Review – Johnny Blue Skies (Sturgill Simpson) – “Passage Du Desir”

#563 (Cosmic Country), with elements of #577 (Country Soul), #580 (Outlaw Country), and #560 (Country Rock) on the Country DDS.
When the history books are written about how country music was saved in the modern era, the first chapter will set the table with how the Outlaws of the ’70s inspired the movement, how underground punks in the 90s seeded it by moving onto the abandoned Lower Broadway with Bloodshot Records giving them legitimacy, and then how a set of famous sons in the form of Shooter Jennings, Hank Williams III, and Justin Townes Earle helped set the table for what was about to come.
Then the second chapter will be all about Sturgill Simpson. Though Sturgill never achieved the commercial heights of his descendants, he was beyond foundational for paving the avenue, crafting the template, shattering the glass ceiling, creating the appetite, and moving immovable objects out of the way for everyone else to succeed, even if he broke a few things and left a bit of mess behind due to his sometimes prickly and self-important nature. There is no Tyler Childers, then Zach Bryan, then an entire industry of independent artists succeeding without Sturg.
Now the always mercurial and elusive songwriter returns under the moniker Johnny Blue Skies after completing a five album cycle and officially retiring his name as a solo artist in 2021. Though Sturgill always left the door open for returning with a band, Johnny Blues Skies is less a band, and more of a sound and a pseudonym.
Announcing his live return first with the most legendary lineup of his previous backing band (Laur Joamets, Kevin Black, Miles Miller), none of these players appear on the album. Instead we get Jake Bugg on guitar, Dan Dugmore on pedal steel, along with Sierra Hull, Steve Mackey, and Fred Eltringham. As we have seen from Sturgill in recent years especially, as a producer he prefers to field his own hand selected session players as opposed to the seasoned players on hand. Sturgill also plays significantly on the album.
Passage Du Desir is an inspired, omnivorous work that is sometimes country, sometimes genre-less, often rock and roll, and more soundscape than singer/songwriter. It’s sometimes self-indulgent, but is mostly an enrapturing and riveting work that in part seems to explore the timeline of a relationship, from the founding of it amid a lost abyss, to its final expiration with the emotion best expressed in a guitar solo, and the seasons in between.
But more so, the album was inspired by the last couple of years of Simpson’s life and an international exploration that started in Thailand, and ended up on the streets of Paris where Simpson has been living, and where Passage Du Desir was written. There is a neighborhood, or set of streets in Paris that carry this name, along with a specific corridor. Not to come across as authoritative on local lore, but historically it was supposedly a location that included small hotels where trysts or tricks could occur out of the prying eyes of the rest of the city.

Untethered by genre, Simpson is able to explore ideas both lyrically and sonically wherever they take him on the album, which he takes full advantage of on numerous tracks. But as he says in the 7 minute “Jupiter’s Faerie,” “There’s no happy endings, only stories that stop before they’re through…” Similarly, Passage Du Desir seems to revel less in answering questions as it does in asking them, and seems to be okay, if not intended, to leave some of those questions unresolved.
Those hoping for a second coming of Sturgill’s debut album High Top Mountain, or even his magnum opus Metamodern Sounds in Country Music might be rendered somewhat disappointed. But Johnny Blue Skies owes country music nothing. Neither does Sturgill Simpson. Country is most certainly one of the aspects that Passage Du Desir is rendered in, and perhaps where it finds some of its best moments. But it’s the extended explorations in the form of “Jupiter’s Faerie” and the ending song “One For The Road” where it finds its most soaring moments.
As Simpson sings in one of the most country tracks on the album, “They don’t ask you what your name is when you get up to heaven. And thank God. I couldn’t tell her if I had to who I am.” He also tells GQ, “Sturgill served his purpose, but he’s dead, he’s gone, and I’m definitely not that guy anymore.”
But some of this is the romantic notions of how Sturgill wants to present himself to the world, because when he sings, “And that old radio still won’t play me. I can hold down the line but I can’t kick the can. Life ain’t fair and God is cruel…” it sure is reminiscent of an old Sturgill Simpson song.
Johnny Blue Skies is a nickname Simpson was given in his younger days by a Gen X barroom character in a trench coat with a Zippo lighter. It was later referenced in the liner notes of Simpson’s Grammy-winning A Sailor’s Guide to Earth. But as much as the new name and the new album open a new season for Sturgill (he says he’s written multiple albums worth of material), it’s also perhaps the most Sturgill Simpson thing he has ever done. It’s country, but expanded, enlightened, and uninhibited, rendering it boundless in possibilities for inspiring and speaking to a wide audience intimately.
Passage Du Desir is perhaps not the masterpiece some people will decree it as after a first listen—giddy that they’re even getting new music from Simpson after he said he was retired. It lacks a level of cohesion, and makes a few sonic mistakes along the way.
But the hype and excitement isn’t entirely unwarranted. The immersive experience and the inspired moments make for one of those complex musical journeys true music lovers enjoy to embark on, and it fulfills expectations that are so often left unrequited in today’s musical landscape.
8.6/10
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Purchase from Johnny Blue Skies / Sturgill Simpson
Purchase from Amazon
Song Reviews:
Swamp of Sadness
The song’s intro and outtro are reminiscent of mid career Tom Waits with the French macabre/cabaret influence that is meant to give rise to the setting of this album on the streets of Paris where it was written and inspired. But the heart of this song sounds very much like a Sturgill Simpson song in the way it grooves and utilizes emptiness, similar to Metamodern‘s “Living The Dream” and “Long White Line.”
If The Sun Never Rises Again
Obviously it’s the R&B sound of this track that your ear immediately picks up on, and the patently different vocal approach Sturgill Simpson takes, utilizing tones and inflections we’ve previously never heard from him. Though this adds another dimension to both Simpson and this album, it also gives ammunition to the Simpson critics who say his singing voice is a character or a put-on. Who is the real Sturgill Simpson, or Johnny Blues Skies? The song itself can still fit in that universe, but singing this in his more natural voice may have ended up with more positive results. Simpson may idolize Marvin Gaye, but he’s never going to sing like him. He can sing like an R&B guy just fine, if not even good. But that doesn’t mean he should. He should sing like Sturgill Simpson.
Scooter Blues
A decidedly simple song compared to the rest of the album, this is about Simpson’s time in Thailand and later in Paris, trying to become anonymous so that he can lose himself and find the next season of his life. It’s in the simplicity that Simpson says a lot more than what you might glean on the surface. This is also obviously one of the more “country” songs on the album, taking a bit of an island/beach “toes i nthe sand” vibe to the approach.
Jupiter’s Faerie
Going from the generally lighthearted “Scooter Blues” to this song is the album’s greatest transition. The keys part immediately sucks you in, and the song never lets go. Perhaps the album’s greatest track, some are depicting it as being about the loss of a friend. But the verses can be interpreted to be about losing multiple friends, including one lost touch with over the years, another perhaps to suicide. Either way, it feels very personal and intimate to Simpson. The only quibble is the watery effect on some of the vocals, which for some may give the intended “cosmic” element to this decidedly celestial track. But to others it will just be distracting.
