Home Read Albums Of The Week: Tommy Prine | This Far South

Albums Of The Week: Tommy Prine | This Far South

THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE:Tommy Prine’s debut album is not only a long-awaited introduction but a testimony to Prine’s 20s and the loss, love, and growth that has defined them. Co-produced by close friend and kindred musical spirit Ruston Kelly, and beloved Nashville engineer and producer Gena Johnson, the album is rich and dynamic, from cathartic jams to nostalgic storytelling.

The son of late songwriting legend John Prine, Tommy Prine grew up in Nashville surrounded by music, art and writing. As a child, he thought all parents were musicians, as his father “going to work” meant performing shows for adoring fans and writing songs. Tommy learned to play guitar by watching his father play, copying the ways his fingers moved and inadvertently developing his own singular style.

Summers spent in his mother’s homeland of Ireland lent their own inspiration too and 10 straight years camping at Bonnaroo introduced Prine to a swath of music not belonging under the greater Americana umbrella and his musical tastes grew to become decidedly eclectic, spanning John Mayer, Outkast, Bon Iver, The Strokes and more. In a way, what makes Prine’s own music so special is how he’s navigated life and creativity apart from his family’s name — as he once said, on stage, to a disorderly request for one of his dad’s songs, “You’re not about to get an hour of John Prine Jr.”

It wasn’t until Prine reached his mid-20s, though, that he considered a career of his own in music and began to share with others the songs he wrote in private. It took a long while for Prine to even share the songs he’d been writing about the triumphs and tragedies of his life, only recently deciding to let his friends and now-collaborators Kelly and Johnson hear what he’d been putting together.

This Far South is an emotionally complex but universally accessible debut that sonically brings together a colorful patchwork of musical influences and lyrically explores existential questions and emotional experiences.”