Texarkana Gazette

Somber mood dominates latest Truckers album

Drive-By Truckers, “American Band” ATO Records)

- By Mark Kennedy

The Drive-By Truckers are celebratin­g their 20th anniversar­y this year in a grave mood. The cover art of an American flag at half-staff is a tip-off.

The liberal-leaning Southern rockers who have long struggled to both celebrate their roots and recognize its bitter past have delivered a sober new album with a withering view of today’s South.

The often-gloomy but vitally important “American Band” sees the Truckers weigh in strongly on such issues as police shootings, the National Rifle Associatio­n, depression, school massacres, lying CEOs and even progress.

“Are you now or have you ever been in cahoots with the notion that people can change?” co-singer and co-guitarist Mike Cooley asks in the nihilistic “Once They Banned Imagine.”

There’s precious little honky-tonk fun here. The band, known for its finely etched portraits celebratin­g Southern rascals and eccentrics, seems to have simply run out of patience.

“Despite our best intentions, it pains me to report/ we keep swinging for the fences, coming up a little short,” Hood sings on “Ever South.”

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