WHITNEY ROSE READIES
NEW ALBUM, RULE 62,
FOR OCTOBER 6 RELEASE
ON SIX SHOOTER/THIRTY TIGERS
World-traveling
Austin-based artist enlists Raul Malo (Mavericks) as producer,
Niko
Bolas as co-producer.
Paul
Deakin (Mavericks), Jen Gunderman (Jayhawks, Sheryl Crow), Kenny Vaughan (Marty
Stuart, Lucinda Williams), Chris Scruggs and Aaron Till
(Asleep
at the Wheel) form Rose’s own hot studio band.
"Even
the chief architect, standing in the ruins of her dream, could laugh at herself
—
and that
is the very acme of humility.” —Tradition Four, AA
Rolling
Stone Country
premiered a track
AUSTIN, Texas – There are many
useful rules to live by, but for Whitney Rose, there’s one that
stands alone as a guiding principle for life as she knows it: Rule 62. The
origin of the rule is best summed up by the poignant, pronoun-adjusted excerpt
from Alcoholics Anonymous’ Tradition Four cited above, a treatise on how to
find harmony between ambition and self-awareness, and how to learn one’s
lessons with humor and humility. This truism, officially worded as “Don’t Take
Yourself Too Damn Seriously,” is the origin of both the title and ethos of
Whitney Rose’s forthcoming album, Rule 62.
The album is due out on October
6, 2017 on Six Shooter Records through Thirty
Tigers.
Rewind to January 2017. Six months
ago, Rose was primed to release South Texas Suite, a countrypolitan
valentine to Austin, Texas. (Rolling Stone noted that it “bristles
with local flavor.”) Days before the EP hit the streets and Rose kicked off a
four-month worldwide tour, the burgeoning songwriting force (and “country hair”
disciple) packed her boots for Nashville, where she entered BlackBird Studio A
to reconvene with the Mavericks’ Raul Malo. In one short week,
Rose, Malo and co-producer Niko Bolas channeled the tumult,
turbulence and tension outside of the studio into Rose’s sophomore worldwide
release, which includes nine self-penned songs. Playful yet
uncompromising, Whitney Rose reminds us of popular music’s rich history of
strong female voices and perspectives, and on Rule 62, she channels
her inner Nancy Sinatra, Bobbie Gentry and Françoise Hardy. Rule
62 finds Rose “breaking up with patriarchy,” a breakup evidenced by
new songs that show verve, swagger and self-assurance in Rose’s instinctive
sense of tone, broadened scope and attention to detail.
Consider “Can’t Stop Shakin’” in the context of the day it was recorded: January 20, 2017. With Malo on harmonies and rhythm guitars, Kenny Vaughn on lead guitar, and saxophones and organ in the mix, “Can’t Stop Shakin’” was originally written as an anti-anxiety treatment in Memphis soul dance party form. Against an ominous political backdrop, the song now reverberates with an undercurrent of uncertainty and anger that reframes the self-calming shimmy as an act of protest. “’Can't Stop Shakin’ started out as something I would sing to calm myself down.” Rose says. “We recorded that song on Inauguration day and you could physically feel the divide between the public and the unrest in the air. I was in the studio that week every day for twelve hours on average, so realized my contribution was going to have to take place within the walls of Blackbird. So the song that started as a personal anthem got a rewrite that day.”
LISTEN TO "CAN'T STOP SHAKIN'" ON SPOTIFY@Spotify— Whitney Rose (@whitneyroseband) 5 August 2017
👉 https://t.co/JlcM0OEj31👈 pic.twitter.com/PuIJaXhQ84
Rule 62’s
“breakup” theme can be felt in songs like “Arizona” and “Time
to Cry,” two fiery, merciless tunes that show Rose at the end of her
rope with the manipulation and discrimination of women in the music business
and beyond. “For reasons unbeknownst to me at the time, I started writing all
these “breakup” songs that were mostly angry. I wasn’t sure where all these
feelings were coming from until one day it hit me like a ton of bricks that I
was penning these songs to society,” she observes. These sharp-tongued
send-offs come with a good dose of humor, and the result is a reassuring sense
that Rose isn’t letting anything grind her down.
Rose’s rising resilience underpins
the message of “Better to My Baby,” a standout song that puts
into practice the spirit and the letter of the album title. A tuneful take on
moving on, the song is a measured spin on the traditional volatility of regret
and jealousy that accompanies the end of a relationship. “Better To My Baby”
also showcases Rose’s adept handling of ’60s pop conventions in its proud girl
group nods: tinkling piano, buoyant harmonies and rueful
romanticism.
Rule 62 is Rose’s
second release of 2017, and sees the songwriter’s increased output matched by
increased distinction. With so much touring now under the tires, it’s no
surprise that Rose’s best work yet often explores her journeywoman’s
experience.
“Meet Me in Wyoming” and “Trucker’s
Funeral” are emblematic of Rose’s clever study of the
musician-as-trucker analogy. “Trucker’s Funeral,” a Dolly-caliber yarn with a
stranger-than-fiction twist, is in fact a true story: “I had a meeting at Bank
of America here in Austin last year and when the meeting was over the
teller told me about going to his grandfather’s funeral here in Texas,” Rose
recounts. “He found out he had a full second family on the West Coast. His
grandfather was a trucker and always on the road, so neither family had any
idea. As he was telling me this story, I was jotting down lyrics on my banking
papers because it was just too intriguing an experience not be made into a
song.”
Rule 62 boasts the
first-class musicianship and studio instincts of collaborator and
producer Raul Malo. The comfort and familiarity between the two
made for a seamless return to the studio, this time with the added ear of Niko
Bolas as co-producer. “Niko brought a lot to the table in the
studio (when he wasn't sitting at his table at Waffle House). It allowed
Raul to step down from the producer role from time to time and be a part of the
band. That man can play and sing. One of my favorite parts of the album is
the guitar solo on ‘You Never Cross My Mind’ — that's all Raul,” Rose observes
appreciatively. Other musicians in the studio included Paul Deakin (The
Mavericks) on drums, Jay Weaver (Dolly Parton, Tanya Tucker,
The Mavericks) on bass; Jen Gunderman (Sheryl Crow) on
piano; Chris Scruggs (Marty Stuart) on steel; Aaron
Till (Asleep at the Wheel) on the fiddle; and Kenny Vaughn (Marty
Stuart, Lucinda Williams) on lead guitar.
Rule 62. Don’t Take Yourself Too
Damn Seriously. It’s the only rule that Whitney Rose needs to keep going.
RULE 62 TRACK LISTING:
1. I
Don’t Want Half (I Just Want Out) (3:06)
2. Arizona
(3:58)
3. Better
to My Baby (3:13)
4. You
Never Cross My Mind (4:02)
5. You
Don’t Scare Me (4:14)
6.
Can’t Stop Shakin’ (4:22)
7. Tied
to the Wheel (4:41)
8. Trucker’s
Funeral (5:04)
9. Wake
Me in Wyoming (3:29)
10. You’re
a Mess (3:48)
11. Time
to Cry (3:56)
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