Nominees for the 2017 Saving Country Music Album of the Year
For the last few years, in the humble estimation of Saving Country Music, it has been a somewhat down era for excellent, legacy-caliber releases in country music and independent roots, with deference paid to the releases that did leave high water marks here and there. But 2017 was a different story, especially the first half, leaving us with difficult choices of what to consider to be the best of the year, let alone where to start whittling down the field. But here we are, and we’ll try and do our best.
More so than most years, a slew of projects will not make the cut as Album of the Year candidates, and this feels like a crying shame. Jason Eady‘s self-titled effort was right on the bubble, and would have been included if the candidates weren’t cut off at 10. Dori Freeman once again impressed just like she did in 2016, and was also right on the bubble. Billy Strings arguably put out the best bluegrass album of the year with Turmoil & Tinfoil. The Brother Brothers and their Tugboats EP can’t be overlooked. Colter Wall put out a high caliber, self-titled effort, and at only 22-years-old, will certainly get more shots at Album of the Year in the future, as will Parker McCullum, who set the pace for forward thinking country coming from Texas and beyond.
That’s to say nothing about Chris Stapleton‘s two installments of From A Room, or Willie Nelson‘s God’s Problem Child, which very well might be his best effort in a decade, or decades. And if it wasn’t for the relative un-country-ness of Shinyribs‘ I Got Your Medicine or JD McPherson‘s UNDIVIDED HEART & SOUL, they may have been included here as well.
But 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 don’t go crying about what has been left off. 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 calculus of the winner. So if you have an opinion, pipe up. 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 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 exercise to make music into a competition. The purpose is to expand the knowledge base for great music in a vetting exercise that is open to everyone, and respectful to all the music we think is the year’s best.
Jaime Wyatt – Felony Blues
Incredible singing, songwriting, and production in a heavily-thematic effort that hits straight at the heart.
For many of the best practitioners of country music, they don’t choose to pursue country music as a profession, country music chooses them. It becomes a necessity of their circumstances bred from hardship, bad decisions, a misspent youth, or other situations where the burdens of life grow so heavy, the only way to alleviate the load is to put those personal histories and bad experiences into song. With stories spun directly from Jaime Wyatt’s stained history, Felony Blues has the right style, as well as the real world-authenticity that true country music needs to not just send your toes tapping, but to stick to your bones as the real testaments of a life-worn soul.
Exquisitely produced and recorded with an excellent crew of musicians that includes Ted Russell Kamp, Gabe Wincher of The Punch Brothers, and fellow California country artist Sam Outlaw on the duet “Your Loving Saves Me,” the autobiographical, 7-song record is striking in how full and real it sounds, especially when held in contrast to the rather extended era of uninspiring output we find ourselves amidst in independent roots and country music. Though the album was made on a meager budget, no expense was spared if the song called for it, including steel guitar and backup singers, giving this otherwise West Coast country project plenty of Southern textures. (read full review)
Tyler Childers – Purgatory
Traditional/Outlaw country at its finest. A star is born.
Timing is the intangible quantity that is often overlooked for why sweet lady luck smiles upon certain artists and allows their music to succeed, and why others fall flat, or never seem to find the success their relative talent deserves. If Sturgill Simpson had started his career in earnest at age 23, he may have become a known quantity in music way before he was ready, typecast as just okay, and not be in a position where if he randomly chooses to produce an album from some unknown Kentucky songwriter, it immediately results in a necessity to pay attention.
Just like Sturgill Simpson and Chris Stapleton, Tyler Childers was playing and writing music for many years before he was ready to become a part of the national country music conversation. It was only after years of failure, perseverance, tempering in the fires of everyday life and dues paid on small stages that Tyler was able to find enough wisdom furrowing his brow and the proper resources beneath him to take it to the masses.
It’s that nexus between rural, real-world vernacular, filtered through an intelligent perspective, and gifted with poetic insight that makes an album like Tyler Childers’ Purgatory more infectious than your average throwback country effort. This album makes no apologies, and no attempts to sand down the rough edges, speaking candidly about drug use and womaizing similar to those early underground records from folks like Hank3 that helped set the table for the current country insurgency, yet is still distinctly Kentucky in perspective, steeped in the hollers of coal country, where the action happens down winding roads shaded from the sun due to the looming hills, and debauchery is so easy to discover if you know where to go looking. (read full review)
Lilly Hiatt’s – Trinity Lane
This is the 2017 sleeper.
With her third record, second generation alt-country performer Lilly Hiatt has offered up a career-defining album full of songwriting gems and inspired performances that is spirited to the heights of infectious listening by smart and considerate production. This personal and galvanized work finds the full realization of Lilly Hiatt’s vision, voice, and potential as a songwriter and performer, stepping out of the shadow of a famous name, forging her own sound and identity, and announcing her participation in discussions of who is worthy of praise in a new generation of emerging artists energized by rock and country in equal measures.
Trinity Lane is not just a record for people who like music, but for those dedicated acolytes of the art form who would travel two states over for a festival, or fork out money to buy their favorite artist’s new record on vinyl the day of release. Whether it’s incorporating the time stamp of the day David Bowie died in an alt-country song, or one of Trinity Lane‘s standout songs called “Records,” this particular work doesn’t just speak to what it’s like to have your heart broken, it speaks to having music help you through those moments, and how it can act as the backdrop to certain memories.
Trinity Lane is named for the specific street where Lilly Hiatt resides. But beyond the emotional breakup that inspired this record, it also reminds the true music fan what a place apart music can be for the troubles of the mind and heart—where it can create intimate landscapes inside each of us to escape to. There is us, and then there is us when we are lost in those moments all to ourselves that only the best music can provide—music like the stuff found on Lilly Hiatt’s Trinity Lane. (read full review)
Zephaniah OHora – This Highway
An ideal specimen of classic country in the modern context, and the best-produced album in the bunch.
