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$5.25The Story
Beulah is John Paul Whiteās new album, his first in nearly a decade, a remarkably and assuredly diverse collection spanning plaintive folk balladry, swampy southern rock, lonesome campfire songs, and dark acoustic pop. Gothic and ambitious, with a rustic, lived-in sound, itās a meditation on love curdling into its opposite, on recrimination defining relationships, on hope finally filtering through doubt.
Far from the grind and glamour of Nashvilleāwhere he worked for years as a working songwriter before stepping into the spotlight himselfāWhite settled in his hometown of Muscle Shoals, Alabama, a wellspring of gritty Southern rock and soul since the 1960s. Together with Alabama Shakes keyboard player Ben Tanner and Shoals native Will Trapp, he founded and runs Single Lock Records, a local indie label that has released records by some of the Yellowhammer Stateās finest, including Dylan LeBlanc, St. Paul & the Broken Bones, and legendary songwriter and keyboard player Donnie Fritts. The label is based in a small ranch house a stoneās throw from Whiteās own home, which would come in handy when those songs started invading his head.
āHonestly, I tried to avoid them, but then I realized the only way I was going to get rid of them was if I wrote them down. I got my phone out and Iād sing these little bits of melody, then put it away and move on. But eventually I got to a place where it was a roar in my head, and that pissed me off.ā Due to his experiences as a gun-for-hire in Nashville, White was reluctant to romanticize the creative process, to turn it into a spiritual pursuit. āThen one day I told my wife I think Iām going to go write a song. She was as surprised as I was. I went and wrote probably eight songs in three days. It was like turning on a faucet.ā
Most artists would kill for such a downpour, but White was wary of the consequences. He knew that writing songs would lead to recording them, which would result in releasing them, and that means touring and leaving home for weeks at a time. āAs soon as I write a song, I start thinking what other people might think of it. Iāve talked to friends about this: What is it about us that makes us do that? Why canāt I just sit on my back porch and sing these songs out into the ether? I donāt have an answer for it yet, but I think itās just part of who I am. I need that reaction. I need to feel like Iām moving someone in a good way or in a bad way. I need to feel like thereās a connection.ā
White threw himself into the project, no longer the reluctant songwriter but a craftsman determined to make the best album possibleāto do these songs justice. He cut several songs at the renowned FAME Studios in his hometown, where Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, the Allmans, the Osmonds, Bobbie Gentry, Arthur Conley, and Clarence Carter recorded some of their most popular hits.
One product of those sessions is āWhatās So,ā which introduces itself by way of a fire-and- brimstone riff, as heavy as a guilty conscienceāthe kind of riff you wouldnāt be surprised to hear on a Sabbath album. But Whiteās vocals are gritty and soulful, a product of the Shoals, almost preacherly as he sings about earthly and eternal damnation: āSell your damn soul or get right with the man, keep treading water as long as you can,ā he exhorts the listener. āBut before you do, you must understand that you donāt get above your raisinā.ā Itās the heaviest moment on the record, perhaps the darkest in Whiteās career.
At the other end of the spectrum is āThe Martyr,ā one of the catchiest tunes White has ever penned. The spryness of the melody imagines Elliott Smith wandering the banks of the Tennessee River, yet the song is shot through with a pervasive melancholy as White wrestles with his own demons. āKeep falling on your sword, sink down a little more,ā he sings over a dexterous acoustic guitar theme. This is not, however, a song about some unnamed person, but rather a pained self-diagnosis: āThese are the wounds that I will not let heal, the ones that I deserve and seem so real.ā White knows heās playing the martyr, but he leaves the song hauntingly open-ended, as though he isnāt sure what to do with this epiphany beyond putting it in a song.
The rest of Beulah was recorded in the Single Lock offices/studio near Whiteās home. āI can be more relaxed about the process. We can all just sit there and talk about records or baseball without feeling like someoneās standing over our shoulders. Thatās a big deal to me, not to feel pressured. And Iām only about twenty yards away from home, so I can walk over and throw a baseball with my kids or make dinner with my wife.ā
Some of the quieterābut no less intenseāsongs on Beulah were created in that environment, including the ominously erotic opener āBlack Leafā and the Southern gothic love song āMake You Cry.ā As he worked, a distinctive and intriguing aesthetic began to grow clearer and clearer, one based in austere arrangements and plaintive moods. These are songs with empty spaces in them, dark corners that could hold ghosts or worse. āThere were certain moments when Ben and I would finish up a song, listen back to it, and think how in the world did we get here. But thatās just what the songs ask for. These are the sounds in my head. This is the sound of me thinking and living and breathing and doing.ā
Once White had everything assembled and sequenced, it was time to give the album a title, to wrap everything up for the listener. Beulah stuckānot only because of family history or Blake, but because White realized that making music was his own trip to Beulah. āIf you had to sum up what music is for most people in this world, itās that. Itās that escape. Itās that refuge. You go there and you come back and you use that to help you with your life. You always have that as a place to go.ā
Description
Beulah is John Paul Whiteās new album, his first in nearly a decade, a remarkably and assuredly diverse collection spanning plaintive folk balladry, swampy southern rock, lonesome campfire songs, and dark acoustic pop. Gothic and ambitious, with a rustic, lived-in sound, itās a meditation on love curdling into its opposite, on recrimination defining relationships, on hope finally filtering through doubt.
