Album Review – Charley Crockett’s Surprise Album “Clovis”

Americana (#570), Classic Country (#510.1), Outlaw Country (#580) on the Country DDS.
Now this is the kind of Charley Crockett you want emanating out of your speakers: Greasy, rootsy, country more than anything else, but also seamlessly sliding between a myriad of classic American influences like only Crockett can do until you’re bathed in sepia-toned goodness, and are re-racking it again for a second swim through. His surprise album Clovis isn’t just a career-defining record. It’s an act of rebellion.
It was less than a year, and three albums ago that Charley Crockett sat down with Joe Rogan, bemoaning his previous “broke dick deals,” and excited he was now on a major label with Island Records. That marriage saw the release of his “Sagebrush Trilogy” (Lonesome Drifter, Dollar a Day, Age of the Ram). But he uploaded Clovis on a random Tuesday via his iPhone to purposely undercut the last album that was released just three weeks previous, and is currently still in its promotional cycle.
“Every time I find out I signed a deal I don’t like, and I go to these fuckin’ business people, and tell them I don’t like the deal, I don’t think it’s fair, they say ‘Tough luck kid, you shouldn’t of fuckin’ signed it.'” Charley Crockett says. “As soon as I hold them to that same standard, I’m the fuckin’ bad guy,” (laughing).
Traveling from the hometown of Waylon Jennings, through the small town of Muleshoe and crossing over the New Mexico border in the arid Southwest, you come to the town of Clovis, which if you didn’t know any better, you’d swear it’s stuck in a time many eras past. That’s certainly the case for the Norman Petty Studio in town where Buddy Holly cut all his greatest songs in the 1950s, and Waylon Jennings first recorded.

Geography is always an important part of country music, and it’s always been an important element to Charley Crockett’s music. He leverages setting on Clovis as good or better as he has on any of his records in the past. He puts you right in the town, where you can see the way the dust creates painted skies at dusk and dawn, and where time and priority has forgotten its land plots and people.
Though it’s always been a fair criticism that Crockett songs could spend a few more minutes in the oven—sometimes served up with mushy centers, however entertaining—that’s not really the experience with Clovis, despite the quick turnaround time from his previous album. By utilizing Shooter Jennings as a co-writer on many tracks, as well as Jason Lee Moeller, Crockett’s wife Taylor Grace on a couple of tracks, along with others, songwriting is an asset to Clovis, not a burden.
Same goes with the level of sonic diversity throughout the album. As fun as the “Sagebrush Trilogy” was in the way Charley Crockett explored his Western influences like never before. it’s more the chameleon-like nature of his music that makes him unique. Some might complain Clovis really isn’t country enough. But you can’t say it doesn’t lean into certain textures with a level of authority that results in positive outcomes.
Only time will determine if Clovis is a career-defining record for Crockett. Surprise albums also tend to be better received since their best songs aren’t spoiled by early single releases. But what Clovis clearly is already is a turning point in Crockett’s career where he’s re-asserting who’s in control, taking grip of his own destiny, and proving to be not just one of the most prolific, but one of the most unpredictable and iconoclastic artists in country music.
8.4/10
Song Reviews:
1. The Hallelujah Trail
Precision is not really what this album is interested in as much as capturing a feeling. The plucky guitar part drives this song, with the tasteful, ethereal elements in the chorus really elevating the song’s enchantment. Like numerous songs on Clovis, Charley makes you first think they’re about a place. But it’s the character study where the heart of the song lies.
2. Down By Law
It’s no work of fiction that Charley Crockett has been pursued by law enforcement and his past throughout his career. That became patently obvious when he was turned away recently at the Canadian border and denied entry for a previous marijuana charge. Consider “Down By Law” a sort of dramatized version of that story, set in the San Juan mountains just north and west of Clovis.
By the way, word is when Crockett had to cancel his Canadian tour last minute, he went ahead and paid all his band and personnel for the entire tour anyway.
3. One Eyed Jack
Charley Crockett uses a face card as a philosophical study into the ulterior motives of characters. This is one of those Charley Crockett songs you immediately find favor with, and the tasteful horn accents and guitar work really make the track stand out. One of those guitar solos is Crockett himself, thumb picking away on his Danelectro like he does.
4. Image of a Woman
Clovis doesn’t have a lot of straight country songs, or steel guitar for that matter. “Image of a Woman” is an exception, with the story of a lonesome man roaming the streets of a city haunted by the memory of a woman being something you can feel in your bones, bolstered by the musical accompaniment.
