Album Review – Tris Munsick & The Innocents – “Big Medicine Moon”
#512 (Western) and #510.2 (Honky Tonk) on the Country DDS.
From the eastern slope of the Big Horn mountains in Wyoming, Tris Munsick and the Innocents offer a portal from the mundane to the rugged and adventurous through country songs with Western flair that exploit the timeless appeal of cowboy music rendered authentically.
In Western music, the name Munsick means a little something more than other surnames. In Wyoming and the surrounding areas, it’s best known as the name behind The Munsick Boys. Led by New Mexico Fiddle Champion and father Dave, boys Tris, Sam, and Ian regale audiences with Western songs speaking to the rugged landscapes and ranching life that many in Wyoming enjoy.
As The Munsick Boys grew up, they also started pursuing solo careers. Perhaps best known among them is Ian Munsick, who found pay dirt after moving to Nashville, signing with Warner, and instilling Western themes and imagery into songs that otherwise have a distinctly accessible sound to compliment Ian’s higher pitched voice he employed in his family band’s harmonies. Ian’s collaboration with Cody Johnson on the song “Live Live Cowgirls” is one of three Certified Gold singles Ian Munsick now owns.
Tris Munsick and his band The Innocents have charted a decidedly different direction. There’s no dilution, dulling of the edges, or active effort to entice a wider audience to the music by making it more accessible. Instead, Tris Munsick has chosen to deal in a more dedicated form of the Western discipline. If it attracts a wide audience as well, awesome. But this is genuine Western music at its core that unabashedly embraces the tried and true modes of the genre. It’s steel guitar and fiddle. It’s songs about country and Western life. It’s the real deal.
If anything, what’s now Tris Munsick’s third album since 2017 takes an even more traditional country approach compared to a Western one. This is a hard country, honky tonk record, just from a Western perspective. And aside from a cover of Merle Haggard’s “Red Bandana,” all these songs spring from the pen of Tris Munsick, and Tris Munsick only.
Big Medicine Moon is just a great listening record. Put it on, and let the country and Western sounds shepherd you away to somewhere a little more Western, and a little more innocent. There’s not a track to skip in the bunch, and Tris Munsick’s songs are a perfect example of how to take timeless themes, set them to timeless sounds, but still make something that feels new and fresh.
This is music that appeals to the present day, but would have been appealing 50 years ago, and will still be appealing and relevant 50 years from now. What makes this country music Western is little references within the lyricism about the Western way of life. Western music also comes with a little more wisdom than wit. When Tris Munsick sings about the windshield being bigger than the rearview mirror, you feel it, and take it to heart.
The Munsick Family plays an important role in Western music. Tris Munsick’s brother Ian acts as an critical bridge from the mainstream and accessible with songs that take a more sensible and contemporary approach. But where it leads you to is the world of Tris Munsick and the Innocents where the most authentic and unadulterated Western expressions are kept alive.
1 3/4 Guns Up (8.1/10)
Purchase from Tris Munsick and the Innocents
From the Big Horn Mountain in northern Wyoming,
Terry
November 29, 2024 @ 9:54 am
Sounds like a great album-Will definitely pick it up!
Thanks Trigger for exposing me to another artist I probably would otherwise never hear.
Nevada_Buckaroo
November 29, 2024 @ 12:48 pm
Solid album. Happy you’re finally giving them a review, been looking for them here since they popped up on my radar at least 10 years ago. They put on a great show, too…saw them at a dance in Denver shortly before the pandemic shut everything down.
David:The Duke of Everything
November 29, 2024 @ 8:36 pm
This is why i come to this site. I like ians stuff a lot so when i saw this, i was thinking i might like it. Sure enough those two songs that were featured proved it at least by those two anyway. I will check the album out and get back. Quicksand sounded very traditional but big medicine moon def has a western vibe. I love both styles.
David:The Duke of Everything
November 29, 2024 @ 9:52 pm
Well i went and gave it a listen. Love it. A couple of songs wild child and calm before the storm i consider average but everything else is great. Even those two arent that terrible, this is def an album you can just push play from the start and let it play. Will def be getting some listening time from me.
JAN D BASEHART
November 30, 2024 @ 8:03 am
Takes me back to 1973 when this SoCalGal got a summer job at Eaton’s 🙂
Janice. Brooks
November 30, 2024 @ 1:39 pm
I. got this album as an IWMA dj and it blends well with the recent run o€ Honky Tonk releases.
Rose
November 30, 2024 @ 6:17 pm
I don’t care for Ian’s music at all, but I had no idea he had a brother in music. Thank you Trigger for sharing this, because I absolutely love this album. Playing it on repeat! This is why I follow this site!
Todd Villars
November 30, 2024 @ 9:39 pm
That’s good stuff right there!
Matsfan/Jatsfan
December 1, 2024 @ 1:13 pm
Wow, I love this! Gave it three listens in past two days and totally digging it. A nice early Christmas present.
Taylor
December 1, 2024 @ 8:46 pm
Going to have to take a listen of this as it sounds like it right up my ally. I like his brother Sam’s music too. Never have been able to get into Ian’s tunes.
Ranger Rhys
December 2, 2024 @ 6:31 am
On Rio Grande Valley Radio since 2017, We call it Western Country! “It’s songs about country and Western life. It’s the real deal.” ‘Western music also comes with a little more wisdom than wit.’ Thank you for the article on this amazing family of Western Country musicians, songwriters and performers.
Ranger