Album Review – Paul Cauthen’s “Black on Black”
As a fan of the independent country music that never gets played on commercial country radio, that rarely gets recognized at major awards shows, and that faces an uphill battle compared to the music of mainstream country, you take a lot of pride and ownership in what independent country music has become, and how it got here.
Quality songwriting that shares meaningful and substantive stories, emotions, and perspectives is an important focus of the music. Standing up for the roots of country and the greats that came before is an important value too. So is resisting the digital intrusion in what’s supposed to be organic expressions performed by humans, while also rejecting trend chasing, or putting commercial concerns above artistic ones.
Generally speaking, all of these maxims are adhered to by most all of the incredible performers who make up the independent country and roots music community, with very few exceptions. It’s this integrity, quality, and artistry that has made independent country strong enough to rise up and challenge the mainstream for market share, despite not having the same access to mass media and infrastructure.
And then there is Paul Cauthen.
Paul Cauthen is not a unimportant or insignificant character in country music. His footprint and fan base are impressive. His music clearly comes with a wide measure of appeal. He’s a top tier name on the independent country festival circuit, and a strong draw on tour. He came up in the Austin scene with the duo Sons of Fathers. He produced the first Luke Bell album—the one you’ve probably never heard.
But Paul Cauthen is also the performer who most fundamentally gives into the id and the ego. He’s the guy who puts vapid entertainment value ahead of artistic integrity. He’s the one who bends genre, and not as a creative endeavor, but as a commercial pursuit. He’s the one who incorporates cliché dance beats into what’s supposed to be country music, claiming to be uncaring of genre, while also exploiting its channels for attention.
Paul Cauthen is the artist that mainstream defenders can point to as patent hypocrisy from independent fans, and be correct. His latest album Black on Black isn’t the first time Cauthen has participated in trend chasing, and giving into his lowest desires as an artist and performer. That ship sailed most illustratively with his 2022 album Country Coming Down. But the new album establishes that this is who Paul Cauthen is, at least for this era of his career.
Paul Cauthen isn’t country music. He’s some sort of derivative and shallow version of country couture. It’s country as surface coating, and as a style motif appropriated by the ultra-hip to be considered cool in the moment, only to be cast off for the next trend when it comes along. This is the reason Cauthen has collaborated with Shaboozey and Diplo. Cauthen reminds you of that clique of Christian kids in high school who always had the best drugs, and got away with everything because of the fundamental unfairness of life. Paul Cauthen is the embodiment of us all giving into our worst desires.
No different than Luke Bryan, Cauthen simply gauges what the audience wants, and gives them more of it. That’s not creativity. He’s a dancing monkey. But don’t take that strictly as criticism. Many people point, laugh, and dance along. The reason Cauthen continues to lean into this approach, and away from the songwriting and substance of his early career is because it’s working, and clearly so.
Unquestionably, songs like the EDM-infused “Hot Damn,” the repetitive and inane “Sweetheart from the Trailer Park,” or the bellicose title track “Black on Black” build into boisterous moments for an audience who buys into the Paul Cauthen experience entirely, sometimes excusing the guilty pleasure of his music as being infused with sarcasm. Perhaps that was the case for some of his previous songs such as “Country as F-ck” or “F-ck You Money.” But with Black on Black, that’s a tough argument to sell. This is who Paul Cauthen is now.
The EDM dance songs with country coverlets were all the early singles from the new album, emphasizing what Cauthen and his camp wanted to highlight from Black on Black. But it’s also important to emphasize some of the “better” selections from the album. “Speaking in Cursive” tells the story of growing up in a broken home, and begins with great promise.
But like so much of Black on Black, the production from the otherwise highly-regarded Beau Bedford bogs down in flashy and shallow movements meant to tantalize the public, getting in the way of any deeply meaningful moments. Jason Burt is also credited as producer on some of the album’s most derivative tracks.
Paul Cauthen also explores faith on the album, with songs like “Angels & Heathens” and “Innocent” speaking to the duality of human morality, leading to the outright reverent “To Whom Do You Belong” co-written with Cauthen’s old Sons of Fathers partner, David Beck, and originally appearing on their 2013 album.
