Album Review – Pug Johnson’s “El Cabron”


#510.2 (Honky Tonk), #550.5 (Tejano/Mexican-inspired Country), and #569 (Cajun-inspired Country) on the Country DDS.


One of the reasons that Texas music presents such a rich and vibrant sound is due to how it sits as a crossroads, both culturally and geographically—most notably with Mexico on its southern border, and French Cajun influences to the east in Louisiana. On his new album El Cabrón, singer and performer Pug Johnson explores these regional dialects and their intertwined nature, resulting in tasty and sometimes unexpected moments that has many buzzing about their next favorite artist.

It’s not uncommon for a Texas country album to include a Tejano-flavored track or a fun little little Cajun tune. But for Pug Johnson, he begins with these influences as primary ingredients, along with traditional country as well, with some songs working exclusively in one style, and others blending all three. Horns and accordion help accommodate this in places, while country sounds set the primary foundation.

Then when it comes to the songwriting, Pug institutes character studies into a host of interesting and often greasy individuals one might interact with in the late night bar scene. This includes a gringo crossing over the border to charm the señoritas out from under the locals, a guy who gets in the doghouse for visiting a cat house, and a dude who must compel his date to blow into his breathalyzer to take her home. It’s assumed some of these songs aren’t autobiographical, though some could be based off of actual characters or events.

Meanwhile, the music helps evoke the setting for these escapades, drawing from Pug’s upbringing in Beaumont, Texas, which might as well be Louisiana to many. When you hear a song like “Buy Me a Bayou,” it’s not hard to understand the inspiration. But Pug utilizes the full geography of the Lone Star State, evoking the funny name of the north Texas town “Waxahachie” at one point, and also referencing the border town of Ciudad Acuña, known for it’s legendary night life.


Pug Johnson certainly presents a distinctive listening experience with El Cabrón, and avoids the well-worn grooves of traditional country and Texas music along the way. You’re not going to find many records with the ambitiousness of this one to mix influences together so aggressively, nor the personnel to pull it off like Pug and his collaborators have done here. Johnson co-produced the album with Ryan Johnson and Paul Walker.

But there is a shticky sort of feel to this album, while the songwriting sometimes fails to go deeper than the surface. Unlike Charley Crockett who also blends roots genres, there’s less of a synthesis of various influences here, and more a layering of them on top of each other. Charley Crockett is a character too as opposed to an authentic representation, but he’s more easily able to get you to suspend disbelief. For Pug Johnson, the shifts in sound and singing style are often so abrupt, it’s easier to spy the slight-of-hand behind them.

Arguably the best song on the album, and the one with the most streams so far is “Believer.” It perhaps shows off the compelling contours of Pug’s vocal delivery the best out of the entire set. But it’s also this smooth, R&B-style song that doesn’t really jive with the rest of the album, or the theme of exploring the musical influences of Texas. If you pick any individual song from El Cabrón, you’re likely to enjoy it. But as an album, it ultimately lends to more questions than answers about who Pug Johnson is as an artist.

With the song “Believer” specifically, you can see him making that predictable R&B shift we’ve seen so many country and Americana performers make over time. But then you listen to the straight country songs like “Hole In Me” and “Pipeliner Blues” and you feel like you’ve found your next favorite country artist. The next to last song “Change Myself Today” shows a depth to Pug’s songwriting that the rest of the album fails to illustrate.

Pug Johnson is still a young artist, with ample opportunities to answer some of the questions El Cabrón presents, while also opening up various sonic avenues he could pursue to do so. There also happens to be some really great songs on this album. Perhaps just like Texas, Pug Johnson’s is just too vast, and too diverse to pin down in a simple notion.

8/10

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