Desperate Man Eric Church

Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
05.10.2018

Album including Album cover

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  • 1The Snake04:01
  • 2Hangin’ Around02:30
  • 3Heart Like A Wheel03:16
  • 4Some Of It03:15
  • 5Monsters03:20
  • 6Hippie Radio02:54
  • 7Higher Wire02:43
  • 8Desperate Man03:29
  • 9Solid04:18
  • 10Jukebox And A Bar03:13
  • 11Drowning Man03:50
  • Total Runtime36:49

Info for Desperate Man



“What I thought this album was going to be—well, it wasn’t that at all,” says Eric Church. “But once we found the template and got on the right path, we were really knocking them down. It took a while, but then we got most of the album done in a few days.”

Church’s sixth studio album, Desperate Man, marks the end of the longest break in his career between putting out new music. In the three years since the sudden, surprise release of Mr. Misunderstood, though, he has experienced some of the highest peaks and some of the biggest challenges in his work and in his life.

First came the triumphant declaration of independence represented by Mr Misunderstood (a surprise release, initially mailed out on vinyl to members of the Church Choir fan club, which went on to become the 2016 CMA Album of the Year) and the “Holdin’ My Own” tour (with no opening act, he played two marathon sets each night, as documented on the 61 Days in Church collection). “That was the most effortless record I’ve ever made,” he says, “and it showed that all the things you thought you needed to do, you really didn’t. And then the tour was such a spiritual thing for me—just us for three hours, with the crowd and the energy we had.

“After that, you find yourself struggling with ‘Where the hell do I go now?’ Instinctively, you go back to the things that got you there—but that’s thinking logically, and that never works.”

When Church returned to the studio with his band and his long-time producer Jay Joyce, they settled on a handful of songs that felt like the right place to start. “They were big stadium songs,” he says. “And I knew they were hits—I could have had four Number Ones in there—but they didn’t make me stand up and throw my fists in the air. It was what everybody was expecting, but it just wasn’t the right record.”

Since his last recordings, Church had also been through a serious health scare and had performed at the Route 91 Harvest festival in Las Vegas, where dozens of country music fans lost their lives. “I still felt shook up pretty good,” he says. “I wasn’t ready yet, wasn’t settled from all that happened—I was still reeling from Vegas, I felt displaced and not really connected to anything. I had to get back to enjoying what we were making and finding refuge in the music as a bit of an anchor.”

He called his manager and said that he might need to take a break and hold off on the recording sessions (“that’s never happened to me before,” he notes). But then came a breakthrough, in the form of two songs that represented an entirely new direction.

“The Snake” is a menacing, spoken-word parable with a political undertone. “The rattlesnake and the copperhead—that’s left/right, blue/red, however you say it,” says Church. “They sit there and fight all day to rile people up and then go get a drink. They’re working together while the whole world is burning down.”

Then, immediately after, he wrote a simple song called “Hippie Radio,” an acoustic meditation on the ways that music is there to mark different phases in your life. And suddenly, Church started to get a notion of where this project might be headed.

“It was making my Spidey Sense go up,” says Church. “It was different, soulful, a total left turn from what we had been doing. The coolness started to come in. Plus it was saying something, and that’s what artists are supposed to do—give us guidance for where we are and where we’re headed.”

The sessions became more loose and experimental. The bulk of the material was written in the studio; he came up with “Hangin’ Around” in an hour and cut it that same day. For “Drowning Man,” Joyce secretly set up a microphone under Church’s foot, and the tapping forms the main kick on the final drum track. “My creative juices were really flowing,” says Church. “I was trying different sounds, and calling more audibles than ever before. I really enjoyed the journey of where it was starting to take me.”

They experimented with 25 songs for Desperate Man, the most Church had ever recorded for an album. But a sound started to emerge, a common thread he describes as “an electric, raw, old soul sound.” For the chugging title track (co-written with Ray Wylie Hubbard), Church wanted “something that sounded like 1973 or ‘74”; he chose it as the first single because it “spoke to a lot of the elements on the album—the vocals, piano, broken-down chorus, it felt like it encompassed all the other tracks.”

