Sunday, January 25, 2026

ROUTES-cast January 26, 2026

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
January 26, 2026
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust


This week's haul features quality stuff from British rock outfit Langkamer, and a project that finds Sammy Brue partnering with the late Justin Townes Earle. We're also drawn to the return of talented folk duo Lowest Pair, and the reliably reliable Lucinda Williams. 


IF YOU ONLY LiSTEN to ONE RECORD THiS WEEK

Under the marquee of Sophie and the Broken Things, Sophie Gault delivered an excellent 2022 debut in Delusions Of Grandeur, and followed it as a solo artist with an even more promising Baltic Street Hotel in '24. Gault returns with well-earned confidence for Unhinged (Torrez, January 23), a session which suggests she merits a place alongside Margo Price as one of the foremost artists in our sort of music. 

Where those first albums dwelt on the songwriter's relationships and mental wellbeing, there is a looseness and abandon to Gault's new set. With producers Alex Torrez and David Dorn, the record boasts a live, guitars-forward mix. Atop its nasty groove, the title cut remarks, If winning was whiskey / We'd be on a binge. Her run through Robert Johnson's "Stop Breaking Down" turbo fuels the original, at the crossroads of alt.country and juke joint blues. 

Sophie Gault is a strong writer, but demonstrates a personal touch on tunes by Buck Owens, Mando Saenz and others. Unhinged explodes with her take on "Love's Gonna Live Here", splitting the difference between Bakersfield and Memphis. The original "Last Call Rock and Roll" is a nod to country-rock, while "Merlot Dodge Dart" simmers: I must admit it felt so good / When I dug my key into the hood. Gault celebrates the undersung Gurf Morlix on a cover of his "Is There Anyone Out There", laying down a lovely, soulful vocal. 

The songwriter has acknowledged that Unhinged isn't the project she initially expected to record, but fate and label politics intervened to encourage this largely live-in-studio rock 'n roots session. Recording alongside seasoned pros like Fred Eltringham, Adam Kurtz, and Sol Littlefield, Sophie Gault has produced a deeply satisfying reminder of the valued places where rock rubs shoulders with country and blues for a shot of last call rock and roll


ROUTES-cast January 25, 2026

^ Sophie Gault, "Merlot Dodge Dart" Unhinged  (Torrez, 26)
- Sammy Brue, "Older Than I Thought I'd Ever Be" The Journals  (Bloodshot, 26)
- Pokey LaFarge, "Pickup Truck" Travelin' With Pokey LaFarge  (ONErp, Feb 13)
- Jobi Riccio, "Buzzkill" single  (Yep Roc, 26)  D
- Milk Carton Kids, "Friend Like You" Lost Cause Lover Fool  (Far Cry, Apr 24)  D
- Clover Country, "Airpark" Finer Things (Deluxe Edition)  (Undercover Lover, 26)
- Bill Callahan, "Stepping Out For Air" My Days Of 58  (Drag City, Feb 27)
- Spencer Cullum, "Rowan Tree" Coin Collection Vol 3  (Full Time Hobby, Mar 27)  D
- Lowest Pair, "Diamonds" As Young As We'll Ever Be  (Delicata, 26)
- Montvales, "World Of Trouble" Path Of Totality  (Free Dirt, Mar 20)  D
- Glass Hours, "Not Your Ordinary Heart" Chapel Glass  (Cornelius Chapel, 26)  D
- Donovan Woods, "I Talk About You" Squander Your Gifts EP  (Meant Well, Feb 27)  D
- Molly Parden, "I Envy the Wind" single  (Parden, 26)  D
- Natalie Prauser, "Dice" Everything Is Fine  (Prauser, 26)  D
- Hannah White, "Melody Of Love (ft Dirk Powell)" single  (Last Music Co, 26)  D
- Bella White, "Dream Song" single  (Rounder, 26)
- Cat Clyde, "Another Time" Mud Blood Bone  (Concord, Mar 13)  D
- John Craigie, "Edna Strange" I Swam Here  (Zabriskie Point, Feb 6)
- Leah Blevins, "Diggin' In the Coal" All Dressed Up  (Easy Eye, Mar 20) 
- Danny George Wilson, "Distant Seasons" Arcade  (Loose, Mar 20)  D
- Old 97s, "Off My Mind" single  (ATO, 26)  D
- John Andrews & the Yawns, "Something To Be Said" Streetsweeper  (Earth Libraries, Apr 3)  D
- Wendy Eisenberg, "Meaning Business" Wendy Eisenberg  (Joyful Noise, Apr 3)
- Lindsey Troy, "Love Is Deeper" single  (Troy, 26)  D
- Builders and the Butchers, "Blood/Death" No Tomorrow  (Badman, Apr 3)  D
- Langkamer, "Summer That I Hit the Wall" No  (Breakfast, 26)
- New Pornographers, "Votive" Former Site Of  (Merge, Mar 27)  D
- Courtney Barnett, "Site Unseen (ft Waxahatchee)" Creature Of Habit  (Mom + Pop, Mar 27)  D
- White Denim, "(God Created) Lock and Key" 13  (Bella Union, Apr 24)  D
- Cat Power, "Nothing Compares 2 U" Redux EP  (Domino, 26)  