Zephanaiah OHora’s This Highway just very well might be a modern classic country masterpiece. It’s flawless for what it is, which is a reawakening of everything brilliant and beautiful about the Countrypolitan era of country music, while leaving all the superfluousness of strings and choruses and other overproduction aside. In fact in a strange way, Zephaniah OHora, some 60 years after the original Countrypolitan era, has represented the essence and spirit of what made that era so great even better than some of the original artists and albums that helped define that epoch of American country music.
And don’t let me hear a peep about how some slicked back guy from the Big Apple is incapable of singing country music. Just listen to This Highway, and that perception is immediately discredited. If you want a good excuse to disregard Zephaniah OHora and This Highway, I offer my sincerest apologies. It is still eclectic to take this type of vintage approach to country music, and it won’t put Zephaniah on the Sturgill Simpson trajectory to superstardom. But for what it is and how it’s presented, This Highway leans heavily towards perfection. (read full review)
Marty Stuart – Way Out West
Country music’s best conceptualized record of 2017.
This album is steeped in a moment when forces thought to be so diametrically opposed in culture began to cross breed in ways we are still trying to match the creativity of today. Being a tireless student of the music as he is, Marty Stuart has gone and made a record that delves into this era with such authority and enthusiasm, it comes as close to matching those original moments as anyone since.
Just like The West itself, Marty Stuart’s new album is vast and diverse. You have the Marty Robbins-style desert ballads, you have the California country Clarence White influence, you have the Native American and the Mexican represented since they have such a profound influence on the land, and it’s all interwoven with the wonder that the American West inspires.
As much as Marty Stuart is a student of country music—and always has been from his days of playing in the bands of Lester Flatt and Johnny Cash—he’s also a teacher. And with a refreshing boldness, and frankly a little bit of guts from running the risk of being misunderstood by some of the fuddy duddy fans of traditional country, Marty Stuart encapsulates a critical time in country and all of American music when country music became cool. And even better, with Way Out West, Marty Stuart proves it still is. (read full review)
John Moreland – Big Bad Luv
The best songwriting of 2017, hands down.
Moreland has always been the apex predator in the songwriting department since he began releasing albums, even preceding Jason Isbell for those who put the effort out to seek Moreland out and listen. But the production of his records has always left a little to be desired. It’s hard for an artist who is used to performing solo to sit in a studio and know what to do with additional musicians, and this came through in the recording process. Don’t mistake this as a desire for Moreland to have a “produced” sound. That would suffocate his music faster than anything. But releasing music that is infectious, that honors groove, that finds a fetching melody is just another way to broaden the audience for John Moreland songs and enhance the experience, and shouldn’t been seen as somehow disrespecting or misunderstanding what’s at the heart of his appeal.
Big Bad Luv is exactly the type of album that John Moreland needed to make, where his songcraft suffers none, but is bolstered by the virtue of a more compositional approach to the music itself. And this is the only place he could improve or “evolve,” because the songwriting was already at the pinnacle. This album works like memories do. Salient, yet immersed in longing. Warm, but tinged with a little bit of pain. The song ends, but the message remains in your heart—and on this album, the melody and beat still frolicking in your toes, while presenting maybe even a more elevated songwriting effort from previous Moreland works, if that is even possible. (read full review)
Sunny Sweeney – Trophy
A victory from a once major label star who found her voice, and her home.
With Sunny Sweeney’s new album Trophy, it’s country, it’s Texas, and most importantly, it’s Sunny Sweeney all the way. It is the full package. It is a homecoming for Sunny. Like she says so well in the song “Nothing Wrong with Texas,” we all get so swept up in thinking there’s greener pastures, and better opportunities in latitudes and locations beyond our own, we forget that sometimes the things we go searching for in life are right under our noses. It’s not always a compromise to settle. Sometimes there’s nothing better than what you already have.
Trophy is the name of Sunny Sweeney’s fourth record, and a song about an attitude problem of an ex-girlfriend or wife. But the title is also indicative of a victory. The problem with money and fame is that you can always have more of it. The true victories in life are the ones earned when you discover something about yourself, and achieve a goal that is personal to you. Sometimes this comes with the earning of great wealth and recognition, and sometimes it comes at the compromise of them. But the measurements of fame and wealth are arbitrary and capricious. What’s most important is the personal discoveries you achieve. That is the point of the pursuit of happiness, and what is at the heart of Trophy. (read full review)
Turnpike Troubadours – A Long Way From Your Heart
Has to be considered one of the strongest contenders in a strong field.
The Turnpike Troubadours are the greatest country music band in the world right now. The Turnpike Troubadours very well may be the the greatest country act overall—male, female, duo or group. Unlike other big non-commercial names like Jason Isbell, Chris Stapleton, and Sturgill Simpson, the Turnpike Troubadours are not polarizing in any way to the population of music fans. Unlike Stapleton and Simpson, they are truly independent. You don’t shy away from the Turnpike Troubadours in any way from some perceived political affiliation or other potential acrimonious issue. And unlike Isbell, Stapleton, and Simpson, the Turnpike Troubadours are solidly, undeniably country.
The appeal for the Turnpike Troubadours crosses age groups, gender, geographic location, and social status. The Turnpike Troubadours are the independent band that even your mainstream-listening friends and family love. The Turnpike Troubadours are energetic and youthful, yet mature. Their music has an infectiousness, yet is still incredibly deep. The Turnpike Troubadours are all things to all country music people, and continuously prove their universal appeal whenever given a chance. And with a head full of momentum and a growing mantle of critical accolades and commercial accomplishments, the Turnpike Troubadours may have just released their most gratifying album yet.
Where other promising acts of independent country seem to almost invariably veer towards the rock or indie side of music as they make their career ascent, the Turnpike Troubadours have stuck to their country roots. If anything, they’ve added more twang to their sound by incorporating a sixth permanent member into the band recently in steel guitar player “Hammerin’” Hank Early. The Turnpike Troubadours are a band that won’t break your heart as a country fan. They won’t abandon you to follow some big trend, or attempt to set one for themselves. Like the rising and setting sun, the Turnpike Troubadours are steady. They are there for you, while remaining remarkably fresh and avoiding anything the feels even close to a stale routine. (read full review)
Joseph Huber – The Suffering Stage
Not to be overlooked, a strong display of songwriting and instrumentation, combined with excellent, unique production.
