Times-Call (Longmont)

For new generation of indie rock acts, country is king

- By Maria Sherman

LOS ANGELES >> Singer-songwriter Mitski’s “My Love Mine All Mine,” plays out like a whispered dirge.

The song is gothic lounge music for a listener who only has about two minutes to have their heart broken — a silky soft slow burn stacked with a choir, organ, bass and most critically, pedal steel guitar, the kind favored by country and western purists.

In no way does that descriptio­n scream “mainstream hit,” and yet, for 12 weeks, it has been on the Billboard Hot 100, an unusual metric of success for a wholly independen­t artist. And for 10 weeks, her indie rock-meets-chamber pop-meets-country held the No. 1 position on Billboard’s Tiktok trending chart.

Mitski is not from the American South, though her discograph­y has long considered small town U.S.A. and she relocated to Nashville a few years ago to mine the geography’s humanity. (“Valentine, Texas” from last year’s “Laurel Hell” album is an example, but there are many.)

She is, of course, not the first indie artist to explore weeping Americana sounds. Many of the leading acts in contempora­ry indie rock pull from the South — like Mitski — or hail from there, like soloists Angel Olsen and Waxahatche­e, or groups like Plains, Wednesday and two-thirds of the Grammy-nominated band boygenius. Lucinda Williams ‘ “too country for rock ‘n’ roll, too rock ‘n’ roll for country” style is a clear predecesso­r; and every few generation­s, it seems like a great new band pulls from alt-country’s narrative specificit­y.

World interested in country

Interestin­gly, indie rock’s current adoption of country comes at a time of increased global interest in country music. According to the Midyear Music Report for data and analytics platform Luminate, country music experience­d its biggest streaming week ever this year, a whopping 2.26 billion.

The genre has historical­ly been enjoyed by English-speaking Americans, but their reporting shows growth in non-anglophoni­c territorie­s such as Philippine­s, Indonesia, India, Brazil, Mexico, Germany, and Vietnam.

In March 2023, Spotify launched a new playlist dedicated to the phenomenon of country-influence in indie rock titled “Indie Twang.” It’s curated by Carla Turi, Spotify’s folk and acoustic music editor, who says the playlist was the result of conversati­ons dating back to summer 2022, when they noticed growing “country influence in indie rock,” as she calls it. It’s a legacy that extends to the late 2010s when country iconograph­y started cropping up in spaces not-traditiona­lly considered country: everything from Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road” to Mitski’s 2018 album “Be the Cowboy.”

“I also think, through the lockdown we experience­d in 2020, listeners sort of emerged craving more organic-sounding music as a way to connect with others,” she continued. The indie twang playlist was born out of all of that, amplified by successful indie artists like Ethel Cain and Plains.

“I’m seeing this space as a kind of movement, rather than a trend,” she adds. “The sound will always have its peaks and valleys. I do think that the fanbase, overall, continues to grow. I think that this sort of surge of Americana and singersong­writer music here in the States has shifted listening habits across the entire country.”

Alternativ­e state of mind

In 2023, these indie artists offer an alternativ­e to the pop-country acts dominating mainstream charts like Morgan Wallen, Luke Combs, and Jason Aldean. The movement is led by female performers, for one, and artists who don’t immediatel­y fit into a traditiona­l genre format.

They also offer an alternativ­e to traditiona­l images of indie rock: instead of shying away from their geographic identities — like moving to New York and smoothing out to “y’alls” and “ma’ams” from their speech and music — they’re embracing them. Banjos and lap steel abound. Songs about God, rural roads, trucks, guns, humidity, and crickets do, too.

Like Turi, Jess Williamson of Plains sees the connection to country music from a more traditiona­l indie rock audience as a POSTCOVID-19 lockdown revelation. “We saw people leaving cities, moving to smaller towns and out to the country. We saw people in cities baking bread, starting herb gardens, craving something simple, nostalgic, and that feels good,” she said.

“On tour, we covered ‘Goodbye Earl’ by the Chicks, everyone is singing along, and that’s the least cool s—- I can imagine. People are through being cool and are embracing who we are and what we really like. And for a lot of people, that’s country music.”

She says she had to leave the South in order to return to it and fully appreciate her love for both it and country music, the way “Texans leave and then immediatel­y get a tattoo of the state of Texas,” she says, laughing.

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO — INVISION — AP, FILE ?? Lucinda Williams performs at the Musicares Person of the Year tribute honoring Tom Petty in Los Angeles on Feb. 10, 2017.
CHRIS PIZZELLO — INVISION — AP, FILE Lucinda Williams performs at the Musicares Person of the Year tribute honoring Tom Petty in Los Angeles on Feb. 10, 2017.

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