Nashville-based country/Americana outfit Whiskey Wolves of the West is set to release its debut album, Country Roots, on March 2, 2018 via Rock Ridge Music. With a sound that is something that can only be earned by a thousand nights in smoky bars and a million miles on bald bus tires, the Whiskey Wolves are disciples at what could be the last supper of country music, and. A concisely focused, seven-track melting pot of an album-with tunes that are high and lonesome, yearning and dark, twangy and gritty and oh-so-satisfying-Country Roots features the dynamic songwriting and performing tandem of Tim Jones (vocals, guitar) and Leroy Powell (vocals, guitar, bass, pedal steel, clavinet, keys, harmonica), two prime progenitors of the new Nashville sound.
"I feel like the music Tim and I do could easily be put side by side with any of it-we're not shooting to sound like anybody other than ourselves," theorizes Powell, a first-call guitarist/multi-instrumentalist for noted Music City producer Dave Cobb who's backed heavy-hitters Sturgill Simpson and Chris Stapleton in the studio, as well as both Shooter and Waylon Jennings. Concurs Jones, a top-cat Nashville singer/player in his own right who's worked side by side in a band with Carl Broemel (My Morning Jacket) and had Chris Robinson (The Black Crowes) as a producer and tourmate, "I'm proud to say we're both making the same kind of music now that we did back when we were starting out. It's the love of a genre that a certain zeitgeist movement may have briefly captured, but we never left it."
Making sure every song on Country Roots has a lasting impact on its listeners was critical to the duo, who had prepared more than 20 tracks before whittling down the final running order to the lucky seven we have here. "It's a nice, short record, like those great old country records that had only ten songs on them that would last maybe 20-30 minutes," recounts Powell. "That was something Waylon [Jennings] was notorious for doing. Every song counted, and I loved that. It's not too overwhelming either. You don't need to hear every song we've ever written-just the best ones."
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