2018 Saving Country Music Album of the Year Nominees
In the humble estimation of Saving Country Music, 2018 has been the second bumper crop year in a row for excellent, top shelf efforts in country music. To reflect that, the number of nominees for Saving Country Music’s vaunted Album of the Year recognition has been pushed to its capacity of 10 once again, with each selection worthy of the topmost recognition in 2018. And with no clear front runners, and no obvious names to walk away with the distinction this year, it’s a wide open field.
Even with 10 nominees, it still feels like numerous albums got shorted, which is just the way it is when you have to cut the amount of candidates off at some point. This includes Lori McKenna’s The Tree, and John Prine’s The Tree of Forgiveness—both songwriting tour de forces. So is The Pistol Annies’ Interstate Gospel. Also sitting right on the bubble was Tom Buller’s When A Country Boy Gets The Blues, which probably deserves recognition for one of the greatest discoveries for 2018. If the bylaws could be changed and 11 nominees allowed, it would very likely go to Colter Wall’s Songs of the Plains.
You won’t get any complaint here if Country Marie Andrews and May Your Kindness Remain, or Randall King‘s self-titled album is one of your favorites, or the favorite of 2018. Cody Jinks and Lifers also remains a strong effort, and similar to Golden Hour by Kacey Musgraves, they still might be represented in the nominations for Best Song of the Year, so don’t lose hope in them being considered for end-of-year accolades just yet.
Plus all of these records and more will be included on Saving Country Music’s much more expansive Essential Albums List, which will be published later in December. So if you feel something was left off here, be patient. Further albums will also be reviewed, and be made eligible for the Essential Albums List as the end of the year nears.
As always, your feedback isn’t just requested, it will be included in the final calculations for the winner. So if you have an opinion, please leave it below in the comments section. However, this is not a straight up and down vote. Your opinion will count, but it will count even more if you put the effort out to convince all of us why one album deserves to rise above the others. And please, no “You Forgot!” comments. You think something has been unfairly omitted? By all means use the comments section to inform us. Because ultimately this isn’t an effort to make music into a competition. The purpose of this exercise is to expand the knowledge base of great music to all the music we think is the year’s best for the benefit of everyone.
Without further ado, here are your 2018 nominees for Saving Country Music’s Album of the Year.
Whitey Morgan and the 78’s – Hard Times and White Lines
Whitey Morgan is like the embodiment of all the rage and frustration of true country music fans channeled into one hairy human vessel. Whitey’s “Fuck Pop Country” shirts are just as famous as some of his songs, and no quarter is given when he walks out on stage to whip crowds into a honky tonk frenzy, and feed them a steady dose of hard country shit kickers.
Hard Times and White Lines is only Whitey’s fourth full studio record in nearly 15 years of playing, but it’s always been quality over quantity with Whitey, allowing an appetite to build among his rabid fan base before slinging them a thick slab of red meat they’ll feed off of for years to come, and that’s what he does here. Whitey doesn’t look at new records as some experimental artistic medium, or an opportunity for him to noodle around with innovative ideas that potentially may alienate his fan base. He’s not looking to reinvent himself for the adulation of media critics. He knows who he is, and what he does. He is the voice of the whiskey drunk, the working man, and the weary country music listener, and he wears that badge proudly.
“Country” music in all of its modern incarnations and mutations will continue to devolve and disgust the folks who know what the music is supposed to be. But as long as Whitey Morgan and the 78’s are still around, they will be offering a true compass of what real country music is, and give the fans of real country a home, and a voice. (read full review)
Sarah Shook & The Disarmers – Years
You think music is a skills competition? You think what speaks deeply to people in music is the perfection served through drum loops and Auto-Tune, or technically adept musicianship, or even vintage styling conveyed through cute production techniques trying to emulate past greatness? Four scraggly dudes and a single mother from North Carolina just proved they can supersede all other efforts simply by assuring the pain and the blood of real life experiences are sown straight into your songs, embedded between the notes, and born out in the melodies. Years is soaked in whiskey and sweat, tenderized through conflict, forged from 700-mile van rides to play $200 shows, and ultimately captured in studio recordings that like a great sponge, are able to soak up all of that pain, and convey it with lossless quality.
Sarah Shook is the badass woman we’ve been waiting years for. She can play the guys off the stage and drink them under the table, all on a half night’s sleep and her eyelids at half mast. Years is the exact type of country music album you crash little music websites and Spotify playlists searching for—that album that immediately sucks you in, and promises years of enjoyment and recurring listens, even in the world of endless audio variety. It’s a record that feels like it was made specifically for you, regardless of you’re in the midst of a breakup and a bout of drunken depression, or you’re beyond all of that and enjoying a stable, sober family life. It’s an album where every song begs to be heard, and not one gets passed over. There’s nothing expressly special about any of it. But there’s something especially warm about all of it, making you say, “This is what I’m talking about when I say I love country music.” (read full review)
Caitlyn Smith – Starfire
Starfire is an opus. Even being wise to the talents this young woman possessed for many years, and steeled from multiple spins of her short-run EP’s and scattered video releases, Starfire still cuts deep, surprises with each new track, and universally impresses. All these incessant releases from Music Row of young women trying to make it in country, rolling off the assembly line one after another with their strident attempts at contemporary styling, stretching average talents to attempt to appear exceptional, trying to win ears with songs written by committee and algorithm—all that effort expended feels like such a waste in the presence of a project like Starfire.
The only thing keeping Caitlyn Smith from being a household name is simply the lack of knowledge to her existence. She once penned a mega hit for Meghan Trainor called “Like I’m Gonna Lose You.” If there was any justice in the world, the tiers that Trainor has attained would be waiting for Caitlyn Smith as a reward for what she’s accomplished on Starfire. Whether anybody else knows it or not, Caitlyn Smith has made a near masterpiece, and made the model of what modern country pop should be. (read full review)
Jamie Lin Wilson – Jumping Over Rocks
Call it The Tao of Jamie Lin Wilson. It’s about figuring out a way to pursue your passions, regardless of the challenges. It’s facing adversity with a cheerfulness and perseverance until the walls in front of you come crumbling down almost automatically. It’s about making yourself available to finish a co-write, lend a backing vocal, or whatever else it takes to wiggle your way into the music scene with a smile and a willingness in your heart, just like Jamie Lin Wilson has been doing for years.
Jumping Over Rocks is Jamie Line Wilson’s second official solo release to go along with her early work with The Gougers, and later with the Texas music supergroup The Trishas. All that feels well in the past now though, similar to how referencing Jason Isbell as “The Former Drive-By Trucker” feels obsolete. Jamie Lin Wilson is Jamie Lin Wilson—The Queen of Texas/Red Dirt’s modern era.
Jumping Over Rocks is not a default title; it’s perfect. It’s a testament to Jamie Lin Wilson’s dexterity as an artist, and as a human. She is a remover of obstacles, a doer of the demanding. They say you can’t be a full time mother and have a meaningful music career. You can’t give birth to a child and release a new record and hit the road a few weeks later. Try telling that to Jamie Lin Wilson. Just as her music bolsters our spirit, imparts important wisdom, and wets the corner of the eye, Jamie Lin Wilson’s personal story inspires us to pursue our own dreams and persevere, touching us just as much or more than any single note she may sing, or splendid line of verse she may compose. With Jamie Lin Wilson, it’s the full package that leaves you spellbound. (read full review)
American Aquarium – Things Change
Backed into a corner is where an artist and songwriter like BJ Barham performs at his best. With a guy like this, defeat is where he finds his greatest inspiration, his most deep-seeded determination, and his willingness to sacrifice it all for the cause, and the dream. Limping along just successful enough to sustain was not the right place for American Aquarium. It all needed to implode for it to ultimately succeed. It’s gutting out a living, and giving a middle finger to the sweltering sun that has always been at the core of American Aquarium—a philosophy like is embodied in the song “Work Conquers All” from Things Change.
