
I absolutely love how big the band is and how each performer brings about the best sound. This is the only Country Music band that gives this special kind of musical twist.
Backstage at the Susquehanna Bank Center in Camden, New Jersey, the four members of A Thousand Horses are still processing the news that their debut single “Smoke” has just reached Number One on Billboard's Country Airplay chart. The rock-boogie-country group is in the gritty city just across the Delaware River from Philadelphia to play the 31st anniversary concert of WXTU, the region's country music station. And with “Smoke” the week's chart-topper, the band is expecting an especially strong response when they light into their new hit later that afternoon.
There's likely to be an uptick in holy-shit moments for the band when their debut album, Southernality, is released next Tuesday, June 9th. Produced by Dave Cobb (Jason Isbell, Chris Stapleton), the record is a muscular mix of radio country and Southern rock, with accents of Seventies gutter rock weaved throughout.
When they asked him to join the band, Hobby says Brown only had one question: Could they cover Aerosmith? “I was like, ‘Yeah, we can do it,'” remembers Hobby. “He was like, ‘Cool, I'm in. I'll see you tomorrow.'”
“We still haven't covered Aerosmith though,” adds Brown.
These days, it's more plausible that the group would channel Lynyrd Skynyrd or the Allman Brothers. Since forming in 2010, A Thousand Horses have grown from compact quartet to sprawling troupe — in addition to the four guys, they tour with drummer Ryan Scarborough, keyboardist/fiddle player Brian Purwin and three backup singers: Morgan Hebert, Kristen Rogers and Whitney Coleman. The result is a boisterous flesh-and-blood stage show that recalls Skynyrd circa 1976, during their One More From the Road period.
Despite the close quarters, or perhaps because of it, there's a palpable camaraderie within the group, which also informs Southernality. “It's our story and situations for the last five years,” says Hobby. “From when we formed and became a band to now, every song on that album is real and somebody in the group lived it.”
Indeed, the LP feels lived-in, a complete entity rather than a collection of singles. While the radio-ready tracks are easy to pick out, the deeper cuts are far from filler — instead, they seem destined for the set list. Or, in the case of “Travelin' Man,” a thundering freight train of a jam co-written with the Cadillac Three's Jaren Johnston, are already live favorites.
“That song is the oldest song on the album. We've played that song at every A Thousand Horses show we've ever played,” says Brown. “Smoke,” meanwhile, is the newest, with Hobby writing it shortly before the group entered the studio.
“The day before we started recording, we had a show. So we learned the song at soundcheck, played it at the show and recorded it the next day,” says Satcher, who first met Hobby in middle school in their small town of Newberry, South Carolina. The pair began hanging out at a local record shop and jamming with Deloach, Satcher's cousin, eventually all ending up in Nashville in a house and rehearsal space on 46th Avenue in the Sylvan Park neighborhood.
What do you think of Country Bands playing this type of music are you more of a fan of the older-style of music or do you like the new spin these artists are playing?
Tell Us About It!
Check Out The Music Video Below & See Why They Are So Popular!
Photo Source: Larry Marano/GettyImages
This Article Was Adapted From: The Rolling Stones
No comments yet... Be the first to leave a reply!