The closing track, “Drowning Man,” addresses the state of our times and the ways artists have (or haven’t) responded. “With what’s going on in the world, I felt forgotten, left behind,” says Church. “And if you go to any bar or concert in America, there are whole groups of forgotten people who are very much alike, who have way more in common than not. There’s a lot of madness in the world that makes no sense, and it’s not all high tides and yachts—I don’t want to hear that shit.”

“Solid,” co-written with New Orleans mainstay Anders Osborne, stands as a kind of mission statement for the album, a testament to the basic principles and priorities that hold up over time. “It’s just saying, this is where I’m at and who I am,” he says. “I love the simplicity—‘I’m good, I’m OK, just keep heading down that path.’ And it helped my confidence in the studio, because when you don’t know where you’re headed, you can get pretty insecure.”

When it seemed the album was done, though, one song from that first, scrapped batch of material was still calling out to Church. “Some Of It” is a reflection on lessons learned and wisdom gained, and (with the encouragement of his wife, Katherine) he decided to give it a shot at the last minute.

“I was spooked by it, because it was one of those original songs that wasn’t working,” he says. “But I called Jay and said, ‘This one is still bothering me, so I need to go back in and cut it.’ And when we got that, it felt like we were really where we needed to be.”

Eric Church has no regrets about his initial struggles with Desperate Man, nor with the experiences that led to his uncertainty. “That’s what allowed me to make this record,” he says. “If those things hadn’t happened, I wouldn’t have had the same turmoil and angst inside me, and I would have just gone ahead and made that radio-friendly record.

“The main thing I love,” he continues, “is that we’ve always shown progress, we’re always moving the creative needle forward in some way. And that’s what I’m proudest of—with this album and with my whole career.”

Eric Church, vocal, guitar



Eric Church
Reigning CMA Entertainer of the Year and 10-time GRAMMY nominee Eric Church has spent the past year-plus releasing new music at a relentless pace; providing a glimpse into the marathon session during which he spent nearly a month writing and recording a song per day – including current Top 5 single “Hell of a View” – while sequestered in rural North Carolina. The resulting project, his critically acclaimed new triple album, Heart & Soul, is available now.

Just as unique as Church’s approach to recording and releasing music is his tenacity on the road. During his most recent outing, 2019’s Double Down Tour, Church played back-to-back nights of two unique shows in each market sans opening act, giving every city’s fans six-plus hours of his iconic music. The tour also featured a massive stop at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, where he broke the venue’s concert attendance record with more than 56,000 fans in attendance and became the first artist to sell out the venue with a solo lineup. Church also took to the field at Tampa Bay’s Raymond James Stadium on Sunday, February 7 to perform the National Anthem with R&B star Jazmine Sullivan ahead of Super Bowl LV and will return to the road for The Gather Again Tour this fall.

A seven-time ACM Award winner, four-time CMA Award winner, and 10-time GRAMMY nominee, Church has amassed a passionate fanbase around the globe known as the Church Choir as well as a critically acclaimed catalog of music. His previous album, Desperate Man, earned a GRAMMY nomination for Best Country Album (his third nod in the category) and produced his most recent No. 1 hit, “Some Of It.” Additional releases include the Platinum-certified Sinners Like Me (“How ’Bout You,” “Guys Like Me”), Carolina (“Smoke a Little Smoke,” “Love Your Love the Most”) and Mr. Misunderstood (“Record Year,” “Round Here Buzz”), the Double-Platinum certified The Outsiders (“Like a Wrecking Ball,” “Talladega”) and the 3x Platinum-certified Chief (“Springsteen,” “Drink In My Hand”), as well as 22 Gold, Platinum and multi-Platinum certified singles.

This album contains no booklet.

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