Who I Am
Perhaps the most country song on the album with its Outlaw beat, it chronicles Simpson’s loss of self he experienced on his world travels. Just like “Scooter Blues,” it’s in the simplicity that Sturgill arguably communicates his most complex ideas and thoughts. Though the bigger moments on the album may get more attention, “Who I Am” definitely competes for the album’s best.
Right Kind of Dream
Though there is plenty to unravel and rave about with this track, the heavy reliance on a rather repetitive and frankly ineffective melody make this song vulnerable to being consider the album’s weakest effort. The song struggles to find where it wants to go, and also perhaps gives the album its most self-indulgent moment. “Right Kind of Dream” isn’t bad as much as it doesn’t step up to the standard set by the rest of the album.
Mint Tea
This is another country song with the phaser on the acoustic guitar, Dan Dugmore’s steel, and Sierra Hull’s mandolin really bolstering the organic roots of the track. This really is quintessential Sturgill Simpson country. And in this instance, the phaser-style vocal enhancements enhance the song with that “cosmic” element that Simpson does so well. Great song.
One For The Road
About the expiration of a long relationship, this song really leaves you asking lots of questions. Amid all of Sturgill’s world travels and moving to Paris, where exactly did this leave his family and his wife in the picture? Simpson tell GQ that he “stayed in communication” with them, but that’s all it says. This song feels very personal to Simpson, not a character study, but perhaps it is. It’s important to note that this is likely Simpson playing guitar in the extended outtro. It takes on a somewhat Pink Floyd vibe, not necessarily showing of the range of his skills, but capturing the deep emotion behind the song in instrumental form.
July 12, 2024 @ 9:56 am
A complex, multi-voiced work that will reward with repeated listening. Songs that don’t fade from memory easily, and a band at the top of their game. Been some great releases this year so far – this is a serious contender for best yet.
July 14, 2024 @ 4:03 am
Sturgill “Chris Gaines” Simpson
July 12, 2024 @ 9:57 am
Great read… but let’s not forget the chapter of Jamey Johnson and That Lonesome Song, which really got everything rolling after Shooter and Hank 3. Lonesome Song really put Dave Cobb on the map, and then came Sturgill, Stapleton and several others produced by Cobb.
Still think High Top Mountain was Sturgills best.
Need time to digest this one
July 12, 2024 @ 11:31 am
This is sort of a tangent, but at the time of Jamey Johnson and “That Lonesome Song,” he was signed to a major label, he was writing songs for big mainstream artists (including “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk”,) was winning CMA Awards, etc. He was very much a part of the industry, while Sturgill was decidedly outside of it, busking outside the CMAs as opposed to accepting them on the stage.
Jamey Johnson was definitely part of saving country music in the modern context. But I wouldn’t put him in the same line as Sturgill. And you could argue it was Sturgill who put Dave Cobb on the map, not vice versa.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:47 am
C’mon now, let’s not get over our skis here. Shooter Jennings (one of those first phase guys you mentioned) was produced by Dave Cobb on his early stuff. Dave was a thing before High Top and Southeastern, albeit not quite as big.
July 12, 2024 @ 1:01 pm
Dave Cobb produced “Black Ribbons,” which was Shooter’s departure from country. He also produced an Oak Ridge Boys album early on. But it was really the double shot of Jason Isbell’s Southeastern” and Sturgill’s “Metamodern Sounds” that had everyone all of a sudden paying attention to Cobb.
Not trying to diminish Cobb, not trying to diminish Jamey Johnson. Was just trying to offer a very succinct explanation to someone who may have never heard of Sturgill Simpson before, but is coming to this music via Zach Bryan etc., how Sturgill fits in the grand scheme of things. Obviously, a real history would have much more context.
To carry this even further, when listening to this album, I got strong ‘Black Ribbons” vibes. It’s significantly more country than that project, but I got the same mood from it. Whether Sturgill, Cobb, or Shooter want to admit it, there is definitely a sonic connection between the three.
July 12, 2024 @ 1:22 pm
Cobb also produced Put the O Back in Country and Electric Rodeo
July 12, 2024 @ 1:47 pm
I understand. But it wasn’t until 2013-2014 until you really started hearing buzz about Dave Cobb as one of this generation’s great producers. Not even really sure why we’re having this discussion here. Again, I was just trying to offer a very short summation to contextualize Sturgill’s career. I’m not going to go in depth about it in an album review, nor should folks be insulted if I didn’t mention someone’s name.
July 12, 2024 @ 2:11 pm
I’m not arguing, and I’m not insulted, it’s merely an opinion. My point was Cobb had been producing albums from known artists for at least ten years prior to High Top and Southeastern. I’m as big a Sunday Valley and Sturgill fan as anyone. That said, to say Sturgill made Dave’s career seems like a bit of an oversell, especially given some of Dave’s prior producing credits and producing Southeastern that same year. Did High Top help Dave a lot? Hell yeah, it led to Traveler and all that, no doubt. Did High Top make Dave? I’d say Sturg and Dave helped each other’s career arc, no more, no less. That’s all I got, no need to keep on with this subthread….
July 17, 2024 @ 4:11 pm
So you gonna write that book?
July 17, 2024 @ 6:00 pm
Maybe at some point. At the moment I’m just trying to unbury myself.
July 18, 2024 @ 8:28 am
You should contract Shovels & Rope 😉
You should really write that book. You already have so much material, it would be a shame not to turn it into a book.
July 16, 2024 @ 9:16 am
Cobb did also produce “Southeastern” which came out the same year as “High Top Mountain” and also deserves to be mentioned as part of the same revolution.
July 12, 2024 @ 9:57 am
Wild ride listening to this one the first time through. Can’t remember the last time an album listen made me think about so many things between the sounds and the stories
July 12, 2024 @ 11:57 am
Yes, that was my main takeaway after first listen as well, and it’s for that very reason that I love it. It’s fresh, multi-inspired, and something truly NEW. Feels like everywhere I look nowadays I see shameless copycats, which makes this album felt like glass of cold water in the desert. I think it fits right in with Sailors and Sound & Fury in that it’s not 100% country and may take some time for people to fully appreciate, and it definitely is short, but ultimately I think it accomplishes its goal well and fits very nicely in Sturgill’s increasingly diverse, special, and thankfully still growing discography.
July 12, 2024 @ 9:58 am
Listened to this once and I would say I think the songwriting and music is really strong. I was thrown though that his voice sounds consciously auto tuned? I’m not sure I am correct in that description but his vocals sound very robotic on a lot of songs in a way I didn’t like. The contrast of who I am (where this isn’t an issue and he sounds incredible) to right kind of dream was really jarring in this way.
Maybe this is because of the vocal cord injury but this felt more intentionally artistic than a tool to correct voice struggles. I didn’t like that part and it really colored a lot of it for me my first listen. Will definitely listen to it again (I’m now on the Billy strings album) and maybe this won’t bug me second time through.
