


New Threats From The Soul
Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Bandâ the project of Louisville-based visual artist, multi-instrumentalist and songwriter Ryan Davis â announce their new album, New Threats From The Soul, out 25th July on Tough Love and release its lead single and title track (which features guest vocalist Catherine Irwin of legendary Louisville band Freakwater).
2023âs Dancing On The Edge was quickly beloved by those who stumbled upon it, earning high praise from publications like Pitchfork & The Line Of Best Fit, who deemed it a âremarkable, endlessly rewarding debut.â His second album, New Threats From The Soul, reckons mightily with the perplexities of human efficacy and agency in an absurd and debased world. This probably sounds hopelessly plodding and severe. It is notânot remotely. Itâs a shit-ton of fun. The songs are all earwigs; the arrangements genuinely thrilling, enlivening efforts by the crackerjacks that comprise the sprawling Roadhouse Band. Each trip through the record reveals more of the depth and breadth and tangle of its tapestry.
Across New ThreatsâŠ, Ryan manages near-rhymes that a hundred yearsâ worth of monkeys labouring at Chat GPT-enabled typewriters couldnât achieve: âbromeliadâ and ânecrophiliacâ; âurinalâ and âde Chirico.â Kinky Friedman lamented that people thought his funny songs were sad and his sad songs were funny, when they were both simultaneously. Like the Kinkster, Ryan can make you laugh through a lump in your throat. In his formidable crew of harmony singers there are four of the most gifted lyricists & vocalists to currently walk among usâCatherine Irwin, Will Oldham, Lou Turner, Myriam Gendronâ which testifies to the profound heft of his writing (these folks donât often sign up to sing pap).
New Threats From The Soul is a masterclass in reducing the sublime to the prosaic, immensity to infinitesimally, and vice versa (the trick can only work both ways). Everything in our universe is essentially flotsam or jetsam, rubbish heaps of fragments and shards. We, especially, are jerry-rigs of bubblegum and driftwood, inconsistencies and incoherencies, dead dreams and necrophagous hopes, âmismeasurements between the place where [we are] and the place where [we] could have been,â although somehow notâmiracle of miraclesâbereft of simple joys, as Davis sings on todayâs single.
The record functions in parallel with Kafkaâs winking dictum that there is an infinite amount of hope in the universe, just not for us. New Threats⊠suggests that maybe, just maybe, something like redemption is possible, but only once weâre entirely emptied out and hawked in toto down at Walden Pawn.
âRyan Davis traces lifeâs edgesâŠcontemplating the human capacities for open-hearted euphoria and harrowing pain.â Pitchfork.
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Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Bandâ the project of Louisville-based visual artist, multi-instrumentalist and songwriter Ryan Davis â announce their new album, New Threats From The Soul, out 25th July on Tough Love and release its lead single and title track (which features guest vocalist Catherine Irwin of legendary Louisville band Freakwater).
2023âs Dancing On The Edge was quickly beloved by those who stumbled upon it, earning high praise from publications like Pitchfork & The Line Of Best Fit, who deemed it a âremarkable, endlessly rewarding debut.â His second album, New Threats From The Soul, reckons mightily with the perplexities of human efficacy and agency in an absurd and debased world. This probably sounds hopelessly plodding and severe. It is notânot remotely. Itâs a shit-ton of fun. The songs are all earwigs; the arrangements genuinely thrilling, enlivening efforts by the crackerjacks that comprise the sprawling Roadhouse Band. Each trip through the record reveals more of the depth and breadth and tangle of its tapestry.
Across New ThreatsâŠ, Ryan manages near-rhymes that a hundred yearsâ worth of monkeys labouring at Chat GPT-enabled typewriters couldnât achieve: âbromeliadâ and ânecrophiliacâ; âurinalâ and âde Chirico.â Kinky Friedman lamented that people thought his funny songs were sad and his sad songs were funny, when they were both simultaneously. Like the Kinkster, Ryan can make you laugh through a lump in your throat. In his formidable crew of harmony singers there are four of the most gifted lyricists & vocalists to currently walk among usâCatherine Irwin, Will Oldham, Lou Turner, Myriam Gendronâ which testifies to the profound heft of his writing (these folks donât often sign up to sing pap).
New Threats From The Soul is a masterclass in reducing the sublime to the prosaic, immensity to infinitesimally, and vice versa (the trick can only work both ways). Everything in our universe is essentially flotsam or jetsam, rubbish heaps of fragments and shards. We, especially, are jerry-rigs of bubblegum and driftwood, inconsistencies and incoherencies, dead dreams and necrophagous hopes, âmismeasurements between the place where [we are] and the place where [we] could have been,â although somehow notâmiracle of miraclesâbereft of simple joys, as Davis sings on todayâs single.
The record functions in parallel with Kafkaâs winking dictum that there is an infinite amount of hope in the universe, just not for us. New Threats⊠suggests that maybe, just maybe, something like redemption is possible, but only once weâre entirely emptied out and hawked in toto down at Walden Pawn.
âRyan Davis traces lifeâs edgesâŠcontemplating the human capacities for open-hearted euphoria and harrowing pain.â Pitchfork.
























