Call Neon Blue a throwback to the boot-scootin’ days of the 1990s, if you must. Certainly, Nashville-based country singer Joshua Hedley welcomes such comparisons, kicking off his second record with “Broke Again,” a breakneck boogie with a stuttering chorus that splits the difference between Brooks & Dunn and Garth Brooks—superstars who pushed country music into stadiums in the ’90s without entirely abandoning the hardscrabble spirit of honky tonk.
Hedley makes no bones about being well-versed in the genre’s history. In the second track on Neon Blue, he calls himself “a singing professor of country and western,” resuscitating a phrase that fell out of favor sometime in the late 1960s—a bygone era Hedley expertly evoked on his 2018 Third Man debut, Mr. Jukebox. That record positioned Hedley as an unabashed revivalist, crafting a meticulous, loving re-creation of the heyday of the Nashville Sound, layering supple strings and vocal harmonies over the steady clomp of tic-tac bass. It was the kind of exercise that proves the thesis he offers “Country & Western”: Hedley knows his chosen genre so well that he could construct an exact replica of a certain era if he so chooses.
This time around, Hedley cut a record built upon his belief that country music took a sharp left turn somewhere around 1997, abandoning fiddles and steel guitars for shinier electronic accouterments. (Not so coincidentally, this was also the time when the Telecommunications Act of 1996 took hold, governmental deregulation that wound up homogenizing mainstream American music of every genre.) Back in the 1990s, the arena rock moves of Garth Brooks camouflaged the deep, distinct roots in classic country, a lineage that seems more evident in hindsight. On Neon Blue, Hedley starts here in his effort to bring country music back to the barrooms.
Hedley isn’t chasing a sound so much as an aesthetic, distilling country music to its essence: joyous and mournful songs about broken hearts, dead-end jobs, boozing, and loving. He keeps his stakes and sounds modest. Where modern country music is designed to be pumped out of high-end systems at anonymous, brightly-lit sports bars, Hedley is making music for dives. No top shelf liquor or sleek product placements for Hedley: He’s down at the corner beer joint, drinking whatever’s on tap, in the can or in the bottle.
Neon Blue is steeped in the culture of saloons, with barrooms playing a prominent role in most of the record’s 12 songs. Hedley meets a cowgirl at the Broken Spoke; he surveys the crowd at the honky tonk and notes that “The Last Thing in the World” it needs is another broken heart; he asks to be buried underneath a barroom floor with his boots on. He may be drinking his sorrows away, but he also discovers love underneath the warm neon glow, pining for crushes and singing about an old couple who found love in a bar.