Aaron Lewis scores No 1 US selling country album

Frayed at Both Ends sells more copies than other country records in America

Aaron Lewis doubled down on his unfiltered take on a kind of country long-forgotten with Frayed at Both Ends via The Valory Music Co. Stripped even further back, the project was built around songs the songwriter had written – for the first time with friends – and allowed the room to give the emotional charge and musicianship full rein. The result is an album that is the No. 1 selling country album in America this week based on physical sales and digital downloads, a week after it debuted at the top of the Apple Music charts.

With a core band of Academy of Country Music Guitarist of the Year Tom Bukovac, Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony band leader Biff Watson and bluegrass award winner Seth Taylor, who joined GRAMMY-winning Dan Tyminski on acoustic and mandolin, dobroist Ben Kitterman, and supplemented with Sturgill Simpson vet Laur Joamets acoustic slide and baritone where needed and Jim Moose Brown on keyboards, Frayed was a real record capturing human interaction and a voice.

“The players assembled are beyond the very best,” Lewis says. “To hear them in a room is so much more than just what they play, you feel the intentions and emotions of the songs. To strip things back this far is scary, but with players this good, it also turns into something thrilling.”

Having previously earned two No. 1 Billboard Country Album debuts, the decision to slash everything back to the essence was a sonic decision predicated in large part by the songs he’d written. After 10 years in Nashville, having dedicated a large portion of his life country music, he wanted to cut to the core of what the music meant to him.

He’d also made enough friends. He’d started – organically – writing with GRAMMY-winner Tyminski, Nashville Songwriters Hall of Famers David Lee Murphy and Jeffrey Steele, ACM Award winner Ira Dean and hard country writer Chris Wallin. Wallin’s “Everybody Talks To God,” 20 years without being recorded, was the performance for Lewis’ FOX & Friends appearance on Monday. Response to the guitar and string section performance took the song to No. 2 on the iTunes all-genre Songs chart and the album to No. 5 on Amazon’s physical sales chart.

“Great country songs prove life can be distilled down into three- and four-minute books and movies,” Lewis offers. “This is how people who need to work are actually living their lives. Mistakes get made, consequences happen, hearts get broken – and then you have to deal with that. Frayed at Both Ends, like a lot of the Merle Haggard records in the ‘80s, deals with those things. And ‘Everybody Talks To God’ suggests that no matter what you think, ultimately, and it’s what makes this song great, you’re going to speak to God.”

Having recorded with George Jones, Willie Nelson, Charlie Daniels, Vince Gill, Alison Krauss, Mickey Raphael, the Cox Family and Ben Haggard, Lewis built a singular place in Nashville by absorbing his grandfather’s 8-tracks. As importantly, he’s now maintaining the space for adult music occupied by mid-career David Allan Coe, Hank Williams, Jr and Waylon Jennings.

Grammy winning producer Julian Raymond provided A&R oversight for the album that was mixed by Chris Lord-Algae, the five-time Grammy-winning engineer who captured the warmth of what is becoming Lewis’ most successful tour – his Frayed at Both Ends: The Acoustic Tour — and left room to let the splinters and reckonings that once made country such a good place to drown one’s sorrows and figure out how to move on from the wreckage one creates stand out.

Buddy Iahn
Buddy Iahn

Buddy Iahn founded The Music Universe when he decided to juxtapose his love of web design and music. As a lifelong drummer, he decided to take a hiatus from playing music to report it. The website began as a fun project in 2013 to one of the top independent news sites. Email: info@themusicuniverse.com