Billy Gibbons announces new single & album

“West Coast Junkie” is first single from Hardware

Hardware, the third solo album from ZZ Top front man Billy Gibbons, has wrapped recording and post-production and is set for release on CD and LP June 4th by Concord Records. The album was recorded at Escape Studio in Californiaโ€™s high desert, near Palm Springs, and was produced by Gibbons along with Matt Sorum and Mike Fiorentino with engineer Chad Shlosser providing additional production. The albumโ€™s release is preceded by the release of the single โ€œWest Coast Junkieโ€ on March 26th. The video for the track was filmed near Joshua Tree, a stoneโ€™s throw from the studio.

Sorum, veteran of Guns โ€˜Nโ€™ Roses, Velvet Revolver and the Cult also serves as the album’s drummer and was joined in the albumโ€™s core band by guitarist Austin Hanks. The same Gibbons-Sorum-Hanks aggregation recorded The Big Bad Blues, Gibbonโ€™s earlier solo effort for Concord and winner of the Blues Foundationโ€™s Blues Music Award.

In contrast to The Big Bad Blues and Perfectamundo, Gibbonsโ€™ debut solo album, almost all of the Hardware repertoire is original and rock-oriented with eleven of the albumโ€™s 12 songs written by Gibbons, Sorum, Fiorentino and Shlosser. The sole exception is โ€œHey Baby, Que Paso,โ€ originally recorded by the Texas Tornados. The albumโ€™s title is a tribute to legendary recording engineer the late Joe Hardy who worked with Gibbons and ZZ Top dating back to the mid-1980s. Sonically, the album was influenced by the high desert circumstance of its recording.

“The desert settings, replete with shifting sands, cacti and rattlesnakes makes for the kind of backdrop that lends an element of intrigue reflected in the sounds created out there,” Gibbons shares.

โ€œStackinโ€™ Bones,โ€ one of the albumโ€™s standouts, features a guest appearance by Larkin Poe with whom Gibbons has been familiar and friendly for quite a while. He initially met them through the good offices of Tyler Bryant, husband of Larkin Poeโ€™s Rebecca Lovell; he had toured extensively with ZZ Top in the past. Larkin Poe also shared a bill with Gibbons at New Yorkโ€™s Love Rocks NYC benefit in 2019 and the Hardware collaboration grew from there.

While a truly broad spectrum of approaches is notable on the albumโ€™s hard driving tracks there is, to be sure, no mistaking the remarkable tone and growling vocals that are hallmarks of Billy Gibbonsโ€™ artistry. Elements of traditional hard rock, neo-metal, country rock, new wave, blues and even surf music make Hardware difficult to categorize and it would be a foolโ€™s game to do so. In fact, โ€œDesert High,โ€ the albumโ€™s last track, is a spoken word piece accompanied by a sinewy guitar that evokes the legend Graham Parsons whose death 48 years ago took place very close to where Hardware was recorded.

Gibbons sums up the albumโ€™s ecumenical construct, โ€œWe holed up in the desert for a few weeks in the heat of the summer and that in itself was pretty intense. To let off steam we just โ€˜let it rockโ€™ and thatโ€™s what Hardware is really all about. For the most part, itโ€™s a raging rocker but always mindful of the desertโ€™s implicit mystery.โ€

CD | LP

  1. My Lucky Card
  2. Sheโ€™s On Fire
  3. More-More-More
  4. Shuffle, Step & Slide
  5. Vagabond Man
  6. Spanish Fly
  7. West Coast Junkie
  8. Stackinโ€™ Bones (featuring Larkin Poe)
  9. I Was A Highway
  10. S-G-L-M-B-B-R
  11. Hey Baby, Que Paso
  12. Desert High

Buddy Iahn
Buddy Iahn