But arguably, Cauthen’s Christian virtue signaling doesn’t make his trespasses any better. It makes them worse by adding a layer of hypocrisy to the entire experience, while his affected Johnny Cash voice so obviously evidenced by listening back to early Sons of Fathers material adds another layer of insincerity. Meanwhile, all of the flashy, pop-infused pageantry overshadows the substance of other independent country artists getting relegated to side stages and early slots show Paul Cauthen puts on.
It might feel like faint praise among all the strong criticism, but Paul Cauthen is certainly good at what he does. This is the reason it draws a crowd, just like Luke Bryan. Anyone dismissing the entertainment value of Black on Black or his live shows is participating in their own false narratives. But we know that Cauthen is capable of so much better, because we heard it earlier in his career.
As opposed to venturing down the easy path of mindless entertainment, if Cauthen would have stuck to his guns, perhaps he could have ascended to the same stature he enjoys today by joining the rising tide raising all independent country artists. Instead, he took the short cut. And that’s why we offer strong, but respectful criticism. Because when the sands of time wash over the current moment in country, it will only leave a few legacies standing.
1 1/2 Guns DOWN (3.5/10)
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El Duderino
November 5, 2024 @ 8:31 am
Never cared for Paul Cauthen’s music, but his duet of Black Hole Sun with Cody Jinks is bad ass.
PS20832
November 5, 2024 @ 8:32 am
Well, that’s disappointing! Saw him over the summer and absolutely loved him and his band. But I often find I prefer a musician’s live performance over their albums. Will give it a listen.
David Pecker
November 5, 2024 @ 8:38 am
I remember catching Paul at Soda bar in San Diego after My Gospel came out. Still hands down one of my top concerts of all time. But man, every album has me questioning how much I loved this guy.
Great performer, but boy did he lose his way with the EDM garbage lol
Jordan
November 5, 2024 @ 9:41 am
oh wow. Soda Bar (aka Radio Room aka Zombie Lounge) just unlocked 100 memories. thank you!
M. Shane
November 5, 2024 @ 8:43 am
I had absolutely no idea about the Luke Bell connection. “Don’t Mind if I Do?”
Not to derail the discussion…. but I have scoured the internet for that album and it seems as though it has indeed been thoroughly scrubbed off the web… is there *anywhere* it can be found?
Trigger
November 5, 2024 @ 8:53 am
It was not the “Don’t Mind If I Do” album that Paul Cauthen produced. It was an album that Luke released previous to that when they both were hanging around Hole in the Wall in Austin. It’s a bit more of a rock style album. There is talk that it will be re-released at some point.
“Don’t Mind If I Do” basically became the self-titled album when Luke was signed to Thirty Tigers.
M. Shane
November 5, 2024 @ 8:58 am
Wow. Longtime Luke Bell fan and I had no idea about any of that. Thanks for the great information, Trigger!
marcel
November 5, 2024 @ 4:59 pm
speaking of luke bell, any word on the documentary release date and on which platforms it will be available?
Quint V
November 10, 2024 @ 10:48 am
If you look hard enough on reddit, there are allegedly some links to some VERY shady websites of the Russian variety where you can download both albums. Download at your own risk though
Jbird
November 5, 2024 @ 8:56 am
I agree this is one of his weaker albums, and some of his experimentation with different genres did not work here, but he’s far from Luke Bryan and I think it’s odd to refer to him in that way in such a bitter and disingenuous manner. Experimenting with different genres is not the what Luke Bryan does, he’s sticks to a formula that has been successful for others in the past.
Say what you want about Cocaine Country Dancing, Country as Fuck or any of his signature songs, no one sounds like Paul Cauthen, in fact, he may have the most unique sound in all of roots music at the moment, for better or worse. That is not something that could be said about Luke Bryan.
