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Comes on 3LP vinyl.
American Heartbreak is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter Zach Bryan, released on May 20, 2022, through Belting Bronco and Warner Records. It is a triple album and Bryan’s major-label debut
The men and women (mostly men) in his songs spend their twenties drinking their way through the alienating cities theyโve fled to from the small towns theyโve outgrown. They congregate in dive bars, break each otherโs hearts, pound High Lifes, pop Zyn, ponder God, place parlays, rediscover their rural accents, act younger and feel older than they really are. The boys and girls in his America have such a rad time together. So why do they spend all their spare time remembering everything?
The feat of The Great American Bar Scene, Bryanโs fifth record, his magic trick, to quote one of its many featured guests, Bruce Springsteen, is to make it seem like the life he sings about is still the one heโs living. Since Bryan is such a preternaturally gifted songwriter, his new albumโs premise is as convincing as it is absurd: That Americaโs most iron-hot rock star spends his time not on airplanes and in hockey arena green rooms but traversing dirty dives with the boys, losing money to sketchy Philly bookies, and staying up for sunrises on friendsโ apartment roofs.ย The way Bryan wrestles with this contrast between his newfound success and the homespun characters he writes about โ and he wrestles with it quite a bit โ is by leaning on remembrances of a recent restless past thatโs never far from his mind. โGive me four minutes and a little โbit of time,โ he sings on โBass Boat,โ another tune about his favorite topic: memory. โIโll make them old days an old friend of mine.โ
These 19 songs feel like a batch of old friends largely because of Bryanโs other magical gift: his knack for absorbing and transforming his many influences into something that feels uniquely his own. Heโs emerged as the foremost pop synthesizer of the past decade in singer-songwriter, country-rock, indie-folk, and heartland rock, blending his favorite Kings of Leon, Bon Iver, Turnpike Troubadours, and Lumineers records into something that feels new to a younger audience.
Call it the Great Americana Bar Jukebox: the way Bryan deploys mournful trumpets, like the National, to build tension (โOak Islandโ), the traces of the Lumineersโ feel-good playbook when he sings โโcause I got youโโ in falsetto (โFunny Manโ). Throughout the record, he channels his hero Tyler Childersโ knack for writing in his charactersโ rural vernacular (see the albumโs surplus of โtheyโsโ and โIโsโ and โyouโseโ). On โAmerican Nights,โ he twists bro-country signifiers (Fords, tan lines) into a noir, Nebraska-esque tale tinged with violence and PTSD. On โ28,โ he sets a Jason Isbell-evoking chorus melody to the cello melodrama of the Avett Brothers. On the ballad โMemphis; the Blues,โ he goes further, recruiting songwriting hero and fellow Okie John Moreland, for a co-write and a second verse. When, a few songs later, he enlists Springsteen himself for a duet, the song they trade verses on (โSandpaperโ) is an homage to โIโm on Fire.โ
But part of Bryanโs stunning commercial success may be that amid all this influence-peddling, his closest songwriting contemporary is Taylor Swift, whose sui generis world-building Bryan almost always pulls off for himself. Like Swiftโs recent work, he uses silence and space to turn otherwise sparse records into stadium sing-alongs. And as a lyricist, heโs absorbed Swiftโs knack for detail (a worn-in baseball glove, a rusty door hinge, a balled-up left fist).
The result is writing that blends endearing Kerouac cosplay, Instagram poetry, and Proustian profundity, sometimes from one line to the next, like on the last verse of โThe Way Back.โ โPink Skies,โ the albumโs lead single (featuring Watchhouse, another influence), is a masterclass in storytelling that deploys sparse imagery about grief and family to pack a novelโs worth of emotional punch into four minutes. In one image, Bryan nails the flood of memories and emotions his protagonist faces packing up a childhood home while grieving: โAll the inches scraped on the door frame/We all know you tiptoed up to 4โ1 back in โ08,โ he sings. Bryan is adept at letting scraps of dialogue do his narrative heavy lifting, as he does on โThe Way Back,โ the story of a mother and her wayward adult son: โShe always sat under the oak tree/Sayinโ, โGod I miss the old me (source is www.rollingstone.com).
Weight | 1 lbs |
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Dimensions | 14 × 14 × 1 in |
Condition | New |
Media | Vinyl |