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Ryan Bingham knows a thing or two about pain. He learned the emotional aspect early in life, when shuttling between small towns and family members in the hardscrabble ranching communities of West Texas and
That ache is palpable in the grooves of Mescalito, Ryan Bingham’s
“I first started playing music when I was about 17 years old and living down on the border of
That’s evident throughout Mescalito, from the Rolling Stones-flavored blues strutting of “Take It Easy Mama” to the deceptively gentle finger-picking that runs through the wistful “Don’t You Wait For Me.” Aided by the sympathetic production of Marc Ford -- perhaps best-known for unspooling the sturdy rhythm guitar lines that powered the Black Crowes on their classic ‘90s albums -- Bingham manages to kick both the heart and the hips into high gear.
“I grew up listening pretty much only to the older stuff,” says the 25-year-old. “My family had a ranch between
That affection for tradition is evident throughout Mescalito, an album that finds Bingham digging deep into raw-boned country (on the just-jawed workingman’s ode “Dollar a Day”) and revisiting his border-town upbringing (on the lilting, Spanish-language mariachi track “Boracho’s Station”). But nowhere on the album does Bingham come across as the sort of guy prone to living in the past. He can pay tribute to his heroes -- “Travelin’ Jones” is a nod to
“We lived in so many different towns and even when we stayed in one town, we’d move to different houses,” recalls Bingham. “Something would happen, the bills wouldn’t get paid and we’d get evicted. After a while, I’d get to where I wouldn’t even unpack my stuff. My parents were great people, but they lost control, lost their grip on the world and went spiraling down and crashed. Me and my sister either had to go down with ‘em or we had to get up on our own feet and make our own way.”
Those aren’t just idle words. Bingham has been living largely on his own since his mid-teens, an existence he facilitated by -- as he puts it -- “driving all night to ride a bull who’ll knock your teeth out on every jump, then sleeping in back of your truck in a dusty arena.”
It was while on these cross-state treks that Bingham, who’d often take out his acoustic guitar to entertain friends, got his first taste of performing for strangers. He remembers “[going] into a bar in
That success led Bingham to put some of his growing backlog of compositions on tape -- which led to the release of such self-released, no-budget CDs as 2005’s Wishbone Saloon. The tunes contained on those fueled many a barroom jukebox and earned the attention of folks like Texas legend Terry Allen (who dubbed him “the legitimate heir to the hard traveling deep knowing likes of Woody Guthrie and Hank Williams”) and Joe Ely (who marveled that “his stories plant an uppercut to the gut and give a hint that truth is on the run.”).
Bingham shrugs off such praise, assessing his own work in the matter-of-fact fashion one might expect from a guy who cut his teeth hanging with, and sometimes brawling with blue-collar folks for whom cowboy hats are no mere affectation.
“To me, making music is like having a conversation with someone,” he says. “I met some guys who talk about the same sort of stuff that I do, and you can tell when somebody has lived it and when they haven’t. It’s not hard to tell when a guy is full of crap, man.”
He’s full of stories -- both knee-slapping and white-knuckled -- and he’s undeniably full of soulfulness. But as Mescalito proves, no one will ever accuse Ryan Bingham of being full of crap.
Ryan Bingham and his band:
Ryan Bingham – Lead and Background Vocals, Acoustic, Electric and Slide Guitars and Harmonica
Matt Smith – Drums and Percussion
Elijah Ford – Bass