New Album Announced: Good Souls Better Angels

“It’s all come full circle,” says Lucinda Williams about her powerful new album, Good Souls Better Angels. After more than forty years of music making, the pioneering, Louisiana-born artist has returned to the gritty blues foundation that first inspired her as a young singer-songwriter in the late 1970s. And after spending the last year on her sold-out “Car Wheels on a Gravel Road” 20th Anniversary tour, Williams has reunited with that game-changing 1998 album’s co-producer and engineer Ray Kennedy, recording Good Souls, Better Angels with her ace touring band at his Nashville studio. Joining them as co-producer is Williams’ manager Tom Overby, to whom she’s been married for a decade and who contributed lyrics to her masterful songcraft. “That’s what I always dreamed of – a relationship with someone I could create with,” Williams enthuses.

The result – Good Souls Better Angels – is the most topical album of Williams’ career. The dangerous world we live in, the constant barrage of a frightening news cycle, depression, domestic abuse, a man without a soul – and, yeah, the devil – figure prominently among its twelve tracks.  “The devil comes into play quite a bit on this album,” Williams says. “I’ve always loved the imagery in Robert Johnson songs and those really dark Delta blues that are sort of biblical. I was inspired by Leonard Cohen – he dealt with that in his songs – and Bob Dylan and Nick Cave.” While, Good Souls Better Angels reflects many dark realities that surround us, the album is tied together with themes of perseverance, resilience and ultimately, hope.

As for the topicality of the material, Williams says, “Because of all this crap that’s going on, it’s on the top of everybody’s minds – it’s all anybody talks about: Basically, the world’s falling apart – it’s like the apocalypse. That’s where that Old Testament stuff comes from. It’s different from my other albums in that there aren’t the story songs about my childhood and all. It feels exciting.”

From the driving blues of the opening track “You Can’t Rule Me” to the ominous gothic “Pray the Devil Back to Hell,” from punk-blues-fueled “Bone of Contention” to fire ‘n brimstone “Drop by Drop (Big Rotator),” Williams has never been more raw and direct, with gut-punching wordplay crossing the Good Book with hip-hop with Ginsbergian beat poetry. The Williams-Overby collaborative songwriting experiment clearly has been a success. “It just happened organically,” says Williams. “Tom and I started working on songs together and he came up with some of the ideas. He gave me lines that he’d written and I took it from there. I love it because it expands things. ‘Man Without a Soul’ was his idea, and he came up with ‘Big Black Train,’ about that big black cloud of depression. When I listen to that track, it makes me cry.”

Recording live in Ray Kennedy’s vintage-equipped studio, Williams and her longtime band – guitarist Stuart Mathis, bassist David Sutton, and drummer Butch Norton – cut most of the songs in two or three takes, with the rhythm section’s rock-solid pulse and Mathis’ versatile sonic attacks backing Williams’ distinctive passion-drenched vocals. The brutal “Wakin’ Up,” punctuated by Mathis’ chainsaw guitar, viscerally details a woman’s harrowing escape from domestic violence, while the pensive “Shadows & Doubts” sheds light our quick-to-judge, social-media-led society and how everyone may love you one moment, but completely abandon you the next. Williams turns Greg Garing’s honky-tonk shuffle “Down Past the Bottom” into a dark-night-of-the-soul hard rocker. Tongue-in-cheek irony leads the swingin’ “Bad News Blues” as Williams bemoans a plethora of “liars and lunatics/fools and thieves/clowns and hypocrites” and Mathis’ guitar work slithers around the lyrics like a snake. The bittersweet counterpoint “When the Way Gets Dark,” with its lovely melody and evocative guitar, offers hope to us all, Williams urging in her most tender vocals, “Don’t give up/Take my hand/You’re not alone.”

Williams has traveled a long road since her 1979 debut, Ramblin’ on My Mind, followed by Happy Woman Blues, her first album of originals released forty years ago in 1980. (She says that she’s still “the same girl” except that now “I have a bigger fan base and I can afford to stay at better hotels.”) Over the course of fourteen remarkable albums, three Grammy awards, and countless accolades, including Time’s Songwriter of the Year of 2001, Williams is one of our most revered artists, beloved for her singular vocals and extraordinary songs. Her recent double albums, Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone (2014) and Ghosts of Highway 20 (2016), released on her own label, received some of the best reviews of her career.

