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Black Stone Cherry

Kentucky's Black Stone Cherry employ a fiery and uncompromising mixture of rootsy hard rock and post-grunge/heavy metal. The band's 2003 self-released Rock N' Roll Tape caught the attention of Roadrunner, which signed them after witnessing audience reactions to their endless touring. Their self-titled debut for the label appeared in 2006 to rave reviews from the rock press. 2011's Between the Devil & the Deep Blue Sea was celebrated for its gritty attack on tunes such as "White Trash Millionaire" and "Killing Floor," plus the swaggering honky tonk blues of "Let Me See You Shake." After leaving Roadrunner for Mascot in 2016, they issued the back-to-basics crunch & roll of Kentucky. For 2018's Family Tree, they recorded at the same studio as their debut. 2020's Human Condition revealed new complexity in the band's songwriting. Following the pandemic and a year of touring, Black Stone Cherry re-entered the recording studio and emerged with 2023's Screamin' at the Sky. According to the bandmembers, none of whom were born before 1983, the lack of anything to do in their hometown, coupled with a rich musical background in their community and families, led them to start playing music. Lead vocalist and guitarist Chris Robertson met drummer John Fred Young (the son of Kentucky Headhunters' Richard Young) in school, and the two played music together throughout high school. In June of 2001, Black Stone Cherry officially formed with guitarist Ben Wells and bassist Jon Lawhon. They began holding shows at clubs in the area, and after a short while they gained a large all-ages following. The band recorded its first album for In de Goot/Roadrunner Records, and after returning from the recording session, Black Stone Cherry held a homecoming concert at the local high school. Their self-titled debut album was released in July of 2006, followed by Folklore and Superstition in 2008. It performed well on the charts, both in America and across Europe. The band's third album, 2011's Between the Devil & the Deep Blue Sea, was recorded in Los Angeles with producer Howard Benson (Daughtry, Three Days Grace). It peaked inside the Top 40 of the album charts in their home country, and hit the top spot in Great Britain. The band toured the globe in support and won fans as far away as Japan. In 2013, the country duo Florida Georgia Line covered the band's "Stay" and hit the number one spot on the country chart. Later that year, the band re-entered the studio with producer Joe Barresi. In April of 2014, Black Stone Cherry issued a preview single, "Me and Mary Jane," which entered the chart at number 29 before their fourth album, Magic Mountain, was released in May. After American and U.K. tours, the band took a break in early 2015. They played the summer festival circuit and returned to Barrick Recording Studio, where their eponymously titled debut album had been cut. Thank You, Live, a DVD from their Magic Mountain tour, was released in October. In December of 2015, the new single "The Way of the Future" was released, and "In Our Dreams" arrived in January the following year. The self-produced album Kentucky, which Black Stone Cherry called a back-to-their-roots affair, was released in April of 2016. The album placed at number 40 on the Top 200 and peaked at number one on the Hard Rock Albums chart. After a nine-month tour of the U.S. and Europe, Black Stone Cherry jumped right back into the studio. The band selected six of their favorite tunes by Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Freddie King, and Albert King, reimagined them with the meaty moxie of their own sound, and cut a six-track EP entitled Black to Blues. It was issued in the fall of 2017. In February 2018, the band issued the single "Burnin'" in anticipation of the release of their sixth studio long-player, Family Tree, which arrived later that May. While writing a seventh album, the band issued Back to Blues, Vol. 2, a six-track covers EP that included their unique Southern rock readings of Freddie King's "Big Legged Woman," Howlin' Wolf's "Down in the Bottom," Robert Johnson's "Me & the Devil Blues," Otis Rush's "All Your Love (I Miss Loving)," Elmore James' "Early One Morning," and Son House's Delta standard "Death Letter Blues." After touring the U.S. and Europe for more than a year, the band reconvened in early 2020 at bassist Jon Lawhon's Monocle Studio. Producing themselves, they tracked nearly 20 songs before completing an album in late March. In summer post-production they pared down the final list to 13 tracks. In early August, they issued a lyric video for set-opener "Ringin' in My Head," and followed it two weeks later with a video single for "Again." In late October, Black Stone Cherry released The Human Condition through the Mascot Label Group. Recorded before the pandemic and released later in 2020, the band was unable to tour to support the recording, waiting until January 2021 to hit the road. They wrote during tour breaks, and upon their return, they re-entered the studio and reflected a new maturity in the recording studio as they streamlined songwriting and production techniques for 2023's Screamin' at the Sky.
© Megan Frye & Thom Jurek /TiVo

Discography

30 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller

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