It’s hard to say enough about Joseph Huber’s songwriting, and how he’s able to evoke melancholy and forlornness in both timeless and timely narratives, or his ability to step behind most any instrument and pull the magic out of a melody that is eerily perfect for the desired mood and message. But something that can’t be emphasized enough about Huber’s music, and what is at the heart of why his songs have this naturally mournful, yet warming sensation, is simply the way his record’s sound, boiled down to perfunctory recording technique. It’s wholly immersive on the senses, like the smell of the inside of your grandfather’s suitcase.
The Suffering Stage makes reference to the Buddhist philosophy of life as suffering, and to life as a “stage” that we’re all simply players on. Whether it’s a spiritual journey or a theatrical movement, the point is to walk away with something learned; something gained. This is what Joseph Huber delivers on this record. Old, forgotten memories get stirred to the forefront. Theories on life are recalled and reflected upon. And you don’t end up more happy like music is supposed to do, you end up a little sad and nostalgic, but in a way that’s strangely comforting in a manner simple happiness is incapable of delivering. (read full review)
Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit – The Nashville Sound
A tour de force from Isbell. The Album of the Year in Americana, for sure.
Jason Isbell’s The Nashville Sound is a career record. Put it right up there with his 2013 breakout, Southeastern. It is an important record for our time, and not because it relies on raptly polarizing political ideologies as the basis for its message and creative assertions, but because Jason Isbell, a native of Green Hill, Alabama, who is as Southern as the day is long, who is as sharp and in tune with the rhythms of culture in his time as anyone, is like a living, breathing embodiment of the modern day American experience, with all the dichotomies, guilt, glory, fortitude, humility, fears, and vices we all face encapsulated into one perspective, all capped off with his newly-found illumination via fatherhood.
The Nashville Sound is not a country album. It’s a Jason Isbell album. We want to claim it as country because it’s just so damn good regardless of what you call it. Country music should be proud to have Isbell within its ranks, and that’s the same reason so many try to extract an artist like Sam Hunt. A track like “Anxiety” isn’t really country at all. It’s not like any song we’ve heard from Isbell in the past. But it’s good, and most every roots-based genre will look to claim it.
We have lost so much in the last 18 months in the United States and beyond, even those of us who may have won political victories. The polarization and vitriol has inflicted its acrid state of mind on nearly every sector of life, including sports and leisure, and things that are supposed to take our minds off everyday trouble and conflict. At some point there must be a firewall, and music not meant as political insult shouldn’t be taken as such, or characterized so. Especially music that carries such enjoyment, wisdom, and is able to evoke emotions like The Nashville Sound does. (read full review)
Thomas Rhett – Life Changes
Yeah right.
Remember:
1) Please feel free to leave who YOU believe should win in the comments section below, as well as a list of your top albums of 2017.
2) Your feedback is strongly encouraged and will factor into the final decision, but this is not an up or down vote.
3) A much more expansive Essential Albums List will be posted in later December, so no bellyaching about what is “missing.” Make a suggestion of what you believe deserves greater recognition. This list is not just intended to reinforce who you already like, it’s purpose is to help fill in gaps in everyone’s knowledge base about great country and roots music.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:45 am
Tyler Childers hands down.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:32 am
I actually found Purgatory underwhelming after all the hype. I much prefer A Long Way From Your Heart
December 4, 2017 @ 8:46 am
I don’t know, Trigger. You may have to listen to Rhett’s album again. If you get really drunk, really listen to the lyrics, and have a frontal lobotomy, it really grows on you.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:47 am
For me it’s either Turnpike Troubadours – A Long Way From Your Heart, Joseph Huber – The Suffering Stage or Zephaniah OHora – This Highway. All superb albums and I am struggling to choose the best between them.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:47 am
Hey folks,
Just a quick reminder: if you want one of those cool little icons beside your name, you can go to https://en.gravatar.com/ and sign up for one. It’s pretty easy, and will work on many other websites as well.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:20 am
I was struggling with this survey due to the fact that while living in one of the bigger media markets in the country, we have exactly one “country’ radio station and it is mostly crap…
While diversity can be a good thing, it has reached the point where my market is divided into a hundred tiny pieces, and ends up pleasing no one.
That said, going with Turnpike because I bought it and Stapleton’s…Wish I could buy them all.
December 4, 2017 @ 2:46 pm
Now all ya got to tell us how to do is italicize.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:48 am
It’s Turnpike for me, just keeps getting better the more I listen while the rest of these I only listen to on occasion. Jason Eady second.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:49 am
I got 6 of the 10 on rotation. Tough choice.
Purgatory gets my vote for AOY
This Highway is the best Country album I’ve purchased in 10 years
December 4, 2017 @ 8:50 am
Completely agree with Tyler Childers and Jason Isbell! Havent heard the others but will definitely be checking them out! Tyler’s album was outstanding to me as it had some incredible songwriting in it such as Lady May and Universal Sound and Jason Isbell’s was pulling no punches and differed from his more story telling songs to feeling personal.
The White Buffalo brought out a great new album but I don’t know if it would fall into this category and Colter Wall’s record is great. Steve Earle’s new album was a solid effort and was my in to the rest of his music.
And I may be bias but I’m really proud of my E.P Rusted which came out in April!
December 4, 2017 @ 8:51 am
Tyler childers, but turnpike a close second
December 4, 2017 @ 8:52 am
Tyler Childers or Turnpike Troubadours.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:53 am
Normally a new Jason Isbell album would be a shoe-in for me to be my personal choice for album of the year. This year, however, I have to go with the Turnpike Troubadors. They have always been one of my favorite bands, but for whatever reason this was the year that everything “clicked” for the band on “A Long Way From Your Heart”. Maybe it is Evan Felker sobering up and getting married, maybe it is a group of guys all entering or in their 30’s and really hitting their creative stride, maybe it is that Isbell is so damn great and consistent greatness can become “boring”. Whatever the reason “A Long Way From Your Heart” is my choice in a very strong year for new Country/Americana music.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:54 am
Tyler Childers, but DAMN this is a tough list to choose from!!!