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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview:


Sunday, January 18, 2026

ROUTES-cast January 18, 2026

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
January 18, 2026
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust


ROUTES-cast January 18, 2026

^ Courtney Marie Andrews, "Everyone Wants To Feel Like You Do" Valentine  (Loose Future, 26)
- Boy Golden, "Like a Child" Best Of Our Possible Lives  (Six Shooter, Feb 13)
- Aubrie Sellers, "Subatomic" Attachment Theory  (Carnival, Mar 20)
- Langhorne Slim, "Strange Companion" Dreamin' Kind  (Dualtone, 26)
- Julianna Riolino, "Don't Put Me In the Middle" Echo In the Dust (Deluxe)  (MoonWhistle, Feb 27)
- Tyler Ballgame, "Matter Of Taste" For the First Time Again  (Rough Trade, Jan 30)  D
- Crooked Fingers, "Haunted (ft Sharon Van Etten)" Swet Deth  (Merge, Feb 27)
- Charlotte Cornfield, "Hurts Like Hell" Hurts Like Hell  (Merge, Mar 27)  D
- Ora Cogan, "Honey" Hard Hearted Woman  (Sacred Bones, Mar 13)  D
- Katzin, "Nantucket" Buckaroo  (Mexican Summer, Feb 13)  D
- Luke Winslow-King, "Dangerous Blues" Coast Of Light  (Bloodshot, Mar 27)  D
- Cut Worms, "Windows On the World" Transmitter  (Jagjaguwar, Mar 13)  D
- Son Little, "Be Better" Cityfolk  (Anti, Mar 20)  D
- Third Mind, "Reap What You Sow" Spellbinder!  (Yep Roc, Mar 13)  D
- Natalie Jane Hill, "I Thought Love Meant" Hopeful Woman  (Dear Life, Mar 6)
- Big Richard, "Millionaire" Pet  (Signature Sounds, Feb 6)
- Jeffrey Martin, "Garden (Live)" Alive July 25 2025  (Fluff & Gravy, Feb 20)
- David Huckfelt, "Any Way the Wind Blows" I Was Born But ...  (Don Giovanni, 26)
- Jeremy Ivey, "Don't Sleep On Your Dreams" Shape Will Reveal Itself  (Soggy Anvil, Feb 13)
- Hayes Carll, "If We Don't Try (ft Ashley McBryde)" We're Only Human (Deluxe Edition)  (Hwy 87, 26)
- Drayton Farley, "I'll Hold You" A Heavy Duty Heart  (Hargrove, Mar 27)  D
- Band Of Heathens, "Take the Cake" Country Sides  (BoH, Feb 20)
- Nude Party, "Walk That Walk" Look Who's Back  (Nude Party, Feb 13)
- Flatland Cavalry, "Never Comin' Back" single  (Lost Highway, 26)  D
- Low Gap, "Appalachian Ohio" Geneva  (Cloverdale, 26)
- Morgan Nagler, "Grassoline" I've Got Nothing To Lose and I'm Losing It  (Little Operation, Mar 13)  D
- Ratboys, "The World So Madly" Singin' To An Empty Chair  (New West, Feb 6)
- Euphoria Again & Dogwood Tales, "It's Not Hard To Laugh" Destination Heaven  (Born Losers, 26)
- Olympians, "Strawberry Kiwi" In Search Of a Revival  (Daptone, Feb 13)
- Souled American, "Boom Boom" Sanctions  (Jealous Butcher, Apr 17)  D

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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview:


Sunday, January 11, 2026

ROUTES-cast January 11, 2026

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
January 11, 2026
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust

Those Big Music floodgates have a habit of restricting the flow of new stuff for the first several weeks of the new year. To begin 2026, however, there's been an unexpectedly strong bunch of new announcements. 

We've been enjoying Arbor Labor Union's new prog-folk Out to Pasture since it first snuck out on Bandcamp a few weeks ago. Jay Farrar and Shannon McNally released a very limited edition collection of duets last year that has finally been added to streaming services. We're also quite taken by Destination Heaven, the new collaborative project from Euphoria Again and Dogwood Tales. That said ...

IF YOU ONLY LiSTEN to ONE RECORD THiS WEEK

It's not unusual this time of year to entertain doubts and second-guesses about our year-end favorites. With our thorough awareness of pivotal new releases from week-to-week, what's more unexpected is coming across a record that might have earned a prominent ranking had we been aware of it. 

From British Columbia, Theresa Anne Bromley released her debut full-length as Pony Gold in October. While High Road Reverie (Neon Moon, Oct 3) did receive a bit of attention in Canada, the record escaped notice further south. Produced by longtime artist, musician, and producer Leeroy Stagger, and supported by members of City and Colour, Deep Dark Woods, and other notables, the collection should at least have caught the ears of bloggers driven by new music discovery. But we whiffed on Pony Gold.

