it was actually finished, and that how a song is delivered is the real key to how it’s received. Keeping it simple is all there is to do as a songwriter sometimes.”

The slow-burning “What Kind of Fool” was one of several songs that were sonically re-shaped by Howard’s input: “What we wrote was something totally different,” Foster recalls. “Mark brought in a track similar to what Amy Winehouse more than likely had recorded and said, ‘Let’s try it this way.’ It was a totally different approach, and it worked.”

“Finish Line” showcases contributions from slide guitar veteran Sonny Landreth, while Foster’s take on “Feels Like Freedom,” which was originally sung by Joanna Jones, makes the heart soar with her passionate vocal take and full embrace of the song’s lyrical lessons. “I fell hard for the song,” she says while discussing her rendition and what it means to her. “It said everything about what I wanted to do with this album. It’s about this feeling of rising from a place where you felt stuck. Towards the end of the song, you realize that ‘Oh, this is what it feels like to be totally free!’. A lot has gone on in the last several years, and for some people it felt as if the world was falling apart. This song says to me, ‘No, we got you.’”

Then there’s the ruminative and luminous album closer “4 AM,” which originated while Foster was on tour in Eastern Europe. “I felt very out of sorts while being so far from home, trying to keep up with my family and friends,” she recalls. “I was up really late and not able to sleep, and I just sat with my guitar, a tea set, and a shot of vodka, and I wrote from where I was. I was disconnected from the people I love, but connected to what I was there to do.”

“Touring musicians get all this love from hundreds, sometimes thousands of people every working night,” she continues, “and then I come back to this lonely hotel room by myself. I go from feeling everything to just being.” And Healing Time is ultimately a work that explores such extremes as being human often brings to the surface, reminding listeners that even when we feel like we’re at the top, we’re ultimately still finding our way—a beautiful reflection of the essence of living itself.