December 4, 2017 @ 8:55 am
Marty & Sunny
December 4, 2017 @ 8:55 am
It’s between Tyler Childers and Turnpike Troubadours for me. Jason Isbell’s record was excellent as always, just not quite country.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:56 am
Tyler Childers gets my vote. With Turnpike troubadors coming in at a close 2nd
December 4, 2017 @ 8:56 am
Isbell. While not really country, nobody can dispute this man’s influence on the genre and his ability to write relevant and poignant songs. Tupelo is the best song on the album if it is about country. Has all the necessary items needed in a country song, except mama, trains or prison. But it does have heart ache, getting drunk, and maybe one could construe he was in a truck driving home with the windows up. Anxiety is awesome also, and Vampires is haunting. He is without a doubt the best American song writer alive at this time.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:58 am
I thought Alison Krauss’ Windy City was a rather solid, and underappreciated country album.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:09 am
Krauss’s “Windy City” is a great album. But in such a crowded field this year, you have to go with albums that include more original material. Since it was mostly a covers album, it made it hard to choose over the others, but that shouldn’t be taken as a knock on the record.
December 4, 2017 @ 8:58 am
Loving Trophy and Purgatory!!, but if I had to pick one, I choose Sunny Sweeney Trophy
December 4, 2017 @ 9:00 am
Great list! I’m torn between Ty and Marty.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:02 am
Sunny Sweeney’s Trophy for me. The Nashville Sound as a close runner up. Kasey Chambers, Jason Eady, Dori Freeman, JD McPherson, Sarah Shook, and The Sweetback Sisters round out my other favorites.
December 4, 2017 @ 12:35 pm
I love that Kasey Chambers album as well. Not Album of the Year for me, but top 20 of the year for sure. Would like to see a review for that here.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:02 am
Would have loved to have seen Jeremy Pinnell’s “Ties of Blood and Affection” on that list but i realize there’s only so many albums you can review.
December 4, 2017 @ 6:02 pm
Yes, but there are so many good things about that album, it baffles the mind that people aren’t talking more about it.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:03 am
I hate that Jason Eady’s eponymous album was left off this list. John Moreland’s “Big Bad Luv” is a great album, but not as great as “High On Tulsa Heat” – supposed production issues be damned. Zephaniah OHora’s “This Highway” is my winner out of this group. How something can sound so classic and so modern is beyond me.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:33 am
Every year there is going to be one album that feels like it gets screwed because you have to cut off the list at some point and it can’t go on forever. This year, it’s Jason Eady.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:04 am
1. Travis Meadows -First Cigarette
2. Turnpike Troubadours – A Long Way From Your Heart
3. Jason Isbell – The Nashville Sound
4. Lee Ann Womack – The Lonely, The Lonesome and The Gone
5. Tyler Childers – Purgatory
Honorable Mention. Chris Stapleton – From A Room, Volume 2
December 4, 2017 @ 11:41 am
Travis Meadows “First Cigarette” was my favorite record of the year. Never saw a review for it on here, but I know Trigger is busy. “Pontiac” and “Pray for Jungleland” are jams.
December 4, 2017 @ 12:38 pm
I agree, that record was very good and has been a little underrated. And the production was great which hasn’t been the case on a lot of 2017 records. My favorites were the title track, “Sideways,” and “McDowell Road.”
December 4, 2017 @ 1:40 pm
When Travis sings, you know he’s lived the words. I think my favorite is “Better Boat”.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:04 am
Many folks probably haven’t given it a listen, but Joseph Huber’s album should be strong considered. It is a great record.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:05 am
I will have to go with Turnpike Troubadours a long way from your heart. But Tyler Childers is an artist I just recently found within the last month and I love most of his stuff! Purgatory is an excellent album! And I can’t wait to hear more from this man.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:07 am
Lilly Hiatt’s record is great if you’re like me and went from Grunge/Sludge metal in the 90s into twangpunk and Alt country. Good rough edge to the songs.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:08 am
I agree with just about everything on this list, but I have to ultimately go with Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit’s Nashville Sound. It is the album I keep coming back to this year, but there are several wonderful choices. I wouldn’t be mad if any of the albums won.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:08 am
Isbell & The 400 Unit
My Top 10
Susto – & I’m Fine Today
Jason Isbell & 400 Unit – Nashville Sound
Nikki Lane – Highway Queen
J Roddy Walston & The Biz – Destroyers
The Secret Sisters – You Dont Own Me
Chris Stapleton – From a Room Vol. 1
Ryan Adams – Prisoner
Rod Melancon – Southern Gothic
Turnpike Troubadours – Long Way
Willie Nelson – God’s Problem Child
December 4, 2017 @ 9:10 am
Tyler Childers Purgatory
December 4, 2017 @ 9:10 am
1. JI for NS
2. TC for Purgatory
3. TT for ALWFYH
December 4, 2017 @ 9:10 am
I love Felony Blues so much, I only wish it was longer.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:11 am
Margo Price and Sunny
it’s the year of the woman dammit.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:12 am
Purgatory is a great record, but I think we all know how much Tyler has left in the tank. It left me wanting more. Not because it wasn’t great, but because I know Tyler has so many more good songs ready to go.
A Long Way From Your Heart is also great, but seemed to me to be a little on the safe side. It wasn’t a dramatic move forward for them, just a solid album by a solid band, right in line with their previous efforts.
The Nashville Sound is incredible, but we’ve all come to expect that from Jason. Much like Turnpike, I love the album, but don’t see it as a dramatically different or outstanding album when compared to his catalog.
The album I’ve kept coming back to time and time again this year is Way Out West. It was so fresh and different when I first heard it that I’ve been obsessed with it since. Much like Sailor’s Guide to Earth, it takes the listener on a journey and completely immerses you in it, unlike the others (especially Turnpike’s, Tyler’s, and Justin’s) that are just a collection of songs. The musicianship is effortless and one would be hard pressed to find anything out of place. I remember being halfway through my first listen and being struck by how easy a career musician with loads of talent like Marty Stuart can make a record like this seem.