Bromley's story isn't entirely unique - absent father, addiction, trying to escape that small-ass town. As Pony Gold, however, she tells her story exceptionally well, leaving us with loose ends and more than a couple unresolved issues. There's nowhere but up from here, she sings, accompanied by Kendel Carson's fiddle on one of the album's chasing the dream tunes. Joined by her brother Matt on slide guitar, "Big In the City" resonates like a country radio ringer, Now it's someday and I'm looking back. Bromley's melodic gift carries "Impossible Dream" as well, a song that portrays the narrator balancing responsibilities and bad habits: Spent my last ten dollars to get me gone

Reverie delivers no fewer than three (3) excellent songs, bolstered with Stagger's full-service production. Just as captivating are the cuts that dial back the live studio band, encouraging the singer's voice and story to the fore. "Wait For Me" coaxes the Patty Griffin-like soul from Bromley: Where the fuck has time gone. "Little Horse" and "From a Jail in Washington" succeed in translating her very personal stories onto a larger stage without sacrificing the intimacy. Coping with the added challenge of addiction, the songwriter never casts blame for her lot on anyone but herself. On the Lucinda-esque "Angel of Misery", Bromley confesses, I've been the wreckage and the cause

Those more introspective moments tend to gather toward the record's close, but offer an alternative impression from the tracks with fuller production. "Love Song" features a crunchy guitar solo, with writing that evokes Waxahatchee's americana series, and "Montreal" splits the difference between honky-tonk country and bar band blues. Like Clover Country (to whom we did pay attention), or Sophie Gault, Theresa Anne Bromley should be supported as among the stronger up-and-coming artists in our kind of music. 


ROUTES-cast January 11, 2026

^ Pony Gold, "Big In the City" High Road Reverie  (Neon Moon, 25)
- Anna Tivel, "Memphis" Animal Poem B-sides EP  (Fluff & Gravy, Mar 6)
- Cordovas, "Back to Life" Back to Life  (Yep Roc, Jan 30)
- Jay Farrar & Shannon McNally, "Blood On the Tea Leaves" Don't Ya Take It Too Bad  (Transmit Sound, 25)  D
- Emily Scott Robinson, "Hymn For the Unholy" Appalachia  (Oh Boy, Jan 30)
- John Craigie, "Dry Land" I Swam Here  (Zabriskie Point, Feb 6)
- Sammy Brue, "Love At a Glance" The Journals  (Bloodshot, Jan 23)
- Jared Hart, "Ready To Go (ft Ben Nichols)" single  (Mt Crushmore, 26)  D
- Joe Pernice, "Black and the Blue" Sunny I Was Wrong  (New West, Apr 3)  D
- Chicago Farmer, "Mattress" Homeaid  (LoHi, Mar 6)
- Yarn, "Good Things" Saturday Night Sermon  (333, Apr 24)  D
- Pert Near Sandstone, "Pipe Dream" Side By Side  (PNS, Feb 27)
- Clay Street Unit, "Drive" Sin & Squalor  (LEO33, Feb 13)
- Brit Taylor, "Warning You Whiskey" Land Of the Forgotten  (Cut A Shine, Mar 6)  D
- Zach Bryan, "Plastic Cigarette" With Heaven On Top  (Belting Bronco, 26)  D
- Tyler Halverson, "Like the Rodeo (ft Wade Forster)" In Defense Of Drinking  (Big Hit Herefords, Feb 13)
- Euphoria Again & Dogwood Tales, "At Least I'm Not Lonely Tonight" Destination Heaven  (Born Losers, 26)  D
- August Ponthier, "I'm Crying Are You" Everywhere Isn't Texas  (Nowhereland, Feb 13)  D
- Meels, "Vultures" Across the Raccoon Strait EP  (Lost Highway, Jan 30)  D
- Melissa Carper & Theo Lawrence, "Good Luck To Ya" Havin' a Talk  (Warner, Feb 6)
- Bonnie Prince Billy, "They Keep Trying To Find You" We Are Together Again  (No Quarter, Mar 6)  D
- Iron & Wine, "In Your Ocean" Hen's Teeth  (Sub Pop, Feb 27)  D
- Buck Meek, "Gasoline" The Mirror  (4AD, Feb 27)  D
- Young Fresh Fellows, "Destination (ft Neko Case) " Loft  (Yep Roc, Mar 27)  D
- Daniel Romano, "Autopoiet" Preservers Of the Pearl  (You've Changed, Mar 13)  D
- Jay Buchanan, "True Black" Weapons Of Beauty  (Sacred Tongue, Feb 6)
- Jesper Lindell, "Drift Away" 3614 Jackson Highway  (Yep Roc, Mar 6)
- Olympians, "Honey Bea" In Search Of a Revival  (Daptone, Feb 13)  D
- Parlor Greens, "Eat Your Greens" Emeralds  (Colemine, Mar 27)  D
- Arbor Labor Union, "Out To Pasture" Out To Pasture  (Sophomore Lounge, 26)  D

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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview:


Sunday, January 04, 2026

ROUTES-cast January 4, 2026

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
January 4, 2026
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust

That audible <click> you noticed was the universal calendar turning over a new year. Like others who take advantage of the reset to quit smoking or to develop healthier habits, here at R&B HQ we're making resolutions for another year of music discovery. And also the healthier habits ...