And yeah after one listen who I am stands out as instant classic song
July 12, 2024 @ 10:07 am
It’s not Auto-Tune. He is using vocal filters to try and enhance the vocal signal and give songs a cosmic aspect. But as I said in my song reviews, I think it takes away from what he’s trying to do. This is a great album, but some of the vocal renderings are where it suffers. People will find it distracting, though some songs are fine.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:23 am
I think the fact that he is singing softly makes him sound very different too.
July 12, 2024 @ 7:14 pm
I quite like it. Gives the album an ethereal, pondering feel which I think is precisely the point. And again, scores another stylistic award to Sturgill/JBS.
July 12, 2024 @ 10:00 am
Jupiter’s Faerie is great, but damn it’s emotional and sad and I’m here for all of it. Overall the album is like the bastard child of Sound & Fury and Sailors Guide which worked for me. Great songwriting throughout.
July 12, 2024 @ 2:14 pm
First time I listened to “Jupiter’s Faere” I was wow, this is a cool sounding song. The second time I listened to the lyrics and it just made me start crying. It was so good.
July 12, 2024 @ 10:01 am
So far I’m enjoying this quite a bit!
July 12, 2024 @ 10:03 am
Something about Sturgill. I don’t know but his free and open mind always make me feel good about music. That’s what he’s all about…. music. He’s got a Willie kinda spirit.
July 12, 2024 @ 10:10 am
In love with Jupiter’s Faerie but for the first 2/3 I had to search Lyric Genius to catch what he was really saying. It get clearer towards the end.
Glad he’s back!
July 12, 2024 @ 10:27 am
Like Sturgill apparently is himself, I’m still trying to figure out just who this guy is. And ultimately I find that as a listener that question doesn’t matter very much. There seems to be a different Sturgill Simpson for whatever mood I’m in – even if I rarely find myself in the mood for the Sturgill of Sound & Fury – and all of them are damn talented. That’s why I find it nearly impossible to rank his discography. I will say that this one is on par with A Sailor’s Guide and so far it’s the only thing giving Sierra Ferrell any serious competition for my album of the year.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:44 am
Agree, Sierra has been my AOTY all year and this one is right up there with it after a few listens.
July 12, 2024 @ 10:35 am
Great review! Loved the album. I am here for the Johnny Blue Skies journey.
July 12, 2024 @ 10:52 am
I’ve really enjoyed this record a lot. At first I was like…is this…Americana Yacht Rock? But I was ready to start it over for another play through by the time “Jupiter’s Faerie” and “Who I Am” settled into my skull.
But I get it may not be for everyone. Personally, “Sound & Fury” is my most listened to Sturgill record. Not cause it was the first one I heard by any means, but one that has resonated a lot with me.
I think that’s why I’m digging this one so much. It resonates too, just in different tones and soundscapes.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:02 am
Album of the year material here. I was hoping for something along the lines of his Sunday Valley material but what we got was so much more.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:09 am
The song “Mint Tea” has a couple lyrics that are allusions to Taylor Swift songs. It could be coincidence but I kinda doubt it.
“…band-aid on my bullet wound” and “tell me why you’re so afraid of little old me” are almost word for word lyrics from the Swift songs “Bad Blood” and “Who’s Afraid of Little Old Me” respectively. Interesting nod.
July 13, 2024 @ 7:06 am
“Band aid on a bullet hole” is an idiom, not a TSwift original. The other isn’t exactly an original line either.
July 16, 2024 @ 4:29 pm
Johnny Blue Skies is a giant Swiftie.
Source: I made it up.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:19 am
It’s very good but I don’t think great. I don’t think there have been any genuinely great great records out this year though there are a lot of very good ones.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:28 am
I have listened to this album twice and all I can say is that it makes me very happy. It feels so good to be excited by a Sturgill Simpson album of originals again. I have written at least a couple of times how that whenever I listen to MMSICM, I tend to feel a little sad as nothing he’s done since has excited me that much. ASGTE is a solid album that I like but don’t quite love. I really don’t like Sound and Fury that much and I just don’t think it’s that good of a rock record. Can’t really listen to it straight through. The Dood and Juanita is enjoyable enough. But this one just works for me in a big way. As GP would say, Cosmic American Music.
July 13, 2024 @ 6:47 pm
Your thoughts on his albums more or less match my own, though you probably like Dood & Juanita more than me (only listened once), and I really liked his bluegrass records. I was prepared to be disappointed by Johnny Blue Skies, especially when I started seeing people throw out the phrase “yacht rock” to describe the sound. But, man, I loved it. It’s his best since Metamodern, I think.
July 14, 2024 @ 7:18 am
This one could move up to #2 in my ranking of Sturgill albums, as much as I love High Top Mountain (Metamodern was one my top 3 albums of the 2010’s). If this album came out after Metamodern, I think it would have felt like more of natural progression for me than ASGTE and I would have been happy. To me, ASGTE is a good album that is greater than the sum of its parts, but was middle of the pack of the albums I bought that year. This one could end up being my favorite of 2024. And a lot of it has to do with the type of music fan I am (natural roots rock fan whose path to blues and country music was through bands like CCR, The Band, Little Feat, The Allman Brothers, CDB, MTB, The Outlaws and early Poco/Eagles).
Dood and Juanita has grown on me. I think it’s a nice little bluegrass friendly album.
July 14, 2024 @ 4:34 am
Nice to see the GP reference. I’m betting, though, that Johnny Blue Skies’ record (haven’t heard it yet) is more cosmic than Gram’s records were (and don’t get me wrong, Gram is my touchstone artist of all time), in large part because it’s NOT American music. Johnny has apparently consciously cut himself loose from that boundary.
July 14, 2024 @ 6:16 am
Appreciate the GP reference. Gram is my #1 musical touchstone, but I think from what I’m reading Johnny Blue Skies may actually be more authentically cosmic than Gram was in that he’s apparently let go of the “American” boundary.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:33 am
I don’t know, seems ok but nothing that would catch anyone’s attention or be discussed here if it wasn’t for his first couple of albums. You know…the ones from the now “dead” guy. So dramatic…
July 12, 2024 @ 11:35 am
Nailed the review, per usual.
It’s not his best album, but it’s a really, really strong album, and definitely going to be at the top of the list at the end of the year.
Like you, I didn’t love what he did with the vocals on a few of the tracks initially, but I understand the direction. Very much similar to what he did with the distortion filters on S&F – music intentionally fits the mood he’s capturing. “Mint Tea” is an awesome track, but is so close in arrangement to “The Storm” that it distracted me on first listen. But, the sheer strength of the songwriting and clears those minor cons. “Jupiter” might be one of the best songs he’s ever written, just a ton of layers to peel back on that onion.
Musically, it’s something different, but we should all expect that by now. Many may disagree, but I love hearing his eclectic influences in his output. The first time I saw the man perform, he took the stage in a T. Rex tshirt, so nothing since has surprised me.