Giving voice to all her experience, Williams ends Good Souls, Better Angels with the luminous “Good Souls,” one of the last songs written for the album. It is a deeply moving invocation: “Keep me with all of those/who help me find strength/when I’m feeling hopeless/who guide me along/And help me stay strong and fearless.”

Amen.

Final Car Wheels 20th Anniversary Shows

We just recently announced the final 20th Anniversary Car Wheels shows coming in August and September. With the probable exception of two shows in LA and SF in October, this run will be the final Car Wheels 20th Anniversary shows. We have been blown away by the reception and ongoing demand for these shows. When we came up with the 20th Anniversary idea we thought we would maybe do a handful of them and that would be it. But word of mouth has traveled about how special these shows are and the demand to do more has been unbelievable. In addition to saying that these will be the final shows we want to thank everyone for their incredible support of these 20th Anniversary shows. What was going to be 10-12 shows has now turned into a run of almost a full year of almost completely sold out shows. Thank you, thank you, thank you and we hope you won’t miss one of these final shows – they truly are special!

– Lucinda mgmt

Paste Magazine: The 10 Best Roots & Blues Albums of 2018

# 1 Charles Lloyd & the Marvels + Lucinda Williams:Vanished Gardens
Before he became a Fillmore-headlining jazz star in the ’60s, saxophonist Lloyd played in Howlin’ Wolf’s band. Before she became one of Dylan’s most obvious heirs in the ’80s, Williams got started by covering blues standards by Robert Johnson and Memphis Minnie. Those early apprenticeships enabled Lloyd and Williams to pull off the year’s most audacious album: a long overdue integration of Dylan’s innovations in the ’60s with John Coltrane’s innovations in the same decade. Williams’s moaning vocals lend language to the instrumentalists’ improvisations, and their musical inventions trace the implications of her literary forays. A landmark achievement. Read entire article online at Paste Magazine

‘Car Wheels on a Gravel Road’ Turns 20: Lucinda Williams & Producer Steve Earle Reflect on Her Masterpiece

by Jason Scott – June 30, 2018, 10:03am EDT
“In honor of the groundbreaking set’s 20th anniversary, Williams and Earle set the record straight about the album’s storied past and what brought so many manifestations. Earle also corrects a misquote that has been circulating for nearly two decades and talks how hip-hop was the basis for much of his approach.”
Read the entire conversation on Billboard HERE

Lucinda Williams, Steve Earle, Dwight Yoakam to Unite for LSD Tour!

Three of the most acclaimed country and Americana artists of the past three decades are teaming for a North American tour this summer. Dubbed the LSD Tour, a clever play on their first names, it will feature singer-songwriters Lucinda Williams, Steve Earle and Dwight Yoakam all taking the stage at theaters and amphitheaters across the country.

The trek begins June 12th in Boston. Summer trek will also feature indie alt-country rocker King Leg. Read more at RollingStone.com

For a complete list of Lucinda and LSD Tour Dates visit lucindawilliams.com/tour

Hope to see you this summer!

Lucinda Williams Re-Records, Re-Releases 1992 Album ‘Sweet Old World’ – Rolling Stone Magazine

Lucinda Williams had a one-word response when her husband and manager Tom Overby suggested that she re-record her 1992 album Sweet Old World: “Really?”

Although Williams has consistently performed a few songs from the album over the years in concert, including the title track and “Pineola,” she felt that she had outgrown most of the others and was reluctant to revisit it. That was until she listened to the songs with fresh ears.

“After we got in the recording studio and we got going, I got really pumped up about it,” says Williams, who re-recorded the album in 10 days with her touring and studio band – guitarist Stuart Mathis, bassist David Sutton and drummer Butch Norton – and longtime friend and collaborator, legendary steel-guitar player Greg Leisz, who actually participated in the early sessions for the original LP. Williams will release the re-sequenced album with four bonus tracks under the updated title This Sweet Old World on September 29th via Thirty Tigers. (Listen to the opening track and first single, “Six Blocks Away,” above.)

