The song is from Monroe’s new album due this summer
Ashley Monroe shares her new single โBitter Swisher Sweetโ featuring Brittney Spencer, the latest offering from her upcoming album Tennessee Lightning, due out August 8th. Accompanied by a video with footage of the two artists collaborating in the studio, the intoxicating new song revels in the highs and lows of escaping through self-medication.
“The day Logan Wall, Emily Landis, and I wrote this song, we were just chatting before we started and Logan said the phrase โBitter Swisher Sweet.โ I donโt even really remember the context, but we all looked at each other and knew it was a title we should chase. I had a little groove and bass thing going (a sick beat, as I call them) that gave us our vibe. We wrote it in less than an hour, and Iโve dug it ever since,” Monroe shares.
โThis song makes me think of a specific season of my early teenage years, when my older brother and his friends sometimes allowed me to tag along while they cruised Gatlinburg or some random East Tennessee backroads. Whilst they smoked Swisher Sweets, I sipped Zimas in the back seat, and we would just get lost in whatever music we had blasting and forget we had a care in the world. We had lost our dad a couple years earlier, and when I look back on that time in my life, I think how those โyoung and dumbโ seasons are never really wasted. In a lot of ways, they keep us alive… so get high, get low, light up, come on, the night is young.โ
โBitter Swisher Sweetโ follows โThe Touchโ featuring Marty Stuart. Recorded in the wake of Monroeโs transformative bout with cancer, Tennessee Lightning documents her remarkable journey as a celebration of life, love and the healing power of music. In addition to Spencer and Stuart, the 17-song collection also includes contributions from special guests T Bone Burnett, Waylon Payne, Brendan Benson, Butch Walker, Karen Fairchild and Armand Hutton.
Co-produced by Monroe with Grammy-winning producer/engineer Gena Johnson (John Prine, Jason Isbell), Tennessee Lightning is a rich, multifaceted meditation on identity, purpose, and meaning from an artist whoโs learned to see herself โ and the world around her โ in a whole new light following a life-altering diagnosis. โWhen I got diagnosed with lymphoma and started my treatment, I stopped writing, I stopped hearing melodies, I stopped thinking about songs at all,โ Monroe recalls. For six months, she focused almost exclusively on her recovery and her family as she underwent a grueling regimen of injections and transfusions.
โWhen I finally went into remission, I could feel the life and the music start flowing in my veins again,โ she explains. โIt was like a flood, just this rush of inspiration.โ Along with that inspiration came a newfound clarity and gratitude, as well as a vision for this new album.
โI feel like Iโve emerged from these last few years with a pretty profound perspective shift. Iโve learned to be more in the moment, to appreciate whatโs right in front of me and enjoy every second I get to spend doing what I love with the people I care about.โ
The album also features previously released tracks โThere You Are,โ โHot Rod Pipe Dreamโ and โRisen Road.โ
On July 25th, Monroe will celebrate the 10-year anniversary of her Grammy-nominated 2015 album The Blade with a one-night-only show at Nashvilleโs The Basement East, where she will perform the record in its entirety. In August, sheโll be co-headlining a run of shows with Fancy Hagood across Europe and the United Kingdom.