Regina Leader-Post

Country trio Midland keeps it traditiona­l

Country trio Midland brings traditiona­l country back to radio

- KRISTIN M. HALL

On a recent Saturday night backstage at the 125-yearold Ryman Auditorium, the members of the new country trio Midland have stacks of their debut album, On the Rocks, spread out around their dressing room waiting for their signatures.

They also have about six kinds of liquor on the makeup table, including a bottle of tequila and a bowl of limes and lemons.

Cameron Duddy, 31, Jess Carson, 38, and Mark Wystrach, 37, not only sound retro, but they look the part too: shaggy hair and moustaches, denim with sewnon patches, bespoke Western wear and vintage T-shirts.

Suddenly, the evening ’s headliners, Little Big Town, burst into the dressing room. The fourpiece vocal group have come to congratula­te Texas-based Midland on the success of their first single, Drinkin’ Problem, a George Strait-inspired song with a little Urban Cowboy flair. Before the interview was interrupte­d, the trio talked about their modern traditiona­list country music and invoking the sound of the genre’s past for a new generation of fans.

Q Is this the right time for a traditiona­l country album?

Duddy This couldn’t have come out two years ago. I remember sitting there watching the CMAs and Chris Stapleton winning that year and it really felt like there was a sea change going on. Drinkin’ Problem was written two years ago and we’ve been sitting on that song since then. It’s really been a lesson in patience.

Carson When we cut Drinkin’ Problem, it was a lofty idea that it would be played on radio, let alone be a No. 1 song. Personally I didn’t even dream that big.

Wystrach The fact that it did go No. 1 and as fast as it did is a great indicator that there is a thirst for modern traditiona­l or neo-traditiona­l or however they are calling our music.

Q What were some of the earliest records you remember listening to?

Duddy Of course, the first songs I learned on guitar were Nirvana songs, you know. I owned the Dookie Green Day album.

Carson I thought my dad’s taste in music was embarrassi­ng when I was young. I grew up in a farmhouse with no TV and a piano. So we’d sing songs around the piano. My dad loved Dire Straits, Paul Simon and all this stuff that I listen to now.

Wystrach My parents are much older. I was a 40-year-old mistake. I grew up with a lot of very old country. Hank Sr. Johnny Horton. Roger Miller. Elvis Presley. My dad’s side was much more about Stax — Otis Redding, Sam and Dave, Sam Cooke.

Q What does the music of the ’70s and ’80s invoke in you?

Carson It’s a very dense time period in songwritin­g. There was an incredible combinatio­n of art and pop. Wystrach There was more depth in the songwritin­g back in that time. People weren’t afraid to write about important things. Maybe things that are a little bit more taboo these days. Writing beautiful songs about dark places and dark things. We’re seeking to write something that’s not just disposable.

Q You’re going on tour with Little Big Town next year. What do you think you can learn from them?

Duddy That we need a fourth person.

Carson We have a lot to learn from them. They are probably the best to do that harmony thing in Nashville.

Like literally I want them to sit down and break down some of their harmonies for us.

Wystrach You hear that, Little Big Town? For free. No charges.

When we cut Drinkin’ Problem, it was a lofty idea that it would be played on radio, let alone be a No. 1 song.

 ?? WADE PAYNE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? Midland’s Jess Carson, left, Mark Wystrach and Cameron Duddy perform their first single, Drinkin’ Problem, at the CMT Music Awards in Nashville earlier this year.
WADE PAYNE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES Midland’s Jess Carson, left, Mark Wystrach and Cameron Duddy perform their first single, Drinkin’ Problem, at the CMT Music Awards in Nashville earlier this year.

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