Jason Isbell RE: separation with Shires wrote: “I think I’m just going to try to be honest in all the ways that I legally can. I mean, there’s certain things that we’ve agreed not to talk about, but I think I can still manage to tell people who I am and what the truth is from my perspective.
“You know, it’s one of those things when not everything that ends is a failure. I think we did a lot of really beautiful things together, and I have really fond memories of all of that, and I don’t regret any of it, you know, even the hard stuff. It’s like when I got into recovery, I wound up after a few years looking back and thinking, I don’t regret even the worst parts of that, because it all kind of goes into making me who I am, you know?
“And the time will come when the wounds aren’t still fresh. The time will come when I’m able to take all this and put it into my work in a way that is honest and true but makes sense for me. I’m going to be patient, and in the meantime, I got plenty of other shit to write about.”
Jason Isbell
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Re: Jason Isbell
Jason Isbell Talks ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon,’ Divorce, Songwriting & More On ‘Broken Record’ Podcast
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Re: Jason Isbell
Man, that does not sound good.
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Re: Jason Isbell
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Re: Jason Isbell
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Re: Jason Isbell
RIP Dickey.oasisfan35 wrote:
When I saw Isbell in 2017, it was a couple of weeks after Gregg Allman died and he played Whipping Post.
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Re: Jason Isbell
Isbell has been in fairly constant rotation with the yard work this year. I listened to Reunions yesterday, which I believe I was already a larger fan than most here but it really hit me hard. It is not an easy album subject matter wise though really much of his catalog is not.
I have yet to see the documentary but given what eventually happened I am not exactly in a rush.
That said, I think these lyrics are simply genius:
It's easy to see that you'll get where you're going
The hard part is letting you go
Written from a father's perspective and to end the album is pretty masterful.
I have yet to see the documentary but given what eventually happened I am not exactly in a rush.
That said, I think these lyrics are simply genius:
It's easy to see that you'll get where you're going
The hard part is letting you go
Written from a father's perspective and to end the album is pretty masterful.
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Re: Jason Isbell
Reunions is a strong record. I don't know that I like it quite as much as the ones on either side of it but it's still a fantastic listen. The highs are among his highest. I still lose my shit every time I hear Dreamsicle, for example.
Man, that dude can write!
Man, that dude can write!
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Re: Jason Isbell
I came in here to see what the read was on his latest work only to find out about the divorce. Sad to read.
I'd honestly found his pubic persona to be increasingly grating, arrogant, and condescending and not at all the empathetic master craftsman that shows up in so many of his songs and that was coming through in later works where the songwriting was way more agenda-driven than story-driven. I think he misread what his real gift was and got a bit absorbed in the mythos of the world-changing artist. A bit how Bono became a weaker writer once he started teaming up with Oprah on poverty initiatives. I guess my general opinion is that politics and social change are fine but their inherent didacticism doesn't always make for good art.
Bob Dylan did well to shroud it all in mystery, personae, and bullshit.
I'd honestly found his pubic persona to be increasingly grating, arrogant, and condescending and not at all the empathetic master craftsman that shows up in so many of his songs and that was coming through in later works where the songwriting was way more agenda-driven than story-driven. I think he misread what his real gift was and got a bit absorbed in the mythos of the world-changing artist. A bit how Bono became a weaker writer once he started teaming up with Oprah on poverty initiatives. I guess my general opinion is that politics and social change are fine but their inherent didacticism doesn't always make for good art.
Bob Dylan did well to shroud it all in mystery, personae, and bullshit.
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Re: Jason Isbell
I don't know his public persona much aside the interviews, live shows and some awards acceptances but I don't think the bold is fair at all if one purports the writer as the subject or narrator of the work. I think the next sentence is total horseshit but to each their own there.lvc wrote:I came in here to see what the read was on his latest work only to find out about the divorce. Sad to read.
I'd honestly found his pubic persona to be increasingly grating, arrogant, and condescending and not at all the empathetic master craftsman that shows up in so many of his songs and that was coming through in later works where the songwriting was way more agenda-driven than story-driven. I think he misread what his real gift was and got a bit absorbed in the mythos of the world-changing artist. A bit how Bono became a weaker writer once he started teaming up with Oprah on poverty initiatives. I guess my general opinion is that politics and social change are fine but their inherent didacticism doesn't always make for good art.
Bob Dylan did well to shroud it all in mystery, personae, and bullshit.
I also find the last album quite topical yet also very story-driven. Listened to it today right after The Nashville Sound while working in the yard.
edit: Also want to add that separating the art from the artist is definitely something I have thought about very much over the years and with time aka experience I'm finding it a thinner line whether I like it or not, which is odd to me.