There’s just something in the way that Stu captures that honest yet cynic sentiment of “Who I Am” that is something that connects with a lot of people, but few, if any, can articulate it the way he does. It just amazes me.
What I can articulate though is just how damn jealous I am of anyone that gets to be out on the lake today with a left handed cigarette, blasting “Scooter Blues” over the speakers. Y’all think of me, please.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:53 am
I think if this was anyone but Sturgill, self indulgent would have been the main thrust of the review, not just a side comment. There are some A level songs here, but the lack of coherence drags the album down to a C, at best. I’ll probably give it another listen in a few days to see if it grows on me.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:54 am
Clearly, Sturgill can enunciate, and with a strong and Beautiful voice, reminiscent of some great country singers from over half a century ago.
But then, he gets very sloppy, and gives us Stu Mumble.
1.1 Stumble.
Not edgy, lazy.
But Hey, that’s his thing.
July 12, 2024 @ 12:48 pm
I still haven’t listened to this and looking forward to it this evening but I think this guy is either losing his mind with all of the melodrama or he’s just trying to cash in with weirdness like Chris Gaines did, example: “Sturgill served his purpose, but he’s dead, he’s gone, and I’m definitely not that guy anymore.” no he’s not gone, he’s you just make music that folks want to listen to and not try so hard to be so edgy and weird.
July 12, 2024 @ 2:02 pm
I don’t think this is “Chris Gaines” level. But I do agree that some of Sturgill’s histrionics, the puff piece in GQ (and the previous one ahead of Sound & Fury) are a bit “much.” The thing is, this stuff is actually really normal in mainstream music. We’re just not used to it with indie guys like Sturgill. I think he’s constantly fighting with himself in being quiet and reclusive and letting the music speak for himself, and putting himself “out there,” and worrying about his public perception and persona. Instead of striking a balance, it’s sort of all or nothing.
July 12, 2024 @ 4:21 pm
It’s always been hard for me to square “reclusive genius artist” with a GQ article bordering on fellatio in print, including a “candid” photo shoot with multiple wardrobe changes. “I don’t even know who Sturgill is”? Fuck off, dude, Sturgill Simpson is the guy who provided you the luxury to leave your family behind while you built a bar in Thailand. This guy and Jason Isbel are exhibits 1A and 1B of why I love the art but ignore the artist.
July 14, 2024 @ 5:11 am
The Chris Gaines stuff was more honest than this.
Garth played a character. Simpson is being deliberately vague.
July 12, 2024 @ 1:49 pm
I’m Lon my third lying through and it’s getting better each round. I wasn’t really digging the vocal affects on several but on repeated exposure they don’t bother me so much. Mint Tea is my favorite track so far but there should be several here, at the least, for everyone.
July 12, 2024 @ 1:54 pm
Rhyming “eggos”, “legos”, and “hasta luego” in quick succession on “Scooter Blues” made me chuckle. So far, I’m pleasantly surprised by the album. Good vibes. I have a feeling I’m gonna have this one on rotation more than Sound & Fury and Ballad of Dude & Juanita.
As an aside, this whole name-change/pseudonym thing lately with artists like Silverada (fka Mike & The Moonpies) and Johnny Blue Skies (fka Sturgill Simpson?) is obnoxious – unless there’s some sort of copyright dispute we don’t know about. No idea why this couldn’t just be a “Sturgill Simpson” album when it looks, sounds, and feels like one. The “five album cycle” thing seems totally arbitrary and more of a marketing stunt than anything else.
July 12, 2024 @ 9:39 pm
Silverada have explained that Mike and the Moonpies was a silly, juvenile-sounding name that they’d simply outgrown. I’m not a fan of the new name, either. It has the look of something carefully researched to avoid legal problems rather than being an inspired band name. But hey, it’s their choice.
July 14, 2024 @ 5:13 am
Indie fans refuse to admit it but their scene markets as much as Music Row. The budgets are just smaller.
July 12, 2024 @ 1:58 pm
If he ever goes into Sunday Valley mode again I will lose my mind. I’m glad he’s not stagnant and puts out a variety of sounds. I think this is what being honest looks like, it’s what’s flowing through him at this particular moment in time. From the samples above it appears these are all songs that I’ll be able to howl along with in the car. Buying it.
July 12, 2024 @ 2:14 pm
Havent been a fan of his, probably this album wont change my mind. Who i am sounds great though. That jupiter song to me just sounds like crap but thats just me. I could only give it thirty seconds so maybe need to listen more. Ill tty to give whole album a listen maybe, i dont know. A guy who goes off and leaves his family for two years as it seems he did, doesnt really deserve any support. Also the whole killing off of a name and restarting with a new one just makes him appear even more goofy.
July 12, 2024 @ 5:27 pm
David,
I read the GQ story on him. It reveals a lot. He is still living in Paris. He left his family by choice. He is as I suspected many years ago, dealing with a serious mental illness. It’s a drug resistant depression. Having lived with someone bi- polar, it’s a miserable situation. Nonetheless, he abandoned his family. Hard to like a guy who does that. Especially when you see how GQ reporter fawned over him, trying to show how cosmopolitan and sophisticated and erudite he is, living in Europe. Truthfully, Sturgill Simpson is a hot mess. He went on to say the skull on the reissued album cover depicts that he is no more Sturgill Simpson. He was talking about portals. Yeah.
Look, i realize a lot of my music heroes were also a hot mess in their personal life. In fact most of them were not great family guys. I guess with music you separate the art from the artist. In this case, I don’t dig the art or the man, so im ehhhh on him. I get the sense though, that he has some fans that will accept anything from him, no matter the genre and no matter the content. My observation in passing is, he doesn’t care a rip about his fans at all. Maybe that’s a draw for some?
July 12, 2024 @ 6:42 pm
You must have the inside scoop, because I haven’t seen anything on him “abandoning his family”. Care to share your source?
July 12, 2024 @ 6:56 pm
GQ magazine article. It’s all there in black and white.
July 12, 2024 @ 7:58 pm
The GQ article mentions several trips over the course of a year, and that he had his wife’s support. It is silent on his family’s involvement in pieces of it, or how often he saw them. And one can pretty safely assume they spend a good amount of time in Paris with him.
Sturgill has always been overly dramatic in his interviews. It’s what he does. Again, nothing points to him “abandoning his family..”
July 13, 2024 @ 5:42 am
The article says he lived 6 months in Thailand, then moved to Paris, for two years and currently lives there. Mentions he told his wife he was going. Also mentions he ” keeps in touch.” He mentions the depression as the reason.
The fact that he ” keeps in touch” implies they are not in Paris with him.
I’m guessing he may financially help his wife and son, but the fact he’s chosen to live multiple years abroad, away from them, isn’t that troubling? That’s where I’m coming from.
July 13, 2024 @ 5:59 am
The quote in the GQ article is “Between that first visit and returning visits, he spent about six months in Thailand.”
The “keeps in touch” is actually “He dove below the radar, remaining in close contact with his family but almost completely unplugged from the music industry.”. That’s PAST tense.
You are being totally speculatory, based on a misreading of that article.