Even the political stuff here is done with such better tact and respect than others recently. The line “And last November I saw first hand what desperation makes good people do…” from the song “Tough Folks” does so much better at encapsulating the political dilemma the United States is in. Instead of insulting people, it recognizes their inherent goodness, regardless of their political stripes. Contrast this between the judgemental and ineffective venting of anger in recent projects. This approach helps to bridge understanding as opposed to drawing hard lines.
Seven studio albums in is about the time you start ignoring a band as the treads wear down and the sound begins to dull. But out of the smoldering ashes of American Aquarium 1.0, this band found its footing, and it is truly something to behold. (read full review)
Blackberry Smoke – Find A Light
Screw talk of saving country music, or even notions of “Southern rock.” With their latest album Find A Light, Blackberry Smoke prove they’re singlehandedly saving rock and roll and everything that stands for—Southern, countrified, and everything in between. Blackberry Smoke transcends genre—in the good way where you’re so badass, everyone wants to claim you as their own, and no single scene can contain you.
Blackberry Smoke doesn’t give a shit anymore about trying to fit into anyone’s preconceived notions of what they should be. Find A Light is the band unsheathing the guitars and going for it. In this calculating music world where so many bands are obsessed with their public perceptions, it’s refreshing, needed, well past due, and welcomed to have a band indulge their barbaric rock and roll masculinity and let the cards fall where they may.
These guys prick such an array of emotions and eras in their efforts with Find A Light, and revive sounds that are going so incredibly underserved except for backlist titles from classic rock greats. Yet their efforts to record roaring anthems and tear-soaked ballads are in the right here, the right now, in the modern context, hoping to become the classics for future generations, and replenish what ClearChannel ran into the ground for decades on classic rock stations.Blackberry Smoke is saying, “We’re here. It’s our time to step up and save the Southern music, be damned what anyone else thinks is cool or relevant.” And that’s exactly what they accomplish on Find a Light. (read full review)
El Coyote – Self-Titled
We’re blessed to live in a time period when there are plenty of woman-led singing duos, trios, and quartets to peruse for your listening pleasure. With the power conjoined female voices can bring to the hopeful and heartbreaking sentiments of country and roots songs, you can’t have enough of this audio virtue. But the one issue a lover of female harmonies who also happens to be a lover of country music will find listening to these respective acts is that despite the promising sounds of their names, they often veer way more folk than what you’re hoping for.
For those fans of the old Carter Family records, or the sounds of the famous Trio collaboration between Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt, and Emmylou Harris, you just want something a bit more country backing these strong, beautiful voices. You want the moan of the steel guitar to match the emotion that three part harmonies evoke, and you want sentiments the fit more with the agrarian and blue collar experiences that country music provides.
Enter the band El Coyote from Montreal, Canada who makes all of this happen and in brilliant form in their debut, self-titled album. Made up of three women singers and songwriters named Angela Desveaux, Michelle Tompkins, and Katie Moore backed by a three piece band, they’re just about everything you want from a woman-fronted singing trio as a country fan, but without losing the gentleness of the folk portion of the discipline. (read full review)
Dillon Carmichael – Hell on An Angel
This record is nothing short of merciless in how it just grinds out one deeply-powerful, slow and plodding track after another. Everything is too damn slow in the best possible way, like the Southern drawl of your grandpa on a Sunday morning, graced with a familiarity that makes you feel like you’ve found home. Dillon Carmichael and Hell On An Angel is what we mean when we say “country music.” Like all great things, country music gets better with age. This is what makes us revere the old greats of country, and suspicious of fresh-faced newcomers, like some are sure to regard Dillon Carmichael. His skin may be tender, but his soul is definitely old.
There’s just something about being in the country that settles your mind, and warms your heart. You can count on it. It’s not complicated. You sit beside a lake with a line in the water, or stretch out between a tall pine, and everything is right in the world. That same feeling washes over you when listening to Dillon Carmichael’s Hell On An Angel, not just because the music is good, but because it assures you that country music is in good hands for the future, with young, impassioned artists keeping the sound alive, and showing sincere promise to help do so for many years to come. (read full review)
Jason Eady – I Travel On
The songwriting of Jason Eady is unquestionable, and has been for some time. In the realm of Texas country and beyond, Jason Eady’s penmanship is arguably the pinnacle, with only a select few performers to be consider beside him, including his wife Courtney Patton. Eady’s approach to country music has always been a measured one. The sounds come from wood and wire, in acoustic-only arrangements, not letting anything get in the way of the songs themselves, which is where the spotlight and attention should always be with an artist like this. But while lumping worthy praise upon Jason Easy’s last few records, Saving Country Music has been vocal about the lack of muscle, or gas behind the music.
How to resolve adding a little bit of enthusiasm to the music, but still adhering to Jason Eady’s acoustic-only proclamation was a tough riddle to solve. Since Jason Eady fits more the model of a Texas honky tonker, bluegrass never really entered the mindset as a possibility. But adding a couple of hot shot bluegrass ringers was the exact injection Jason Eady’s music needed to not just coast, but soar, and the results speak for themselves on I Travel On.
No toes are stepped on. The music never drowns out the emotion of the story or the moment. It’s probably not even fair to call this a bluegrass album. It’s a Jason Eady album with some badass instrumentation to go along with his established and beloved sound, with incredible music runs embellishing the songs, and adding new textures to Eady’s storytelling experience. Still even with a fuel-injected bluegrass kick behind great songs, the music of Jason Eady will never be for everyone. It’s too damn good for the masses. (read full review)
Mike and the Moonpies – Steak Night at the Prairie Rose
The romantic notion of what an old school honky tonk band from Texas should be has been used to stoke fantasies and fill television and movie screens for years. It’s also been a template for Music Row-molded fashion plates to play dress up and role play the part for many patently unaware fans. But putting your finger on the actual embodiment of a Texas two-step honky tonk band who can play covers and originals for four hours non stop and make it look easy—and all while looking cool themselves—is a little more myth than reality. Yes, there are many smoky bars and wooden dance floors throughout the Lone Star State. And there are many cover and original bands that play them. And then there’s Mike and the Moonpies.
It’s the local flavor, the authenticity, the dedication to themselves, their fans, the music, and the true-to-life dues paid by Mike and the Moonpies that make them darn near the perfect embodiment of the Austin, TX dance hall and dive bar band so many want to emulate, but so few want to put in the sweat or make the sacrifices to actually become. And with such a salivating appetite for authenticity now stirring out there among the country music listening pubic, it’s time for Mike and the Moonpies to step out of the shadows of being considered an undercard band of the Texas music circuit, a “poor man’s Turnpike Troubadours” as some have referred to them in the past, and be hoisted forward as just about the perfect example of what a true Texas country dancehall band is all about. It also happens to be that Steak Night at the Prairie Rose is about the perfect record to do that with. (read full review)
December 3, 2018 @ 9:00 am
Also folks, just a quick reminder, if you want an avatar beside your comment, you can go to https://en.gravatar.com/ and get one.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:11 am
Of these nominees, I would go with either “I Travel On” or “Jumping Over Rocks.” Both are so perfect in just their simplicity. There’s a no frills approach to them and the songwriting and the performances are allowed to take center stage and solidify what makes these two artists great. The same may be able to be said for other nominees on the list, but I think these two in particular stood out in this regard.
