Anderson east:southern american music
13:02
Delilah, the latest album from Anderson East, sounds like a
product of Muscle Shoals’ FAME Studios with grooves that
would have made the Swampers proud and just the right
touch of horns. As East begs forgiveness on songs like
“Devil in Me,” his soulful voice has the finely ground gravel
of backwoods Alabama road. In reality, it was recorded in
East’s adopted hometown of Nashville by Producer of the
Year favorite Dave Cobb (Chris Stapleton, Sturgill Simpson,
Jamey Johnson, Jason Isbell). But while you can take the
songwriter out of Alabama, there’s apparently no taking
Alabama out of the songwriter.
Athens, Ala., is only about 40 miles east of Muscle Shoals,
but growing up, East (born Michael Anderson) wasn’t aware
of the musical heritage just an hour’s drive away. In fact, he
wasn’t aware of any kind of local music scene as Athens was
a dry city until 2004 and he had to drive to Birmingham or
Huntsville just to catch a show. But that just made every
album he could get his hands on that more special.
“Music was kind of a precious commodity growing up,” he
says, “every little bit that you could find—whether
something that we would probably look on as cool now or
just awful music in general. There was no delineation
between good and bad at that point. It was amazing just
because you had it.”
Mixed in with albums from Snoop Dogg and Vince Gill and
road trips to see ZZ Top and Lynyrd Skynyrd was music at
his church, where his father sang in the choir and his
mother played piano. “It wasn’t like the most soulful music,”
he says, “but it was incredibly spiritual and very moving
music, and I think just that the essence of it was the
commonality—like those songs are meant for the
congregation. They’re not meant to be a soloist song. That
spirit of music was something I didn’t really appreciate for a
long time, and I probably like even rebelled against it for a
long time as well. But that kind of attitude has definitely
popped its head back into my mind. It just comes out
because that’s what was put into me for so long, and they’re
beautiful! You know, they’re beautiful songs that are healing
and rejoicing—something higher than you. I’m not saying
that we’re singing like spiritualized love songs or anything
like that, but that essence of just truth I think is kind of
what’s coming out now.”
But unlike some small-town Southern
homes where the music of the church
was the only thing allowed, East’s parents
actually encouraged his early love of
music, buying him a four-track recorder
when he was around 13 and watching as
his enthusiasm just grew from there.
“I kind of tried my hand at sports and school, and I wasn’t
very apt at either one of those things,” he says. “Anything
that was keeping me mostly out of trouble, something that
they could obviously see I had passion for, they were
incredibly supportive in it. And the ability to capture sound
and play it back and manipulate it—everything kind of
stemmed off of that. Learning to write songs and play
guitar and sing and everything has always led back to that.”
But early experiments with that four-track machine just left
him wondering why the songs he was recording in his
parents’ basement and playing over his friends’ car stereos
with big subwoofers didn’t sound like his Michael Jackson
album. He started digging into copies of Mix magazine and
realizing he had a lot to learn. “There was all this really
archaic, esoteric language in there that you really had no
idea of what the hell any of this stuff was. And I was just
like, ‘Okay, well apparently I need one of these big boards
that has more knobs, and there’s a computer there that I
have no idea what the computer’s doing, but there needs to
be a computer involved.’”
When his parents pushed him towards college, he found
that nearby Middle Tennessee State University had a music
engineering program, and the choice was obvious—as was
the decision to go from there to Nashville.
“It was where music was being made,” he says. “And at the
time, you could still afford to be a musician and be broke
and have cheap rent and know there’s such a great
community of people that were doing the same thing. It
was a really inspiring place—I mean it still is. Rent’s gone
up, but it’s still a very inspiring place. I was just kinda dumb
and a kid and was willing to make a fool out of myself in
front of people. And people would be like, ‘Okay, that was,
that wasn’t that terrible.’ But that’s where records are being
made everyday.”
He worked as an engineer and session musician while
working on his own music, first under his given name
before adopting his current moniker for a double-album
Flowers of the Broken Hearted in 2012. “I went to L.A. for a
while, and we recorded most of it there,” he recalls. “It was
my first experience being solely on the other side of the
glass. I wasn’t all that happy with it—the ego was far more
in control at that time. And so I came back home and
recorded a bunch more and the stories of all of them kind
of wove together. It was a definite learning process for
sure.”
He was hesitant to give up control of his songs to another
producer until he met Cobb and their introduction played
like something from the TV show Nashville.
“I was playing around at the Bluebird Café here in
Nashville,” he says, “which is, as I’m sure you’re aware, like
the most Nashville place in town. I think it was the first time
either of us had ever been—and I think the last time. But he
was there to see a mutual friend of ours and I ended up
stopping the show so I could go take a piss, and apparently
that made a pretty big impression on him. He kind of came
up and introduced himself and he was like, ‘Hey man, I’m a
producer.’ And I was like, ‘Yeah, sure, everybody is. What
records have you been workin’ on?’ He rattled off a bunch
of people I didn’t know and then he said, ‘We’re just about
to start mixing this guy Jason Isbell’s record,’ and my ears
perked up quite a bit because I’ve been a huge fan of
Jason’s for a long time. So I was like, ‘Alright, if that guy’s
gonna trust you with it, I’ll take you seriously.’”
East visited Cobb’s home studio, and the two self-
proclaimed gear nerds hit it off immediately and recorded a
few songs to get the feel of each other. “We haven’t looked
back since,” East says. “It’s been a really amazing friendship
and a great working relationship. I owe a lot to that guy for
sure.”
The new album is out on Elektra and veers from the blue-
eyed retro-soul of opener “Only You” to Ryan Adams folk-
rock on closer “Lying in Her Arms.” But East says there was
no conscious effort to make something that recalled his
North Alabama roots.
“Honestly, I feel like [the Muscle Shoals sound is] just kind of
happenstance,” he says. “It was never like a thing, like, ‘Oh
I’m gonna try to have this flavor,’ you know? I was just
trying to write songs that I loved and that made me happy.
And, from there it was just servicing the song. I just am that
guy for the most part. You can’t take a kid from north
Alabama and growing up in church—some of that is just
gonna seep out. I think, at the core of it, it’s just really
southern American music. Just the same, I think they’re just
as much a country song as they are R&B songs. I think all
that music stems from the same well.”
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