I know I’ve seen Trig talk about it on here before, but I’ll repeat it here. From anyone else, Way Out West runs away with the show. For some reason we all tend to see Marty Stuart as a has been or former mainstream country sweetheart, which is a damn shame. This record wipes the floor with most of the others put out in 2017 and I think deserves to be the album of the year.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:44 am
I agree. Listening to Way Out West from start to finish is like watching a badass movie.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:14 am
Sunny Sweeny
December 4, 2017 @ 9:17 am
Sunny or Joseph Huber, that guy is supremely talented, love the album. Check out a live You Tube of his to see him playing/singing 4 instruments at one time
December 4, 2017 @ 9:17 am
I agree that the Turnpike Troubadors just released a career album, however, it IS Tyler Childers time! With the songwriting, instrumentation, subject matter, country music just got another kick in the pants from the bluegrass state. So i give the edge to Purgatory, absolutely.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:18 am
Troubadours!! easily best album of the year
top albums in my humble opinion in no particular order
1. Turnpike Troubadours
2. Sam Outlaw
3. Parker McCollum
4. Jim Lauderdale
5. Drew Kennedy
6. Charley Crockett
7.Chris Stapleton
December 4, 2017 @ 9:18 am
Sunny Sweeny for sure. That album is amazing and probably my most listened to of the past year.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:19 am
1. Tyler Childers
2. Turnpike
3. Isbell
All were great albums but the homer in me is just too glad to see Tyler finally get the accolades he deserves. I love the album but “Shake the Frost” will always be my favorite song of his.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:20 am
Rodney Crowell’s Close Ties?
December 4, 2017 @ 9:21 am
Jeremy Pinnell – Ties of Blood and Affection is a glaring omission.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:56 am
I have been down that road, Sam. Careful, people will tell you to “stop being annoying” if you mention Pinnell too much in these parts. : ) I agree 100%…….Pinnell’s album is a solid top 3 for me. And it deserves to be mentioned 100 times over, even if the only coverage he gets here is in the comments section.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:22 am
Tyler Childers! It’s hands down the best album of the year, and one of the best albums of the past decade!
December 4, 2017 @ 9:22 am
Marty Stuart is my top album of the year, so there you go.
I did not know Zephaniah OHora, but after listening to some of his stuff I immediately bought the album. Missed that post in June, but that is a great record.
My other favorites this year are The Country Side of Harmonica Sam, Jason Isbell, Jerry Douglas and Rodney Crowell.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:23 am
This is the closest it’s ever been for me. I’ve listened to Tyler Childers more than anything else but I think Turnpike has the most overall quality.
Honorable mention third place for Proving Grounds by John Baumann, killer album
December 4, 2017 @ 9:23 am
I vote for A Long Way From Your Heart. Hell, I vote that you change the name of this award to The Turnpike Troubadours Album of The Year presented by Saving Country Music.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:25 am
Tyler Childers no question 100%
December 4, 2017 @ 9:27 am
All on your list are on my Essential Albums list, but only one of yours is also on my Top 10 list:
Zephania OHara
My other 9 contenders for Album of the Year are (in no particular order at the moment):
– Dory Freeman
– Emily Duff
– Matt Patershuk
– Jeremy Pinnell
– The Whisky Gentry
– Jim Keaveny
– Brigitte DeMeyer & Will Kimbrough
– Sad Daddy
+ JD McPherson or Jason Eady or Billy Strings or Lee Ann Womack or Eilen Jewell or Rachel Baiman
December 4, 2017 @ 9:29 am
Loved Tyler Childers and Jason Isbell’s new albums, but Turnpike takes the cake this year.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:30 am
The Turnpike Troubadours get all my votes for #1.
Not mentioned above are the latest releases from Nikki Lane, Margo Price and Dori Freeman, all of which were knockouts and at least in my top 10.
I need to check out Lilly Hiatt’s – I was ignorant of it until reading this.
December 4, 2017 @ 1:49 pm
I love the Highway Queen record by Nikki Lane! That’s high on my list as well. Unfortunately, some folks don’t consider her country enough or perceive her as a minimally talented hipster throwback nostalgia act. I completely disagree on all counts and I believe that record is wonderful, her songwriting is strong, good mix of sounds, pedal steel, production better without Dan Auerbach and Brent Cobb this time. She and her boyfriend self produced it and it just nails her sound.She has a great raw Loretta kind of voice, very country to my ears .
December 4, 2017 @ 9:30 am
Tyler Childers all day.
Isbell, Moreland, Earle close behind.
And I gotta get the Turnpike Troubadours one, obviously.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:31 am
All great records, and I especially like the Sunny Sweeney and Turnpike albums, but I’d have to pick Tyler Childers as #1
December 4, 2017 @ 9:31 am
Jaime Wyatt is top of my list.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:34 am
Gotta be Tyler Childers. My mom is from an Eastern Kentucky town called Evarts in Harlan County and while it’s not the same place as where Childers is from, he does a fantastic job of capturing the essence of Eastern Kentucky. Hard to listen to Purgatory and not feel something and think about my family and the people from that area. I feel just at home there as I do here in North Carolina and this album takes me there. It’s an excellent album and he can write one hell of a song.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:36 am
I still can’t believe Colter Wall is only 22, not can I believe how little love that record is getting.