(As a side note, another strong showing that I don’t see mentioned is Cody Canada & The Departed’s “3.”)
December 3, 2018 @ 9:14 am
I’m all in on Mike and The Moonpies.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:14 am
A little shocked Adam Hood’s Somewhere in Between didn’t make the cut. 😒 But, congrats to Eady and Jamie Lin!!!!
December 3, 2018 @ 9:26 am
I’m surprised you didn’t include Courtney Patton here. I feel like What It’s Like to Fly Alone in the top 2 for the year (at least). It has a handful of my favorite songs of the year (Round Mountain, What It’s Like to Fly Alone, Words to My Favorite Memory) and I enjoyed the simple production with plenty of steel guitar and fiddle. To me it’s basically a better version of the (also great) albums put out by Jason Eady and Jamie Lin Wilson.
Out of the finalists, give me Sarah Shook & The Disarmers.
December 3, 2018 @ 2:53 pm
I couldn’t agree more about Courtney Patton. Number 2 for the year for me.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:35 am
Album of the year is Starfire and it’s really not even close. I Dont care if you think it’s not country enough it was a timeless masterpiece!
Number 2 for the year for me was Garrett Bryan’s “Break The Levee” Amazing album no one talked about
Number 3 Blue Water Highway “Heartbreak City” that was more pop but great from front to back
December 3, 2018 @ 9:43 am
For Bluegrass Special Consensus dropped the album of year in my opinion
Close second was Mountain Hearts “Soul Searching”
December 3, 2018 @ 9:38 am
Disappointed to not see the Jason Boland record
December 3, 2018 @ 9:51 am
Also Providence Canyon by Brent Cobb
December 3, 2018 @ 5:18 pm
Album of the year!!!!!
December 3, 2018 @ 9:39 am
Mike & The Moonpies steak night at the prairie rose!
December 4, 2018 @ 10:41 am
Agreed 100%. What I loved the most about this album was the variety between the all of the tracks, from the more somber and reflective “Worst Thing” and “Beaches of Biloxi” to fun honky tonk songs like “Road Crew” and “Getting High at Home”. Loved the title track as well, was raised by a single father growing up so I could relate very closely.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:41 am
Out of your nominees my choice is Steak Night At The Prairie Rose. Love these guys and they put on a hell of a live show.
Some others have mentioned Courtney Patton and Departed records which I’ve enjoyed a lot this year. I also found Wade Bowen’s “Solid Ground” a great album and may have listened to it more than anything else this year*
*being released in February helps
The only nominee I really don’t agree with is Blackberry Smoke. Their album is good and solid, but I liked their last one better and I feel there are more worthy albums to shine the spotlight on this year.
I need to listen to Dillon Carmichael some more and El Coyote somehow completely slipped by me this summer, but all the rest of the nominees are great albums among my top ones too.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:42 am
Years!!! For my money Sarah Shook and The Disarmers blew every one else away this year. The only exception being Dillon Carmichael and Hell On An Angel, a bad ass record in its own right
December 3, 2018 @ 9:42 am
It’s Shook. All the way.
Aquarium and Steak Night would both be in my Top 10 or so.
Also getting high marks from me are JP Harris, Dirty River Boys, Old Crow Medicine Show and Hard Times Are Relative from Boland.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:42 am
American Aquarium gets my vote for sure. Head and shoulders above the rest.
December 3, 2018 @ 7:03 pm
Agree with American Aquarium. My absolute favorite album this year.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:43 am
Mike and the Moonpies are amazing !!! best live show around
December 3, 2018 @ 9:43 am
You left off John Prine but included Blackberry Smoke? Seriously?
December 3, 2018 @ 12:44 pm
Couldn’t agree more.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:55 pm
Yes….and Cody Jinks not being included as a nominee is crazy! Oh well, I will check out the ones i dont have on this list. The blog is titled Saving Country Music, but yet there are Americana acts and Southern rock acts all being included. My vote goes to Whitey Morgan and The 78’s!!
December 3, 2018 @ 9:45 am
Of the 10 I’ve listened to about half the albums enough times to have an informed opinion of them. Since I can’t say the same about the other half, I’m not confident in my choice…curious if people who comment have invested enough time in all?
I love these lists though (and people’s comments) because it reminds me of what I should be checking out more. Especially now there is some distance from the release dates, people’s favorites will have had to have held up.
December 4, 2018 @ 6:36 pm
Probably nobody but Trigger has that kind of time to play all of those equally to have that kind of professional opinion. He lives it 24/7…lol I can only speak for myself on the albums that caught and held my attention for the year and I can honestly remember only giving Moonpies 1 listen and obviously upon the revisit I said to myself “why didn’t I keep playing it” as it is special and you all are right. I didn’t give Pardi or Sarah a second listen at first either. Sometimes I have to be beaten over the head. Like most on here we’ll give some of the others some more spins. I do see a bit of consensus emerging though on a few.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:45 am
1. Starfire- if we are going to do good “pop country” this was the album. “This town is killing me” is completely underrated and anyone who has moved to Nashville or had friends that did that song hits personal on a lot of levels. Great vocals
2. Dillon Carmichael- pairing with Cobb was awesome and the delay was worth the wait. Very very strong rookie debut and his voice is Eddie 2.0
3. Lucero- among the ghosts. I’ve pestered you for a while because you usually do Lucero reviews and this is probably my favorite album they’ve done. Fatherhood has changed Ben and brought new layers to Lucero. It was a very solid album all the way through and had some great lines like Ben talking about his daughters first words she learned was “bye” because of his constant leaving.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:46 am
Mike and the Moonpies ALL. DAY. LONG. They’re not the poor man’s anything. Steak Night is the kind of album that will be handed down to kids and grandkids. Thanks, Trigger!
December 3, 2018 @ 9:46 am
I miss Kayla Ray (Yesterday & Me) & Randall King (Randall KIng).
The Randall King album is the kind of country music Nashville should produce. Pure country with modern elements. Randall King is the new #1 in Texas with “Mirror, Mirror” (Texas Top 100).
Whitey Morgan & The 78’s – Hard Times & White Lines is my pick.
10 tracks & no fillers, gimmicks or duets with transylvanain barbie dolls. “Around Here” is my highlight. Song of the year candidate.
My Album Of The Year Nominees are:
Beccy Cole – Lioness
Kim Rickey – Edgeland
Randall King – Randall King
Anthony Taylor – Music Man
Kayla Ray – Yesterday & Me
Damian O’Grady – From 9 ‘Til 1
Tori Forsyth – Dawn Of The Dark
The Black Lillies – Stranger To Me
Craig Gerdes – Smokin’, Drinkin’ & Gamblin’
Ronnie Eaton – The Hand That Mocked Them & The Heart That Fed
Catherine Britt & The Cold-Cold Hearts – Catherine Britt & The Cold-Cold Hearts
Susan Lily – Free Spirited
Joshua Hedley – Mr. Jukebox
Kenyon Lockry – Honky Tonk Noir
Troy Cassar-Daley – Greatest Hits
Loretta Lynn – Wouldn’t It Be Great
Adam Harvey – The Nashville Tapes
David Paul Nowlin – Keep On Pickin’
Bennett, Bowtell & Urquhart – Weeds
Melissa Robertson – Little Country Life
Scott Southworth – Hey Hillbilly Singer!