5. Eagle and the Crow
This is a fun, hard-charging country Outlaw rock track that finds and groove and lays down in it. Crockett is confidently self-asserting in the song, but it’s really not about the message as much as the vibe. You can tell much of this album was cut completely live with Crockett’s backing band, The Blue Dirfters, with that in-room feel to many of the tracks, imbued with the ghosts of American music greats pacing the corridors of the Norman Petty Studios.
6. Top Hand
Even if you’re a hardcore Charley Crockett fan, you can be honest with yourself and admit he’s not some crooner with a one-in-a-million voice. It’s his evocation of character, his hustle, his showmanship that sells the song. Setting “Top Hand” in hushed tones, Crockett allows the audience to lose themselves in this song. It might not jump out at you, but it’s a song you sense over time might reveal itself as one of the album’s best.
7. Country Music
This is a great song finding Charley Crockett both exploring the idea of what country music is, and how it’s played a central role in his life. Many have tried to define country music over the years. Crockett says in the song, “Country’s a painting. This life’s a canvas in the color of places you’ve been.” There’s no better way to portray the geography and sense of place Crockett weaves into his music than this statement.
8. Last Night at the Alamo
This is an interesting song, though it’s hard to nail the inspiration for it. It could be able Waylon Jennings, who was definitely an inspiration for this record. Or it could be about Crockett himself, or someone else, or maybe a combination. Either way, it’s about someone who stands strong on their convictions, and is willing to go down in the fight standing on those convictions, just like the heroes from The Alamo.
9. Clovis
These are the kind of tracks that country albums, and albums of any kind need more of. The instrumental treatment lends to the cinematic approach Crockett tries to achieve with all of his albums, and confers a sense of place a conventional country music song never could.
10. Don’t Take Your Guns To Town
This song has been done countless times. But even Johnny Cash’s original came across as a little clunky with the tempo change and the delivery of the name “Bill.” It’s the story that has made it a classic. By turning it into a bluesy, groovy country soul song, Crockett finds the mood this song has been searching after for the better part of 70 years.
11. Albuquerque Lights
Anyone who’s ever driven I-40 from the west heading into the Q from the heights of the mesa and seen its lights unfurled out in front of you knows what a sight it is to behold. As much as the song is about I-40 and Albuquerque, Crockett also drops some characters in there for you to explore.
12. I Ain’t Riding Anymore
This is a fine rodeo tune, and one of the more country selections on the record, even if it finds Crockett falling back into songwriting that settles for easy rhymes as opposed to more complex thoughts.
13. Honky Tonk Philosophy
This is one of those songs you could hear being a classic hit for someone like Bobby Bare back in the day. The simple sentiments say more than the words themselves. “Clean white shirt” asserts the simplistic approach to live that often serves one’s purposes better than a life dogged with questions and indecision.
14. Waylon Rides Again
It might have pure coincidence that Charley Crockett co-wrote this song with Shooter and released it on an album where he basically pulled a Waylon and flipped off his record label and the rest of the industry. Regardless, it’s the prefect way to end the set, with a punchy, rock-driven attitude, and a melody that evolves into Waylon’s “Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way” at the end. Great song, with the over-driven vocals setting the attitude perfectly.
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May 2, 2026 @ 9:05 am
There’s some cool stuff on that there album.
May 2, 2026 @ 9:07 am
Great review. This is imo Crocketts best album yet. Can’t get enough of it. It’s perfect. I do hope, however that he didn’t do this release to screw over the excellent “Age of the Ram” which I love best out of his trilogy. I don’t know anything about his deal with island records, but I don’t know that he released three classic albums in a row while with with them and that has to count for something
May 2, 2026 @ 9:23 am
I definitely think that Charley Crockett released this album to undercut “Age of the Ram.” That was my read on the situation when “Clovis” first dropped. Then when Crockett did his Instagram post, be basically verified it.
That said, I don’t think Crockett wants to undercut the art of “The Sagebrush Trilogy.” He just wants to siphon off sales/streams from Island.
May 2, 2026 @ 10:36 am
Cuttin’ off your nose to spite your face.
May 2, 2026 @ 4:15 pm
Great album. One of his best if not best.
May 14, 2026 @ 10:02 pm
I’m wondering if there was a clause in the contract the label will argue makes Clovis Island’s property because he wrote and recorded it while he was under contract to Island. Van Morrison never made a dime off Brown-eyed Girl bc her signed it away to his first record company adhesion contract.
