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Last year, Charlie Martin impulsively wrote
T-R-U-E L-O-V-E in all caps across the top of what would become the title track
of his and Will Taylor’s fourth Hovvdy album. The on-the-nose instinct
encapsulates the LP’s elemental look at relationships – familial, romantic,
friendly – and that desire to capture them in a bottle. Since the creation of
their last album, both Charlie and Will have married their partners. Will
became a father.
A nod to their roots and a reach for more, True Love maturely embraces the best of
the duo’s hyper-genuine, chin-up qualities developed over the past seven years.
Charlie and Will first met at a baseball game while touring with other bands,
both as drummers. Back home in Austin, the pair connected over shared
sports-centric upbringings in Dallas and, most prominently, likeminded batches
of solo songwriting. The interlocking tracks would become 2016 LP Taster, introducing a comforting sonic
push-and-pull continued in the innate melodies of Cranberry (2018) and the propulsive storytelling of breakthrough Heavy Lifter (2019).
Fourth album True Love follows a surprisingly folksy and beautifully determined
course, just hinting at the lo-fi layers of the Austin-based project’s DIY
origins. Co-produced by the genre-morphing Andrew Sarlo (Nick Hakim, Big Thief,
Bon Iver), the acoustically-driven, forward-looking songwriters’ statement
stamps Hovvdy’s debut with Grand Jury Music.
Charlie
and Will add: “This collection of songs feels to us like a return to form,
writing and recording songs for ourselves and loved ones. Spending less energy
consumed with how people may respond freed us up to put our efforts into
creating an honest, heartfelt album.”
Throughout 2020, the band visited Sarlo’s
small Los Angeles studio to put down their biggest-sounding record yet. Trusted
guidance freed Charlie and Will to play to their strengths on essential
elements – an upright piano, an acoustic guitar, a few keyboards. Songs harken
to the duo’s Southern totems of Townes Van Zandt and Lucinda Williams, with
longtime collaborator Ben Littlejohn adding pedal steel and dobro for subtle
drawl. Will calls True Love “the
other side of the coin” from past LP Heavy
Lifter’s tweaked pop, reflecting instead on the sturdy strums of sophomore Cranberry.
“Sarlo heard things in our individual
production styles that we might otherwise feel self-conscious about, but he
would lean into them,” says Charlie. “We knew we could come in with a very
stripped-down acoustic guitar song and it would end up being expansive and
vast. I felt really confident in letting this record be as tender and beautiful
as we could make it, knowing there would always be a layer of darkness in
there.”
“Blindsided” embodies the bespoke Hovvdy
balance. Charlie’s waltzing piano lines and classical bedding make way for
punctuated vocal assurances. Will’s textured guitar downbeats also softly power
syncopated storytelling on “Lake June.” Channeling the warmth of new
fatherhood, he repeats “I love you so
much” at the song’s center.
In the exuberant rush of title track “True
Love,” Charlie references his old Cranberry-era
song “Colorful” – a wizened callback to a growing catalog, forever morphing in
hindsight. Shaking off any nostalgic haze, the new album’s immediate production
places their detailed scenes surely in the present. There’s flashes of a
magnolia tree, a Tom Thumb, a cross on a trailer. “Around Again” frets over the
fleetingness: “Memory won’t let me take a
picture / Turn to me and tell me you’ll remember.”
“It’s about resiliency and appreciating the
little moments, even when the big picture
can be daunting,” says Will. “I’m proud of
how we let the songs and the feeling of the record do the work for us. Even in
somber moments, the joy behind the music is noticeable, and that’s what makes
it special to me.”
Talent
Hovvdy
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