EP Of The Year & my first winner: Gareth Leach – Death & Taxes (“Turn Back Jimmy Creek”)
Worst Album Of The Year: Tim Hicks – New Tattoo (damn easy to pick the worst album…Tim Hicks is a very good helper to destroy what is left of canadian country music)
December 3, 2018 @ 9:48 am
My vote goes to Dillon Carmichael. Hands down the best album I’ve listened to all year. Hasn’t left the player since it arrived!
December 3, 2018 @ 9:49 am
It’s gonna be Starfire, and I’m OK with that. BBS has rebounded with Find a Light, but it’s not their best effort. But it’s the only one of these that separated some cash from me.
While Starfire would not be my pick, I’m not sure what would. Sarah Shook and the Disarmers, maybe? Too many strong efforts this year–a good problem to have!
December 3, 2018 @ 9:51 am
Extremely strong list of nominees. For me it´s Sarah Shook & the Disarmers with Years. Each time I play the record there is this feeling of familiarity and perfection. It just comes naturally.
December 3, 2018 @ 7:13 pm
The Audiotree session of Years on YouTube is awesome.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:06 am
Mike and the Moonpies are what bands from Texas should be. They are a big influence on us as a band. This album has been on my turntable non stop!
December 3, 2018 @ 10:15 am
Not an especially strong year for my tastes. I do really like the Mike and the Moonpies album, though. I’ve turned a couple of friends onto Mike and the Moonpies. Great band.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:17 am
Out of those I’ll go with Whitey. But if I had me say it would be Cody Jinks “Lifers” album. Hands down the best album of the year.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:19 am
Mike and the moonpies all the way. These guys are the real deal and doing it the right way. Real honky tonk guys playing real honky tonk music. P.S. watch out for that pedal steel, it’ll hit you hard.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:23 am
This was the year for females. Just on the top of my head is Kacey Musgraves, Sarah Shook, Courtney Marie Andrews, Caitlyn Smith. So I’d say of the list you provided, Sarah Shook & the Disarmers is the one I keep coming back to. It’s the type of album that grows on you and the songs slip deeper into your subconscious on each listen.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:48 am
I agree it was a big year for women, and let’s not overlook El Coyote, which is made up of three great songwriting women from Canada. Courtney Marie Andrews, Lori McKenna, Courtney Patton, and more were right on the bubble for nominations as well.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:24 am
Mike and the moonpies are the real deal doing it the right way. Real honky tonk guys playing real honky tonk music.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:36 am
Pistol Annie’s “Interstate Gospel” gets my vote. It’s their best album yet with strong vocals, production, instrumentation, and excellent songwriting by the artists themselves, not a team of label picked session writers. There’s not a weak song on the entire album, and it’s proven worthy of many repeat listens.
Runner-ups would be Whitey Morgan’s “Hard Times and White Lines”, and Cody Jinks’ “Lifers”, both excellent releases.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:59 am
I absolutely agree with this. Pistol Annie’s gets my vote as well. Just a tremendous album with great songs and phenomenal song writing..Listen to it every day..
December 3, 2018 @ 9:30 pm
I can’t even believe how good Interstate Gospel is! The only thing that comes close this year for me is Golden Hour, but they’re so different that I think I can crown them joint favorites.
Also loved Tree of Forgiveness and Sparrow.
December 4, 2018 @ 1:36 pm
Sparrow is fantastic!
December 5, 2018 @ 4:34 pm
I have such a weird relationship with Sparrow. It’s a gorgeous album but so challenging that I get a bit bummed when I listen to it as an album.
That said, I do have all the tracks on a shuffled playlist and I’m excited when one of the songs comes up.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:40 am
Hell of a list here. The album that will never get old is the honky-tonk masterpiece from Mike and the Moonpies, “Steak Night at the Prairie Rose”
December 3, 2018 @ 10:49 am
“Honky-Tonk Masterpiece” should be the name of their next album.
December 3, 2018 @ 10:45 am
My top 3 are mike and the moonpies and Shooter Jennings and lori mckenna.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:01 am
Songs of the Plains is the best IMO but from this list I’m gonna have to go with Hell on an Angel
December 3, 2018 @ 11:05 am
+1 for American BJ’s
December 3, 2018 @ 11:08 am
For me, it’s “Starfire”. I can’t tell you how many times one of her songs came up on shuffle and I’d have to go back and listen to the entire album again. Caitlyn’s voice is enslaving. I had the pleasure of seeing her perform back in March. I was front row at this tiny barroom stage and she blew me away. “Contact High” live and in person is a religious experience. Her vocals on “Tacoma” floored me. It was honestly one of the greatest concerts of my life. I’m a sucker for strings (I play the cello), and that’s what initially drew me to this album. But the lyrics and the vocals and the intimacy of this album is what kept me coming back again and again this year. Don’t get me wrong, the other albums on this list are great. I’m a huge Blackberry Smoke fan. I won’t be mad if “Find a Light” or any of the the other albums are chosen. It won’t ruin “Starfire” for me or drop it from the ranks of my favorite albums. But I sure would love to see it win.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:21 am
I’d have to go for Mike and The Moonpies, although Sarah Shook and El Coyote both run a close second.
As you said, there are many fine albums that were released in 2018 and only a few could make this list, but for the future I’m hoping that Karen Jonas’ Butter ends up on one of your lists.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:22 am
From everything I’ve gotten to listen to, my lists is:
1: Pistol Annies – Interstate Gospel. It feels like the album they were destined to make. It’s fully realized, classic country songwriting with wit and twang, their voices are great together, and there is a genuine sisterhood between them which makes it all the better.
2. Kacey Musgraves – Golden Hour. A true standout. It takes guts to release an album which goes against the grain. It’s sonically just so unique and the lyrics are personal and beautiful. The music transports you into a kind of positive free worldview of harmony, if that makes any sense.
3. Joshua Hedley – Mr. Jukebox. It was so refreshing to hear such a throwback sound. The lyrics, the production, even the way he sings just gives it that timeless feel.
4. Sarah Shook – Years. I love elaborate productions, but I also love just straight up no BS country and that is what Years is. Love her voice too.
5. Cody Jinks – Lifters. Other male country artists should be looking to this album as a guideline of how to achieve a balance of great songwriting, while still appealing to a more mainstream audience.
Other considerations. I loved Sparrow by Ashley Monroe, but I wasn’t sure it was actually a country album. It didn’t seem to be marketed as such.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:23 am
Mike and the Moonpies gets my vote! Incrediblely fun album from start to finish
December 3, 2018 @ 11:24 am
My #1 album of the year is May Your Kindness Remain by Courtney Marie Andrews. I’m not all that surprised that it didn’t make the cut here (I expect it might be a “most essential” album in the article to come), but am a little surprised not to see Providence Canyon by Brent Cobb or Baby You WIn by Cliff Westfall here. I’m sure we’ll see them later, though.
Been thinking about my top ten list for a while (because I’m a roots music nerd?) and this is what I got. Not all country, but pretty much all in the roots music world.
1. May Your Kindness Remain – Courtney Marie Andrews
2. 13 Rivers – Richard Thompson
3. Years – Sarah Shook and the Disarmers
4. Providence Canyon – Brent Cobb
5. Bobby Fuller Died For Your Sins – Chuck Prophet
6. Starfire – Caitlyn Smith
7. The Eclipse Sessions – John Hiatt
8. Jumping Over Rocks – Jamie Lin WIlson
9. Wild! Wild! Wild! – Robbie Fulks and Linda Gail Lewis
10. Baby You Win – Cliff Westfall
Mike and the Moonpies, Dillon Carmichael, and Colter Wall are on my bubble.