READ MORE and and listen to new version of “Six Blocks Away,” off the updated 25th anniversary edition ‘This Sweet Old World’ HERE!

Highway 20 Inside Job Blog – Track #1 – DUST

Dust was one of the most unlikely and unplanned songs on the record. We had a lot of songs already recorded for what was to become the Ghosts Of Highway 20 but we wanted to get a couple more recorded. We got Bill Frisell to come back for two days back in April and Lucinda was working hard finishing up some songs so they were ready when he got to town. She had a couple songs ready but wanted to have a few more.

Ironically, she was just starting to work on the song the Ghosts Of Highway 20, but it wasn’t going to be finished in time – which I was disappointed about at the time. Somewhere in the week before I had shown Lu her father’s poem Dust and just sort of casually told her that I thought it would make a great song. I had come across it several months before and it stuck with me that it had song potential. Well…it really resonated with her instantly and it just came to her and she had it done in a day – maybe two at the most. When we got into in the studio it just exploded into the very special song it became. It was amazing to witness. Two days before it hadn’t existed.

Musically, it has some amazing guitar interplay between Bill and Greg – they are telepathic together. They way they play off of each other on this song is just incredible. That was one of the reasons we decided to open the record with this song. We wanted to establish that the guitars on this record were going to be a musical center of the record – and we also wanted make a statement that this record was going to be musically different that Spirt Meets The Bone. We actually put Magnolia (which features Bill & Greg) at the end of Bone as a bit of a musical sneak preview of the next record. That is one of the ways that two records connect.

– Lucinda mgmt. (Tom)
‪#‎DWTSMTB‬ ‪#‎Hwy20InsideJobBlog‬

Lucinda Williams: The Forum, Melbourne, 7 December 2015 (Letters We Get)

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We received this letter from Max Vizard after he attended the show in Melbourne. We felt it was an amazing interpretation of Lucinda’s song “Ghosts of Highway 20” from the upcoming album of the same name. – Lucinda mgmt.

You never know what you will get at live music which is the essence of its enduring beauty as well as part of the mystery. The format is one we all understand where we fork out our money, get the best seats we can or stand as close to the stage as possible bobbing around for an unobstructed view.  In my experience a standing audience is a living thing and plays a part in magical performances from the stage. This night at the Forum is no exception.

We sit in the back  through the entrée provided by Dan Sultan and then when Lucinda Williams arrives  off we go to the front to stand with all the others so that we can see and hear what is going on up on the stage, where the sound is more muscular. Down here the audience talks more, drinks more and moves more and is here for a night out, to hear their favourite songs and have a good time. Two hours and twenty minutes later we are still here and there is no doubt that this was a concert full of surprises.

The first hour or so everything goes to script: songs from throughout her recorded work sung with spirit and a four piece band that has oomph. We are not disappointed and on stage Lucinda is a little like she sounds in interview, reticent, not evasive – just reticent – and perhaps the fact that like Hank Williams, and also her father, she suffers from Spina Bifida shapes her stage presence. Her accent is strongly southern and one of her well known songs ‘Lake Charles’ is about her home town in Louisiana, down in the bayou not far from the Texas border.

Sometime into the second hour something happened, something changed. I have seen it before, we have all seen it before when the light in the room, the vibe from the audience, the feelings on stage all merge and mesh and we are in a sports car not a sedan, and we are cruising, we are out on the highway and our everyday lives are far away. For me it was when Lucinda sang a new, unrecorded song called ‘The Ghosts of Highway 20.’ The band took a back seat and we were on a journey through the heartland of the south, but in introducing the song she said little more than the highway runs through Vicksburg.

