
James McMurtry N2
- singer-songwriter
- folk rock
- rock
- americana
Location
About
James McMurtry released The Black Dog and the Wandering Boy on June 20th via New West Records. The 10-song collection was co-produced by McMurtry & Don Dixon (R. E. M., The Smithereens) and is his first album in four years. It follows his 2021 New West debut, The Horses and the Hounds, which UnCut Magazine said "lifts storytelling-in-song to meticulous new levels" and Pitchfork awarded an 8.0, saying "James McMurtry stands out even among the Lone Star State’s finest songwriters…"
The Black Dog and the Wandering Boy features appearances by:
- Sarah Jarosz
- Charlie Sexton
- Bonnie Whitmore
- Bukka Allen
- and more
It also includes his trusted backing band, THE MARTIAL LAW REVIEW, with Tim Holt on guitar and accordion, Cornbread on bass, and Daren Hess on drums.
As varied as they are, McMurtry’s new story-songs find inspiration in scraps from his family’s past: a rough pencil sketch by Ken Kesey that serves as the album cover, the hallucinations experienced by his father, the legendary writer Larry McMurtry, and an old poem by a family friend.
A supremely insightful and inventive storyteller, McMurtry teases vivid worlds out of small details, setting them to arrangements that have elements of Americana but sound too sly and smart for such a general category. Funny and sad often in the same breath, The Black Dog and the Wandering Boy adds a new chapter to a long career that has young songwriters like Sarah Jarosz and Jason Isbell cite him as a formative influence.
BettySoo’s vocal prowess is a thing of wonder. A world-class instrument of deft phrasing and purity, a voice that knows when to hold back and when to dive in. At her own live shows, taking a verse onstage with friends or singing harmonies in sessions with Austin’s finest, BettySoo sings with consummate loveliness and self-assurance. A voice that knows the roots of American music inside and out; coming from a most unexpected place – a diminutive Korean-American with a deceptively girl-next-door demeanor.