Hot Damn and Black on Black are NOT EDM, they are Funk or Pop, but not anywhere close to EDM, your misapprehension of these genres only add to the country community’s reputation as being out of touch. Electronic drums do not equal EDM. The only song on this album that could be described as EDM influenced would be Sweetheart From The Trailerpark, which is easily the worst song he’s ever done.
Mediocre review overall, not because the album is great, but because your criticism’s miss the mark.
Trigger
November 5, 2024 @ 9:11 am
The parallel drawn between Luke Bryan and Paul Cauthen were not done as a side-by-side comparison of the overall quality or artistry of the two artists, though it’s not surprising that is the take some will walk away with as they attempt to diminish the opinions shared here.
What was said is quote, “No different than Luke Bryan, Cauthen simply gauges what the audience wants, and gives them more of it.”
In other words, as the arc of these two performers’ careers has been traced, you can see them going away from their original sound and leaning more and more into derivative songs that live audiences go crazy over until they’re basically playing vapid, repetitive dance songs.
That said, if you listen to Luke Bryan’s albums—and I’ve said this for years—you will find some really good songs. On both of Luke Bryan’s last two albums, there are better songs than anything on this Paul Cauthen one.
Whenever you post critical reviews of independent artists, it always results in the twisting of words, misunderstandings, and personal attacks on myself. I expect this from this review. But I choose my words carefully.
PeterT
November 5, 2024 @ 11:26 am
I’d like to nominate 25 Tequilias as being as equally shit as Sweetheart.
Derrick
November 5, 2024 @ 12:17 pm
I agree with Jbird here. To be clear, I appreciate critical reviews of independent artists, and I think there’s a lot of valid questions to be asked about Cauthen’s creative direction, songwriting, promotional style, and current place within country music. But Cauthen isn’t grabbing onto any trend – he’s in fact doing the opposite. While popular music swings back towards country (traditional sounds in particular), Cauthen is pursuing a unique funk/roots/EDM sound. This is not nearly the same as Luke Bryan or anybody else who found a popular trend and jumped feet first in without any regard to artistic individuality.
I’m not much of a Cauthen fan past the Room 41 record and I think there are many valid criticisms of Paul Cauthen, and this album being weak in the writing department and moving away from the country scene are two totally fair ones. But arguing that he’s trend-chasing or artistically inauthentic seem weak when he is consistently making music that moves in a direction further from the mainstream. This seems to me like the least trend-chasing behavior possible and the mark of an artist with an artistic direction, even if it’s not a direction I like personally.
Trigger
November 5, 2024 @ 5:14 pm
Multiple trends can be occurring in country music at the same time. You are correct that overall, country music is trending in a more traditional direction. But there is also this ultra-hip, fashion first, EDM-centric “country couture” thing going on that Paul Cauthen is very much in the middle of. This is Shaboozey, who Paul Cauthen collaborated with on his album. This is Diplo’s Thomas Wesley project, which Cauthen collaborated on as well.
I wouldn’t call Paul Cauthen a “trend chaser” and leave it at that. But there is certainly a commercial calculation that’s happening with his music of how to leverage this Stagescoach Festival, cool country crowd trend that’s little more than EDM/hip-hop/pop music in a cowboy hat. This is where Paul Cauthen resides in the country music landscape at the moment.
Erik
November 7, 2024 @ 9:16 am
Have to agree about the EDM comments in the review, this is nowhere near what he did on the past two albums. Even though I found this album to be not very enjoyable, I thought he really got away from that genre.
Banjo
November 5, 2024 @ 9:26 am
I absolutely loved Paul Cauthen’s “My Gospel” and “Room 41”. I think “Grand Central” from My Gospel is an excellent song, and his song “Deliver Me” on YouTube is amazing. Ive seen him in concert three times and its always an awesome experience. There is no doubt that the dude has an amazing voice and is definitely an entertainer, but his last two albums have been horrible. I like country/funk blend from Room 41, but Paul has just missed the mark with these last two.