July 12, 2024 @ 7:46 pm
First, to bring it all back to the music, this is the reason I asked the questions about the final song, “One For The Road.” It’s a leaving song, so did he leave his wife? Did his wife leave him, and that’s why he became a world traveler?
Bringing it back to the GQ article, this is when you need an actual journalist to conduct and actual interview, ask Sturgill tough questions, and try to get tough answers. Instead, what we get is a puff piece in exchange for “exclusive” access to him.
I’m not going to pass judgement on Sturgill because I don’t know the whole story, and some of it probably isn’t our business. But there are lots of legitimate questions.
July 12, 2024 @ 7:58 pm
The GQ article mentions several trips over the course of a year, and that he had his wife’s support. It is silent on his family’s involvement in pieces of it, or how often he saw them. And one can pretty safely assume they spend a good amount of time in Paris with him.
Sturgill has always been overly dramatic in his interviews. It’s what he does. Again, nothing points to him “abandoning his family..”
July 12, 2024 @ 8:06 pm
His wedding ring in the GQ pictures helps with that question, but I guess they could have been contemplating getting a divorce when he wrote the song.
July 28, 2024 @ 5:08 am
There’s one question that brought me to this article and its – IS it Sturg’s guitar in the outtro for One for the Road? I heard someone say it sounds like John Mayer.. The article only says this: “It’s important to note that this is likely Simpson playing guitar in the extended outtro.”
July 28, 2024 @ 7:21 am
Yes, that appears to be Sturgill. I have not seen any specific liner notes confirming this, in part because physical product is not available yet. But since the posting of this article, he’s talked about his approach of playing the guitar on this album specifically, and I can’t imagine it is anyone else.
July 29, 2024 @ 3:54 am
@Trigger, thank you for your reply. After posting this I was skeptical of my own question, like nahhh.. but just to follow this line of thinking in case it’s interesting to anyone else 😉 Then I got to thinking about what it would mean if an artist hosted another artist to add what’s possibly the most profound piece of this entire album. And I thought if anyone would do it, I could see Sturgill doing it.
I gather there was some collaboration with Dead and Co in Mexico last winter.
July 12, 2024 @ 2:54 pm
Well i did a quick listen to the album and my thoughts havent changed much. Who i am is a standout. Mint tea isnt too bad though theres a wide gap between it and who i am. The last song, one for the road wasnt bad at first but then it went off the rails. Only other song i could recommend is scooter blues but i would have to be in a weird mood to really listen to it. If you like the general sound on the album then you might love this album, who i am might be the song you dont care for since its kind of a standout the other way on this. I get it, new name means new sound but overall i cant give it more than a five and that score is mostly who i am by itself.
July 12, 2024 @ 3:39 pm
If someone told me on New Years that my favorite albums so far in 2024 by mid-year would be from “Silverada” and “Johnny Blue Skies,” my response would have been “who the heck are they and when is the new Moonpies album coming out?”
Weird name changes aside, this is a great album and might be Sturgill’s best. In a way, it is Sturgill “finding his sound” as a blend of all of his previous albums. While his previous albums are among my all-time favorites, they admittedly at times sounded like “Sturgill in the style of Waylon” or “Sturgill doing ZZ Top” or “Red-Headed Stranger- Sturgill’s Version”. Johnny Blue Skies feels the most like Sturgill doing Sturgill since the Sunday Valley days. Can’t wait to see him back in action on tour soon.
July 12, 2024 @ 4:08 pm
A couple listens in and I’m fairly bored. He’s lost his edge. It’s not bad music it’s just boring.
July 12, 2024 @ 4:10 pm
I’ve never had a more love/hate relationship with an artist than I do with Sturgill. And I hate this album. I liked Trig’s review more than the album and even tried to listen to it a second time with a different perspective, but I have no use for it. Like Sound & Fury, it wasn’t made for me.
I love the country genre more than any one artist to blindly follow him/her down such a strange path and moniker, no matter how great the previous work. And it’s just so G.D. frustrating! When I last saw Simpson with his bluegrass outfit, the Hillbilly Avengers, back to back nights on the Outlaw Tour before he blew out his vocal cords, I thought he never looked happier or more in his element.
I want to spend the rest of my days listening to good bluegrass and country music and championing the artists that play for the cause. I don’t have the time or patience for genre blending and name changing (I still haven’t listened to the new album from the band formerly named Mike and the Moonpies) or any of this self-tortured, artsy bullshit.
July 12, 2024 @ 5:21 pm
“or any of this self-tortured, artsy bullshit.”
Exactly.
So, Sturg. left his family to their own devices for how long?
Traipsed around Thailand and other places getting his tires rotated and mind blown 11 different ways.
Big deal.
Know one asshole in particular who, with his Unlimited Skymiles with United, frequently flies and “treks” internationally. Disgusting.
Wonder what age group was entertaining Mr. Blue Skies, in Thailand?
July 12, 2024 @ 7:21 pm
“What age group was entertaining him?” Unfortunately I think your imagination is too limited for this artist. Best of Luck.
July 12, 2024 @ 8:26 pm
Don’t mistake legal prostitution in Thailand for anything more than that. Thai authorities do not tolerate abusing underage children. That happens elsewhere in SE Asia, but not Thailand.
Besides, it’s off putting that you would accuse him of that, unless you know something the rest of us do not—which is possible. I know plenty of good and decent people who enjoy visiting Thailand.
My best guess is you are someone who thinks traveling is crossing county lines. Glad I’m not you.
July 12, 2024 @ 10:50 pm
We have no idea of Sturgill Simpson has left his family, let alone what or what he wasn’t doing in Thailand. What irresponsible, wild-ass assumptions. It’s comments like these that give these comments sections and SCM a bad reputation.
July 13, 2024 @ 7:31 am
Well i didnt say he left his family. You yourself pointed out that he spent two years in paris and kept in touch with his family. So you started that cause i wouldnt have known that. Keeping in touch doesnt mean having lots of visits, it means phone calls or texts, etc. I think stuff like that is fair game when talking about an artist whether it be a news article or a music review. You had no problem talking about wallens issues during his album reviews. I would consider having minimal contact with your family over two years maybe more cause i didnt know anything about thailand, is worse than what wallen did by a lot. Like i said, it was part of your review so to me its fair game. Just my opinion.
July 16, 2024 @ 6:14 am
does wild speculative bull like this at all play into why the server company doesn’t want to host scm anymore?
July 16, 2024 @ 6:37 am
Absolutely not.
July 12, 2024 @ 6:14 pm
Man him blowing out his vocals on that tour is a “what if” for me on what could have been. I saw him last night he played in Raleigh and you’re right even then he seemed to be having a good time and jamming and the band was great. Just wish that run lasted a lot longer.
July 12, 2024 @ 6:19 pm
At least Silverada had a reason behind the change. This here just seems kind of bullshit.
