7 Must-Hear New Country Songs: Billy Strings, Molly Tuttle, Larry Fleet, Carter Faith & More
Written by djfrosty on September 5, 2023
In this week’s batch of new country music, bluegrass luminaries Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle team up for a sterling collaboration, while Brian Kelley, Carter Faith, Larry Fleet, Jobi Riccio, and more also offer new tunes.
Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle, “Listen to the Radio”
Two of bluegrass music’s greatest forces team up on this tender cover of a Nanci Griffith classic. Tuttle takes the lead here, her sweet vocals capturing hints of Griffith’s vocal stylings, with Strings offering plaintive harmonies as they sing of a young girl who chases the strains of Loretta Lynn and Merle Haggard flowing from her radio. Shimmering, virtuosic mandolin and guitar wrap around this dreamy outing. Both Strings and Tuttle (the latter with her Golden Highway band) are nominated for International Bluegrass Music Association’s top honors this year.
Brian Kelley, “Dirt Cheap”
Written by Andy Sheridan, Seth Ennis and Wyatt McCubbin, with production by Dann Huff, Kelley’s latest solo effort finds him veering toward a vocal with heavier twang, backed by plenty of banjo and steel guitar.
On “Dirt Cheap,” he contemplates trading the hustle of city life for more time spent on a porch swing or by the pond, in a rural community and celebrating life with those he loves. Though lyrically, the song falls squarely in line with a plethora of other songs on country radio that celebrate rural living, this song marks a welcome change from his hip-hop-flecked FGL days, but Kelley’s vocal feels more relaxed and right at home on this radio-friendly track.
Tyler Braden, “Friends”
Braden follows his breakthrough songs — including “Try Losing One” and “Little Red Wine” — with “Friends,” written by Brent Anderson, Randy Montana and Lynn Hutton. The song finds Braden unfurling his true hurt and skepticism when an ex-lover wants to continue being friends, and act as though their deeper relationship never happened. Braden’s dusty, acid-fueled rendering conveys all the sarcasm, pain and bewilderment of the song’s essence, furthered heightened by rock-propelled production.
Carter Faith, “Carolina Burns”
“I still wear a grudge like a f–ked up crown,” Faith sings, offering a sharp-witted elegy for a past relationship — one still seared into her memory, even as her ex-lover has long since left the emotional ashes behind. Faith wrote this track with Lauren Hungate and Tofer Brown, with Brown also handling the song’s dreamy, soft-focus production. Faith’s lilting, summery vocals soothe her bone-deep observations, in a convergence of country, pop and Americana elements that’s uniquely her own.
Larry Fleet, Earned It EP
Fleet issues his third studio project, with 21 tracks of smooth, ’80s and ’90s country-influenced songs that touch on spirituality, loss, love, barrooms, youthful revelries and hard-earned wisdom and gratitude. He takes saw-dusted romantic chances in “There’s a Waylon,” laces a fiddle-and-piano jam-band vibe around late-night vibes in “Taking the Long Way,” and recalls midnights spent covertly soaking in soul-saving classic rock in “Devil Music.” Fleet is a writer on nearly every track on the project, further cementing his imposing talents as both songcrafter and vocalist, with a style that delves into blues, rock and retro-country with ease.
Jobi Riccio, “Sweet”
Riccio, the winner of the 2023 John Prine Songwriter Fellowship at Newport Folk, releases a new album, Whiplash, this month via Yep Roc Records. On “Sweet,” Riccio dabbles with a “Sweet Home Alabama” groove, but vocally inhabits an insouciance towards changing personality traits or personal preferences to please a lover — or anyone else, for that matter.
Bryan Martin, “We Ride”
Martin’s “We Ride,” which he wrote with Vernon Brown (with production from Nick Gibbens), currently resides just outside the top 40 on the Hot Country Songs chart, and is included on Martin’s 2023 album Poets and Old Souls. Here, his grizzly vocal soars over lyrics that pair perspective on everyday struggles on lines including “Hard to make a living while the gas is so high,” with a rock-seared, ramblin’-man sense of defiance and honesty — all elements that are finding popularity within the ever-expanding country music genre, in songs from artists including HARDY, Jelly Roll and Oliver Anthony.