Twangville

A music blog featuring Alt-Country, Americana, Indie, Rock, Folk & Blues. Est. 2005.

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Now & Then: Hiss Golden Messenger’s I’m People and the reach of Veedon Fleece

Sunday, May 10, 2026 By Tom Osborne

Hiss Golden Messenger – I'm People (cover art)

A good Hiss Golden Messenger record does not arrive like a statement from a mountaintop. It pulls up beside you at a gas station, coffee gone cold, with a half-finished thought about mercy, children, money, God, and whether the map is helping. I’m People fits that line perfectly: a road record with home on its mind, full of M.C. Taylor’s worn-in gospel of doubt and persistence. For a “Then,” Van Morrison’s Veedon Fleece makes the sharper companion, not because Taylor sounds like Morrison, but because both albums use travel as a way to measure the soul’s weather.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Hiss Golden Messenger, Van Morrison

Reckless Kelly – Alternate Routes

Thursday, May 07, 2026 By Shawn Underwood

Thirty years ago in a wide-spot-in-the-road Idaho town 300 miles west of Yellowstone, Willy and Cody Braun formed their first band. As the sons and grandsons of professional musicians, their knowledge about how to do that was ahead of most of their garage band peers. One of their first decisions was to relocate to Austin. […]

Filed Under: Alt-Country, Americana, Outlaw Country, Reviews Tagged With: Reckless Kelly

India Ramey – Villain Era

Thursday, April 30, 2026 By Shawn Underwood

No Fear. Nashville’s India Ramey must have taken some inspiration from that clothing line’s name. Lots of musicians have songs about finding their true self and coming to terms with who they are. On Villain Era, Ramey takes it a step further with a confidence and frankness that would make Clint Eastwood blush. She doesn’t […]

Filed Under: Country, Reviews Tagged With: India Ramey

Now & Then: Vincent Neil Emerson’s Blue Stars and the reach of Old No. 1

Sunday, April 26, 2026 By Tom Osborne

Guy Clark – Old No. 1 (cover art)

Some records announce themselves with a bang. Vincent Neil Emerson’s Blue Stars does something tougher. It settles in, tells the truth, and lets the weight of the songs do the heavy lifting. That makes it a natural fit beside Guy Clark’s Old No. 1, a record that helped define how Texas songwriting could be plain, precise, and quietly devastating. Beyond sound or geography, the connection is a shared belief that the smallest details often carry the biggest truths.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Guy Clark, Vincent Neil Emerson

Odd Marshall – Seconds

Thursday, April 23, 2026 By Shawn Underwood

I’m not really a believer in fate. I just feel like people can make rational choices that end up steering them down a new path. Having said that, I’ve certainly seen examples where the Universe just keeps knocking someone back on track. The musician Odd Marshall seems to be one of those. An obsession with […]

Filed Under: Reviews, Rock, Singer/Songwriter Tagged With: Odd Marshall

Taj Mahal & The Phantom Blues Band – Time

Wednesday, April 22, 2026 By Bill Wilcox

Taj Mahal just keeps doing great music. This master, at 83, continues to show that he, like his namesake building, is a wonder of the world. To say that Taj Mahal has been around for a long time is an understatement. He was raised in Massachusetts in a musical household and gained an appreciation not […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Roots Tagged With: Taj Mahal, Taj Mahal & The Phantom Blues Band

Now & Then: Fantastic Cat’s Cat Out of Hell and the reach of Stage Fright

Sunday, April 19, 2026 By Tom Osborne

Fantastic Cat’s Cat Out of Hell arrives with the band’s usual grin intact, but beneath the loose charm is a sturdier kind of record: one built on shared voices, accumulated mileage, and the small existential leaks that start showing up in adult life. That makes it a good candidate for a look backward, not to some obvious alt-country touchstone, but to The Band’s Stage Fright, another ensemble album where group chemistry sweetens songs about unease, pressure, and trying to keep your balance while the room keeps moving.

Filed Under: Reviews

Hank Alrich – Broken River

Thursday, April 16, 2026 By Shawn Underwood

It’s well known that the Armadillo World Headquarters was at ground-zero for the Austin music scene in the early 70’s. Gary P. Nunn once noted, “It’s been said that our music was the catalyst that brought the shit-kickers and the hippies together at the Armadillo.” Presumably one of those hippies was Hank Alrich, a California […]

Filed Under: Acoustic, Americana, Country, Folk, Reviews Tagged With: Hank Alrich

Adam Gaffney Song Premiere – Product of Another Sad Song

Wednesday, April 15, 2026 By Shawn Underwood

You’ve no doubt heard the phrase, “but for the grace of God, there go I.” For St. Louis native Adam Gaffney, sometimes God’s grace wasn’t around and so he went down a few harmful paths. He has a new album coming out next month, Product of Another Sad Song, and it’s centered around some of […]

Filed Under: Alt-Country, Country, Reviews Tagged With: Adam Gaffney

Corey Harris, Alvin Youngblood Hart & Guy Davis – Fight On! True Blues Vol.2

Wednesday, April 15, 2026 By Bill Wilcox

A niece once pronounced to me that all the great blues musicians are dead. Alvin Youngblood Hart, Guy Davis and Corey Harris show that’s not true, as they are among the best blues masters of my own generation. With Fight On! True Blues Vol. 2, these masters have created an acoustic blues timepiece that is […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Roots Tagged With: Alvin Younblood Hart, Corey Harris, Guy Davis

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