Far as review goes Taking Guns to Town isn’t the definitive cover of that tune … Charlie Robison’s version is the one they did it better than Johnny with nuance and complexity. Look forward to Charley C attempting Cash again, the simpler everyday life numbers make get be a better fit. Like Well Alright. Or let the Blue Drifters have fun with Jackson and find a unique independent artist voice for the duet. Maggie Antone.
May 14, 2026 @ 10:06 pm
You first question was explored more in-depth in a more recent article:
https://savingcountrymusic.com/whats-likely-going-on-with-charley-crocketts-new-album-clovis/
This is definitely something that could have happened, but we don’t know for sure.
May 2, 2026 @ 9:43 am
Charley goes disco.
May 2, 2026 @ 11:06 am
“Every time I find out I signed a deal I don’t like, and I go to these fuckin’ business people, and tell them I don’t like the deal, I don’t think it’s fair, they say ‘Tough luck kid, you shouldn’t of fuckin’ signed it.’” Charley Crockett says. “As soon as I hold them to that same standard, I’m the fuckin’ bad guy,” (laughing).
No, Charley, you’re just a man-child.
If you want to take control of your music, you should hire a trusted lawyer to read the contract and not to sign it if it isn’t to your liking. That’s how contracts work. Or, you know, you can sign whatever carelessly like a serious artiste, not giving a f*** like a “badass,” find later that it bites you, and then act like a wounded poet maudit so you act like some vengeful Marin county ex-wife and strut around as if you’re sticking it to the bad guys.
(rolls eyes)
May 2, 2026 @ 12:57 pm
Agreed.
May 3, 2026 @ 9:59 am
Stop hating loser. I best artist in a long time. Keep putting out the great music. I only hope he puts it out on vinyl. Have every one and they get better and better
May 2, 2026 @ 1:19 pm
Found the Island Records execs burner account, cope harder lol
May 2, 2026 @ 1:25 pm
I respectfully disagree. One of the very reasons I started Saving Country Music was to protect artists from bad album deals. Waylon singed one. Willie signed one. So many artists have found themselves in bad situations with labels. Even with a lawyer looking everything over, they can go back on promises, take advantage of loopholes, etc. I really have no idea about Charley’s deal, but I don’t think any of us are surprised a major label contract didn’t go well. I’m not saying he doesn’t have any personal responsibility. And maybe he’s bellyaching over nothing. But he’s definitely not the first, and most certainly won’t be the last.
May 2, 2026 @ 3:00 pm
If he keeps signing bad deals, it is on him.
May 2, 2026 @ 5:40 pm
This isn’t 1960 anymore. We know better. You will get screwed in the music business, the only question is how hard and by whom. Get a good lawyer or don’t sign. There are too many examples of artists being taken advantage of by labels for any artist to assume that a label has their best interest in mind. Very childish behavior on Charley’s part, and very bad business. Killer record tho.
May 2, 2026 @ 7:06 pm
“There are too many examples of artists being taken advantage of by labels.”
That’s kind of my whole point. Do you think that most or all of these artists don’t know this going in, don’t get lawyers to look over everything, and just hinny ninny sign whatever is put in front of them? Some of them might do this, but do you think Charley Crockett did this in 2024-2025?
Sturgill Simpson traced this same path. He was on Thirty Tigers as well, got lured away to the major label Atlantic like so many artists do, then got so pissed off about how it turned out, and recorded a whole noise rock album about it, and made such a ruckus they let him out of his contract.
And gets this: Then Sturgill went back to Thirty Tigers, but then he went BACK to Atlantic for “Mutiny After Midnight.”
Again, I really have no insight into the details of Charley Crockett’s deal with Island. Maybe he’s crying crocodile tears. But like you said, it’s too common of an occurrence to just blame the artist for carelessness.
May 2, 2026 @ 3:02 pm
The guy is completely unlikable. He plays the true artist card while wanting to make as much money as any record executive.
Garth and Buffett were honest about their business dealings. Crockett pretends otherwise.
May 2, 2026 @ 9:24 pm
What’s wrong with the artist getting most of the money when they did most of the work?
May 2, 2026 @ 9:38 pm
Yeah, the contortions people will twist themselves in via these comments sections to spread something negative is quite telling. I started this entire website to fight for the artistic and financial freedom of artists. Now folks seem to want to side with the executives because Crockett might not be in lock step with their world view.
May 4, 2026 @ 6:37 am
Good grief, Trigger. It is OK for people to disagree with a site’s darling.