Even in this bleak midwinter, we find signs and signifiers of new stuff just beneath the snow's surface. A couple of the entries below hail from 2025 releases we're just finding out about (ie, Adam Faucett and Pony Gold), while many (many) others provide glimpses of what's on the horizon in the first days of the year to come. Of course, you can find a generous accounting of what's to come at A Routes & Branches Guide To Feeding Your Monster

So Happy 2026 to all who celebrate! Please spin the following Routes-cast as  you're sweeping up the tree needles and fallen tinsel, while you're planning your tiny rebellions for the coming months. We'll do the same as we put our year-in-review in our rear-review mirror and plot our course for music discovery. 


ROUTES-cast January 4, 2026

^ Adam Faucett, "Won't Let Your Heart Break Me Now" New Variations Of the Reaper  (Gold Sounds, 25)  D
- Jeffrey Martin, "Out On the Weekend (live)" Alive July 25 2025  (Fluff & Gravy, Feb 20)
- Anna Tivel, "Swan Song" Animal Poem B-Sides EP  (Fluff & Gravy, Mar 6)  D
- Lowest Pair, "Tiny Rebellions" Always As Young As We'll Ever Be  (Delicata, Jan 23)
- Caleb Caudle, "I've Endured" single  (Caudle, 25)  D
- Drayton Farley, "It's Called Doubt" single  (Hargrove, 25)
- Owen Temple, "Fats Domino" single  (El Paisano, 25)  D
- Pokey LaFarge, "Ain't No Grave (ft Addie Hamilton)" Travelin' With Pokey LaFarge: Voice and Guitar Vol 1  (ONErpm, Feb 13)  D
- Leah Blevins, "Be Careful Throwing Stones" All Dressed Up  (Easy Eye, Mar 20)
- Jesper Lindell, "Pretend I Never Happened" 3614 Jackson Highway  (Brunsvik, Mar 6)  D
- Band of Heathens, "No Direction" Country Sides  (BoH, Feb 20)
- Dove Ellis, "Jaundice" Blizzard  (Black Butter, 25)
- Matthew Doc Dunn, "Snow in Memphis" Here We Are  (Cosmic Range, 25)  D
- Jeremy Ivey, "Edge of Darkness" Shape Will Reveal Itself  (Soggy Anvil, Feb 13)  D
- Will Stewart, "Familiar Veils" Memory Man EP  (Earth Libraries, 25)
- Pony Gold, "Love Song" High Road Reverie  (Neon Moon, 25)  D
- Merce Lemon & Fust, "Choices" single  (Trouble Chair, 25)
- One Wheel Fireworks Show, "You're a Line Drive" Jason Eternal  (OWFS, Jan 28)
- Nude Party, "Honey For the Barflies" Look Who's Back  (Nude Party, Feb 13)
- Haylie Davis, "Golden Age" single  (Fire, 25)
- Lukas Nelson, "A Certain Someone" American Romance Too  (Sony, 25)  D
- Della Mae, "Magic Accident" Magic Accident  (Compass, Jan 23)
- Melissa Carper & Theo Lawrence, "You're Forgiven My Love" Havin' a Talk  (Warner, Feb 6)
- West Texas Exiles, "Ace of Spades" single  (Floating Mesa, 25)  D
- Matt Kivel, "For the Roses" Escape From LA  (Scissor Tail, 25)
- Suzanne Santo, "Knew All Along" single  (Santo, 25)  D
- Victor Krummenacher, "Time Will Do Us No Favors" Block Out the Sun  (Veritas, 26)  D
- The Gunshy, "You're Only a Song" Hurricane Umbrellas  (Sleep, 25)
- Big Harp, "Boys Don't Cry" Runs to Blue  (Saddle Creek, Mar 27)  D
- Bill Callahan, "Lonely City" My Days of 58  (Drag City, Feb 27)

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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview:


Sunday, December 28, 2025

R&B FAVORiTE ALBUMS 2025

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 28, 2025
Scott Foley, purveyor of year-end lists

Nov 30: Favorite Covers
Dec 7: State of Americana
Dec 14: Favorite Songs
Dec 21: Christmas Christmas
Dec 28: Favorite Albums

Per our complex year-end calendar above, we've reached the close of 2025. Of course, we've listened to every single record on our Routes & Branches Guide to Feeding Your Monster, and we're confident in our feelings 'n favorites. 

At some point we've tried on most of our ten favorite albums for size, deciding fit and style to assess whether each would work as a year-end favorite. Some were just too itchy, while others made us look barrel-shaped. Over the past several days, everything has fallen into place nicely. While we realize that it's not really the LPs that make us look barrel-shaped, we've arrived at that peace that surpasses all understanding. We hope our thirty favorites below contain some surprises and some reassurances that Routes & Branches will continue to make you the coolest among your peers. 

