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Songwriters:
Rocky Votolato
Rocky Votolato spent his childhood in a small town called Frost (population 647), 100 miles south
of Dallas. Growing up with a biker father on a horse ranch, Votolato had an unconventional
upbringing, soundtracked by Willie Nelson, Steve Earle, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Johnny Cash. After
relocating to Seattle, Votolato spent his high school years discovering the underground punk/indie
scene. Inspired by bands like Fugazi, he and his brother Cody (a founding member of The Blood
Brothers) formed a punk band called Waxwing, which gained a devoted following. Still wanting to
make music that echoed the life heŐd left behind in Texas, Rocky recorded four accomplished
solo albums that increasingly departed from modern aesthetic terrain and explored the sonic
spaces of the music of his youth.
The Brag & Cuss, Votolato's fifth, marks a major turning point in his career. After releasing the
acclaimed Makers in 2006, Votolato set off on multiple ("rough-assed" as he recalls) national
tours in support of the record. It was during these long stretches on the road, away from his family
(Votolato, 29, is the father of two children) that sketches for the songs on The Brag & Cuss first
came together. After his final US run (with Lucero and William Elliott Whitmore) Votolato arrived
back in Seattle again with a batch of completed songs.
After taking a week off to cool his heels and remember what being home feels like, Votolato got
together with co-producer Casey Foubert. Together they charted out the record and decided that
to best capture the spirit of the new material they needed a full band. The next day a few friends
came over to Foubert's studio and they started rehearsing, fleshing out the songs from a bandŐs
perspective. Unlike the minimal acoustic guitar and vocals of Makers, which was recorded in
pieces over two years, The Brag & Cuss is very much a band record, recorded in six straight
weeks in one place with some phenomenal musicians.
Featuring James McAllister (Sufjan Stevens) on drums, Bill Herzog (Jesse Sykes & The Sweet
Hereafter) on bass, Casey Foubert (Pedro the Lion) on electric guitar, banjo, mandolin and
percussion, and Rick Steff (Cat Power, Hank Williams, Jr., etc - who joined the band remotely
from Memphis) on Hammond b3, piano, and accordion, there's a cohesion and grace to this
record that can only come from a group of exceptionally talented musicians playing off each
other.
The bare emotion that made Makers great is still present in spades, but this time Votolato has
ventured further in to the classic country territory of lovers, drinkers, and the distant oasis of a
truck stop on a stretch of dark highway. The album is weighed-down by the longing a man feels
when he knows he's nowhere near home, and lightened by the resolve he feels when he knows
heŐs away trying to make a better life for his family. Votolato can paint broad pictures with a
simple turn of phrase, and on this record he pulls you into a world of reminiscences and feelings
that are truly timeless and eminently human.
Destined to take its rightful place among the best American records to be released in recent
years, The Brag & Cuss will find a friend in anyone who's ever been gone too long, drunk too
much, or fought to stay awake at the wheel.
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