The Oklahoman

AUSTIN SONGWRITER CARLL MAKES STATEMENT WITH LATEST ALBUM HAYES IN CAIN'S

- BY BECKY CARMAN

F ive years passed between Austin songwriter Hayes Carll’s acclaimed 2011 record, “KMAG YOYO (and other American stories)” and the 2016 release of his latest album, “Lovers and Leavers.”

The former found Carll at the peak of his tonguein-cheek, characterd­riven storytelli­ng: The title track is from the point of viewof a baby-faced G.I. on the front lines, and “Another Like You,” about a hardline Republican and Democrat finding common ground in a one-night stand, topped American Songwriter’s list of best songs of 2011. Carll’s knack for straddling touchy themes like war, politics and religion with a dose of acerbic humor spoke to fans on both sides of every fence, in whiskeysoa­ked clubs and honky tonks across the country.

“Lovers and Leavers” is a world away. In measuremen­ts of time, it was five years and 53 days. In measuremen­ts of life, Carll saw hundreds of nights on the road, went through a divorce and fell in love. The Hayes Carll who went into the studio to record this album had a deeply personal list of themes to cover, and the plaintive record, by comparison to “KMAG,” is downright sparse and displays that gravity in spades.

As Carll wrote in the album’s artist notes: “‘Lovers and Leavers’ isn’t funny or raucous. There are very few hoots and almost no hollers. But it is joyous, and it makes me smile ... It’s my fifth record — a reflection of a specific time and place. It is quiet, like I wanted it to be.”

Q: I think you’ve been pretty classicall­y misunderst­ood by a lot of your fans. What’s the quote about irony that you like? Not everyone gets it?

Hayes Carll: Yeah, Ray Wylie Hubbard dropped that one on me. I’ve found it to be true. People take what they will from most forms of art, and it can be a losing battle to try and control how it hits them or how they interpret it. I’ve written a lot of things that I didn’t intend to be taken at face value but were, unfortunat­ely, by a lot of listeners. That is one of the challenges of using irony or writing in a character that isn’t me.

Q: Your new record for me felt like you drawing a line in the sand a bit about what kind of artist you are in the present. Was there trepidatio­n about making that statement?

Carll: I was drawing a line in the sand. I didn’t want to leave as much gray area for interpreta­tion. I wanted to make a singersong­writer record because I wanted intimacy and connection to the material that I hadn’t previously had or communicat­ed. I am becoming more private and developing stronger boundaries as I get older. The opposite of doing that just isn’t that much fun anymore. I had some trepidatio­n in that I was afraid I wasn’t offering something for everyone as I had tried to do in the past, but I’m not Wal-Mart. I’m an artist with a specific thing to say at a specific time.

Q: When you were choosing the songs for “Lovers and Leavers,”

did you set out to purposely create the mood of this record?

Carll: Yes. I set out to make what I thought of as a singer-songwriter record. I wanted it to exist in its own world and give the listener the aural equivalent of a close read, if they chose to listen that way. I wanted it to have a sonic signature, but one that was not overwrough­t or overthough­t. And it isn’t. I chose the songs I chose because they were the ones I felt closely connected to, and if I didn’t feel that, I didn’t force them into the record.

Q: Why was Joe Henry the right producer for these songs?

Carll: I knew that Joe has the confidence to stop producing. Not everyone does, and a song can end up with way too much tweezing and piling on instead of being allowed to stand on its own as a compositio­n. He displays that in his own recordings and those he makes for others. I trusted that he knew what to do with the kind of record I told him I wanted to make. And he did — we finished it in five days. Not a whole lot of polishing there, which I think was the right choice.

Q: Your girlfriend, Allison Moorer, is a prolific writer of great songs and many other things. Have her methods affected yours?

Carll: Her discipline and work ethic, and understand­ing that it doesn’t all come out at once, have given me more perseveran­ce in my own work. She’s also good at making sure she stays inspired by sort of constantly looking for sources, staying curious and enthusiast­ic about all art forms. Her curiosity and open-mindedness inspire my own. She also doesn’t give up on ideas and revises until she can’t anymore. I’ve tended to give up when the inspiratio­n died until recently. I know now that good writing is rewriting most of the time.

Q: What are you reading or listening to lately that you find inspiring?

Carll: I just read “CVJ: Nicknames of Maitre D’s and Other Excerpts from Life” (by Julian Schnabel). Allison picked it up recently, and I read it before she got a chance to. It holds a lot of great

advice for artists — how to stay engaged, how to listen to and trust yourself and your own instincts rather than listen to others and putting their opinions

before yours. Musically, I'm into Rayland Baxter, Gregory Alan Isakov Dawes and Jason Isbell a lot these days.

Q: Are you strict or academic about your artistic process? Or is there a particular head space you have to be in to get things done?

Carll: No. But I need time,

and having my head be clear does help.

Q: What do you do differentl­y to mentally prepare for a Cain's Ballroom show versus many of the quieter theater shows you've been doing this year?

Carll: I like using the different muscles for different types of shows, and after I've been doing more of the quiet, acoustic shows, it's fun to get a little rowdier. The quieter shows are more open emotionall­y for me, but the trio and band shows are more open musically since I don't have to do every bit of the work. Both are their own special way of communicat­ing.

 ?? [PHOTO PROVIDED BY JACOB BLICKENSTA­FF] ?? Hayes Carll returns to Cain’s Ballroom on Friday for a concert with Band of Heathens.
[PHOTO PROVIDED BY JACOB BLICKENSTA­FF] Hayes Carll returns to Cain’s Ballroom on Friday for a concert with Band of Heathens.
 ?? [IMAGE PROVIDED] ?? Hayes Carll’s “Lovers and Leavers” album landed last year via Thirty Tigers. Grammyawar­d winning producer and musician Joe Henry (Glen Hansard, Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt) worked on the 10-track album which was recorded live over five days in LA...
[IMAGE PROVIDED] Hayes Carll’s “Lovers and Leavers” album landed last year via Thirty Tigers. Grammyawar­d winning producer and musician Joe Henry (Glen Hansard, Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt) worked on the 10-track album which was recorded live over five days in LA...
 ?? [PHOTO
PROVIDED BY JACOB
BLICKENSTA­FF] ?? Hayes Carll noted that he didn’t have one song on his latest record, “Lovers and Leavers,” that he knew would be a sing along or would make people dance. He aimed to make a record with space, nuance and room to breathe.
[PHOTO PROVIDED BY JACOB BLICKENSTA­FF] Hayes Carll noted that he didn’t have one song on his latest record, “Lovers and Leavers,” that he knew would be a sing along or would make people dance. He aimed to make a record with space, nuance and room to breathe.

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