Good news is that the spirit of music discovery remains strong, that there's never a time when we're despairing about the availability of excellent new stuff. And while this year has necessitated paring back our posts, we're confident that we haven't lost the bright thread that's carried us through the past eighteen (18) years of this thing. What passes for mainstream americana might seem stale and wheezing now and then, but we've never really respected those borders anyway - only five of our thirty favorites hold a place on the Americana Music Association's one-hundred most played records

So take a few minutes to stare at our annual list, waxing opinionated and casting aspersions as your time permits. We're grateful for our fellow bloggers who take the time to share their original thoughts and express their passions. We're especially pleased with our regular readers who continue to visit our humble online adobe in hopes of finding a couple things to add to their own playlists. And, of course, it would be harder to do this without the artists who push against the frontiers of our kind of music, those who dive deep and surface with something that changes the way we see our world, or at least gives us something neat to listen to while we wait for suppertime. 



WHAT's SO GREAT ABOUT 2025: FAVORiTE ALBUMS

1. Fust, Big Ugly  (Dear Life, Mar 7)
As we wrote presciently upon the record's release: How have I been, Dowdy wonders on the pretty "Heart Song", Have I been okay at living. This new project is a phenomenal step forward for Fust, beautifully broken but capable of great melody and genuine feeling. Like Richard Buckner's watermark Devotion + DoubtBig Ugly  is a terrific blend of quiet and noise, with Dowdy and cohort setting the early bar for the year's best album. 


2. Ryan Davis & Roadhouse Band, New Threats From the Soul  (Sophomore Lounge, Jul 5)
Who knew that the world yearned for extended, rambling alt.country? The second project from Davis and his outfit has made an unexpected appearance on several higher-profile year-end lists. No great surprise that the thing has appealed to us, with the proggy roots arrangements and enigmatic but good natured lyrics. As amiable as seven-minute tunes can be. 


3. Big Thief, Double Infinity  (4AD, Sep 5)
Boldly bursts the bubble built by Dragon New Warm Mountain, letting in the world. Sends Adrianne Lenker's intimate songs grooving into the cosmos. Who else is capable of growing from a whisper to a hallelujah without abandoning their thread?


4. Geese, Getting Killed  (Partisan, Sep 26)
Yes, us too. Cameron Winter 'n co. abandon themselves to the muse. With Getting Killed, Geese have created a sound both nostalgic and imminently current. In the midst of all the attention, we're both excited and afraid to hear what's next. 


5. Alan Sparhawk & Trampled by Turtles Alan Sparhawk & Trampled by Turtles  (Sub Pop, May 30)
A collaboration that was initially unimaginable, but one that has turned out to be brilliant. Essential. Sounds like nothing less that the Low veteran (indie rock) fronting a progressive roots outfit, and reveals unexpected shades for both. 


6. Weather Station, Humanhood  (Fat Possum, Jan 17)
Joni Mitchell is Joni Mitchell, but few if any artists are as worthy of carrying her mantle forward. Tamara Lindeman excels equally with folk, jazz, and electronic sounds, expressing warmth in arenas that can emphasize distance and difference. 


7. Ken Pomeroy, Cruel Joke  (Rounder, May 16)
Our first proper americana selection, if you're counting. Pomeroy's songs are simple and simply elegant, quietly confident like Anna Tivel or early Gillian Welch. Her plainspoken approach speaks volumes, her songs and delivery sufficient to lure and maintain our attention. 


8. Wednesday, Bleeds  (Dead Oceans, Sep 19)
While Karly Hartzman and her cohort are more strongly embraced by the indie crowd, Wednesday have become one of the hallmark acts in our kind of music. While still impressively eclectic and plenty noisy at times, Bleeds is more focused than '23's breakthrough, Hartzman's writing steadier. 


9. Brown Horse, All the Right Weaknesses  (Loose, Apr 4)
Here's what we said upon hearing the first single: Next to the printing press and penicillin, the corduroy fabric is among our greatest inventions. Running close behind is the singing voice of Brown Horse's Patrick Turner (followed by the light bulb). The UK band's 2024 album, Reservoir, was among our surprise favorites for the year. With its shared lead vocal from Phoebe Troup and a sweet little guitar line, "Corduroy Couch" might be a stronger song than anything on that debut. Incidentally, our favorite inventions list will be published next week, with graham crackers and fire also figuring in.  


10. Pigeon Pit, Crazy Arms  (Ernest Jenning, Jan 17)
From our review in the early days of the year: Perfection is overrated. Given the choice between polish and passion we'll gladly choose the latter, a quality flowing freely on the fourth LP from Olympia's Pigeon Pit. Frontwoman Lomes Oleander barks, gasps and emotes her songs, lyrics that passionate invoke friends and settings, bare sustenance and abandon. Crazy Arms is a breathless punk-folk howl. 

11. Florry, Sounds Like ...  (12XU, May 23)
The offbeat charm of Florry's third album is the product of Francie Medosch's offbeat sound and sensibility. Alongside her evolving cast of collaborators, Florry's riff-happy country-rock speaks to a spontaneity and looseness, a sweet imperfection. 

12. Joelton Mayfield, Crowd Pleaser  (Bloodshot, Oct 24)
We'll go to our grave defending the opinion that singer-songwriter is not a genre. Mayfield's eclectic debut isn't the sound of some guy singin' and strummin' his diaries. From our review: Like Jason Hawk Harris or Richard Buckner, Joelton Mayfield pieces together his work with sonics and space, a soulful delivery and unguarded lyrics that make Crowd Pleaser among the year's most accomplished debuts. 