July 12, 2024 @ 7:18 pm
I don’t know. I still appreciate a true tortured artist which I believe Sturgill to authentically be (vs that bullshit that actually makes an album that calls itself that). Would I want to be married to it? Probably not. But that’s where I find the most beautiful music. Not just Sturgill but the other desperate souls that came before him. Sturgill is (IMHO) an actual artist in a current sea of corporate performers. But to each their own Is suppose.
July 12, 2024 @ 7:41 pm
I know you’re not directly comparing this to “Sound and Fury,” but I’m not sure I would even put this in the same universe. To me, this album is just as much country as it is anything. It’s four country songs, two extended cosmic rock songs, and R&B thing, and kind of a mishmash song. It also gives folks an opportunity to ignore what they don’t like, and find something they do.
But I understand that if you’ve soured on Sturgill, this album isn’t exactly going to pull you right back into the fold.
July 12, 2024 @ 7:57 pm
Classic example of confirmation bias right here folks
July 12, 2024 @ 8:19 pm
“ any of this self-tortured, artsy bullshit”….
Yeah and what makes it worse is that we know what he was capable of before he got so self-indulgent and full of himself.
July 12, 2024 @ 5:42 pm
When Corb Lund writes tunes, they are about something that maybe he knows about or maybe he doesn’t, but they are written not about his feelings, life; story, etc. This album, by contrast, has a ton of “I” and “me” in there. I, me, and love just seem to be the lowest hanging fruit. I am obviously not wanting Sturgill to write songs about his missing Five Dollar Bill or anything like that, But I think we should understand that Sturgill was not nirvana in the scheme of country music history.
This was a good album to kick back and enjoy rather than wanted to listen to while putting dirt into the soles of your boots.
July 12, 2024 @ 6:12 pm
I had a belly laugh at the Five Dollar Bill reference. Thanks for the laugh.
July 17, 2024 @ 8:55 am
All the “I” and “me” style of songwriting, with constant references to personal depression, trauma, bitterness, and frustration was my main gripe about Sound & Fury. It was just, lyrically, such a “selfish” album and I hear some of that here too.
My preferred genre as a young teen was grunge/alternative rock and there was so much of that style of songwriting in that music, so much whining and complaining – with Kurt Cobain reaching the inevitable conclusion of that impulse by killing himself – I just swore off of that kind of stuff afterward. It’s not ironic to me that Sturgill covered Cobain’s music and seems to have drawn personal parallels with Cobain, with those parallels echoed and reinforced in the media on a variety of levels.
I just don’t have a lot of patience for whining and sulking in my music anymore, unless it’s done with some sense of irony, self-awareness, wry songcraft, or compelling storytelling – which is why country music resonates with me these days. I just don’t identify with a successful musician living a charmed life, whining about how sad they are or, worse yet, how disrespected and entitled they feel (“that old radio still won’t play me”). Sturgill frequently walks that line – it strikes me as lazy, immature, and tone deaf, but I get that some fans find vicarious enjoyment in it.
July 12, 2024 @ 11:45 pm
I think Sturgill is just a brilliant businessperson. He didn’t lie about not releasing any more albums. It was a great marketing ploy; just rebrand, lol. Builds instant hype when he announces it out of the blue. Then he gets people commenting on him losing his mind and leaving his wife. Plays into it in the interview. I could be completely wrong but seems like ol boy is trolling us.
July 13, 2024 @ 11:16 am
If Sturgill was all about business, he’d have taken the words “name recognition” into account.
On a site like this people know everything about him – but in the real world (and the size of arenas Sturgill used to play tell us he’s crossed over there) the name Johnny Blue Skies will mean a lot less.
I’ve got the music in front of me and I wish I had not yet read all this stuff beforehand. I should have been able to listen to it without any preconceptions. But it is what it is.
I feel like I have read too much about his private life and I feel like an intruder there.
I do not want to judge what is going on – we do not know what is happening and it is quite probably intensely complicated. I am going to say that in the years before “Dood and Juanita” it seemed from the outside that all Sturgill wanted was security for himself and his loved ones and the peace of his own ranch.
It must have been frustrating to find out that happiness still did not arrive once he achieved all that. Depression is a bitch. I had a few years in my twenties when I had thoughts about undoing myself everyday and I am so happy these days are behind me. I have found a capacity within me to appreciate the nice little things happening. All I wish for Sturgill is that he will find a similar equilibrium.
By the way is anyone going to pick up on the fact that Jake Bugg, the UK singer, is his guitarist on here? I’ve met him a few times. Not a man of many words, but those words are on point. Typical english bloke. He made one of his records in Nashville, i guess that is where the connection was formed.
Steve Mackey, is that Steve Mackey of the band Pulp who passed away last year? He was doing a lot of session and production work with UK indie artists. But there happens to be more than one esteemed musician with that name, so it might be somebody else.
July 13, 2024 @ 12:25 am
I think it’s time to call a spade a spade. Sturgill Simpson peaked with Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, and it’s been downhill and plateauing since. Had he not insisted on abandoning playing his songs as pure country, as his Bluegrass albums showed, the overall sink would’ve been mitigated, but as he didn’t, so it wasn’t.
Also, what the hell is going on production-wise on there? There’s a clear vocal tampering on the songs, I hesitate to call autotune on it, but there are some parts, especially the slower songs that it’s really noticeable, and some other effects are thrown around unnecessarily. Like (I believe) everyone I keep waiting for the Sturgil Simpson of Metamodern Sounds to reappear, but let’s face it, he released now 4 albums since, and they were either bad, lukewarm or just meh.
July 13, 2024 @ 5:37 am
As a lover of multiple genres and as someone who appreciates genre blending I couldn’t disagree with you more.
July 13, 2024 @ 9:32 am
I’m not criticizing Simpson for genre blending, I’m criticizing him for writing mediocre songs and also for not showcasing them in the best possible way, and also for not genre blending as much as genre diluting, watering it all down to what is basically soft rock.
As an example I gave his Bluegrass albums where his lesser works from A Sailor’s Guide to Earth were uplifted by the new arrangement and by not being straddled down by the overall Soft-Rockish production of that album. Anything he did past that, Country or not, was simply not good, and his latest, while not as bad as Sound and Fury or as milquetoast as The Ballad of Dood & Juanita, is another not good album in a sequence of not good albums of different genres.
July 13, 2024 @ 10:13 am
Just feel the need to chime in here and say that though I respect everyone’s opinion about this album and specifically agree about the vocal signal issues on some of the songs, it an opinion that Simpson peaked with “Metamodern” and everything he’s done since has been subpar.
I’d say that for 3/4 of the people listening to this album, their take is overwhelmingly positive, including some saying it’s their album of the year so far, and that it is a return to form for Sturgill. There is also negative sentiment, and I understand that. But I personally don’t think it’s fair to hold Sturgill to the standard of releasing a second masterpiece, or to expect him to restart what was basically his high school band in Sunday Valley, and if he doesn’t do this, everything subsequently is subpar.