Crockett can believe whatever junk he wants. I know most, if not all, of Turnpike disagrees with my viewpoints but I don’t care. They make great music. Otherwise, I would only listen to Aaron Lewis or Lee Brice. No thanks to that lifestyle.
Crockett apparently keeps signing lousy deals. Eventually, he bears some responsibility. Point is, he likes money as much as a label executive. That is fine. Just don’t pretend to be this untarnished true artist.
Again, we don’t know if the contract is unfair. We only have the word of a carnival busker.
The funny thing is, some artists do better under a tight reign. Hank3’s best music came with Curb. His post-Curb output was generally lousy. Of course, that doesn’t excuse mistreatment, but executive oversight isn’t always the poison fans think it is.
May 2, 2026 @ 10:10 pm
Absolutely agree. But of course there are differences between making money and selling out. As a completely random example: If an artist were to sell perfume, it would clearly belong to the latter category.
May 3, 2026 @ 12:35 am
I’d be Ok with the perfume if it was a female artist who actually had a part in choosing the fragrance instead of just slapping her name on it and taking the cash. I would definitely have a problem with one that endorsed a product they didn’t even use. I’ve noticed that Charley seems to be one of the few artists who have no corporate sponsors at all even though the western wear brands would probably love to have him wear their stuff.
May 4, 2026 @ 6:39 am
Launching a perfume brand isn’t selling out.
Hank Sr. promoted Mother’s Best Flour. I guess he was a sellout!
May 4, 2026 @ 6:28 am
Nothing.
Re-read my comment and try again.
Or I will save you the time and break it in simple terms. I don’t give a damn if an artist or singer wants to maximize their earnings. Just don’t pretend to be all about the art while doing so.
May 4, 2026 @ 6:46 am
Not sure how releasing an album with no promotional push on a random Tuesday when you just released another album weeks prior, and haven’t even made any physical product where the actual margins for music are is “maximizing earnings.”
May 6, 2026 @ 11:30 pm
Did he try to make as much money as any exec when he laid his whole band and crew when his tour was cancelled and he didn’t have t?
May 4, 2026 @ 7:39 am
@corncaster 100% the only correct take.
If anyone has the contract, post it, otherwise see it for what it is: another “artist” biting the hand that fed them. When you up and comers can’t get a call back from labels, this kinda shit is why. When they want to own you 360 degrees, this is the risk they are trying to mitigate.
May 5, 2026 @ 9:59 pm
Kind of strange when I saw him promoting “Age of the Ram” 3 1/2 weeks ago at an instore appearance.
May 2, 2026 @ 2:24 pm
I’m totally thrilled by “Clovis”. “$10 Cowboy” was already absolutely masterful. And I think “Clovis” is almost even better. There is actually nothing to add to this review. The pace at which Charley Crockett knocks out high quality music is absolutely breathtaking.
May 2, 2026 @ 2:26 pm
Last Night At The Alamo is a movie about a bar in Houston.
May 2, 2026 @ 2:55 pm
Great review man, I always appreciate your thoughts. After many listens, for my own enjoyment of this record I’m comfortable calling it a top 5 personal modern country favorite, right up there with Sturgill, Hank III and .357 String Band. Now just gotta keep my eyes out for the vinyl release.
May 4, 2026 @ 8:33 pm
357 String Bamd was soooo good.
May 2, 2026 @ 3:25 pm
I’m not astute as to the music business, I DJ’d in college and was the music director at Texas Tech, and learned that it wasn’t my cup of tea with all the politics and programmed shows and the like, so glad I went into my first love, Horticulture, so that said, I really like this album and I applaud Charlie really putting in so much effort and work. It’s paying off in my opinion. I like Shooter’s involvement too.
May 2, 2026 @ 3:52 pm
Horticulture, good on you, bud.
May 2, 2026 @ 3:28 pm
I just saw him last week here in New Orleans. He was dynamite as usual but I would have liked to have heard a few of those new tunes. He sure does churn em out.
May 2, 2026 @ 4:45 pm
Well like i said on the other article, this is my least favorite crockett album. Image of a woman, country music, and i aint ridin anymore are good songs and waylon rides again isnt bad but thats about it really far aa what i like, about the same as the first album in the trilogy but i could somewhat tolerate the songs i didnt like on it. Not here. But thats ok, most of his albums have at least 80 percent great songs.
May 2, 2026 @ 5:01 pm
Obvious pitch correction was used on Top Hand.
Could be his best song if he could actually sing those high notes.
May 2, 2026 @ 7:16 pm
You’re correct here. They did some digital editing to sustain his vocal notes in this song on pitch. It’s not a egregious or obvious as on his Bad Company cover but it’s there.
May 2, 2026 @ 7:57 pm
As producer, Scooter isn’t doing him any favors adding that effect.
To the listener, it simulates a whole range of emotion that just isn’t there.
May 2, 2026 @ 8:17 pm
I’m not hearing any effect. But then again, I didn’t hate listen to this album looking for anything and everything I could cynically spin into a negative.
May 2, 2026 @ 8:25 pm
There’s fine line between critic and publicist.
May 2, 2026 @ 8:38 pm
You’re telling ME this?
May 3, 2026 @ 12:37 am
The line between critic and publicist is who, if anyone, is paying you. If the answer is nobody, you aren’t either one.
May 3, 2026 @ 7:42 am
Free concert tickets.
May 3, 2026 @ 7:50 am
It’s adorable when people think that press passes somehow compensate for all the sacrifices journalists must make to do this job. It’s hilarious you think I’m on the Charley Crockett payroll. My guess is he thinks I’m a chode because I’m one of the few people who’ve criticized him in print.
May 3, 2026 @ 8:11 am
Since both journalists and publicists get free tickets that makes no sense.
May 3, 2026 @ 8:49 am
Artist publicists get a check.
Industry publicists get gifts (tickets, meals, rooms & swag)
May 3, 2026 @ 1:15 pm
When I was editing and writing for country music magazines industry publicists got paid because it’s a job. So is being a music journalist but you get some tickets, press junkets and other goodies. Are you just now finding this out?
May 14, 2026 @ 9:37 pm
The Bad Company cover with the Bad Company band was his least interesting cover for my money … did it straight didn’t bring nothing to the table. You want a good Bad Co. cover check out Kid Rock rocking tf out of Feel Like Makin’ Love … play it on real speakers and twist that dial all the way clockwise.
May 2, 2026 @ 5:40 pm
I will say I’m someone who has always liked him but not loved him. This is his first album I’ve really loved and had on repeat. For me as someone who hasn’t been a huge fan of him but have always kept up with him, this is my favorite album of his
May 2, 2026 @ 5:53 pm
Where this Ben Jarrell review?
May 2, 2026 @ 7:10 pm
*Spends six hours writing a Charley Crockett review with song reviews, featured Ben Jarrell in a dedicated article about all the releases that came out on April 24, and still gets shit like he’s purposely ignoring Ben Jarrell while sitting on his couch in boxers with his finger up his nose*
May 2, 2026 @ 7:11 pm
I finally realized why his near-entire catalogue of 1800’s Western songs annoys me – it’s akin to stolen valor. He’s a millennial hipster whose discography is almost entirely 1800’s Western songs. Artists certainly have the liberty to sing some songs about lifestyles they have never lived, but when it’s one’s ENTIRE song output then it’s a gimmick. I’m not talking about the “fake cowboy poser” complaint, I’m talking about how at a certain point all these 1800’s Western songs is just too much, and I view it these aren’t Charley Crockett’s own stories to tell – these belong to generations before him. To be crude… it’s historical blackface.
Another annoyance I have with all the 1800’s Western lingo is that it’s a cheat code for having a song sound more profound and emotion-filled because it’s just cherry-picking names of places, things, and lingo from the past and cobbling them into a song and tricking the listener into thinking the song is more serious just because it has all this old-timey stuff in it.
May 2, 2026 @ 8:21 pm
Strange comment to leave on the album AFTER Charley Crockett concluded his Western trilogy.
May 2, 2026 @ 9:06 pm
You didn’t pick up on the same theme throughout most of this album?
May 2, 2026 @ 9:39 pm
No. There are a couple of cowboy songs. This is not a Western album, in either a lyrical or sonic sense, especially when contrasted with his last tree, and “Age of the Ram” specifically.
May 3, 2026 @ 12:39 am
It seems to me that some of his western references are allegories about things in the present.
May 3, 2026 @ 6:50 am
Yes, there is not a whole lot of anachronism on this album like you get in most Western works.
May 2, 2026 @ 8:28 pm
I will only respect Charley Crockett when I see him get bucked off a horse,
May 2, 2026 @ 8:37 pm
“He never claimed to be a cowboy
but he sure could sing the songs
and he rode a silver eagle
his whole life long
he never said he was an outlaw
though at times he was
he wasn’t in it for the money
he only did it for the love”
May 3, 2026 @ 12:41 am
This verse sounds like it could be about Waylon, whose influence is all over this album from the choice of the studio to the end.
