Brighter Days (Via/Thirty Tigers, 2025)
Dwight Yoakam
Reviewed by George Hauenstein
His music and style really hasn't changed that much over the years, yet he is always able to keep things fresh, but with a throwback/retro sound. "Brighter Days" is a great example of this.
Most of what we hear here is vintage Yoakam, and it's very hard to find much to dislike. The album opens with "Wide Open Heart," "I'll Pay The Price," with its Bakersfield-Beat sounding, pedal steel, to the rockabilly-esque "Can't Be Wrong," and the tunes have all the ingredients that fans love: great lead guitar, tight harmonies, rootsy-fiddle, and ,of course, Yoakam's vocals which sound much like they did on his earliest records.
Two of the most notable tunes are perhaps the best ones here. Yoakam's duet with rapper/country singer, Post-Malone, '"I Don't Know How to Say Goodbye (Bang, Bang, Boom, Boom" more than belongs. Malone fits right in and doesn't stretch the boundries of the Yoakam sound. It's a very fun tune. "I Spell Love,' (L-O-V-You)" is cute and very moving and sincere.
Though mostly original Yoakam-tunes(or co-written), he turns in very enjoyable versions of The Byrds' "Time Between" and an up-tempo rendition of the Carter Family classic, "Keep on the Sunny Side." Each has the unmistakable Yoakam twang, which makes them anything than just straight covers.
Dwight Yoakam is a national treasure. "Brighter Days" is one of his best.
CDs by Dwight Yoakam







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