Album Review – Eliza Thorn’s “Somebody New”


#573 and #510.1 (Country blues, classic country) on the Country DDS.

Eliza Thorn offers a super tasty, diverse, enriching, and involved album for her official debut that shows off a wide array of influences and talents across a spectrum of roots music, fulfilling the appetite of the audience, and stoking interest in this young performer and her unique sound.

Similar to other fast-rising country and roots musicians of our era such as Charley Crockett, Sierra Farrell, and Melissa Carper, Eliza Thorn is slightly less interested in “genre,” and more attune to how “era” can help define how her songs unfold, using a wide array of sounds to capture the ideal mood for each one of her original tunes.

Saving Country Music was first introduced to Eliza Thorn at a tribute event for Luke Bell where she referred to herself as a blues artist. Since the blues are so integral to most every other form of American music—including country—this isn’t as limiting as it may sound. With producer Mose Wilson, Eliza explores the thru line of the blues across country, vintage R&B, and even a little jazz, while invoking the 40s and 50s era when these genres didn’t feel so stratified.

What really defines the music of Eliza Thorn is her soulful and robust exhalations that are unmistakably bluesy, even when expended on straightforward classic country. The title track of the album “Somebody New” is an excellent showcase of the blues side of Eliza as a shade-throwing kiss-off. Then on “Nobody But You,” the old school country vibes come on strong, including an impressive yodel from Eliza.


On the song “I Tried,” Thorn shows off both her blues and country side in the same song, illustrating the seamlessness of her sound, and how her sultry delivery works across a host of disciplines while staying within expressions that are authentic to herself.

There are so many textures and intricacies to Thorn’s singing, it intrigues the audience and gives them something to explore further on subsequent listens. Similarly, producer Mose Wilson’s instrumental selections are interesting and anything but commonplace, adding clarinet, chorus singers, and percussive layers in distinct spots to make it a full-bodied listening experience. Care and love was shown to these tracks.

And most importantly, you can’t sing the blues unless you’ve lived them. The songs of Eliza Thorn speak to love pursued and love lost, following a young woman from being smitten to crestfallen, and all the seasons in between, rendered in language that is timelessly relevant, but careful to not be anachronistic or dissonant from the vintage sounds that comprise this album.

At nine songs and 26 minutes, Somebody New feels more like a starting point as opposed to a culmination for this artist now living in Nashville. But you already see the buzz building, and the respect her fellow performers and local promoters have for her. With the way she captures emotions in songs and a sound that is surging in appeal at the moment, it’s hard to not say that the future for Eliza Thorn seems bright.

8/10

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