May 3, 2026 @ 1:17 pm
When I was editing and writing for country music magazines industry publicists got paid because it’s a job. So is being a music journalist but you get some tickets, press junkets and other goodies. Are you just now finding this out?
May 3, 2026 @ 10:32 pm
I had a similar realization about his songwriting after listening to this today.
Normally love the fantasy Western genre of songwriting- 1800s cowboys, etc etc.
The problem is I just don’t give a shit about the ones he writes about. It’s partly his delivery which is sometimes really matter of fact and bored sounding (he’s been doing way less of that than a few years ago when he was experimenting with the bored sound) – and the fact that there’s just not that much reason to care about these characters in his songwriting.
I keep comparing it to the storytelling of Ben jarrell where there are clearly fictional characters who are not named Ben jarrell and yet he gets to the emotional dilemma at the center of their stories,. While still feeling interesting stories.
Just don’t give a shit about the love story between the dude and the rancher’s daughter or whatever in on this album, or any of the number of these other fantasy characters. I don’t know what’s missing for me to wear these songs just sound kind of generic but I kind of need to know why I should care about these narrators. I think it’s a combo of both the songwriting and the fact that he’s not the best singer and the fact that there’s like 18 million of these songs by now with his very impressive prolific output.
May 14, 2026 @ 9:52 pm
Songwriting style of late has been spare character sketches with deadpan delivery … Age of the Ram for me it evoked sitting around a campfire listening to tales and tall tales and tryna piece together the full canvas from bits and pieces offered and the parts you heard from the various protagonists.
Charlie Robison is one of the most underrated songwriters in music country or otherwise that boy penned at least a dozen ditties that developed characters surrounded by rich detail that would be right at home in Huckleberry Finn.
Preacher. Rain. John O’Reilly. Desperate Times. Loving County. Indianola. Hometown. Sunset … to name check a few.
Hilarious like Samuel Clemens, too.
Charley is at his best when he’s packing content in his verses that convey the feeling that there’s a whole short story behind every one of them that he’s only scratching the surface and giving flight to the imagination. Good At Losing is an absolute masterpiece and he ain’t come close to that in the last four albums, truth be told. Like the review said, pumping them out too fast sometimes they’re a little mushy in the middle bc not enough time in the slow cooker letting the flavors blend and achieving that complexity that makes em more classics than one offs.
He’s got it in him but it’s been quantity over quality at a certain level last four lp’s or so.
May 5, 2026 @ 9:47 am
Say “1800s western songs” one more time and that’ll be a bingo!
May 5, 2026 @ 9:54 am
I stopped reading at “He’s a millennial hipster”. What a silly comment.
May 2, 2026 @ 9:20 pm
I get a 70s feel from this album, probably because I’m the only one here old enough to have actually lived in the 70s and listened to the albums by the legends on the day they came out, if not before. To me, it sounds like what might have been recorded in Tompall’s studio after a night of playing pinball at the Burger Boy and I’m loving it.
One Eyed Jack sounds like it was inspired by betrayal by a friend, kinda like Tompall’s Come Back Shane about his split with Waylon. Could the faux friend have my last name? Just asking.
Last Night at the Alamo reminds me of The Door is Always Open which was recorded by Waylon and others back then.
The Clovis instrumental brings back memories of the TV westerns I watched with my dad when I was a kid like Bonanza. The ones where you knew this week’s episode would be a snooze if it started out with nesters on the prairie.
Albuquerque Lights is about a songwriter who disappeared while driving from LA to Nashville which reminds me of the tale of DB Cooper. I dig the reference to Harry Dean Stanton, a character if there ever was one.
Honky Tonk Philosophy reminds me of Gary Stewart, whose influence we could use right now.
Waylon Rides Again evokes I’ve Always Been Crazy which is one of Shooter’s favorite songs by his dad. There’s a little Don’t Think Hank Done It This Way at the end and while Charley and Shooter didn’t do it exactly like Hank or Waylon did it, they damn sure came closer than anything on corporate country radio these days.
May 3, 2026 @ 1:27 am
He is prolific and I have enjoyed all his albums. $10 Cowboy is probably his best in my opinion but this one might be its equal or better. A unique talent. Yes another great Crockett album.
May 3, 2026 @ 2:57 am
Great , fun record back to back even if “not so country” as Trig pointed out.
At first listen i noticed more “synth” sounding keyboards than in his previous output.
