RON POPE ANNOUNCES NEW LP "AMERICAN MAN, AMERICAN MUSIC" OUT FEB. 14
NEW SINGLE “MAMA DROVE A MUSTANG” PREMIERES VIA HOLLER
LISTEN // WATCH: “MAMA DROVE A MUSTANG”
Nashville-based platinum recording artist Ron Pope has announced his forthcoming LP, American Man, American Music, with the release of a new single, “Mama Drove A Mustang.” American Man, American Music is set for release on February 14, 2025, via Brooklyn Basement Records. “The title of the album is a nod to Ron's hardscrabble upbringing,” says Holler in their announcement and track premiere. “Born to struggling teenage parents, Ron was often left in the care of relatives and regularly dealt with food insecurity. He never felt at home anywhere - until he discovered the road and the concept of ‘America’ became a frequent character in his personal story, as he formed the idea of what ‘home’ is…Pope gives a clear-eyed examination of that story in his new album American Man, American Music,” Holler continues, adding, “It’s an ambitious project that uses the touchstones of his sometimes-wayward journey to ask big questions.”
Holler calls new single “Mama Drove A Mustang” a “life affirming, steering wheel slapping heartland rock anthem.” “Evoking a very particular American landscape, the driving guitars count down the white lines of the highway as Pope reflects on the distance between adolescent dreams and adult realities,” they continue. “Earnest without slipping over into sentimentality and authentic without ever sounding contrived, 'Mama Drove a Mustang' feels like a raucous descendent of the kind of punk spirited alt-country of The Replacements or Copperhead Road era Steve Earle.”
In "Mama Drove A Mustang," Pope recalls his mother, "a newly minted divorcee at 25," buying the one car she could imagine herself driving - a Ford Mustang. However, she had two small children, and a tiny sports car was wildly impractical. "That car was something of a metaphor for my upbringing; there was lots of shit we probably shouldn’t have done, but my parents were kids too, figuring it all out as they careened through their 20s occasionally bumping into the proverbial guardrails, so we often just went ahead and made the mistake, took our lumps, and kept on rolling," Pope says.
"I carried that 'fuck it, let it ride' attitude with me as I went out to seek fortune and fame in the bright lights. I ran long and hard with very little to show for it except an endless hangover and then, when my dreams inexplicably started coming true, I was gut-punched with the reality that none of it changed the way I felt about myself. Figuring out how to put down my bullshit and become a grown-up for my own family has been a big part of my trip as a human being. The journey from scared little kid, flying down the highway in a white blur with a sometimes dangerous (if well-meaning) lunatic behind the wheel to a fairly stable grownup/father/husband/song-and-dance-man has been jarring, to say the very least," he adds. "I love my mom, and she loved that ill-advised quarter-life crisis car. She’s a chill grandma now and thank God she finally quit driving like she’s trying to qualify for Daytona."
“Mama Drove A Mustang” follows album tracks “I Pray I’ll Be Seeing You Soon,” the playful “Nobody’s Gonna Make It Out Alive,” “I Gotta Change (Or I’m Gonna Die),” a gut-punching commentary on the opioid epidemic, and “I’m Not The Devil (ft. Taylor Bickett).”
For a long time, living on the road felt tailor-made for someone like Pope. “And then I found love, grew up, and developed a sense of home centered around that love. But America is a character in my personal story in a way that it might not be for other people,” he says. It’s a long road to that state of contentment, though. American Man, American Music reaches back to a time of humiliating gigs in Georgia bars and long stretches making trouble with friends before the complexities of adult life started to kick in. Then Pope falls in love, gets dealt some crushing losses, and starts to take a closer look at the struggles of his community, like swaths of blue-collar areas decimated by opioid addictions.
Through it all, Pope’s empathy comes through in the album’s open-hearted messages: we all deserve to have a place to call home, we all deserve to have a shot at building a life, and we all have a family, whether blood or chosen. “This is an ode to the life I'm living now,” Pope says, “the journey it took me to get here and all the people I've known and loved along the way.”
American Man, American Music can be pre-saved HERE. In November, Pope will embark on a co-headlining tour with singer-songwriter Joshua Radin across the Western US. He also recently announced the “Neon and Glass World Tour,” 28 dates slated for 2025 spanning the UK, EU, and the US, with Emily Scott Robinson, Andrea von Kampen, Thunderstorm Artis, and Denitia opening. Click HERE for a full list of dates. Be sure to follow Ron Pope at the links below for all the latest news and updates.
AMERICAN MAN, AMERICAN MUSIC TRACKLIST
Nobody's Gonna Make It Out Alive
I Gotta Change (Or I'm Gonna Die)
Klonopin Zombies
In The Morning With The Coffee On
I Pray I'll Be Seeing You Soon
The Queen of Fort Payne, Alabama
I'm Not The Devil
Mama Drove A Mustang
Where You're Kept
The Life In Your Years
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