That being said, I’ll go with the Jason Isbell record.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:01 am
Colter Wall’s record is great and JUST missed the cut here in an extremely crowded field this year. But I actually think he’s getting quite quite a bit of love. You’re hearing his music in movie soundtracks, TV shows, celebrities are mentioning him on social media, etc. That voice is touching a nerve, and he’s launched a pretty healthy career in a short period of time. Obviously there can always be more attention to worthy artists, but I think at 22, he’s got a great head start, and will be hearing from him for decades to come.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:37 am
Sunny Sweeney or Colter Wall (tie). Childers, TT, The Steel Woods, Hellbound, Marty Stuart, Nikki Lane, Josh Morningstar.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:42 am
Turnpike’s album is the strongest on the list top to bottom. The writing is next level, Evan has solidified himself as one of the greats of our generation with the ability to capture imagery and bring the songs into life and stand on their own. This is coming from an okie who gets all the references geographically that’s being used which I will admit make these songs that much more personal but wow these guys as a whole are on fire and should be given a listen by anyone who’s not heard them and or gave this album a listen.
Jonny Fritz’s “Sweet Creep” was fantastic too and would have been on my year end top 10
December 4, 2017 @ 9:47 am
Purgatory is my AOY by an Albertan mile. For a debut to arrive so fully aware, confident and established is a testament to how talented Childers is. It balances contempoary sensiblity and throwback references and fully captures that mountain sound with neither kitsch nor irony.
Childers artistic voice is fully developed on his first release–it took Sturgill Sunday Valley and Hightop Mountain. Not only is the sound and feel enough to deserve serious acclaim, but the Souther Gothic tale Purgatory tells adds to the intrigue and need for repeat listens. Can’t wati for more from the guy,
Plus, Purgatory came from out of nowhere in Aiugust and turned my brain inside out. Few albums are able to do that. Timing is everything here: a lot of people are getting used to solid releases from Isbell et al., and the new artists that are riding the wave. But for me, Childers is the first artist who deserves to sppoken about in the same conversation of the current greats.
*******
I loved Jamie Wyatt’s as well. But it has a couple of songs that I skip over. The strength of the rest of the tunes though ore than make up for it.
The only other release that I thought should show up here is Colter Wall. There’s another kid who knows exactly who he is, and creates and inhabits a world all his own. It’s too over reliant on the throwback feel to be genre defining or anything, but he grabs my ears like few others.
On another note, Brent Cobb definitely deserves the Grammy nod. But Childers was robbed. I imagine his second release will get the attention it deserves. Or perhaps he’s not elibilie for that serious consideration because his tunes manage to feel really youthful at the moment–that’s just a random thought, might not hold up to any scrutiny.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:51 am
Childers or Stuart hands down from that list. I would say Childers just given what he accomplished with that album and I love the approach he took in the production and recording of it. I think Eady is hands down better than many on that list, as is Freeman, but as Trigger pointed out, that is going to happen sometimes.
For my overall top 5,
Childers
Eady
Stuart
Jeremy Pinnell – Tales of Blood and Affection
Ohora
December 4, 2017 @ 9:57 am
*Ties
December 4, 2017 @ 9:52 am
Of the nominees, I definitely think it should go to TPT.
However, I think Josh Ritter’s “Gathering” deserves a nod. I know it’s not technically country, but then again, neither is Jason Isbell’s album (or arguably some of the others on this list.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:53 am
While I love The Suffering Stage by Joe Huber and Purgatory by Tyler Childers. However, these things being said, I would have to choose This Highway by Zephaniah O’Hora. Forgive me for oversimplifying/rehashing this description, but the only adjectives to describe such an album are pristine and perfect. As flawless as flawless can get.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:55 am
My only “Why da hell did dis not get put up?!?!” album would have to be Drinks After Midnight by The Country Side of Harmonica Sam. The Swedes really take the cake.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:54 am
Childers, Outlaw, and O’Hora are my top three. You get the return of deep mountain music with novelistic skill and an immediately arresting voice, a persuasive and languid SoCal sound of great wit and sophistication, and hardcore traditional honky-tonk in spades from Brooklyn, of all places.
I’d say all three are noticeable for those reasons.
December 4, 2017 @ 9:54 am
The Mavericks – Brand New Day Allison Krauss – Windy City
December 4, 2017 @ 10:02 am
Have only heard 3 of these but i gotta go with Nashville Sound
December 4, 2017 @ 10:03 am
Tyler Childer’s Purgatory without a doubt. Beautifully genuine sound.
Jason Isbell and Turnpike Troubadours at a dead draw for second in my opinion.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:07 am
If I had to pick one I’d just take a shot of whiskey and flip a coin – heads it’s Turnpike, tails it’s Childers.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:10 am
O Hora and Stuart. Also a big shout out to Hearth productions that handles O Hora, Billy Strings and Dori Freeman(read someone wished she had been considered for a grammy).
December 4, 2017 @ 10:12 am
All these records feels really strong. Thought this year was so-so, but when I see your nominees I realize what fantastic albums have been made. In my book, Andrew Combs album is number one. Really tough call, but from your nominees it have to be Sunny Sweeney with Trophy. It just has something so genuine about it, more so than the others. And the songs are unforgettable and so varied. So, Sunny, in great competition.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:12 am
Turnpike Troubadors
December 4, 2017 @ 10:13 am
Of this crowd, I’d pick Childers or Ohora. Jaime Wyatt was really good, but so short if felt more like an EP. If I had to pick my favorite of the year though, it would be AJ Hobbs.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:16 am
I really liked Whitney Rose’s album too. I get it may not reach the level of some of these others, just thought I would mention it. Honestly, I think she is hitting the target that Margot Price seems to be aiming for and missing.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:36 am
Wow, got to admit that I had almost forgotten about the AJ Hobbs album – loved that when it first came out. Did he tour for it at all? Seemed to be off the radar a little.