December 3, 2018 @ 1:09 pm
13 Rivers was one of my top 5 for the latest NPR poll.
December 3, 2018 @ 1:12 pm
This. Yes.
December 4, 2018 @ 1:11 pm
Oh, Jeez. Chuck Prophet was from early 2017, not early 2018, Move 6 to 10 up one, Songs of the Plains by Colter Wall at #10.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:27 am
Lori Mckenna “the tree” and Jason Eady “i travel on” are my favourite for sure…very strong list of contenders though i got all of this albums(except AA).Love Sarah Shook but it’s a little too punk for me…..surprise of the year: Dillon Carmichael, a monster of an album!!!
Brent Cobb is also a runner!!
December 3, 2018 @ 11:30 am
Wrighting in Expariment by Kane Brown – truely amazing, so talented! Can’t beleive he got snubbed
December 3, 2018 @ 1:29 pm
Thanks for the comedic break in the serious thread….lol but you are correct Kane Browns Excrement is certainly worth __________…….Um…. I dunno…. something…oh yeah a snub.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:31 am
Great that you included American Aquarium, as their song “The World Is On Fire” was this summer’s anthem. “We just can’t give up, we just can’t give in, we have to go boldly into the darkness, and be the light..”
I think Loretta Lynn’s “Wouldn’t It Be Great” should be considered. Not because its Loretta, but because its good.. Her voice is amazing, and the Dobro work on there is stellar. She is still great, and I think it’ unfortunate that the old-timers are sometimes forgotten, even though they are still putting out good music. Very solid list!
December 3, 2018 @ 11:33 am
Mike and the Moonpies.
It’s a toss-up with Whitey, but this year I’m tipping in favor of Mike and the boys’s sense of humor.
Off the list is Robbie Fulks’s Wild Wild Wild with Gail Lewis. That’s a wonderful record.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:34 am
Moonpies.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:35 am
Preface #1: Not eligible since it’s a repackaged merging of 2 live EPs from around 5 years ago, but the album I absolutely cannot put down is Tyler Childers: Red Barn Radio I & II. Even better than Purgatory, IMO, and that. is. saying. something.
Preface #2: Starfire is not country, so it’s disqualified for me. I can’t show support for a pop/r&b album to save country music, no matter how fantastic it is.
Out of the 10 listed, I’d have to go:
1- Sarah Shook. Just perfect, in sort of a quirky way. The album plays great on repeat.
2- Whitey Morgan & the 78s. Badass. F’in’ awesome. Fits right in with their other stuff.
3- Mike & the Moonpies. Great for listening and dancing to. Gets better with age.
4- Jason Eady. Might have finally found that perfect sweet spot.
5- El Coyote. Great, great stuff, coming seemingly out of nowhere. This year’s Jaime Wyatt?
6- American Aquarium. Really surprised by this one, was not expecting to enjoy it so much.
7- Jamie Lin Wilson. Haven’t spent enough time with it, been playing all her other albums too much!
8- Dillon Carmichael. Strong record. I’m ok with it as a nominee.
Didn’t like this BBS album as much as the last couple, wouldn’t have nominated it.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:36 am
Great list. I’d probably go with Starfire for the winner but really can’t go wrong. Among the honorable mentions, Tom Buller and Lori McKenna are my favorites. Kristina Murray’s ‘Southern Ambrosia’ could also be an honorable mention.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:38 am
Good list …. I love Whitey Morgan but I think it’s a stretch to put him over Tom Buller or Colter. Tom Bullers album is an absolute masterpiece.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:43 am
Sarah Shook
Ashley McBride
American Aquarium
Brent Cobb
Amanda Shires
December 3, 2018 @ 11:55 am
Mike and the Moonpies’ Steak Night at the Prairie Rose, in my opinion, is one of the best album in years. From the opening taps of the high-hat to the last note if We’re Gone, the album runs the gamut of what country music embodies — happiness, heartache, loss, and indulging in illicit behavior, among other things.
I have listened to this album over and over and over again. It never gets tiring, yet every time I listen to it, I hear something I didn’t hear before. Mike’s songwriting abilities paired with truly one of the best bands in the country behind him makes this album a staple in my music rotation.
The Moonpies have toured harder than most any other band for the better part of the last decade. They have grown their audience organically and by being genuinely great guys. It’s time they get full recognition for paying their dues, and putting this album at #1 is a tip-of-the-hat to the best band around.
December 3, 2018 @ 11:56 am
Loretta Lynn “Wouldn’t It Be great “
December 3, 2018 @ 11:57 am
For me its “Brenn Hill – Rocky Mountain Drifter”, but he is unfortunately unknown.
December 3, 2018 @ 3:47 pm
I bought the album for my mom. Brenn Hill covers “Everything That Glitters” & my mom is the biggest Dan Seals fan worldwide. Glad she likes the other songs too.
December 4, 2018 @ 3:19 pm
Wow, thanks, that’s a great find!
Love Country with the “& Western” part included.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:03 pm
Moonpies would be my vote too, seeing them live this year won me over as a rabid fanboy. American Aquarium and Whitey Morgan are damn close though.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:05 pm
1) American Aquarium ~ Things Change
2) Sarah Shook & the Disarmers ~ Years
3) Blackberry Smoke ~ Find A Light
4) Old Crow Medicine Show ~ Volunteer
5) Willie Nelson ~ Last Man Standing
December 4, 2018 @ 1:31 pm
It looks like you and I can be friends. Although, I’m suffering from American Aquarium burn out. The overriding message of that album seemed stale.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:11 pm
There are some fantastic records on this list, but for me, I have to cast my vote for Blackberry Smoke. From start to finish, this album is a diverse and eclectic mix of genres and sounds, from the grungy opening track “Flesh and Bone,” to the rootsy folk jam “Mother Mountain.” I know some listeners might be a bit thrown off by the way this band tends to shift from one style to another, but I believe that their sonic diversity is a testament to how well they can blend their influences to create a sound that is very much their own.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:14 pm
Mike and the Moonpies for the Win! From start to finish Steak Night is a honky tonk journey. The musicianship is showcased by every member of the band. Thought I was listening to Marty Stuart and the Fabulous Superlatives for a sec. For a runner up, I was skeptical of the Dillon Carmichael record at first, but after listening to “Natural Disaster” I bought the record and have enjoyed it thoroughly. He’s like Travis Tritt backed by the Drive by Truckers or something.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:18 pm
I look forward to these lists all year! And what a tough decision to make! Of these nominees, my favorite is for sure Mike and the Moonpies. But a new discovery for me this year and an album I haven’t been able to put down is Kristina Murray’s Southern Ambrosia.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:19 pm
I am going with Sarah Shook for album of the year.
Her songwriting is fantastic.It is country music. Might not be every-ones type of country music and that’s OK.
Granted too, subject matters aren’t for everyone, but if you get what its about, you feel it, know it, and a lot of us live it.
The band is kick ass.
Trigger, I never understood where you were coming from with suggesting this band does not have “technically adept musicianship”. These are really solid talented players.
There is no gimmicks, no pandering, nothing fake about this album.
“A vegan, pansexual, atheist, civil-rights-activist singer/songwriter and her band of seasoned virtuosos walk into a country/western bar”
She is a unique woman, whose subtlety gets her feelings across without being in your face about. it She is opening country music up to a new dynamics of fans.
