Product Description
Brand New ~ Sealed! Double LP Set In Gatefold Cover With Inner Sleeves. The Second Album From Country Rock Musician / Singer / Songwriter, Orville Peck!
A consummate storyteller, the country rock inspired ‘Bronco’ plays upon the horse theme so often found in Orville Peck’s work, but this time with an exploration of freedom, breaking free from that which binds us and all that is wild and untamed. ‘Bronco’ builds upon and follows Peck’s previous album ‘Pony’ and EP ‘Show Pony’, which explored themes of love, loss and loneliness but advances the story arc in a bolder, newer, and warmer trajectory.
“This is my most impassioned and authentic album to date. I was inspired by country rock, 60s & 70s psychedelic, California and even bluegrass with everything being anchored in country. ‘Bronco’ is all about being unrestrained and the culmination of a year of touring, writing in isolation and going through and ultimately emerging from a challenging personal time.” ~ Orville Peck
Side 1:
Daytona Sand
The Curse Of The Blackened Eye
Outta Time
Lafayette
Side 2:
C’mon Baby, Cry
Iris Rose
Kalahari Down
Bronco
Side 3:
Trample Out The Days
Blush
Hexie Mountain
Let Me Drown
Side 4:
Any Turn
City Of Gold
All I Can Say
AMG –
Orville Peck's image as the glamorous and subversive masked man of country music puts the spotlight firmly on a genuine talent, and Bronco is a glorious achievement that fulfills Peck's promise and then some. If you're going to reinvent yourself, there's no point in being shy about it, and Orville Peck has learned that lesson well. Transforming into a cosmic cowboy took vision and hustle, and Peck has not only made it work, he's shown he knows how to grow within his persona. Peck has the talent to pull it off as a vocalist and a songwriter, and as strong as his 2019 debut album Pony was, 2022's Bronco builds on it in every way. If the sonic vistas of Pony evoked a classic John Ford western, Bronco takes him from Stagecoach to The Searchers, with a bigger, more colorful, and more nuanced variation on those themes. It helps that Peck had greater resources at his disposal this time out, and working with a major-label budget allowed him to record at first-class facilities in Nashville, and augment his road band (which includes members of the Canadian indie rock band Frigs) with a number of session players and Punch Brothers banjo picker Noam Pikelny. In this case, the extra money went toward detail, not excess gloss; Bronco maintains the spirit and sound of Peck's debut, but builds on it with added instrumental details and atmospheres, and he wisely does so without cluttering the landscape, still leaving enough space for the dynamics that serve this music so well. If anyone feared Peck would fall victim to the Sophomore Slump, he's dodged that bullet with style on Bronco. He has no trouble writing songs that have the dramatic sweep his Roy Orbison meets Morrissey voice demands, and as a lyricist, he's an effective storyteller who doesn't shy away from a dollop of melodrama while still making his characters ring true. The artfully woven queer subtext of Pony is present and accounted for, while the universality of his lonely cowboy's mingled desires for independence and companionship will make this speak to all sorts of listeners. And while songs like "Daytona Sand," "Lafayette," and "City of Gold" fit Pony's template, the caffeine-addled rockabilly of his road diary "Any Turn," the countrypolitan grace of "C'mon Baby, Cry," the spectral acoustic arrangement of "Hexie Mountains," and the twang-infused rock of the title cut demonstrate this cowboy can go anywhere he pleases and make himself at home. Orville Peck's image as the glamorous and subversive masked man of country music still feels a bit gimmicky, but in the grand show biz tradition, it's a character that puts the spotlight firmly on a genuine talent, and Bronco is a glorious achievement that fulfills Peck's promise and then some.