That said, the rise of social media, both accounts of the artists and the public at large, constant interview media machine, et al has not exactly helped this matter in my opinion but confounded it. I find it fascinating but at times almost like a carwreck I'm debating to turn to.
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Re: Jason Isbell
I crammed a lot of clauses into those sentences so I'm not sure I 100% know where the horseshit lies. I'll allow it's highly likely to be in there.oasisfan35 wrote:I don't know his public persona much aside the interviews, live shows and some awards acceptances but I don't think the bold is fair at all if one purports the writer as the subject or narrator of the work. I think the next sentence is total horseshit but to each their own there.lvc wrote:I came in here to see what the read was on his latest work only to find out about the divorce. Sad to read.
I'd honestly found his pubic persona to be increasingly grating, arrogant, and condescending and not at all the empathetic master craftsman that shows up in so many of his songs and that was coming through in later works where the songwriting was way more agenda-driven than story-driven. I think he misread what his real gift was and got a bit absorbed in the mythos of the world-changing artist. A bit how Bono became a weaker writer once he started teaming up with Oprah on poverty initiatives. I guess my general opinion is that politics and social change are fine but their inherent didacticism doesn't always make for good art.
Bob Dylan did well to shroud it all in mystery, personae, and bullshit.
I also find the last album quite topical yet also very story-driven. Listened to it today right after The Nashville Sound while working in the yard.
edit: Also want to add that separating the art from the artist is definitely something I have thought about very much over the years and with time aka experience I'm finding it a thinner line whether I like it or not, which is odd to me.
That said, the rise of social media, both accounts of the artists and the public at large, constant interview media machine, et al has not exactly helped this matter in my opinion but confounded it. I find it fascinating but at times almost like a carwreck I'm debating to turn to.
I mostly was thinking about how he was pretty much a dick on Twitter a lot. This was a while back and it always seemed to be about Trump in some way or another. People baiting him and him rising right to the bait. I unfollowed him because it just wasn't interesting. I'm not on twitter anymore or whatever it's called now, but it made songs like Hope the High Road a bit clangy in my ears because he was on the low road a lot online. Definitely fighting people down in the ditch.
Anyway, I saw him live once and the band is truly great. I could listen to Isbell talk guitars all day. I was never a huge fan of Amanda Shire's fiddle contributions personally, but in that genre I'm probably wrong. I just like electric guitars better.
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Re: Jason Isbell
Yeah, I got away from twitter quite some time ago but as I mentioned could totally see how this can shade some perception. It kinda sucks, especially when the character limitation was there, I mean interpreting texts are bad enough. I do recall him having a lot of funny bits on there but lord, so long ago.lvc wrote:I crammed a lot of clauses into those sentences so I'm not sure I 100% know where the horseshit lies. I'll allow it's highly likely to be in there.oasisfan35 wrote:I don't know his public persona much aside the interviews, live shows and some awards acceptances but I don't think the bold is fair at all if one purports the writer as the subject or narrator of the work. I think the next sentence is total horseshit but to each their own there.lvc wrote:I came in here to see what the read was on his latest work only to find out about the divorce. Sad to read.
I'd honestly found his pubic persona to be increasingly grating, arrogant, and condescending and not at all the empathetic master craftsman that shows up in so many of his songs and that was coming through in later works where the songwriting was way more agenda-driven than story-driven. I think he misread what his real gift was and got a bit absorbed in the mythos of the world-changing artist. A bit how Bono became a weaker writer once he started teaming up with Oprah on poverty initiatives. I guess my general opinion is that politics and social change are fine but their inherent didacticism doesn't always make for good art.
Bob Dylan did well to shroud it all in mystery, personae, and bullshit.
I also find the last album quite topical yet also very story-driven. Listened to it today right after The Nashville Sound while working in the yard.
edit: Also want to add that separating the art from the artist is definitely something I have thought about very much over the years and with time aka experience I'm finding it a thinner line whether I like it or not, which is odd to me.
That said, the rise of social media, both accounts of the artists and the public at large, constant interview media machine, et al has not exactly helped this matter in my opinion but confounded it. I find it fascinating but at times almost like a carwreck I'm debating to turn to.
I mostly was thinking about how he was pretty much a dick on Twitter a lot. This was a while back and it always seemed to be about Trump in some way or another. People baiting him and him rising right to the bait. I unfollowed him because it just wasn't interesting. I'm not on twitter anymore or whatever it's called now, but it made songs like Hope the High Road a bit clangy in my ears because he was on the low road a lot online. Definitely fighting people down in the ditch.