I really like how she sings from a male perspective at different times.
IDK , she has broken the gender division in a way and has answered the call for diversity.
Play a lot of this album on the jukebox during dart season.
Sometimes I find it ironic when the guys at the bar are passionately singing along to her
“Make me feel the man I used to be”
There are safer choices for a number of reasons, but Years is mine.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:25 pm
Well I’ve made no secret about the fact that Sarah Shook and The Disarmers album Years gets my AOTY vote. I didn’t really get it at first and that’s ok cause I get it now……and boy do I.
Songs are incredible as is the musicianship on the album. 2 shows coming up and I hope to make both!
I love Whitey Morgan & The 78’s Hard Times and White Lines as well. The song “Carryin’ On” just always makes me smile. No clunkers at all on here. Still think the album could use an up tempo tune. Whitey keeps playing Chicago, we love him and thank him for that!
Blackberry Smoke’s Find A Light was played many many times throughout the year as it is one of my favs. Dillon Carmichaels is certainly solid and has just made it into my rotation.
Cody Jinks’ Lifers didn’t get a nomination and I know how many on here feel about it but I still love it. It’s not as easy as you all think to write new songs as great as his old ones but I love all these. Just wish he’d fuckin play here!!!
Honorable mentions………Ashley McBryde’s – Girl Goin’ Nowhere thanks for playing here twice Ash. Chicago loves you!
Josh Ward and Shane Owens both albums I found here and were played often as well.
I guess I gotta go back and the Mike and The Moonpies some more listens cause I wanna hear what you all are hearing.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:29 pm
Out of these, Jason Eady’s is a clear #1, with Whitey Morgan’s a close second.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:32 pm
out of the above options I’m going to have to vote for Whitey Morgan, simply because i can”t stop listing to What Am I Supposed to do off of that record. The whole album is country from top to bottom, but that song ties it all together for me. It’s literally why country music was invented in the first place.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:35 pm
My vote goes to American Aquarium. Lots of great albums this year but that’s the one that keeps me comin back.
December 3, 2018 @ 12:47 pm
My votes are for Jamie Lin Wilson, Jason Eady and Mike and the Moonpies ⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️ Three of the best albums this year
December 3, 2018 @ 12:51 pm
Pretty shocked trigger didn’t wait until friday when the brett young album comes out so he could include it :p
December 3, 2018 @ 2:39 pm
Go ahead and Break my HORT, just break it. Have mercy…
I feel that Brett forces his voice to sound more raspy, country.. it’s very off putting. He tries to hard…
December 4, 2018 @ 10:23 am
I am so glad someone else mentioned the HORT. The brief bit I watched of the CMA’s was even worse. HWUART. Ugh
December 3, 2018 @ 12:54 pm
I fully acknowledge that the “but what about this” whiney comments are often just that….but hey, this is the comment section of the Album of the Year article : )
I felt the Dillon Carmichael album was far inferior to Randall King’s album, who should be there in his place. Also, I am continually surprised how much the Folk Soul Revival album continues to grow on me…definitely in my top 10 of the year. Tom Buller would also be in my top 10, as well as Courtney Patton’s album. Boland is also up there, although I can understand how Hard Times didn’t make the top 10 list.
I would also have John R. Miller’s album up there…certainly in place of El Coyote, and would have thought Brent Cobb’s album should be there in place of Blackberry Smoke.
Finally, I am glad that Lifer’s wasn’t included…..we need to hold the current “gods” of country to a standard, no matter how good their prior albums were (Whitey showed that one upping yourself or at least keeping your standards high coming off of some great releases can be done)….and Lifers did not meet that standard.
December 3, 2018 @ 1:05 pm
My personal album of the year would be California Sunrise by Pardi. Still listening to it non stop since 2016.
But from your ballot, I’d vote for El Coyote
December 3, 2018 @ 1:40 pm
“Things Change” for sure.
December 3, 2018 @ 1:46 pm
1. Jumping Over Rocks — Jamie Lin Wilson
2. Years — Sarah Shook and the Disarmers
3. Starfire — Caitlyn Smith
4. May Your Kindness Remain — Courtney Marie Andrews
5. Hard Times are Relative — Jason Boland and the Stragglers
December 3, 2018 @ 1:49 pm
Great records that are too far from country for consideration, but still roots/rock/folk related:
To the Sunset — Amanda Shires
13 Rivers — Richard Thompson
All That Reckoning — Cowboy Junkies
Bottle It In — Kurt Vile
Sparkle Hard — Stephen Malkmus
Freedom — Amen Dunes
Among the Ghosts — Lucero
December 3, 2018 @ 3:18 pm
Back with my reasoning…
Why Jumping Over Rocks? The sheer density of incredible songwriting, coupled with tasteful arrangement. Wilson’s pen takes you deeper into the human experience, ruminating on insecure love, abusive relationships, ephemeral desire, mortality, and work-life balance.
I get that it doesn’t offer much in the way of “a Jamie Lin Wilson sound,” but in the absence of a 2018 album that is a classic on all fronts (playing, vocals, ethos, writing, production, etc.. ), I think JOR is the pick.
Also, her version of “Instant Coffee Blues” is fucking incredible.
December 3, 2018 @ 1:47 pm
Blackberry Smoke is the best touring band of this decade!
December 3, 2018 @ 1:48 pm
Fantastic list. I’d give it to Mike and the Moonpies.
Why? Because we so often hear talk about traditional sounds, but Steak Night at the Prairie Rose pegs itself to a different, but still important, era – when Dwight, Alan, and Co. were making smart, fun country music. It’s a bit of a risk, some people still scoff at that stuff, but the Moonpies do it justice while still making an album that is unmistakably from 2018. The band has done this for a while, but this is their best set. It may not be revolutionary or super popular, but it is unabashedly and lovingly conducted.
December 3, 2018 @ 3:49 pm
Who in the hell would “scoff” at that stuff?
December 3, 2018 @ 1:51 pm
Whitey Morgan I have Listened to that record everyday since it came out
December 3, 2018 @ 1:53 pm
Impossible to choose.
December 3, 2018 @ 1:54 pm
And Brent Cobb? Álbum of the year for me.
OCMS in second place.
Brothers Osborne in third.
December 3, 2018 @ 1:58 pm
I Travel On…Jason Eady is the most underrated singer/songwriter of the bunch…with an incredible voice and lyrics that rival Chris Stapleton, I can’t understand why his name is not similarly a household word. He is a humble, unassuming family man who is always available before and after his shows… I’m pulling for this guy but I like all your picks.
December 3, 2018 @ 5:41 pm
My vote is for Eady as well. This is one album the whole family loves. Jumping over rocks would be my 2nd vote.
December 3, 2018 @ 2:11 pm
Steak Night at the Prairie Rose has been in my listening rotation since it debuted. It’s Mike and the Moonpies best album to date! ❤️
December 3, 2018 @ 2:29 pm
My vote goes to Mike and the Moonpies Steak Night at the Prairie Rose. Even though it was released at the beginning of February, it is still fresh on a lot of minds/playlists. Every song on it has quality lyrics, melody, vocals and instrumentation. 2 of the songs could compete for Song of the Year (Steak Night & Beaches). Tough choice though.
December 3, 2018 @ 2:31 pm
I wanted to like Courtney Marie Andrews’s records more than I did. Fruit there is still green in places, but man, what an orchard she’s got. When it comes into full bloom, watch out. To my ears, she and Leah Blevins are two really good writers right on the verge of turning into truly great ones.