May 3, 2026 @ 7:55 am
Someone related – does the record label still control Crockett’s YouTube channel? It seems that is the case as “Clovis” is nowhere on his channel and the only way to find the album on that platform some random channel not clearly tied to Crockett.
May 3, 2026 @ 8:26 am
Whenever you distribute music through a service like TuneCore, they will upload your music to YouTube unless you stipulate to them not to through the “Artist – Topic” tab. That’s what’s embedded in the song review portion of this article. Often if you’re on a record label these days, they will upload their own more graphic rich version of these song players with enhanced artwork, physical copy links, sometimes lyric videos, and more information. Obviously, Crockett doesn’t have that at his dispose for this release.
May 3, 2026 @ 8:07 am
I found it on YouTube Saturday. I just searched his name and Clovis.
May 3, 2026 @ 9:24 am
I’m a big Crockett fan, as is my wife – we’re seen him live down here twice and we have one coming in September. But I’m beginning to realize that this man may also be a marketing genius.
“Age of the Ram” is a terrific record, as were the previous two in the trilogy. I’ve had it in my hand for less than a month – and here comes “Clovis.”
And what are we all doing? We’re all talking about Charley and his records. About how he’s thumbing his nose at the industry and doing what *he* wants. We really can’t be sure that there’s some animosity over the Island deal or if it was just a three-album deal to get his records out there and increase his national exposure. Whatever it was, that part worked OK. Three good records, lots of live shows, hard working guy, says “controversial” stuff occasionally to get people talking…
…and then he drops a new album of great music right on top of his last album of great music and what’s everyone doing?
Talking about Charley, his methods and his music. No matter how you feel about the guy and his work, if you’re here talking about him, his plan is working.
May 3, 2026 @ 1:08 pm
As Brad Paisley wrote about 20 years ago, “The more they run my name down, and the more my price goes up.”
May 3, 2026 @ 1:31 pm
If your talking about someone then often youve done something right , or you wouldnt be talked about in either a positive light.
Even better example than Charley, is the six decade career of Bob Dylan theres been long debate over whether he can sing or not, just the fact that your even discussing him means he did something right.
Im sure all four recent albums by charley are good but its coming at such a pace i have trouble digesting it
May 3, 2026 @ 3:43 pm
‘Im sure all four recent albums by charley are good but its coming at such a pace i have trouble digesting it’
From what I’ve read on here, Charley gives some of our commenters indigestion.
May 4, 2026 @ 1:36 am
oh no Tom if Colter Wall released albums the pace charley does id have trouble keeping up with it.
May 3, 2026 @ 11:42 pm
Apparently he’s not through dropping goodies on us since his London documentary was just added to his YouTube channel. Love him or hate him, he knows how to get his name out there.
May 4, 2026 @ 6:42 am
Sure. His entire persona is a character.
Plenty of us saw through the act years ago.
May 5, 2026 @ 10:03 am
So your typical country act? OK.
May 5, 2026 @ 11:18 am
Of course. What? You think I believe most country singers aren’t playing a character?
May 3, 2026 @ 2:24 pm
He should’ve just included a cover of “The Lights of Albuquerque” instead.
May 4, 2026 @ 10:00 am
So is the way when you’re in the spotlight (and especially on the internet) that you’ve got people who love ya or hate ya.
I just find it interesting that an artist who has released plenty of content whether it be documentaries, interviews, or his entire discography that highlights his personal story via an amalgamation of genres and vignettes is still being treated skeptically by detractors. Love him or hate him he’s plain as day with what he says and does. That’s why people are all bent over his recent political comments.
He’s said it in Clovis and many times prior – this life’s a rodeo. You’re either playing for the crowd or you’re playing for yourself. Considering he’s going against the grain by not signing sponsorships, releasing an album right after his prior one, or even neglecting to put ads on his documentaries via YouTube – it shows that he’s playing this rodeo for himself.
Are people gonna talk? Always will. And as it goes in entertainment “all press is good press”. So ironically, the more the haters talk, the more visibility he gets. But just like executives, politicians, and internet trolls – flapping your gums usually winds up with your faster exit.
He’s playin this rodeo for himself and could give a damn what people are saying. I’m sure he’s heard far worse before than he is now. Cause now he can look down at laugh at the people coming after him.
May 4, 2026 @ 2:19 pm
For someone playing for himself, he sure loves signing with record labels in the era of DIY.
