Album Review – Chasen Wayne’s “CORPUS”

Honky Tonk (#510.2) and Gulf & Western (#568) on the Country DDS.
Austin TX’s Chasen Wayne has never been interested in a conventional approach to country music. By utilizing jazz cords, surf tones, and making unintuitive turns, he takes country music and the intrepid listener into uncharted territory, though with plenty of familiar sounds and guideposts to immediately grip you with intrigue, and keep you engaged throughout the experience.
Chasen’s 2024 album Strange Places touched on a whole host of different sounds and approaches, zigging when you were expecting it to zag. His new album is significantly more cohesive both sonically and thematically—so much so it’s fair to characterize it as conceptualized. CORPUS is a distinctly personal album incorporating the stories of three generations of men in his family: his father, himself, and ultimately, his son, with the hope of breaking the cycle of generational mistakes.
For those unfamiliar with Texas geography, Corpus Christi is a city on the Texas coast, popular as a regional getaway, even if the gulf’s murky water makes it inferior to some other watery destinations. As Chasen explains, his parents took their honeymoon in Corpus, and he was conceived in the men’s room of Blackbeard’s Bar & Grill on the beach—a place mentioned in the album’s opening song “Honeymoon.” Wayne would later propose to his wife on the pier in Corups as well.
Infidelity and marital mistakes are chronicled in the album, along with some dramatized and fictionalized scenarios. The super twangy “Easy To Find” supposes the worst parts of Chasen’s proclivities into a scenario of juggling two women at once. “Los Angelisa” is also not 100% autobiographical, but continues the linear story on a line if Chasen continued to give into his worst inclinations. Wayne is open about his struggles with addiction to drink, drugs, and sex, but now counts himself 100% sober. CORPUS in many ways is about exorcising his addictive demons.

Similar to another Austin-based band—Rattlesnake Milk—Chasen Wayne is unafraid to allow the music to tell the story as well, including through a couple of instrumentals. Though this is a challenging enterprise many songwriters struggle with, Chasen’s backing band the Honky Tonk Machine are well up to the task of fleshing out his ambitious vision.
Pedal steel player and arranger Jamey Maness, lead guitarist Alex Riegelman, fiddle player Jared Standish, bass player Matty Roth, and drummer Conner Church really shine on this record that if nothing else, presents one tasty musical composition after another that immerses you in a universe of twang and echo that feels decades and dimensions removed from the mundane present. The element of time is deftly utilized in the music of this album, giving the songs a sense of depth that most music disregards.
CORPUS is an ambitious record, yet improves on some of the sound quality issues Chasen Wayne’s previous record had by perhaps getting too ambitious for the resources at his disposal. Whether you want to sink your teeth into the conceptualized narrative that Chasen presents, or just sit back and enjoy the killer musical accompaniment that’s arranged perfectly for a road trip, CORPUS is an audio vacation away from the ordinary.
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To learn more about CORPUS, you can read about the songs on Chasen Wayne’s Substack.
8/10
July 23, 2025 @ 12:01 pm
Ooh I love concept albums. It’s like an audio movie.
This sounds pretty good. What other artists have put out concept albums in the last couple years?
July 23, 2025 @ 7:05 pm
Jesse Daniel’s “Son of the San Lorenzo” could be considered a concept album. Joshua Ray Walker’s “Tropicana,” though a different concept from this.
July 24, 2025 @ 12:18 pm
Yeah almost feel like when people do beachy albums it’s just kind of its own thing. The other really good one like that is Scott Southworth’s Dead Fish Go With The Flow (or whatever the album was called). It was a really good example of that kind of jimmy Buffett inspired country thing. Scott is such a killer songwriter in honkytonk and completely underrated
So it’s not new at all but in your country music holiday post , someone mentioned last pale light in the west, which is a concept album based on a book. That’s a thing I’d like to see happen more often.
July 23, 2025 @ 5:00 pm
I’ll be checking this one out!
July 24, 2025 @ 9:10 am
Thanks again Trigger
I’m glad you dig it
I know by sending it in I’m also just as liable to get bad one but that’s why I respect you. Not everyone’s got the balls to do that these days
July 24, 2025 @ 9:28 am
This album is a lot of fun! Thanks for pointing it out, Trigger. And best of luck to Chasen Wayne and his band!
July 24, 2025 @ 3:28 pm
Who remembers the great song by Dale McBride, from over thirty years ago, “Corpus Christi Wind?”
July 24, 2025 @ 5:41 pm
“Corpus Christi Wind” is an incredible song! Bubba Littrell and the Melody Mustangs out of San Antonio recorded it and it is amazing.
July 24, 2025 @ 8:11 pm
Never heard of the song, “Corpus Christi Wind” or the artist, Dale McBride, but I did some searching and found the single on Y-T and also a recent cut of the song by Terry McBride–who I remember from the ’90s, and who I learned is Dale’s son. Both excellent. Learn somethng new every day by coming here.
A song about the city that I remember is R-E-K’s “Corpus Christi Bay,” and its killer cover version by Johnny Rodriguez.
July 27, 2025 @ 10:12 pm
There need to be more Chasen Waynes in this world. Excellent album. Hands down my current favorite.
July 28, 2025 @ 9:28 am
Glad you think so bub
I appreciate you
July 28, 2025 @ 8:27 pm
I decided to listen to his first one first. Holy shit that is some interesting/good songwriting. Definitely going to go into the rotation. Off to hear this one now
July 29, 2025 @ 12:56 pm
Thanks for checking it all out!
I appreciate you taking the time
July 29, 2025 @ 4:06 pm
I’ll be posting your stuff over on Reddit”s r/countrymusic. We have a “weird country ” tag over there (and stuff like cosmic country lands in there sometimes). Seems like a good fit …
August 2, 2025 @ 11:16 pm
Listened to this a couple times. Really well done album. Review is right on.