December 3, 2018 @ 2:32 pm
Whitey Morgan first with Jason Eady as a solid second. Morgan’s album has that edge and sound that keeps me listening to the album as a whole over and over again. I always prefer quality over quantity. Eady’s is country without so much of the edge, but that wonderful country feel and his lyrics are great, so I listen to the album repeatedly. I like the American Aquarium and Jamie Lin Wilson very much, but do not keep them playing as often. Blackberry Smoke is great and fun, but just not as good as Morgan or Eady’s albums.
I think Cody Jinks really banged it off of the rim with his new album, which was good, but somewhat disappointing; I agree with Trig’s mention and the exclusion from the top ten; it just was not there. I felt the same way when I saw him in concert last month in Athens, GA.
December 3, 2018 @ 2:46 pm
I guess Trig only favors independent artists… No Pistol Annies.. No Brothers Osborne.
Sorry dude, but there is no way that radio will ever play your Top 10 artists of the year… If this is what this website is all about, then I’m sad to say its a hopeless cause… Cody Johnson, William Michael Morgan, Pardi, Midland, Brothers Osborne, Stapleton etc -they are likely the ones to Save Country Music Radio! Not your list. Of course this is just your opinion and that’s awesome. But I feel like you will never be satisfied with the future of Country music with your fav playlist , that is. I’m guessing you hated 80s and 90s country too.
December 3, 2018 @ 2:52 pm
Screw radio.
Not picking what I believe the best albums are based off of dumbass radio play.
December 3, 2018 @ 3:03 pm
Oh $h!T, ill probably get a lot of hate now on this site from others.. I didn’t mean to offend your picks or anything…
I think me and you have different opinions on what “saving country music” means… and for that I humbly announce my resignation from posting on this sacred site. It’s time for me to move on to greener pastures.
R.I.P. Hey Arnold. (July 2018 – December 2018)
Country Roads, Take Me Home
December 3, 2018 @ 8:41 pm
In the words of the great Dan Hicks, “How can we miss you when you won’t go away?”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rW9-FOLG-iA
December 4, 2018 @ 11:52 am
HeyArnold, perhaps you and the rest of us would benefit if you read your posts out loud to yourself or a friend before you actually post them. Just a suggestion…
December 4, 2018 @ 1:30 am
Well I didn’t hate 80’s and 90’s country, but I certainly didn’t love it. Frankly I think many of the underground country types we have around right now are about the countriest damn thing I’ve heard since the roaring 70’s. Stapleton’s the only dude on the radio worth a damn.
December 3, 2018 @ 3:05 pm
Brent Cobb and Pistol Annies for me, along with the Ashley Monroe record and **gasp** Kacey Musgraves.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:33 pm
4 of my top 5 also – with Prine thrown in as well.
December 4, 2018 @ 1:32 am
Cobb has perfected the Country Funk sound so to a tee.
December 3, 2018 @ 3:11 pm
I going with Sarah Shook on the song Damned If I Do Damned If I Don’t Alone. That song is basically a metaphor for life right now.
December 3, 2018 @ 3:12 pm
From this list:
1. Jason Eady followed by Sarah Shook
My top 5
1. Courtney Marie Andrews
2. Courtney Patton
3. Colter Wall
4. Jason Eady
5. Lindi Ortega
I’m still rounding out my top 10 but they include Sarah Shook, Lori McKenna, Western Centuries and Pistol Annies plus one of the following:
Mike and the Moonpies
Old Crow Medicine Show
Kelly Willis
El Coyote
Wes Youssi and the Country Champs
Loretta Lynn
Jamie Lin Wilson
Belle Plaine
December 3, 2018 @ 3:27 pm
Sarah Shook (but Bent Cobb has really closed the gap).
December 3, 2018 @ 3:32 pm
Nice to see good, informed comments and opinions on this.
As opposed to “leave Kane alone!”
I would go with 1. Courtney Marie Andrews, for her beautiful voice, moving and well written lyrics, melody, and chord progressions, and 2. Tom Buller who is the performer would most like to hear perform live.
Person who is not mentioned, and who I think should be heard is Jeffrey Martin, album one go round.
On the list, I go with Mike and the Moonpies. Even though I think I can hear a major seventh chord in steak night at the prairie rose. which means it can’t be country.
(joking, not about the chord, it’s in there)
runner up Jamie Lyn Wilson. Third place, Sarah Shook.
December 3, 2018 @ 4:24 pm
My top 3 are Colter, Whitey and Eady.
December 3, 2018 @ 4:39 pm
Mike and the Moonpies – Steak Night at the Prairie Rose
December 3, 2018 @ 4:48 pm
How can you have an album of the year list without Kane Brown??
December 3, 2018 @ 4:55 pm
KEY QUESTION
December 4, 2018 @ 3:49 am
Aye yo fellas i’m like thanx ya’ll nowutimsayin! 🤠💖 i’m str8 up the next kinny rodgers and shit!
December 3, 2018 @ 4:49 pm
All great albums. But the best album I heard all year was AA “Things Change”. Awesome songwriting, awesome band and awesome production by Fulbright. Plus, it has the best line of the year in “we just can’t give in, we just can’t give up, we must go boldly into the darkness and be the light”. So that gets my vote. I’ll also add Amanda Shires album deserves a place somewhere. It’s great.
December 3, 2018 @ 5:00 pm
Colter Wall, JP Harris, Cody Jinks, Shooter Jennings, Whitey Morgan, Blackberry Smoke, Dillon Carmichael, Brent Cobb, Tyler Childers, and Joshua Hedley all put out phenomenal albums. I haven’t bought so many new albums in one calendar year in my entire life. Within those 10, it could be a 10 way tie for first.
But I’m going with JP Harris “Sometimes Dogs Bark At Nothing”
December 3, 2018 @ 5:24 pm
I would give it to both Caitlyn Smith and Mike & The Moonpies – both albums are terrific. If I had to choose though I’m going with Steak Night at the Prairie Rose.
December 3, 2018 @ 5:43 pm
Certainly no one’s going to get an argument from me re. Courtney Marie Andrews’ album MAY YOUR KINDNESS REMAIN. Both Courtney and her album are true winners for this year.
My pick would be Lindi Ortega’s album LIBERTY. It is just one of the most eclectic albums of any kind in recent memory, mixing country, rock, Mexicana, and Western film music (late 60s/early 70s) influences on a concept album rooted in the mythology of the American Southwest and northern Mexico. You really get the dry, parched feel of the landscape out of this album–and this from a Canadian-born gal with Mexican bloodlines.
December 3, 2018 @ 5:51 pm
Mike and the Moonpies has my vote! Wore the needle out on my turntable to that album.
December 3, 2018 @ 5:58 pm
A lot of great albums here but I vote for Sarah Shook and the Disarmers’ “Years” as SCM Album Of The Year. The band is incredinle live, playing fiesty rock n’ roll and honky tonk country with a lead singer who is as rebellious and direct as Ol’ Hank or Waylon. “New Ways To Fail” is a great track and shows you you can honky tonk and skateboard in the video, my favorite of the year.
