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Never Will
Barnes and Noble
Never Will
Current price: $12.79


Barnes and Noble
Never Will
Current price: $12.79
Size: CD
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The air of defiance in the name
Never Will
sets expectations for
Ashley McBryde
's second major-label album, echoing how the title
Girl Going Nowhere
framed the understanding for the 11 songs on her stellar 2018 debut.
is more of a consolidation than a departure from
-- it has the same blend of heartfelt country and burly rock & roll, and it was also produced by
Jay Joyce
-- but its sound and attitude are bold and assured, giving it a different vibe; it feels like
McBryde
knows precisely where she's headed. She's so confident, she ends
with a bizarre flight of funky fancy called "Styrofoam," a clever novelty from
Randall Clay
. Ending on that whimsical note helps pull the rest of
into perspective, underscoring its aspirations and melancholy moments as well as how
's articulation has sharpened. Sometimes, that precision arrives in the form of roaring guitars: "Shut Up Sheila" builds to a tidal wave of six-strings, while "Voo Doo Doll" marries a nimble country-disco rhythm to grinding riffs. Usually,
personalizes heartland rock and roadhouse country, finding a beating, quivering heart within anthems designed for the open road. Emotions come to the forefront on the quieter moments, whether it's the small-scale aspirations of "Sparrow" or the sorrow of "Stone." Those songs are melancholy grace notes on an album that's otherwise strikingly open-hearted and resilient, proof that
is broadening her horizons while deepening her core humanistic strengths as a writer and performer. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Never Will
sets expectations for
Ashley McBryde
's second major-label album, echoing how the title
Girl Going Nowhere
framed the understanding for the 11 songs on her stellar 2018 debut.
is more of a consolidation than a departure from
-- it has the same blend of heartfelt country and burly rock & roll, and it was also produced by
Jay Joyce
-- but its sound and attitude are bold and assured, giving it a different vibe; it feels like
McBryde
knows precisely where she's headed. She's so confident, she ends
with a bizarre flight of funky fancy called "Styrofoam," a clever novelty from
Randall Clay
. Ending on that whimsical note helps pull the rest of
into perspective, underscoring its aspirations and melancholy moments as well as how
's articulation has sharpened. Sometimes, that precision arrives in the form of roaring guitars: "Shut Up Sheila" builds to a tidal wave of six-strings, while "Voo Doo Doll" marries a nimble country-disco rhythm to grinding riffs. Usually,
personalizes heartland rock and roadhouse country, finding a beating, quivering heart within anthems designed for the open road. Emotions come to the forefront on the quieter moments, whether it's the small-scale aspirations of "Sparrow" or the sorrow of "Stone." Those songs are melancholy grace notes on an album that's otherwise strikingly open-hearted and resilient, proof that
is broadening her horizons while deepening her core humanistic strengths as a writer and performer. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine