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Josh Grider ABOUTThe Texas-by-way-of-New-Mexico artist is hitting his stride at just the right moment. Pandemic be damned there is music to be made. After a year of waiting for the world to return to some kind of normal, Grider is firing an all cylinders despite the circumstances. With a new record in the can, putting on the producer hat for a new up and coming artist, and gigs starting fill up the calendar again 2021 is looking to be a banner year for Grider.
“A poet of optimism and maturity” (Lonestar Music magazine), Grider has fully embraced his status as a musical Swiss Army Knife, expanding his reach deeper into collaboration — as evidenced by projects with longtime friend Drew Kennedy (Topo Chico Cowboys, Vol. 1 and 2) and his wife. (Josh and Kristi Grider Live at Gruene Records). His songwriting prowess is in high demand as he traverses Music Row writing rooms to return to the creative well and deliver “just what country music fans need right now” (Taste of Country). Look no further than 2020’s “Country’s Comin’ Back” and “American Anthem” as proof.
From solo sets on storied stages like the Kerrville Folk Festival to honky tonk dance halls across the Southwest to “rock yachts” and even house concerts, Josh Grider is taking his sound further and to more people than ever before. And as an experienced craftsman approaching two decades in the industry, Grider is also jumping into the world of production, helping to musically mentor / co-write / and produce new country artist Gunnar Latham’s debut project (also due out 2021). No longer the new kid on the block, and not yet the grizzled veteran, Josh is just moving in time with the rhythm of a career that has come a great distance, and still has miles to go.
“We had one rule when we started recording this record: If we don’t have it, we can’t use it.” It’s a simple concept – the premise that makes up Drew Kennedy’s ninth studio album, Marathon – but the result is a vivid and immersive ode to a corner of the world that the singer-songwriter has fallen in love with over the years. Kennedy and his collaborator, Davis Naish, packed up a select set of instruments and headed to a small adobe house in the tiny Far West Texas town after which the album is named – as he mentions in the opening track, a town born of Buffalo Soldiers and Seminole Scouts and the third transcontinental railroad, with seven high school seniors; the entire town has less than 400 residents – where they spent a week recording his latest 11-song collection.
“This one is personal. Hear that at the end? That’s me breaking down into tears,” he notes. “I’m not sure exactly why that happened just yet, but it did, and afterwards I felt so much... lighter. That’s the only way I can describe it. This is what I want my kids to remember. This is what I want people that hear this record to think about. What matters? What is real? What is it all about? As far as I can tell, it’s this. This is the closing credit song, and it might be my favorite song that I’ve ever written.”
That single verse is also a solid glimpse into Kennedy’s life, small pieces of his own story sewn into the lines. A south central Pennsylvania native, he didn’t start playing music until college, where he played baseball. He and his wife, an art teacher, moved to the Texas Hill Country a few decades ago, where they are now raising their two boys.
“The first CD I ever bought with my own money in 1993 was Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s Will The Circle Be Unbroken — and I’m not sure I still fully understand how that kind of full-circle journey happened,” he says. “I might not understand it, but I do have a handful of songs to prove it, and this is my favorite of the ones I’ve written with those two magical people.” Items Not Allowed
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