I gave “Sound & Fury” a 5/10. I had concerns with “Sailor’s Guide” and “Dood & Juanita.” I think this album is the best he’s done since “Metamodern,” and probably the closest work he’s done to Metamodern since that release. Nothing will hold up to Metamodern because it’s a once-in-a-lifetime album. But that doesn’t make everything else bad.
Just my thoughts.
July 14, 2024 @ 12:40 am
See, here’s my point, I agree with your assessment of his work post Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, and therefore claim his output’s level basically collapsed, which is not a critique, most artists in our field of popular music has this issue with peaking and then collapsing and plateauing. I can name 10 such artists off of the top of my head, those that do manage to either maintain a level of quality or even surpass their initial effort are the exception, not the norm. However, and this is the interesting point here, is that his failures created a lower expectations situation which he managed to exceed, and I have to admit, my initial response was “oh, this *is* better than his previous works”, but then I realized this was less of a qualifier in itself and more of a statement of how his previous efforts were not good. Most people seem to want a good Sturgill Simpson album, and therefore are basically looking at the slight improvement over his previous ones as proof positive that “he’s back” and that this is a “return to form”. It may be, depends on what you think his “form” is. If we’re looking at his OK-to-good Americana-Rockish overall quality of his work sans his best one, then yes, it’s a triumph of an album. I think he can do much better. We have apparently gone from “don’t hold an artists worst album as a proof of his badness” to “don’t hold him to the standards of his best work”. His best album showed what he can do if all engines are firing in sync and he’s giving it a 100% effort and not getting distracted by anything. I don’t expect him to produce nothing but classics, but I do expect him to write good songs, and display them in the best style and arrangement (and production) that will make them shine as best as they can. He has not managed to achieve those in what is now a 4 albums run. There were good songs in all 4, there were good country songs in all 4, and there were moments I liked in all 4. I just can’t say that, judging on those four album run, that I can hold Sturgill Simpson to any position of greatness he achieved with his first two solo albums. And that is my opinion of his.
July 13, 2024 @ 5:12 am
“Flattery is a dangerous thing, because sometimes people believe it” – J. Vernon McGee
July 13, 2024 @ 6:05 am
It’s just ok.
I was really hoping for a Sunday Valley, country punk rock sound but hey.. Sturg never gives you what you expect and in that regard it is a great album. But for Sturgill.. it’s just ok.
New Sturgill in any capacity is still new Sturgill so I’ll be playing it too much and loving every second of it.
July 13, 2024 @ 6:21 am
Alright, so I finally got around to a full spin, and I must say it was an absolutely pleasurable listen. It’s nice when an artist gets to a point in their career where they can do whatever they want and not worry about monetary trappings or what the critics/peanut gallery says. I love variety, and Sturge delivers it. I think the vocal effects were unneeded, but didn’t bother me overall. I’ll be slotting this in with the morning drive slots now occupied by Kimmi, Kaitlin, and Hannah Dasher. I’d also like to thank Sturgill for not making me pick through 18 songs to find the good ones because I like them all.
July 13, 2024 @ 6:24 am
Hey Trig I screwed up the link in my website header above and somehow my email got in there can you delete that part please thanks
July 13, 2024 @ 6:38 am
I’ve been a critic of Sturgil over the last few years, but I tried to give this album a fair listen. I have to say, I don’t hate it. But I don’t love it either.
Firstly, the music. I like the instrumentation on several of the songs here, but the vocals on much of the album are weak. Not sure if Sturgel is purposely trying to shed his past vocal stylings, but several of the songs have him sounding tentative. Odd for a guy who is seemingly always trying to portray himself as confident and smarter than everyone else. The vocals on If The Sun Never Rises Again are simply horrible, which is too bad because it’s one of the better songs on the album. Not surprising, the best vocals on this album come in the form of the two most country songs Who I Am and Mint Tea.
Secondly, the band/album name. The Johnny Blue Skies/Sturgel Simpson name just seems lame. Sturgel walked himself into a corner with his 5 albums proclamation, and instead of just simply saying, Hey, I changed my mind, he comes up with a supposed band featuring the same musicians from his solo albums. He comes up with the Johnny name for this supposed band release, but apparently fearing no one would notice, tacks Sturgil Simpson on the end. And what the hell is a Passage Du Desir? Sturgel Simpson is the controlling force on this album. Just call it Sturgel Simpson, because that’s what it is.
While this album is an improvement over Sailors or Sound and Fury in my opinion, in all honesty this album, from the band name, album name, and the singing of the songs, seems to have an overall feel of uncertainty. For as much as Sturgil downplays the role of Dave Cobb in his success, the fact is that he has lacked direction since they parted ways. You have to wonder if this album would have gone from ok to at least pretty good with Dave at the helm?
July 13, 2024 @ 9:13 am
Passage Du Desir is from the part of Paris he was living when the album was written
July 14, 2024 @ 5:53 pm
Not suer why you care what new name he uses, you can’t even spell the old one correctly.
July 15, 2024 @ 3:25 pm
You’re right, I did misspell his name, and apparently in more than one way. Thanks for correcting my comment lol.
Honestly, I don’t care what he names his project. Just making fun of his obvious attempt to try and skirt his proclamation by calling this a band project, then attaching his name at the end just in case someone doesn’t know who it is. It’s funny. That doesn’t mean I’m losing sleep over it.
July 13, 2024 @ 7:29 am
Sturgill strikes me as a wandering spirit. He was in the Navy, worked for the railroad and has been a touring musician. Some people are just that way, they need to be on the move. I would presume his wife Sarah knows this about him and has dealt with him being away from home for long stretches. I believe Sturgill has three sons, so as how they deal with that, well that’s between Sturgill and Sarah. He’s protected his family’s privacy over the years and from the GQ article, still does. I like the new album; i like the ongoing changes he brings to his music, it mirrors his adventuring spirit. Anyone listening to him who expects him to settle playing one genre of music will likely be disappointed over the musical changes in Sturgill’s career. The whole musical and persona changes date back to David Bowie, so that’s nothing new. Bowie said he’d stop playing his early hits and changed his mind. He did arty music, top 40 then joined a rock and noise band for two albums and then changed direction again. I’m ot suggesting Sturgill is a new Bowie, just suggesting some artists just like to roam about exploring.
July 13, 2024 @ 7:37 am
Very fair statement and artist should be able to do this. But it doesnt mean someone cant have an opinion on it. Also just because someone does different stuff, doesnt mean its good in somes eyes.
July 14, 2024 @ 5:17 am
Unique doesn’t automatically equal good.
Well said.
July 13, 2024 @ 7:31 am
I like Sturgill, but Cody Jinks is my favorite. He “changed the game” & he’s a good dude.
July 13, 2024 @ 8:56 am
First off, unless Trig got an advance copy he must have been up all night to write such an in depth and quality review so early the morning after its release. Great review Trigger. I haven’t been able to turn this album off since Friday morning to even take time to check out anything else that came out. Every listen reveals something new and a different favorite track. I love the variety of style, vocals, instrumentation, theme and tempo. Not sure yet if this is my AOTY but it has absolutely captivated me thus far. No idea when it will let go so I can check out Hold My Beer Vol. 4.