December 4, 2017 @ 12:33 pm
I have no idea if he toured. I just know it is a fantastic album. I think I have played that more than any other new album I have heard all year.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:16 am
Zephaniah for me with turnpike as a close second.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:19 am
Turnpike Troubadours- A Long Way From Your Heart
Jason Eady
Colter Wall
The Infamous Stringdusters- Laws of Gravity
Chris Stapleton- From A Room Vol. 1 and 2
December 4, 2017 @ 10:20 am
missing Colter Wall and also Amanda Anne Platt & The Honeycutters
December 4, 2017 @ 10:21 am
Purgatory, Tyler Childers- all the way for me. But have enjoyed Isbell and Moreland this year, too.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:22 am
Turnpike T. J Isbell. Tyler C. In that order
December 4, 2017 @ 10:23 am
Haven’t taken Tyler Childers album out of the truck since I got it. No doubt AOTY.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:26 am
Gotta go w Turnpike and Tyler. You said it best ” no percieved political affiliation “, and as much as I love the Isbell album he seems too influenced by the MSM at times. Out of all his albums i actually would put this on the bottom (which is still great compared to other artists). Havent really listened to the other albums on this list, but i will soon. Highly doubt ill like them as much as the 3 i listed but ill try, lol.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:27 am
1. Tyler Childers, Purgatory
2. Turnpike Troubadours, A Long Way From Your Heart
3. Marty Stuart, Way Out West
4. John Baumann, Proving Grounds
5. Zephaniah Ohora, This Highway
6. The Secret Sisters, You Don’t Own Me Anymore
7. Jason Eady, Eponymous
8. Sunny Sweeney, Trophy
9. John Moreland, Big Bad Luv
10. Jaime Wyatt, Felony Blues
December 4, 2017 @ 10:30 am
Long way From Your Heart Surprised this is a discussion. Tyler Childers the production was lacking on that album a bit. It was fussy when it could have been crisp like with turnpike.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:33 am
I have to cast my vote for Sunny Sweeney and here’s why:
This is a site dedicated to saving country music, and Sunny had to literally fight the system to make a real country album her way. For the most part, Nashville is about following – they see what works, imitate it, and milk it dry. But Sunny doesn’t follow the crowd. She just wants to make good country music, and she had to step away from that world to do so.
I love Marty Stuart’s album as well, but he is (thankfully) a country music mainstay. His record didn’t involve any large amount of risk. Sunny had to jump off the high board into the deep end to create a record that she believed in wholeheartedly. And that, in my opinion, is saving country music.
December 4, 2017 @ 11:24 am
These are the kind of votes I like.
December 4, 2017 @ 11:38 am
I can’t listen to her voice … for me, it’s like nails on a chalkboard.
December 5, 2017 @ 12:15 pm
I agree with everything Craig said. I’d like to add another reason Sunny’s album deserves recognition is that the theme of the album is totally country. Traditional Country music uses all the things you were too afraid to talk about, but need to get off your chest. Sunny’s lyrics are clever yet genuine. This is also the reason I would cast my vote for Jason Eady’s self-titled album.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:34 am
I think A Long Way From Your Heart is the only way to go. It’s got the best chance to reach and positively affect the most people.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:36 am
My top 10
Steve Earle – So You Wanna be an Outlaw
Jason Isbell – The Nasville Sound
Turnpike Troubadour’s – A Long Way From Your Heart
Rodney Crowell – Close Ties
Willie Nelson – Gods Problem Child
Marty Stuart – Way Out West
Margo Price – All American Made
John Moreland – Big Bad Love
Willie Watson – Folksinger volume 2
The Lone Bellow – Walk into a Storm
It says an awful lot about how good a year it’s been that I’ve had to leave several stellar albums out.
norrie
December 4, 2017 @ 10:38 am
Wowsers. That is a jam-packed field!
December 4, 2017 @ 10:38 am
My #1 vote is for Tyler Childers’ Purgatory.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:38 am
Tyler Childers album was on repeat for 4 weeks in my truck. And I still listen to it at least twice a week. Great songwriting, vocals and production. Every song is my favorite. He has my vote!!!
December 4, 2017 @ 10:39 am
Personally, I have Evan Bartels CD “The Devil, God, and Me” as my favorite of the year. Dan Tyminski’s “Southern Gothic” was also a brilliant ‘twist’ on the Bluegrass meets Americana style.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:52 am
I liked Dans Southern Gothic album. But as much as I enjoyed it as a dirty pleasure its albums such as that one that will kill country music instrumentals as we know it. Liked the lyrics and whatnot but I felt like it was a step in the wrong direction for the music that we love.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:47 am
Sunny Sweeney all day! Killer band, great songs!
December 4, 2017 @ 10:50 am
Of the ones I’ve heard, Zephania OHora’s is the best
December 4, 2017 @ 10:53 am
First of all, as I’ve said in the prior comments sections, this was a very down year for our kind of music. Not that unexpected because we’ve been on a great run for some time – I’d call the last eleven years the golden age of outlaw/ alternative/ non-mainstream country music. Artists either took this year off (Sturgill or Jinks), released the same album (Stapleton), or released an album had some serious warts (Isbell).
With that said, Tyler Childers released the only album I’d consider worthy of labeling AOY. Hands down, no competition.
My attempt at a top ten list:
1. Tyler Childers – Purgatory
2. Dead Man Winter – Furnace
3. Hellbound Glory – Pinball
4. Lee Ann Womack – The Lonely, The Lonesome & The Gone
5. Turnpike Troubadours – A Long Way From Your Heart
6. Rod Melancon – Southern Gothic
7. Chris Stapleton – From a Room Volume 1 & 2
8. Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit – The Nashville Sound
9. Colter Wall – Colter Wall
10. Bob Wayne – Bad Hombre
I’ll revisit some of the albums you listed, Trig. But, I’ve already given them a spin (or two).
December 4, 2017 @ 12:36 pm
Glad to see you could list the Turnpikes. Appears as though the healing has begun.
December 4, 2017 @ 10:55 am
2017 Top 10 Favorite Albums
Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit- The Nashville Sound
Gregg Allman-Southern Blood
Kelly Clarkson-Meaning Of Life
Harry Styles-Harry Styles
Jason Eady-Jason Eady
Sunny Sweeney-Trophy
Ed Sheeran- Divide
Chris Stapleton- Songs From A Studio Vols 1 & 2 (project)
Zephaniah Ohora-This Highway
Turnpike Troubadours-A Long Way From Your Heart
December 4, 2017 @ 10:55 am
While all are great pieces of work theres only one that is phenomenal and thats turnpike’s long way from your heart. This band deserves way more attention than they get. Canadian guy here and if it wasnt for corb lund bringing evan felker on tour and this site i wouldnt even know they exist. Got a few local stations in winnipeg playing the band in hopes they catch on and grow! Cant wait for a 2018 tour hopefully they come somewhere close like the dakotas or Minnesota!
