Event description
Gabe Lee has been collecting stories for years, both onstage and off. "I used to bartend," says the Nashville-based songwriter, "which means I was also a cheap therapist for whomever happened to be sitting on the barstool. Whether they were there to celebrate or drink away their problems, I heard about whatever they were going through. It was my job to have thatface-to-face interaction — that connection. Being a full-time musician isn't much different."
With critically-acclaimed albums like 2019's farmland, 2020's Honky-Tonk Hell, and 2022's The Hometown Kid, Lee created that connection by delivering his own stories to an ever-growingaudience. His fourth record, Drink the River, takes a different approach. This time, Lee isn'toffering listeners a peek into his internal world; he's holding up a mirror to reflect their own.
Rooted in the bluegrass influences that have always simmered beneath the surface of Lee'smusic, Drink the River is an acoustic album about the shared human experience. These songsare true-life tales of heartbreak, love, overdoses, and resilience. They're stories about the highsand lows that bind us all together. Lee collected some of those stories from his family andfriends, while others arrived as he criss crossed the country over the past decade, playing showafter show, meeting characters from all walks of life.
"There's a lot of raw, personal emotion on my first three records," he explains, "but I love
singing about other people's stories, too. On Drink the River, I'm drinking from the river of
human experience, through which all our collective stories flow. That river is probably a littledirty — it isn't purified or sanitized — but that means it's real, too."
Arriving on the heels of The Hometown Kid — whose robust, amplified sound earned praise
from outlets like Rolling Stone and Billboard — Drink the River marks a back-to-the-roots
return to the folksy, stripped-down music that Lee created during the beginning of his career.He captured these nine songs with a series of live-in-the-studio performances at SoundEmporium Studios, accompanied by three of his longtime bandmates: dobro player LuccianaCosta, bassist Tim Denbo, and drummer Dave Racine. Fiddle player Jason Roller andmandolinist Eamon McLaughlin also contributed to the sessions, with both musicians taking abreak from their regular gig as members of the Grand Ole Opry house band to join Lee in thestudio. The group worked fast, finishing the bulk of Drink the River in two days. Theinstrumentation may have been acoustic, but the energy was electric.
"Merigold," with its minor-key melody and gorgeous vocal harmonies, sketches the picture of amarried couple ripped apart by cancer. Lee first met the couple's widowed husband at a showin Merigold, Mississippi, and was moved by the story of his late wife's passing. Mortalityweaves its way throughout much of Drink the River, showing up once again in songs like"Lidocaine" (a gorgeous folk song inspired by an Uber ride in which Lee learned his driver hadbeen diagnosed with dementia at 40 years old) and "Even Jesus Gets the Blues" (whosedeceptively bright textures are contrasted by darker lyrics about a friend's overdose). Drink theRiver also offers moments of humor. Lee took inspiration from his girlfriend's father — a deerfarmer in Alabama, eager to keep trespassers off his private land — for the light and limber"Property Line," which he describes as "a salty-old-redneck, country-justice type song."Finally, the title track reaffirms Lee's status as a classic songwriter, pairing nimble fretwork witha timeless storyline about love, loyalty, and the people who lure even the most dedicated roadwarriors back home again. "I can't drink the river to dry the land / Bury the ocean beneath thesand / But I can love you until the tide pulls me under, by and by," he sings, his voice flankedby mandolin and acoustic guitar.
Storytelling has been an anchor of Lee's music since the very beginning. Raised by Taiwaneseparents in Nashville, TN, he left home during his teenage years and headed to Indiana, wherehe obtained college degrees in literature and journalism. Lee launched his career as a genrebending musician after returning to Tennessee, quickly progressing from dive bar gigs to highprofile opening slots (including shows with Jason Isbell, Los Lobos, Molly Tuttle, and other artists who, like him, blurred the lines between roots-rock, country, and other forms of American folk music) to his own headlining shows. Throughout it all, he drew upon the narrative skills he'd sharpened as a student. If albums like Honky-Tonk Hell and The Hometown Kid often unfolded like autobiographical entries from his road journal, though, then Drink the River shows an even broader range of his storytelling abilities. Lee isn't just writing songs about himself; he's writing songs about all of us. And maybe, in doing so, he can bring us a little closer together.
"People need a reason to connect right now, more than ever," he says. "The common ground between us seems to be fading rapidly. If there's a fundamental aspect to that proverbial common ground, it's human spirit and raw emotion. We've all experienced joy, despair, love, hurt, and loss. We all understand how those things feel, and I believe it's a responsibility for people like me to share those stories. I'm feeling very inspired by the shared experience of others. I just want to pass it down the line."
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