Highway 20 runs East West through the states of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas and towns on the route include Atlanta, Birmingham, Jackson, Vicksburg, Shreveport, Dallas, Abilene, Odessa and further west into the borderlands near El Paso. Lucinda leaves the ghosts unnamed and there are many because this is the route through the deep south, the battleground of the civil rights movement of the 1960s. Even us, Australians of my vintage know about the ghosts littered along the highway and all over the south, about the lynchings, the segregation, the unsolved crimes and the justice system that was a perversion of justice. To name a few, to remember the many, is to hear the song:

Birmingham. Infamous in the years of the civil rights movement, where in 1963,  Martin Luther King was imprisoned and wrote ‘Letter from Birmingham.’

Jackson. The capital of Mississippi, notorious during the civil rights years for the attacks and the beatings handed out to the Freedom Riders and it was here in 1963 where Medgar Evers, the local civil rights leader, was murdered.

Dallas. It was here in 1963 that President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated.

Shreveport.  Hank Williams lived here and was a star on the Louisiana Hayride which rivalled the ‘Grand Old Opry’ as the pre-eminent country radio show.

Vicksburg. A day after the defeat of General Robert E Lee at Gettysberg, the confederacy surrendered on 4 July 1863, to the Union army after a 47 day siege and marked the turning point in the civil war in the Unions favour.

Atlanta. Auburn Street, named Sweet Auburn Street because African Americans could not only prosper but actually own their own businesses and the street was sweet because they could be themselves. The birth home of Martin Luther King is here.

And so all along the way are the ghosts, both the remembered and the forgotten, reminders of the dispossessed, of the lost, of the dreams and the nightmares. It seems like a counterpoint to the journey of Bob Dylan down Highway 61, down the Mississippi through Memphis, the Delta and then on to New Orleans, his journey into the roots of American popular music, from Blues and Jazz and Rock n Roll and whatever came after. It is the same story from a different angle.

With Lucinda, there will always be the personal ghosts and of course in her song ‘Jackson’ she sings the lines:
‘All the way to Jackson
I don’t think I’ll miss you much’
And she sings this song with a pain in her voice that tells you it is a lie. And in this new song, the unrecorded ‘The Ghosts of Highway 20’ she sings the lines:
‘Who I was then
Is who I am now’

There is more, much more to come and I can’t recall the details or all of the songs or what order they are in but I do know that she takes her song ‘Foolishness’ and turns it in to a pledge, a pledge to stand against all the wrongs, and the first wrong she calls out is the Presidential Candidacy of Donald Trump, and everything he represents, she sings from the stage against sexism, racism, against the politics of greed, against poverty and she sings for marriage equality, and compassion. This audience, the people of inner city Melbourne are with her all the way, all the way. Her performance is visceral, the band is brutal and at the end she stands and says ‘Sometimes you have to Testify, you are blessed to be here.’ She means Australia.

Lucinda is now a different person on stage, funny, relaxed, sociable. The transformation is complete, for her and us.

Finally, there is the end. She has been here for two hours and it is time to say goodbye.  For the encore she sings the Neil Young anthem ‘Rockin in the Free World’, originally written in 1989 to remind President Bush Senior, that it is poverty that is the issue of the day. And that mongrel, my words not hers, that mongrel Trump had used this song in his election campaign earlier this year. Its use was not authorised. Tonight Lucinda re-claimed it and delivered it back, all gift wrapped, to where it belonged, as an anthem for justice.

It seemed the night was over but there was one more encore, a real encore, not the rehearsed one we had all just sung along with and for this final encore she sang the song by Australian band ACDC ‘It’s a long way to the top ( if you want to Rock n Roll). She performed this song on her last tour of Australia, but tonight it seemed unplanned, and of course the latest incarnation of ACDC are here in Melbourne and played last night and again tonight.

Gael and I have some stories to tell about some of the towns along Highway 20, but that is another story.

When I go to see live music I am optimistic and before the show I purchased the souvenir T-Shirt. On the front is a yellow camino and on the back the words from her song ‘Lake Charles’, the song about her hometown:

We used to drive
Thru Lafayette and Baton Rouge
In a yellow camino
Listening to Howling Wolf

And underneath is her signature

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Posted with permission.