Anyway, I saw him live once and the band is truly great. I could listen to Isbell talk guitars all day. I was never a huge fan of Amanda Shire's fiddle contributions personally, but in that genre I'm probably wrong. I just like electric guitars better.
I listened to his first two records in the yard today, definitely a young buck but you could see a solid foundation was already there and some fine playing too.
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Re: Jason Isbell
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Re: Jason Isbell
Live from the Ryman Vol. 2
Live From The Ryman Vol. 2 draws from multi-track recordings by the band’s longtime front-of-house engineer, Cain Hogsed, from four of the last six years of sold-out shows at Nashville’s legendary Ryman Auditorium. Hogsed co-produced the album alongside Isbell, and mixed the tracks with Nashville, TN’s Todd Tidwell. The album features 15 live versions of songs from the band’s last two critically acclaimed, award-winning studio albums - Reunions (2020) and Weathervanes, (2023), as well as stunning rendition of “The Last Song I Will Write,” from Isbell’s 2009 self-titled release, and a poignant cover of Tom Petty’s “Room at the Top.”
releases October 4, 2024
- Spoiler: show
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Re: Jason Isbell
Enjoying the new Ryman release currently, great to hear his take on Room at the Top.
Listened to the Bad Monkey soundtrack earlier and got Vedder's take, may have to follow this up with Mr. Petty to close it out.
Listened to the Bad Monkey soundtrack earlier and got Vedder's take, may have to follow this up with Mr. Petty to close it out.
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Re: Jason Isbell
I will get into maybe a little more detail on the live albums thread, but Vol. 2 is where this guy’s music finally clicks with me. I have enjoyed it fine but it hadn’t got its hooks into me until this one. Now I’ll need to go back and revisit.
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Re: Jason Isbell
liebzz wrote:I will get into maybe a little more detail on the live albums thread, but Vol. 2 is where this guy’s music finally clicks with me. I have enjoyed it fine but it hadn’t got its hooks into me until this one. Now I’ll need to go back and revisit.
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Re: Jason Isbell
liebzz wrote:I will get into maybe a little more detail on the live albums thread, but Vol. 2 is where this guy’s music finally clicks with me. I have enjoyed it fine but it hadn’t got its hooks into me until this one. Now I’ll need to go back and revisit.
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Re: Jason Isbell
Jason Isbell Goes Solo on New Album Foxes in the Snow
Foxes in the Snow tracklist:Rolling Stone wrote:Set for release March 7, the album is the songwriter's first without his band the 400 Unit since his 2007 debut Sirens in the Ditch
Jason Isbell has announced the forthcoming studio album Foxes in the Snow. The record will be Isbell’s first solo acoustic collection, recorded over a five-day period at Electric Lady Studios in New York this past October. It is also the first Isbell studio album to not feature his longtime band, the 400 Unit, since his 2007 solo debut Sirens in the Ditch.
Ahead of the album’s arrival, Isbell released the song Bury Me, which begins with him singing a cappella before launching into a plaintive country-folk tale, which makes a light allusion to a past Isbell song Live Oak and puts forth a novel pronunciation of the word obituary before arriving at a sing-along chorus: “I ain’t no cowboy/But I can ride.”
Little much else is known about Foxes in the Snow, other than the fact that it was recorded on Isbell’s 1940 Martin guitar and that the tracklist includes titles like Ride to Robert’s (about the legendary Nashville honky-tonk?) and Good While It Lasted (perhaps a nod to the songwriter’s 2024 split from singer-songwriter Amanda Shires?).
It’s possible that some of those questions could be answered on Isbell’s extensive solo acoustic tour, which begins Feb. 2 in Berlin, a full month before the album’s March 7 release date. In the U.S., the tour will hit cities like Chicago, Washington, D.C., Nashville and New York, where he’ll set up shop at the Beacon Theatre for two nights.
Foxes in the Snow is the follow-up to 2023’s Weathervanes, which was released shortly after the release of an HBO documentary that chronicled the recording of his 2020 album, Reunions, as well as the building tension in his personal and creative life at the time.
“When you try to be as honest with people as possible, there is a concession that you have to make,” Isbell told Rolling Stone later that year. “You have to allow more of your personal life to be made public, but I think that works for me.”
Bury Me
Ride to Robert's
Eileen
Gravelweed
Don't Be Tough
Open and Close
Foxes in the Snow
Crimson and Clay
Good While It Lasted
True Believer
Wind Behind The Rain
Pre-order at bandcamp
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Re: Jason Isbell
He's coming to town to play in May. The last time I saw him, he opened here for John Prine. That whole night was so magical, I'm not sure I want to go to this show in the same venue. 
Clouuuuds Rolll byyy...BANG BANG BANG BANG