December 4, 2017 @ 11:00 am
1a. Tyler Childers
1b. Turnpike.
These are both still daily listens for me. Hard to choose.
December 4, 2017 @ 11:10 am
Tyler Childers!!!
December 4, 2017 @ 11:12 am
My useless opinions:
embarassing to admit to, but I didn’t like Childers album much at first but the more I listened, it continued to grow on me. With Tyler, you know the album would have turned out incredibly whether it was just him and a guitar and iphone, regardless of the backing band or star producer (not to take anything away from the other elements). His voice, the cohesive sound of the album and the songwriting for me all just created something really special.
But a lot of the country artists I follow on social media, as well as this site, have collectively thrown their love behind the Turnpike album. For this reason, I think in decades when we look back on impactful albums to the country genre, this album would probably be the one because so many people are hearing it and promoting it. It’s an incredible album, benefitting full from a handful of very talented musicians and songwriters all contributing to a cohesive record. To contrast with ‘Purgatory’, I would argue more it’s diverse than Childers, with a wide range of styles but still standing firmly within the ‘Country Genre’. This is what pushed me away from Isbell for the “Saving Country Music” album of the year- after hearing the entire album, it’s tough for me to quantify that album as a country effort.
Finally, you omitted Midland’s ‘On the Rocks’. I’m fully aware of the backlash against the band, the focus on image vs substance, etc. But at the end of the day, every time one of their songs (and I’ve got a lot on my spotify playlist) comes on, I love it. My argument would be the same way that Childers can pull a more bluegrass crowd into country, or Isbell’s album has some indie rock appeals, Midland will do more to pull the top 40 crowd into seeking more traditional sounding country bands. If this album does well, their singles do well, then country radio and big labels are going to be throwing more money into that sound- something I’m ok with personally. Feel free to light me up in the replies section!
December 4, 2017 @ 11:39 am
It’s Tyler Childers or Turnpike for me, but I’m glad someone mentioned Midland. If number of spins in my car is the leading factor, then Midland’s LP is the album of the year.
December 4, 2017 @ 11:23 am
I’d like to put in a good word for the this album and artist:
STITCH OF THE WORLD (Tift Merritt)–Of all the female artists in any genre to come along in this century, Tift has been my absolute favorite. This album, her eighth, is another winner for her, with tracks of what one of her heroes Linda Ronstadt would have called “Eclecticmania”–everything from the rustic blues of “Dusty Old Man” and “Proclamation Bones”, to the mystical Americana of “Icarus” and the title track; and tracks like “Heartache Is An Uphill Climb” and “Something Came Over Me” that are original homages to Linda’s and Emmylou Harris’ country-rock legacies.
I also want to second the plaudits given to Alice Wallace and her album ECHO CANYON, in its mix of Western-style yodeling and falsettos in Alice’s vocals, plus a modern update of the California C&W/rock again of the kind pioneered by Linda and Emmylou in the 70s, especially on the spaghetti western-feeling title track.
December 4, 2017 @ 11:24 am
i agree that the best is yet to come for Colter and Parker McColum.
I still keep coming back to Purgatory. Tyler Childers has my vote. Turnpike and Moreland as a second.
December 4, 2017 @ 11:25 am
Sunny and Tyler Trophy Room #2 Purgatory #1
December 4, 2017 @ 11:26 am
Turnpike with Sunny Sweeney coming in a close second. We are lucky enough to have an awesome radio station (95.9) out of Fort Worth that is playing the artist on your list, I don’t say it enough thank you for your articles.
December 4, 2017 @ 11:28 am
Of the albums listed here, my pick is for Tyler Childers. Second would be Jaime Wyatt.
My personal top 10 (in order):
1. Tyler Childers
2. Dori Freeman (a very close second)
3. Jaime Wyatt
3. Sam Outlaw
4. Angaleena Presley
5. Jason Eady
6. Sunny Sweeney
7. Colter Wall
8. Whitney Rose
9. Steve Earle
10. Charley Pride
Honourable Mentions (in no particular order):
– Bruce Robison and the Back Porch Band
– Zephaniah O’Hora
– Lukas Nelson
– Don Williams tribute album
– Easy Leaves EP
– Whitney Rose EP
December 4, 2017 @ 11:39 am
After listening to both of Tyler Childers EP’s first, Purgatory fell short for me. They’re are some great songs that didn’t make it to this album but have to say it’s a great debut album.
A Long Way From Your Heart for me is album of the year without question. It is complete start to finish.
December 4, 2017 @ 11:39 am
My faves
Sarah Shook
Old 97s
Isbell
Marty Stuart
Steve Earle
Nikki Lane
Tyler Childs
Alex Williams
Not in the genre, but I thought the Randy Newman and Ray Davies albums were both sensational.
Thanks for all the tips throughout the year, Trigger!!
December 4, 2017 @ 11:44 am
My pick for AOY is Tyler Childers Purgatory.
It is one of those albums that just seems to be in constant rotation at my house. Many times repeated.
My wife is also addicted to it.
My friends.
This doesn’t happen often with the stuff I introduce them too.
I can’t disagree with anything you pick Trigger. I think you do a great job of putting together the cream of the crop with your nominees and reviews throughout the year.
One album that I really loved this year, and it doesn’t seem to get any mention, is the live album Brandy Clark put out. We talk about women in country music, where the talent is, where it isn’t, she has it. That album is just her and her acoustic guitar, another guitarist accompanying her with some backing vocals. All she needs and WOW.
Sarah Shook and the Disarmers Sidelong is another album that doesn’t get old with me.
Although I realize it was re-released in 2017 actually self released in 2015.
Colter Wall album was great.
Steve Earle album was better than expected for me.
Turnpike was good.
I struggled with the Moreland album. I wanted to love it, but never seem to put it on.