July 14, 2024 @ 7:57 pm
Cody didn’t change anything. He had a couple
great albums and then got stale as fuck and preachy.
July 13, 2024 @ 10:42 am
I have the same problem him as I do Childers. They both are so openly sjw woke and in your face about it, that it ruins the music of both for me. Im not into being lectured about politics.
July 15, 2024 @ 5:27 pm
Yet, you are lecturing us about your own politics in the comments section…
July 13, 2024 @ 12:18 pm
To my ears i only hear one true country song with the rest being pretty much Americana. I think overall its a good album, but not sure i will come back to it much
July 13, 2024 @ 5:25 pm
Very surprised to see that Simpson picked Jake Bugg to appear on the album. He was a pretty big deal here in the UK in the early 2010s and has continued releasing albums to a more limited success since. He’s mostly known for indie rock but has some country/folkier inspired songs across his discography. He’s a great guitar player who I was lucky enough to see live in 2018, but I’m very curious about how he got on Simpson’s radar.
July 14, 2024 @ 4:00 am
A quick comment while half-way through the GQ piece: So nice to see him give a respectful nod to JJ Cale. All hail the great JJ!
July 14, 2024 @ 4:30 am
Yeah. Scooter Blues makes me think of JJ Cale. Nice little funky groove.
July 14, 2024 @ 5:38 am
I just finished writing a book chapter on the whole individualism explosion of the nineteenth century (inspired in large part by the American and French Revolutions; benchmarks include Emerson’s “Self Reliance essay and the Romantic movement) and I find the discussion here fascinating for how it captures the tensions all of that created and that persist right here in the reactions to this album. For one thing, those tensions are embodied in Saving Country Music as a whole because the title seems to allude to traditional country music (when I tell people I like country music I sometimes feel it necessary to add, “George Jones, not Garth Brooks”) but anyone who follows the site knows that Trigger is as open to innovation as anyone, including in his review of this album. Two commenters here embody that tension: one says he’s tired of “self-tortured artsy bullshit” another says she appreciates “a true tortured artist which I believe Sturgil to authentically be.” I understand how Metamodern Sounds in Country Music is considered a “true” country album, which despite its title it pretty much is, musically, but its references to psychedelics aren’t traditional at all. I’m by nature conservative (I hate travel, for one thing) but I admire artists who won’t let themselves be pigeon-holed. (I like the mention of Bowie above. Bob Dylan is another example.) The Romantics produced a lot of great art, but yea, their lives in many cases were messy. Some people seem to need to take those chances, and Johnny Blue Skies is obviously one.
July 14, 2024 @ 5:55 pm
I’m imagining this album released in 1994. Colombia house and BMG are still going strong. They look at my past purchases and send me as my automatic selection for the month this new “Johnny Blue Skies” CD. I give it a listen because I really, really liked his first two albums. “It’s okay”, I think, and I really want to like it, but I can’t see myself really ever listening to it again. I forget to send it back and I get billed for it. I’m pissed that I now own a CD that I don’t really like, but every two years or so, I’ll dig it out and listen to it again, forgetting that I was never really enamored with it in the first place. In other words, it’s about like all of the other releases to me post -Metamodern. It’s just…ok…
July 14, 2024 @ 6:37 pm
This is an absolute masterpiece by one of the last true auteur musicians left in the world. sailors Guide and Metamodern are my 2 favorites depending on what day you ask me and Passage seems to split the difference between the two while adding new textures and nods to other things Sturgill has done.
There are some amazing lines from the clever (eggo/lego/hasta luego) to the profound (I wish that happiness left scars…)
I get the sense that Sturgill is suffering from depression, so do I and so many others…I needed this album now in my life. I hope Stu finds his peace and that he finds it with his family, but we all take different journies to get there.
July 14, 2024 @ 9:28 pm
Hey Doug, I’m not sure how long you’ve been commenting here but I’ve missed your insights to this point. I like your style man.
In terms of this album specifically, I think it’s a great curve ball. Especially relative to that last rock anime deal he did, which wasn’t for me. But so what? He’s talented, original, interesting, and out there. So, in appreciation for, and in anticipation of what’s different and new I’ve kept an open mind. For my sensibilities this is a great reward.
To the folks not liking it, fine and good, it’s all subjective anyways. Don’t buy whats not appealing to you. But I’d suggest that he’s right at the tip of the spear of new and evolving music that’s important to readers of this site, in a good way. I mean this is head and shoulders above techno right? IMO you’re missing out if all you’re wanting is the next cool bluegrass / country stuff he’s already done quite well. I’ll bet a bunch of pesos that this is “the” guy a whole lot of us are gonna tell our grandkids about seeing back in the day. Who else is cutting a similar path? And that’s about all I can ask for, to not be bored. And in my humble opinion, if you’re bored with this, you’re not paying attention.
** Also, Doug, I understand the Garth comment. Low hanging piñata. But if you haven’t already, do yourself a favor and listen to his first album. He started with a legit country bang….
July 16, 2024 @ 11:18 am
Just gave it a listen through. Lefty commented that this sounded like Americana Yacht Rock, and that’s exactly what it is. This sounds like a Poco album from the late 70’s. Although, Scooter Blues could be a Jimmy Buffett song from the Mid-80’s.
July 18, 2024 @ 12:17 pm
Poco were a great band.
July 17, 2024 @ 2:04 pm
I don’t get it. This album is some Barry Manilow boring shit. Nothing country about it. If you like slow, meandering pretentious light contemporary adult rock shit, you’ll love this. I’m done with Sturgill.
July 17, 2024 @ 2:29 pm
“Nothing country about it.”
If “Who I Am” and “Mint Tea” aren’t country, I’ll eat my hat.
If you don’t like it, that’s a matter of taste, and I respect that.
July 17, 2024 @ 7:36 pm
Only two I can stomach, and I will concede they are country. Barely. What is the rest? I respect artists to do whatever they want. I’m glad he earned the freedom to pursue his artistic desires. He made a legendary album.
Everything else has gone steadily downhill. But this album blows. BLOWS.
July 18, 2024 @ 7:03 am
I have been really enjoying this album. Many repeated listens. That is all I can ask for. It does seem like a breath of fresh air in many ways. Sturgill is always good for that IMO. Really looking forward to the live show.
July 18, 2024 @ 11:40 am
After taking the time to listen and ponder, it is probably Album of the Year for me. Refreshing to hear something different than Zach Bryan or Wyatt Flores style of music, although I do recognize their talent – probably showing my age because it seems the younger generation can’t get enough.
July 29, 2024 @ 5:06 pm
Though not country… Brian Wilson got unfavorable reviews for adding highbrow (?) Sounds to The Beach Boys Pet Sounds. Now considered a masterpiece. Avett Brothers currently getting favorable reviews for doing so. I agree with your opinion that Sturgill’s Passage Du Desir is off the charts wonderful.
August 28, 2024 @ 11:02 am
This is Sturgill’s Pink Floyd album. And it’s excellent.