The Unraveling
In 2016’s *American Band*, Drive-By Truckers co-founders Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley expressed their concerns about the sharp political divides that cut across US racial and socioeconomic lines. Since then, those complex moral issues have only gotten worse—leaving the Southern rock band no other choice but to report back on what they’ve learned. Hood is responsible for the bulk of the songs: He speaks directly to his children on issues like gun violence (“Thoughts and Prayers”) and child separation federal policies (“Babies in Cages”), expressing regret over the mess they’ve inherited. Cooley is at his most serious-minded on the powerful “Grievance Merchants,” offering a pointed critique on the rise of white supremacist ideology. The melancholy, fiddle-laced “21st Century USA” continues the band’s MO of defending the working class, conjuring the image of an economically depressed rural county and the employees who deserve their fair share.
On their dark and impressionistic new album, the long-running Southern rock band turns their political anxiety inward.
Drive-By Truckers are angry. Aghast at the state of their country and with a Trump presidency on the horizon, the Georgia rock veterans wrote their best album of the decade with American Band in 2016. But The Unraveling rivals it for quality.
For all the Truckers' anger and disgust, there's also a sense of incredulity in many of the nine songs here
For anyone who thought 2016’s American Band would be the most explicitly political record of the Drive-By Truckers career, the quintet has nine new songs that’ll likely convince you otherwise.
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Based on the glowing reviews that Drive-By Truckers received for their last LP, 2016's American Band, it's seems like critics were just wait...
It's been a little over three years since the previous Drive-By Truckers album, American Band, was released.
With new album The Unraveling, DBT commits to showing that we’ve lost the thread, and it’s a vision as lyrically grim as it is musically inspiring.