December 3, 2018 @ 6:12 pm
My favorite albums of 2018:
1. Sarah Shook & the Disarmers
2. American Aquarium
3. Cody Jinks
4. Cliff Westfall
5. John R. Miller
6. Dillion Carmichael
7. Kayla Ray
8. Whitey Morgan and the 78’s
9. Town Mountain
10. The Bottle Rockets
11. JP Harris
12. Kristina Murray
13. James Steinie
14. Jamie Lin Wilson
15. First Aid Kit
16. Morgan Wade & the Stepbrothers
17. Laura Benitez and the Heartache
18. Vivian Leva
19. Courtney Marie Andrews
20. Pat Reedy & The Longtime
21. Blackberry Smoke
22. Western Centuries
23. Left Arm Tan
24. Joshua Hedley
25. Jason Borland & The Stragglers
26. Wes Youssi & the County Champs
27. Lucero
28. Jason Eady
29. Robbie Fulks & Linda Gail Lewis
30. Armadillo Road
December 3, 2018 @ 6:30 pm
Vivian Leva
December 3, 2018 @ 6:32 pm
Stolen Horse by Dusty Rust — I think this album is on a level with Metamodern when it comes to originality and creativity.
By The Way, I Forgive You by Brandi Carlile — Incredible songwriting and an emotional yet perfect delivery.
Mesa Starlight by The Dirty River Boys — Lots of energy and interesting sonic exploration while keeping the spaceship hog-tied to the country and roots.
Conductor by Goodnight, TX — A criminally overlooked àlbum that should be getting the props it deserves for taking country and roots in familiar yet challenging directions; and they progressed their sound without abandoning the styles that their fans love.
Self-Titled by Jesse Daniel — This isn’t my favorite of the year, but I still feel like this album should be getting some love. This one came straight from his soul and it shows.
Evergreen by Michigan Rattlers — For me it’s a tie between this album and Stolen Horse. This one is simple yet not boring, and I think it’s going to be one of those albums people go back to for more content when these guys get bigger in a few years.
December 3, 2018 @ 8:24 pm
As for your list Trig, I honestly can’t decide who is the best. JLW’s is great but flawed (but if Death & Life doesn’t get S.O.T.Y I will be voicing strong opposition lol), so I would say Years over Steak Night. Steak Night just seems like the easy choice to me, and the album is a little too derivative IMHO. Just don’t say anything about Sarah’s exes, or just to be safe, all males who may have had a hand in her success.
But the thing that stands out on your list for me is Whitey’s album. It has a few solid songs, and I will allow that they really took some chances with this one to keep people interested, but I really feel like they missed the mark here and do not deserve considerations. I love this group, they should slap whoever mixed those tracks and set the levels for some of Whitey’s vocals. This is the one album I feel like you’re phoning in a la Stapleton and the CMA’s.
December 5, 2018 @ 11:57 am
I agree re: the Moonpies and the 78’s; although “Beaches of Biloxi” (earworm of the year) and “Around Here” (just wow…) should be in SOTY contention.
What do you find “flawed” in Jumping Over Rocks? (Especially if you really liked Brandi’s…)
December 5, 2018 @ 4:40 pm
I agree about “Around Here”. It’s probably the #2 song of the year for me with “By the Way I Forgive you” (the song) at #3.
I don’t understand the correlation youre referring to between Carlile and JLW’s. The spirit and message of their music is very similar, but they’re very different sonically imo. The rawness and rough edges of JLW’s voice work for most of the songs on her album, but for a couple they were a little off-putting for me. But if she wins A.O.T.Y., I have no criticism for that.
In fact, I’m way more of a fan of JLW than Shook, but I think its tough to ignore the impact Shook’s album has had on 2018. I’m paraphrasing Trig’s review when I say this, but Years does not come close to featuring the best instrumentation or vocals for 2018, but the sum of all the parts are pretty revolutionary and the final product is very appealing. I just wish she would pull back on the vibrato a smidge.
December 5, 2018 @ 6:23 pm
I’ll be making scenes here if SOTY isn’t The Being Gone 😀
December 3, 2018 @ 6:49 pm
Ok here goes…
Sarah and Years
Brent Cobb Providence Canyon
Robbie Fulks and Linda Gail Lewis
Mike and the Moonpies
Cliff Westfall
BlackBerry Smoke
Kelly Willis Back Being Blue
Wes Youssi
I know I am missing some that are out of rotation from earlier in the year. Some of the most recent ones haven’t grown on me enough yet.
December 3, 2018 @ 9:09 pm
Wes Youssi…yes he at least deserves honorable mention.
December 3, 2018 @ 7:14 pm
I’ll second that one.
December 3, 2018 @ 7:18 pm
Although I havent heard all of these albums my vote goes to Brent Cobb – Providence Canyon.
With that said I have some albums to listen to for the foreseeable future.
December 3, 2018 @ 8:14 pm
Mike and the Moonpies have my vote! That album stays on repeat!
December 3, 2018 @ 8:15 pm
My personal Top 4 albums for 2018 Alejandro Escovedo The Crossing, Brandi Carlile By the way I forgive you, Lucero Among the Ghosts and American Aquarium Things Change. So from your Top 10 AA would get my vote. Great songwriting, great mix of what I consider rock and roll and country songs. And as mentioned the best lyric of the year – and glad I have a shirt with it on it “we must go boldly into the dark and be the light”. BJ really found his voice on this album.
December 3, 2018 @ 8:22 pm
I have been reading your site for years. I really appreciate your effort in putting out reviews and information on the music I love. We often have similar taste and you often put into words what I think about an album. I don’t always see things the same, which is fine too. Thank you for turning me on to countless artists and bands which I have then purchased albums from and gone to their shows. Over the last two years in particular, I agree that there has been an embarrassment of riches for country/ roots/ americana. I put together my list before reading yours, and I think the most surprising is my number one, Red Shahan, has no mentions here. I think you gave him a positive review, and I understand there are just too many great albums this year. I could have listed another ten or more that I greatly enjoyed. I think we shared four of the top ten, and I think I have a few that haven’t been mentioned in the comments yet. Thanks for a great year.
Red Shahan – Culberson County
Jason Eady – I Travel On
Brandi Carlile – By the Way, I Forgive You
Sam Morrow – Concrete and Mud
Sarah Shook – Years
John R Miller – The Trouble You Follow
Jesse Daniel – Jesse Daniel
Whitey Morgan – Hard Times and White Lines
Nicholas Jamerson – NJ
Jamie Lin Wilson – Jumping Over Rocks
December 3, 2018 @ 8:33 pm
My expanded and more thought out 20 (I reserve the right to update based on all the great suggestions)
1. Years – Sarah Shook & the Disarmers
2. Providence Caynon – Brent Cobb
3. Interstate Gospel – Pistol Annies
4. All Damn Day – Nick Dittmeier & the Sawdusters
5. Sometimes Dogs Bark at Nothing – JP Harris
6. The Trouble You Follow – John R. Miller
7. Hard Times and White Lines – Whitey Morgan and the 78’s
8. Last Man Standing – Willie Nelson
9. Volunteer – Old Crow Medicine Show
10. Songs of the Plains – Colter Wall
11. That’s All There Is (And There Ain’t No More) – Pat Reedy & the Longtiime Goners
12. Steak Night at the Prairie Rose – Mike and the Moonpies
13. Lifers – Cody Jinks
14. Find a Light – Blackberry Smoke
15. Carolina Confessions – The Marcus King Band
16. Life is Good on the Open Road – Trampled by Turtles
17. New Freedom Blues – Town Mountain
18. Rifles and Rosary Beads – Mary Gauthier
19. Shooter – Shooter Jennings
20. Dumplin Soundtrack
My favorite Trig album review of the year: Providence Caynon – Brent Cobb