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There is a place on Interstate 10, somewhere east of El Paso, where the road dips so far south  that America starts to fade. In the hours past midnight, the radio dial is mostly static, sliding in  and out of signal. What gets through is haunting, like the sound of an old Victrola playing songs  about broken hearts in broken Spanish. In the autumn, the winds toss 18-wheelers from  shoulder to median and it’s still 100 degrees in the dark. There’s heat lightning in the distance,  maybe from a storm 200 miles away at the next exit. The light at the end of the tunnel is an old  town called San Antonio, offering salvation in the sweetness of its pan de muerto and the cool  of its slow, shallow river. If that road – in all of its chaos and its quiet – had a soundtrack, it  would be John Baumann’s Border Radio

Baumann takes a cue from storytelling greats like Townes Van Zant, Guy Clark and Lyle  Lovett, Adam Carroll, John Prine, Jackson Browne, James McMurtry, Nanci Griffith, leaning  more into observation than experience in his writing, preferring to inhabit stories that are not  his own. And on Border Radio, his sixth album out October 6, the stories range from a man’s  love for his “Gold El Camino” to falling in love in the red light glow of “Boy’s Town.” On each  track, it’s clear the Austin-based Baumann is at the top of his songwriting game. “Saturday  Night Comes Once a Week” could easily be a country radio hit, while the lyrical deftness and  timelessness of “The Night Before the Day of the Dead” and “Turning Gold” rival the best of his  heroes’ work.  

Those great storytelling songwriters were the ones that brought Texas to Nashville, and it’s a  path that Baumann finds himself increasingly taking – with a nudge from Kenny Chesney, who  recently recorded a version of Baumann’s song “Gulf Moon”. But, as a fifth generation Texan and a self-proclaimed geographical songwriter, Baumann will always see the Lone Star State as  the ideal canvas for his writing. In fact, he says Border Radio is simply a collection of “colors and  vignettes from San Antonio and Hill Country down to the border. Like Steinbeck said, Texas is  ‘rich, poor, panhandle, gulf, city, country, Texas is the obsession, the proper study’. 

“My pleasure as a songwriter is to be somebody else for three and a half minutes,” he  continued. “I’m not the hunting and fishing guy in ‘South Texas Tradition’ and I’m not falling in  love on the border. The record is a journey of someone’s experiences through a certain place in  the world – south Texas. And discreetly it’s a love story. It’s all the highs and lows of love. And  there’s real character in the border region, there’s some controversy to it, but I wanted to get  away from the news about the border walls and instead focus on it as a beautiful, interesting  and mysterious part of the state.” 

The album rolls from dance hall tempos to lonely ballad and back again, honoring both place  and love as the two ultimate experiences. It’s a journey through those border ghost lands to a  neon-lit bar and back again. It’s a quest for love and a life well-lived.

“I hope the listener can transport themselves out of their lives and go somewhere else in a  cinematic way,” he said. “I hope listening to this album is like going to the movies. This album is  about experiencing something else, somewhere else.”