10 Best Country and Americana Songs to Hear Now: Kelsey Waldon, Kip Moore


Valerie June reimagines a T. Rex classic, Midland bring back Cheatin Songs, and the Rails fire up irresistible Americana rock in this weeks list of must-hear songs.

The Bros. Landreth, Got to Be You
The kickoff single from the Landreths follow-up to their Juno Award-winning debut, Let It Lie, blends blue-eyed soul with heartland blues-rock. Joey Landreth, now an acclaimed solo artist in addition to the Bros. Landreths frontman, is on fire here, matching his chops on slide guitar with a voice thats as big as John Hiatts.

Whiskey Myers, Bury My Bones
The Texas country-rockers, who dropped a major feather in their cap when they opened for the Rolling Stones last month, get ominous and moody on this marching ballad. Tell my kin to pick up a shovel/wrestle that sugar sand and bury my bones, sings Cody Cannon in the haunting chorus, successfully mixing Southern gothic with Southern rock.

The Rails, Call Me When It All Goes Wrong
The Rails amplify their folk-rock sound with Call Me When It All Goes Wrong, a hand-clapped, hook-laden anthem that has more in common with the Nineties alt-rock scene than the gentle sounds pioneered by singer Kami Thompsons parents (folk icons Richard and Linda Thompson) during the early 1970s. Cancel the Sun, the Rails upcoming album, touches down this Friday.

Diane & the Gentle Men, Little Things
The title track from Diane & the Gentle Mens Little Things EP is a propulsive pop-rocker built for open roads and unbroken horizons. Produced by Jesse Malin, the song shines its spotlight on frontwoman Diane Gentile, whose work as the onetime general manager of New York Citys Bowery Electric nightclub has been instrumental in preserving the citys rock & roll roots.

Kelsey Waldon Details 'White Noise/White Lines,' Her Debut For John Prine's LabelWatch Tyler Childers Sing Intense 'House Fire' on 'Fallon'The 10 Wildest Led Zeppelin Legends, Fact-Checked20 Insanely Great Eminem Tracks Only Hardcore Fans Know

Temecula Road, Never Knew I Needed You
The Salute sisters, Emma and Maddie, and bandmate Dawson Anderson stretch out the final weeks of summer with this breezy, windows-down jam, which celebrates those rare moments when someone special enters your life at exactly the right moment.

Valerie June, Cosmic Dancer
The last time we heard from Valerie June, she was remaking Jimi Hendrixs Little Wing into a deep-space ballad. Here, she tackles a track from T. Rexs Electric Warrior with similar celestial charm.

Kelsey Waldon, Sundays Children
Signed to John Prines label after years of independence, Kelsey Waldon shines a light on the dangers of closed-minded religious fanaticism with this groove-driven track. Released on the upcoming White Noise/White Lines, Sundays Children is dark and foreboding, led by a minor-key bass pattern and psychedelic pedal steel.

Midland, Cheatin Songs
Midland keeps it retro with this heartbroken ballad, whose thickly-stacked harmonies and glassy guitar tones owe more to the country classics of the late Seventies and early Eighties than todays hits. Shes bringing back cheating songs, goes the chorus, with lyrics that reference the bands own nostalgic sound with a clever wink.

Kip Moore, Shes Mine
The wandering spirit Moore narrates his worldwide search for Mrs. Right, while palm-muted guitars and anthemic power chords create a chugging, cathartic backdrop. Rooted in Moores countrified interpretation of heartland rock & roll, Shes Mine splits the difference between Bon Jovi and the BoDeans.

Lady Antebellum, Pictures
Ten years after releasing the career-defining Need You Now, Lady Antebellums members get nostalgic with Pictures, a melancholy number that measures the gap between reality and fantasy. The camera doesnt show the way it hurts, sings Hillary Scott, reflecting upon a relationship whose love has grown as faded as a vintage Polaroid.