May 4, 2026 @ 2:26 pm
He literally just released this album as DIY as possible. And Charley Crockett has only ever been signed to two labels over 17 albums, including 14 of them with Thirty Tigers, which is basically as DIY as you can go while still officially being on a record label. He’s also not signed to a label at the moment, so…
May 4, 2026 @ 1:19 pm
Trigger, I have to disagree on your take regarding Charley’s voice. I think you’re underselling Charley’s actual talent. To say he isn’t a ‘one-in-a-million’ crooner misses the point of what he’s doing. His voice is his greatest instrument—the way he uses those hushed tones on ‘Top Hand’ isn’t just ‘hustle,’ it’s masterful vocal control. His voice carries the emotional weight of his stories. His delivery is what creates that atmospheric, cinematic vibe—it’s not just showmanship, it’s soul. He isn’t just selling a character; he’s a sovereign artist who has fought a massive battle for his ART, and his voice is the heart of that victory.
This album feels like the ultimate victory, proving he doesn’t need a major label machine to tell him how to sing or how to release his music. He’s earned his crown. Charley is KING!
May 4, 2026 @ 4:23 pm
Wow! I thought I was on a Gram Parsons thread there for a minute.
May 4, 2026 @ 7:34 pm
Well I’m late to the commenting party. I think trying to undermine your own album on a label you don’t like could be called “pulling a Sturgill” but who knows his motivations. Clovis is good, it’s fun, it’s a good album for listening to at the gym while working out, or maybe while driving.
I don’t think it’s – what’s the right word?- I don’t know, deep maybe? CC puts on a great live show, which I’ve seen, and he’s got a very personal, unique style, but sometimes I feel like his music is kind of disposable. Nothing he’s released, that I’ve heard (and I have not heard or studied all of his albums) feels like it’s going to be still relevant in 30 years the way some classic albums are. Or, to put it another way, they’re fun and interesting but I’m not sure they stand up to repeated listening over months and years like Clint Black’s first album, or the last couple of Turnpike albums, or Jason Isbell’s Southeastern, etc.
Maybe I’m wrong.
Two more thoughts:
1) Trigger, totally agree that his cover of Don’t Take Your Guns to Town is excellent and perhaps one of the best covers of this song ever.
2) For those who think CC is a fake because he’s not a real Western cowboy, may I remind you that Hank Snow, the “SInging Ranger,” was never a Ranger. Garth Brooks, of rodeo songs fame, probably can’t ride a horse. Johnny Cash never shot a man in Reno. Tracy Chapman did not grow up in poverty like the song Fast Car; she went to private school and a fancy college (lived in the dorm with a friend.) Bob Dylan is the biggest musical faker of them all, never having experienced in his life most of what he wrote about.
You get the idea. It’s called a musical act for a reason. Not a problem as far as CC is concerned as long as his music is good.
May 4, 2026 @ 9:03 pm
It is fascinating to have watched both Charley Crockett and King Gizzard and The Lizard Wizard both come up at the same time. Their career arcs are similliar. They both are extremely prolific. They both are mostly DIY. Both are polarizing, even more so as they earn more success. They are often criticized for being fake or copying other artists. Both are killer live. They both tour relentlessly and (most importantly) they both love their fans. There are some of each of their songs i can do without. However, they are both at the top level of current artists I love and respect.
May 5, 2026 @ 10:07 am
to purposely undercut the last album that was released just three weeks previous?
I saw him do an in-store promoting that album 3 1/2 weeks ago. He mentioned a surprise was coming.
May 5, 2026 @ 10:10 am
He specifically said in his Instagram post about this that he wanted to be the bad guy. He might have been contractually obligated to make some promotional appearances around the release, I don’t know. I don’t think it’s disputable at this point he was at least trying to piss of Island.
PS: Do you want me to change your comments to your normal handle? Your regular name is showing. This portion of the comment will self-destruct.
May 6, 2026 @ 5:10 am
I like this one more than the last few he has put out. Lots of great gems on here!
May 6, 2026 @ 7:51 am
Not to nitpick, but there’s no “of” after myriad.
As always, thanks for introducing us to great new country music.
May 6, 2026 @ 4:39 pm
Looks like some of the songs got pulled.
May 6, 2026 @ 5:12 pm
Looks like Clovis got pulled in it’s entirety. Looking into it.
May 6, 2026 @ 5:57 pm
Glad I bought it on Amazon digitally! Wasn’t sure if he was going to do a physical release or if it might get pulled!
May 8, 2026 @ 11:50 am
I think Down by Law is about Butch Cassidy