13. Margo Price, Hard Headed Woman  (Loma Vista, Aug 29)
While previous projects have landed higher on our year-end charts, Price has never sounded more in her element than on this country-straight collection. Most written with her partner Jeremy Ivey, Price's new songs are instantly familiar, spendidly aged and spirited. 

14. Racing Mount Pleasant, Racing Mount Pleasant  (R&R, Aug 15)
Truly original, RMP delivers the gift of prog-roots, with horns and time changes and extended jammy bits. Ambition without pretension. 

15. Dove Ellis, Blizzard  (Black Butter, Dec 5)
Released on December 5, this one sneaked just under the wire for our year-end list. Like fellow Irish troubadour Damien Rice, Ellis imbues his work with plenty of drama, firmly rooted in the fertile peat of the country's folk traditions. Much of that emotion is communicated from Ellis' delivery, which falls near Jeff Buckley or even Thom Yorke. 

16. Folk Bitch Trio, Now Would Be a Good Time  (Jagjaguwar, Jul 25)
Australian Trio With Silly Name Makes Genuinely Pretty Debut. Much less disruptive than their name might suggest, the indie folk Trio build their songs from their lovely harmonies outward. Will make honorary Folk Bitches out of even the most cautious listener. 

17. Anna Tivel, Animal Poem  (Fluff & Gravy, Sep 26)
Few if any artists on our year-end list are as immediately recognizable as Tivel, whose entire catalog is stamped with her precious hushed delivery. Her new record is especially subtle, but it's also smart, beautiful, and deeply felt. 

18. Neko Case, Neon Grey Midnight Green  (Anti, Sep 26)
Neon Grey arrived as a companion piece of sorts to Case's enjoyable memoir, The Harder I Fight the More I Love You. Leaning into the more theatrical nature of her music, the songs can be mercurial and stormy, poetic and writ large. 

19. SG Goodman, Planting By the Signs  (Slough Water, Jun 20)
Goodman is a master of building a vibe, using the tools of Southern stories, language and sound. Her third solo LP takes its inspiration from rural culture and a rootedness in rich soil and hard work. Like Bonnie Prince Billy, that connection is heard in Goodman's voice as a singer and guitarist. 

20. Snocaps, Snocaps  (Anti, Oct 31)
Here at R&B HQ, we enjoy the unexpected. Barely hinted before its Halloween release, this project from the Crutchfield Sisters, MJ Lenderman and Brad Cook proved a great surprise. Like a perfect weaving of PS Eliot and Waxahatchee, Snocaps serves as a fine companion piece to Waxahatchee's excellent roots-flavored work. 

21. Free Range, Lost & Found  (Mick, Mar 28)
We're not positive that we invented the term bootgaze, but we're certain that, on their second album, Sofia Jensen epitomizes the sub-genre. Free Range's songs are intriguing and understated, not unlike Elliott Smith with a roots music education. 

22. Patterson Hood, Exploding Trees & Airplane Screams  (ATO, Feb 21)
Thirteen years since his last solo collection, the Drive-by Truckers frontman was long due. Guest like Lydia Loveless, Wednesday, and Waxahatchee aren't really necessary for Hood to grab our attention, though they serve to acknowledge his standing among peers. A stronger set than we'd expected. 

23. Jason Isbell, Foxes In the Snow  (Southeastern, Mar 7)
Having raised the profile of his 400 Unit with a series of very well-received records, this spare solo project was just the thing Isbell needed to do. Far from lazy or incomplete, the songs are intimate and personal, stories that sound best delivered with an unadorned acoustic guitar. 

24. Greg Freeman, Burnover  (Transgressive, Aug 22)
The indie songwriter's follow-up to the 2022 cult favorite I Looked Out could never be as much of an out-of-nowhere phenomenon, even as Freeman continues to please with his Molina-esque work. Beneath the satisfying noise and yawl there is some terrific songwriting happening, and it's that noise and yawl that raises Burnover above most other roots-adjacent stuff. 

25. Turnpike Troubadours, Price Of Admission  (Bossier City, Apr 4)
Seven albums in, Evan Felker and his veteran Red Dirt act have little left to prove. Their second project with producer Shooter Jennings simply satisfies with fine songs, tastefully delivered. There's an effortlessness to their sound that can be misleading, a professionalism that shouldn't be taken for granted. 

26. James McMurtry, Black Dog & the Wandering Boy  (New West, Jun 20)
McMurtry stands as one of the very few artists of his generation who are still creating music that matters. While his voice can betray his years, he remains an almost peerless songwriter, an especially effective storyteller. 

27. Alex G, Headlights  (RCA, Jul 18)
Harbors our favorite song of the year ("Afterlife"), which sounds like little else in the indie DIY multi-instrumentalist's busy catalog. One moment this uncompromising collection is musically naive, while the next is orchestrated like a Brian Wilson suite. File under CHARMING (just after CHALLENGING). 

28. Janet Simpson, Can I See You Tonight  (Cornelius Chapel, Sep 19)
Over the years, the Alabama artist has honed her craft as a member of acts like Wooden Wand,  Delicate Cutters, and Timber. Her 2021 solo debut caught our attention, but this follow-up raises the bar with edgier arrangements and even some pop-leaning moments. 