The Messages We Get

LuClapAs we head to Poughkeepsie, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Milwaukee – we wanted to share just a small sampling of the messages we’ve received from every show on this leg of the tour – there are many many more but you’ll get the picture. These are the last four shows of the Down Where The Spirit Meets The Bone Tour that has lasted a full calendar year. We’re gonna go out with a bang – and preview some new songs from the new record coming out in January. There are some tickets left – come celebrate the last U.S. shows that Lu and Buick 6 will be playing for awhile!

Thank you to everyone who took the time to send us notes. We do read them all! (Lucinda mgmt)

Loved the show last night at the Lisner Auditorium! Incredible performance, thank you! (DC)

Finally got to see you live in DC and thank you, thank you, thank you for being you! (DC)

Last nights concert at the Norva in Norfolk was outstanding. Lucinda is sounding amazing. (Norfolk)

I loved getting the chance to see you live last night!!! It was wonderful, thank you!! http://youtu.be/n8-ygSJXh2I (Richmond)

Such a terrific show in RVA last night – so happy for the balance of older, not-so-old, and new songs. Maybe the best show of the 5 or 6 I’ve seen over the years. And – the band continues to amaze! Come back soon! (Richmond)

Thank you for the amazing show in Chapel Hill last night! My dad and I went and had an awesome time! I hope you make your way back to NC some day. Safe travels! (Chapel Hill)

I went to your concert last Wednesday at variety playhouse. I haven’t been to a live concert in very many years. But this concert, I took my daughter who is 23. We lost her dad and my husband in July and you made us feel better. He traveled with work a lot on 20, so your song about the ghosts of 20 really hit us hard. Thank you for the songs you sang. Being there together made us stronger for the life that is before us. (Atlanta)

Just wanted to say that Lucinda brought the house down Tuesday night at Variety Playhouse in Atlanta (as usual). But especially awesome show. You Rock girl!!!! (Atlanta 1st night)

Yep, what a FANTASTIC show this was!! …and if it were possible, I think she topped it the following night!! (Atlanta 1st night)

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I was at this show!! It was truly a magical night….being one of the best shows I’ve seen Lucinda perform. Once the missing page happened it became a human error that showed another side of Lu. She was more relaxed, joking, dancing and just into the moment with the crowd. 2 encores!! Fantastic show!! (Atlanta 2nd night)

Thank you so much for coming to Bloomington! You and the band sound f**in fantastic! (Bloomington, IL)

This was such a fantastic show! Songs I never thought I would hear live, much less in my hometown! I’ve followed Lucinda for years and have loved every performance, but this was something rare and special. Please come visit us again! (Bloomington (IL)

At Roots Blues & BBQ in Columbia, Lucinda & her band were nothing short of amazing. (Columbia Mo.)

I had the good fortune to see Lu & company at the Columbia Roots & Blues Fest. The band kicked ass, and Lu was fantastic! Thank you all for an awesome performance!!!!!! (Columbia Mo.)

Lucinda and the band ROCKED IT at Roots, Blues n BBQ in Columbia MO. Awesome show!!!! Thanks!!! (Columbia Mo.)

I would say Lucinda Williams enjoyed the Music Box Supper Club show as much as we did! (Cleveland)

I love covers….especially when the artist puts their own spin on the song. Lucinda Williams is perfect singing the Clash song “Should I Stay Or Should I Go”. Another superb show at the Music Box Supper Club. (Cleveland)

Lu was outstanding last night @ City Winery Chicago!!! The Buick 6 are a dynamite band that bring out the best of Lu. I had the pleasure of being at the AMA’s last week too, so happy for her. (Chicago)

Thank you for an amazing show in Ottawa Ont. last night, great mix of tunes, and one hell of a band, (Ottawa)

Hi Lucinda!
We r here, in Ottawa! just finished watching your AMAZING show!! We want to meet u!! Make that happen!!! We have been following you since 2006!! (Ottawa)

You were awesome in Toronto tonight!! xo (Toronto)

Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! What an incredible performance at TURF! I cried, you and your band were so amazing xo (Toronto)

For tickets and information for remaining four U.S. Shows visit: TOUR DATES

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