Middle Western Guy
November 5, 2024 @ 9:51 am
Such a bummer the path this guy has taken. My gospel was promising and I really enjoyed it. Room 41 wasn’t as good but I still liked that album as well. But man since then he has taken a turn and I just don’t care for the music any longer. Also does anyone know what the deal was with him dumping his old band a while back?
HBZ
November 5, 2024 @ 10:35 am
Wondered where you would come down on this one since you’ve been critical in the past. I liked it a lot better than the last one. I don’t mind the “EDM” elements in it and I think the song writing is better overall, like Speaking In Cursive as you mentioned. It’s less funk/dance than previous works, which felt a little gimmicky to me. I agree he could put out a great straight up country album but apparently this shtick is working out for him.
Trigger
November 5, 2024 @ 11:18 am
I’ve reviewed all of Paul Cauthen’s album except his last one “Country Coming Down” because it was unclear to me how much was sarcasm and commentary on modern country, and how much of it was truly Paul Cauthen’s current creative direction. It was also unclear how Cauthen felt about this himself. I agree this album is better, but it also establishes that the last album wasn’t an anomaly. This is who Paul Cauthen is at this point in his career. Country fans might find it terrible, but I think it’s important to give him credit for being good at what he does.
HBZ
November 5, 2024 @ 11:24 am
I think the title track to Country Coming Down was really good, seemed like a stark contrast to the rest of the album and was the only one I really liked. I’d like to hear more like that from him.
RJ
November 5, 2024 @ 10:38 am
Is it working? Are his sales that much higher? I am interested. For my part, some of his early tunes were forever tunes for me – they will live on. Every part of them is awesome.
What he has done recently has driven me and my friends and family ENTIRELY away from him. This is so far from what is cool. It is essentially the furthest thing from intelligent. I imagine you cannot wear sleeves and like his last few albums. It is simply horrid.
I am 100% back on the bandwagon if he wants to make music for folks that like to use their brains again.
HBZ
November 5, 2024 @ 11:20 am
He’s doing pretty well touring so I guess so. He’s had some pretty high billing at some big festivals. I think he’s probably considered a crossover attraction for a lot of people, those who aren’t into country can get into the funk and dance elements.
Trigger
November 5, 2024 @ 1:33 pm
Paul Cauthen is doing very well, but he’s definitely on a tier below the headliners of independent country such as the Turnpike Troubadours, Tyler Childers, Billy Strings, Cody Jinks, etc. In the booking business they would call this “direct support” of headliners, but he’s also big enough to headline some small festivals, and to book mid to large sized venues.
His music is both widely appealing, and very polarizing, which often enacts a hard ceiling over a performer. This is the reason I wonder if he’d continued along his Sons of Fathers/My Gospel route, he wouldn’t actually be even bigger.
RJ
November 5, 2024 @ 2:18 pm
Thanks. I guess the songs that appeal to folks that would not think that Kristofferson or Blaze Foley are cool seem to do a bit better. That said, not a significant amount. Holy Ghost Fire and Saddle have 1.6M and 1.3M views on YouTube while Country as Swearword has 2.6M.
If you are reading this Paul, please come back to us! You could be a legend with a legacy to people who truly care instead of a legend about the guy who did crazy things and then paid dearly for them!
PeterT
November 5, 2024 @ 11:19 am
I listen to Paul Cauthen a lot – he’ll probably be in my top 3 listens on spotify by the end of the year. I genuinely like Country Coming down. Its not a country album, there are elements, but it owes as much to T-Rex and Beck as it does Waylon. The key is though, its well executed for what it is, a sleazy concept album about a Country Star going overboard. He achieves what he is shooting for, just listen to Champagne & a Limo, whether you like the style of music or not, the execution is excellent.
I have been dismayed with the releases leading up to this album.
– I didn’t mind Hot Damn for what it was, but the rap element was too cringey for me to ever put on in public.
– There is a decent track in Black on Black, but its ruined by the poor execution of the electronic beats (which I am not fundementally opposed to),
– Sweetheart from a Trailor park is a mess – but again if you follow him on insta you will have seen him slow this down acoustically and its a nice song.
– Angels and Heathens is good, but could have been elite if executed better.
Having said that I thought the album was a lot better than indicated by the singles. The back half of the album is pretty good (Sweetheart aside). Lavender Jones, Black Roses, To Whom do I beyond, Everbody get in Line, all good tracks.
Its his worst album to date, however, there are tracks on here I will go back to. I’d give it a 6/10.
RLN
November 5, 2024 @ 12:22 pm
You hit the nail on the head in terms of why (outside of Cocaine Country Dancing) Paul cauthen has never done it for me. His voice is so put on and fake. I actually think his mix of country and funk is interesting, fun, and sometimes rather unique and original. But the artificiality of his voice is grating to my ears. This Waylon style voice is right for the music he’s putting out. but you can just hear it’s a stretch and unnatural. I feel the same about Orville Peck. He’s got more of a Chris Isaac thing going on and he’s got some vocal talent and a really beautiful tone. But when he stretches into his lower register my ears can tell it’s forced and it takes me out of his songs.
RyanPD
November 5, 2024 @ 4:21 pm
“Got a black bandana wrapped around my neck for catching the sweat from being the shit” is probably the dumbest line in any song I’ve ever heard. WTF does that even mean? So goddamn stupid. I love Paul a lot, but I cringe every single time I hear it.
Trigger
November 5, 2024 @ 9:19 pm
It means that Paul Cauthen has such an inflated ego, he doesn’t understand how cringe that line actually is.
RyanPD
November 6, 2024 @ 6:02 am
Seriously. It doesn’t rhyme, no matter how much he wants it to. Just terrible.
Spoony
November 6, 2024 @ 11:16 pm
It’s funny. Stop being so serious or sensitive.
RyanPD
November 7, 2024 @ 12:34 pm
I am a huge Cauthen fan. This line is just the dumbest. Not funny in the slightest unless you are that devoid of humor. And I’m a connoisseur of dumb shit.
Casey
November 5, 2024 @ 4:58 pm
Dude has a niche and puts on a good show… I think this is one of those rare cases of caring too much. Paul isn’t FGL in 2013 or part of some movement to ruin country. In a non picking a fight way you seem to jump at any opportunity to bring this guy down.
Trigger
November 5, 2024 @ 9:17 pm
It’s really unfortunate that any time you criticize non-mainstream artists, it’s taken as a personal attack. I agree Paul Cauthen isn’t Florida Georgia Line in 2013. This isn’t an existential threat to country music. But if I criticized FGL in 2013 for their hip-hop beats and pandering, and didn’t do the same for Paul Cauthen, I would be called a hypocrite, and that would be a fair accusation.
John Miller
November 5, 2024 @ 5:32 pm
I thought he was heading towards a Raul Malo level of country vocal prowess. His first two records and his pairing with Orville Peck as The Unrighteous Brothers were excellent and I thought showed a lot of promise. Cocaine Country Dancing was fun as a one off even if I thought it was the worse song on Room 41. Then I bought Country Coming Down and was sssooo disappointed. I felt insulted that I thought his prior stuff was good at all because he was apparently not that guy and his preferred direction was whatever you want to call what was on that record. The multiple F*bombs and overall low road of the material just made angry. I listened to it and then sold it on. It’s rare that a record is so off base and bad that it makes early work that was good hard to return to. His older records remain in my collection, for now, but they remain unplayed as every time I touch them I flinch.
Nick
November 5, 2024 @ 6:09 pm
The reality hurts with this one. I saw Paul Cauthen in a very small venue in 2018 and he was like a force of nature. So talented. To this day it is still one of the best shows I’ve ever seen. Since then, he has been on a steady decline with each album much worse than the last. For a moment he was my favorite modern country artist, but I can’t even listen to him anymore. I made it almost 2 mins into the first song on this album and had to turn it off. He’s cooked and those one-eyed promo photos tell it all.
Paper Rosie
November 5, 2024 @ 7:52 pm
Back on Black – A list song that sounds like it’s just trying to be picked up for sync money.