29. Laney Jones, Laney Jones & the Spirits  (AHPO, Nov 20)
Carves a jagged new edge for our kind of music. Such a welcome, raw gesture from a bandleader who deserves to be mentioned alongside Courtney Barnett and Jenny Lewis. Possibly the foremost guitar record on our list. 

30. Red River Dialect, Basic Country Mustard  (Hinterground, Nov 14)
David John Morris is rather new to us, though the British folk songwriter has been practicing his trade for nearly twenty years, both as a bandleader and a solo figure. With Red River Dialect, his songs range from pastoral to driving, deploying fiddle, pipes, whistle, and drone as needed. Less ornate and more organic, Mustard charms behind the alchemy of its players.  

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Sunday, December 21, 2025

ROUTES-cast CHRiSTMAS CHRiSTMAS 2025


ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 21, 2025
Scott Foley, purveyor of a dusting of snow


Nov 30: Favorite Covers
Dec 7: State of Americana
Dec 14: Favorite Songs
Dec 21: Christmas Christmas
Dec 28: Favorite Albums

We're so ready to put certain songs on the way-back burner for a few years. We're okay if it's awhile before we hear new roots-adjacent covers of songs like "Blue Christmas", "River", or "Run Run Rudolph". Nobody has really ever made a worthy cover of "Fairytale of New York". But it's a season of hope, so we live in perpetual anticipation of finding new seasonal classics from year-to-year. 

For 2025, Leon Bridges has participated in two (2) of our favorite new originals. Morgan Wade delivered a very good new EP, and Melissa Carper did her Melissa Carper thing for a new full-length of originals. While there are a handful of entries below called "Christmas Song", turns out only one features chestnuts roasting. Curiously, the soundtrack for a seemingly forgettable movie provided a couple of the year's most listenable covers. 

So once again, we do this sans apology, recognizing that good holiday music is just good music. It's our yearly tradition to pull together a ROUTES-cast bursting with (recyclable) giftwrap, tacky sentiment dripping with tinsel, and so-so bleak seasonal wrist-slashers about how it's not really Christmas if you're not here (Ron Pope wins this year in that category). Since what's below is all new to 2025, if you're looking for something more classic, you might want to try our holiday favorites ROUTES-cast we assembled last year. 

For the rest of us, dim the lights, shut out the world's din, and give this thing a spin. Here's hoping you'll drag some of these into your for keeps folder, that you'll join us in our quest for music discovery, even during these bleak holiday weeks. 


ROUTES-cast CHRiSTMAS CHRiSTMAS 2025

- Chaparelle & Sierra Ferrell, "When It Snows In Texas" single  (Mom+Pop, 25)
- Molly Tuttle & Ketch Secor, "Fairytale of New York" single  (Nonesuch, 25)
- Melissa Carper, "Just One Stocking" A Very Carper Christmas  (Mae Music, 25)
- Glass Hours, "Christmas Song" single  (Cornelius Chapel, 25)
- Leon Bridges, "A Merry Black Christmas" single  (Columbia, 25)
- Willie Nelson, "Christmas Love Song" single  (Sony, 25)
- Shootouts, "Christmas Eve Without You" single  (Transoceanic, 25)
- Shannon Lay, "I'll Be Home For Christmas" Slow Xmas 5  (Bone Sound, 25)
- Tanner Usrey, "Run Run Rudolph" single  (Atlantic, 25)
- Jeff Tweedy, "Christmas Must Be Tonight" Oh What Fun  (Amazon, 25)
- Norah Jones & Leon Bridges, "This Christmas I'm Coming Home" single  (Columbia, 25)
- Morgan Wade, "Christmas In My Dreams" Christmas In My Dreams EP  (Pub Crawl, 25)
- Angus & Julia Stone, "Christmas Song" single  (Nettwerk, 25)
- Deer Tick, "Light Up Reindeer" single  (ATO, 25)
- Kelly Finnigan, "Snowy Night In Ohio" single  (Colemine, 25)
- Autumn Defense, "Please Come Back to Me" single  (Yep Roc, 25)
- Sharon Van Etten, "2000 Miles" Oh What Fun  (Amazon, 25)
- Ron Pope, "It Ain't Christmas" single  (Brooklyn Basement, 25)
- Shovels & Rope, "River (ft Wesley Schultz)" single  (Dualtone, 25)
- Judy Blank, "Merry Christmas Baby" Season's Beatings EP  (Rounder, 25)
- Zack Keim, "Blue Christmas" single  (Keim, 25)
- Country Side of Harmonica Sam, "Christmas Bungalow" single  (Sleazy, 25)
- Old Crow Medicine Show, "Store-Brought Christmas" OCMS XMAS  (Hartland, 25)
- Andy Shauf & Madi Diaz, "Christmas Eve Can Kill You" Oh What Fun  (Amazon, 25)
- Larry Fleet, "That Spirit Of Christmas" single  (Stellar Way, 25)
- Milk Carton Kids, "Christmas Song" single  (Far Cry, 25)
- Olivia Ellen Lloyd, "Let It Snow" Slow Xmas 5  (Bone Sound, 25)
- Doohickeys, "Merry Happy Whatever" Merry Happy Whatever EP  (Forty Below, 25)
- Parlor Greens, "Every Day Will Be Like a Holiday" single  (Colemine, 25)
- Palmyra, "Auld Lang Syne" single  (Oh Boy, 25)