Far from the grind and glamour of Nashvilleāwhere he worked for years as a working songwriter before stepping into the spotlight himselfāWhite settled in his hometown of Muscle Shoals, Alabama, a wellspring of gritty Southern rock and soul since the 1960s. Together with Alabama Shakes keyboard player Ben Tanner and Shoals native Will Trapp, he founded and runs Single Lock Records, a local indie label that has released records by some of the Yellowhammer Stateās finest, including Dylan LeBlanc, St. Paul & the Broken Bones, and legendary songwriter and keyboard player Donnie Fritts. The label is based in a small ranch house a stoneās throw from Whiteās own home, which would come in handy when those songs started invading his head.
āHonestly, I tried to avoid them, but then I realized the only way I was going to get rid of them was if I wrote them down. I got my phone out and Iād sing these little bits of melody, then put it away and move on. But eventually I got to a place where it was a roar in my head, and that pissed me off.ā Due to his experiences as a gun-for-hire in Nashville, White was reluctant to romanticize the creative process, to turn it into a spiritual pursuit. āThen one day I told my wife I think Iām going to go write a song. She was as surprised as I was. I went and wrote probably eight songs in three days. It was like turning on a faucet.ā
Most artists would kill for such a downpour, but White was wary of the consequences. He knew that writing songs would lead to recording them, which would result in releasing them, and that means touring and leaving home for weeks at a time. āAs soon as I write a song, I start thinking what other people might think of it. Iāve talked to friends about this: What is it about us that makes us do that? Why canāt I just sit on my back porch and sing these songs out into the ether? I donāt have an answer for it yet, but I think itās just part of who I am. I need that reaction. I need to feel like Iām moving someone in a good way or in a bad way. I need to feel like thereās a connection.ā
White threw himself into the project, no longer the reluctant songwriter but a craftsman determined to make the best album possibleāto do these songs justice. He cut several songs at the renowned FAME Studios in his hometown, where Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, the Allmans, the Osmonds, Bobbie Gentry, Arthur Conley, and Clarence Carter recorded some of their most popular hits.
One product of those sessions is āWhatās So,ā which introduces itself by way of a fire-and- brimstone riff, as heavy as a guilty conscienceāthe kind of riff you wouldnāt be surprised to hear on a Sabbath album. But Whiteās vocals are gritty and soulful, a product of the Shoals, almost preacherly as he sings about earthly and eternal damnation: āSell your damn soul or get right with the man, keep treading water as long as you can,ā he exhorts the listener. āBut before you do, you must understand that you donāt get above your raisinā.ā Itās the heaviest moment on the record, perhaps the darkest in Whiteās career.
At the other end of the spectrum is āThe Martyr,ā one of the catchiest tunes White has ever penned. The spryness of the melody imagines Elliott Smith wandering the banks of the Tennessee River, yet the song is shot through with a pervasive melancholy as White wrestles with his own demons. āKeep falling on your sword, sink down a little more,ā he sings over a dexterous acoustic guitar theme. This is not, however, a song about some unnamed person, but rather a pained self-diagnosis: āThese are the wounds that I will not let heal, the ones that I deserve and seem so real.ā White knows heās playing the martyr, but he leaves the song hauntingly open-ended, as though he isnāt sure what to do with this epiphany beyond putting it in a song.
The rest of Beulah was recorded in the Single Lock offices/studio near Whiteās home. āI can be more relaxed about the process. We can all just sit there and talk about records or baseball without feeling like someoneās standing over our shoulders. Thatās a big deal to me, not to feel pressured. And Iām only about twenty yards away from home, so I can walk over and throw a baseball with my kids or make dinner with my wife.ā
Some of the quieterābut no less intenseāsongs on Beulah were created in that environment, including the ominously erotic opener āBlack Leafā and the Southern gothic love song āMake You Cry.ā As he worked, a distinctive and intriguing aesthetic began to grow clearer and clearer, one based in austere arrangements and plaintive moods. These are songs with empty spaces in them, dark corners that could hold ghosts or worse. āThere were certain moments when Ben and I would finish up a song, listen back to it, and think how in the world did we get here. But thatās just what the songs ask for. These are the sounds in my head. This is the sound of me thinking and living and breathing and doing.ā
Once White had everything assembled and sequenced, it was time to give the album a title, to wrap everything up for the listener. Beulah stuckānot only because of family history or Blake, but because White realized that making music was his own trip to Beulah. āIf you had to sum up what music is for most people in this world, itās that. Itās that escape. Itās that refuge. You go there and you come back and you use that to help you with your life. You always have that as a place to go.ā