Ridin the Line – Cliche’ outlaw phrases repeated endlessly.
Angels & Heathens – Probably the most memorable one melody wise.
Hot Damn – A one verse “song” that sounds more like the background of a commercial.
Speaking in Cursive – What does this mean? The writing on this one annoyed me. It had potential, but the execution was poor.
Everybody Get in Line – Another outlaw list song…but make it 80’s!
Bet on Me – Yet another song about the road, smoking, outlaw, blah blah. Next.
Lavender Jones – Oh we aren’t done painting the same outlaw picture that keeps repeating throughout this album. We get it. You are an outlaw. Cool. Let’s talk about it some more.
Innocent – How does a song like this make it on an album? This is where one of the yes men should’ve spoken up and said – maybe just keep this one for you and your wife.
Black Roses – As if Back on Black wasn’t enough – here we are again for part two. And of course this one also has highway/road/outlaw references galore. What were the songs that didn’t make this album? The better question is where are the ones that didn’t make it on his first two albums? I’d like to listen to those instead of these.
Sweetheart from the Trailer Park – Another one that should’ve been for him and his wife, not recorded.
To Whom do you Belong – The sigh of relief at the end of having to listen to this waste of time album. My only hope is that if you were to listen to his albums in order song by song in ten years, this one would kick off the beginning of a new era reminiscent of his earlier work. Steering the ship back on its rightful course.
He is so talented and is wasting it in such a trash way. He chose trashy over classy and you are right – if he had chose the latter he would be so much farther along in his career (and respected more). I believe this is what it looks like when your ego fully takes over and you have surrounded yourself with yes men. He is becoming a caricature of himself and has officially jumped the shark.
Sing your song sweet music man, you travel the world
With a six piece band that does for you what you ask them to
You try to stay young but the songs you sung
To so many people have all begun to come back on you
PeterT
November 7, 2024 @ 10:06 am
You can tell he’s surrounded by yes men on Hot Damn. No way he records that ‘rap’ and it stays in if he has anyone willing to be critical in the room.
What seems particularly crazy is he just got signed to a big record label, and the production budget for this album seems to have gone down.
Matt
November 6, 2024 @ 5:52 am
How can be chasing trends if he only sounds like himself? I am actually digging this one. Wasn’t the biggest fan of his last one, but I truly think he’s making the music he wants to make. To me it somehow sounds authentic and heartfelt, and he’s doing something different with it. It’s a far cry from bro country or Luke Bryan-pop country. Plus his voice is absolutely top notch. Just my opinion
erock
November 7, 2024 @ 12:59 pm
I have worn out all of Paul’s first three big releases, including “Country Coming Down”. In fact, I think that the title track of “Country Coming Down” may be my favorite track of his and it is indeed not satire and full on “country”. If “High Heels” doesn’t stoke memories of Waylon and make you want to take your best gal out when times have been tough, then maybe what we see as “country” are two different things (fyi; I despise Luke Bryan type music). The same could be said about “Country Clubbin'”. “Fuck you Money” is something that Hank Jr. might have laid down in his heyday if not for the cussing. I’m not sure if “Roll on Over” is “country”, but it’s for sure an honest and heart felt song about being…well, Paul Cauthen.
I agree that the first two albums were the most “country” and they were bangers by all accounts, but I implore you to give “Country Coming Down” a longer listen. I think you’ll find it stands up to scrutiny and can for sure be called a country album. I mean, they said Waylon wasn’t country at one point, right? And you even wrote about it: https://savingcountrymusic.com/they-said-waylon-jennings-wasnt-country-too-outlaw-history/
On “Black on Black”. I don’t like one bit of it and would never think of calling it “country”. Come back to the country, Paul. We miss you.
Tex Hex
November 8, 2024 @ 9:02 am
I always sniffed genre grifter on Paul Cauthen and he’s one of the artists my non-country music friends always namedrop when they wanna seem down while obviously keeping the whole genre at arm’s length.
Skoorb
November 8, 2024 @ 3:05 pm
This shit is good. Some y’all crazy.