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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview:


Sunday, December 14, 2025

R&B FAVORiTE SONGS 2025

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 14, 2025
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust

Nov 30: Favorite Covers
Dec 7: State of Americana
Dec 14: Favorite Songs
Dec 21: Christmas Christmas
Dec 28: Favorite Albums

You should probably tell some friends about us. Send some new ears our way. While there are plenty of other blogs who do good stuff, nobody cuts the stylistic swath that R&B does, what we call our kind of music. This would be a good entry point for your friends, as we go all AT40 (is that even a thing anymore) and count down our favorite songs for 2025. 

So much very good stuff here, painstakingly culled from an original list at least three times its size. We wept to cast aside all that treasure, but the thirty (30) songs below each made their case so strongly that there was no ignoring them. About half of the songs are from LPs which will very likely appear on our favorite albums list at the close of the year. Others are from standalone singles, or from records that might not have landed another tune on our weekly ROUTES-casts. 

These are in order of current preference, meaning that our very most favorites appear first, and that a year from now when we give our ROUTES-cast another spin we'll say, "Oh yeah, I do remember that! It seems so long ago." It's all about memory, the act of sinking new hooks into the part of our brain that holds all the music, carving deep new grooves. Perhaps it's the repository to which we'll return on days when the world just seems too much. If we're doing our work here, the music will lift us up and hold us aloft, deliver us and bring us safely back home. To quote our favorite song of 2025:


Still here, I'm screaming, "I want to remember it all
Even the hardest of harms that you're hurling at me"
Can't you hear me screaming, "I want to remember them all
All the arrows and the slings."


ROUTES-cast FAVORiTE SONGS 2025

^ Laura Stevenson, "I Want to Remember it All" Late Great  (Really, Jun 27)
- Alex G, "Afterlife" Headlights  (RCA, Jul 18)
- Luke Winslow-King, "Baby Wild" single  (Bloodshot, Jan 24)
- Beirut, "Guericke's Unicorn" Late Great  (Pompeii, Apr 18)
- Sarah Klang, "Childhood" Beautiful Woman  (Nettwerk, Feb 7)
- Alan Sparhawk & Trampled by Turtles, "Not Broken" Alan Sparhawk with Trampled by Turtles  (Sub Pop, May 30)
- Wednesday, "Elderberry Wine" Bleeds  (Dead Oceans, Sep 19)
- Geese, "Taxes" Getting Killed  (Partisan, Sep 26)
- Molly Tuttle, "That's Gonna Leave a Mark" So Long Little Miss Sunshine  (Nonesuch, Aug 15)
- Low Gap, "If a Song Could Change Your Mind" single  (Cloverdale, Jan 10)
- Pigeon Pit, "Josephine County Blues" Crazy Arms  (Ernest Jenning, Jan 17)
- Fust, "Mountain Language" Big Ugly  (Dear Life, Mar 7)
- Ryan Davis & Roadhouse Band, "New Threats From the Soul" New Threats From the Soul  (Sophomore Lounge, Jul 25)
- Big Thief, "All Night All Day" Double Infinity  (4AD, Sep 5)
- James Yorkston, "Oh Light Oh Light (ft Johanna Soderberg)" Songs For Nina and Johanna  (Domino, Aug 22)
- Hermanos Gutierrez & Leon Bridges, "Elegantly Wasted" single  (Easy Eye, Jul 17)
- Brown Horse, "Corduroy Couch" All the Right Weaknesses  (Loose, Apr 4)
- Matt Steinfeld, "Resurrect the Tender" Matt Steinfeld  (Steinfeld, Dec 5)
- Penny and Sparrow, "Jeopardy" Lefty  (I Love You, Jan 31)
- Zack Keim, "25 Days" Battery Lane  (Keim, Feb 7)
- Sunny War, "Cry Baby (ft Valerie June)" Armageddon in a Summer Dress  (New West, Feb 21)
- Them Coulee Boys, "I Need a Friend" No Fun in the Chrysalis  (TCB, Feb 28)
- Free Range, "Concept" Lost & Found  (Mick, Mar 28)
- HORSEBATH, "Another Farewell" Another Farewell  (Strolling Bones, Feb 7)
- Samantha Crain, "B-Attitudes" Gumshoe  (Real Kind, May 2)
- Red River Dialect, "Again Again" Basic Country Mustard  (Hinterground, Nov 14)
- Whiskey Myers, "Rowdy Days" Whomp Whack Thunder  (Wiggy Thump, Sep 26)
- St Paul & Broken Bones, "Fall Moon" St Paul & Broken Bones  (Oasis Pizza, Oct 10)
- Mavis Staples, "Human Mind" Sad and Beautiful World  (Anti, Nov 7)
- Snocaps, "Angel Wings" Snocaps  (Anti, Oct 31)  

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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview: