Reckless Kelly

If Reckless Kelly were a transmission, it would be a five-speed. The Austin quintet's latest effort, Wicked Twisted Road, captures its music in all gears, from the quiet, low-gear country folk of the title track to lilting second-gear love-song ballads, from drunk-and-stumble alt-country Irish travelogues to off-the-speedometer Allman Brothers rumblers...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Keep Dallas Observer Free

We’re aiming to raise $10,000 by April 26. Your support ensures Dallas Observer can continue watching out for you and our community. No paywall. Always accessible. Daily online and weekly in print.

$10,000

If Reckless Kelly were a transmission, it would be a five-speed. The Austin quintet’s latest effort, Wicked Twisted Road, captures its music in all gears, from the quiet, low-gear country folk of the title track to lilting second-gear love-song ballads, from drunk-and-stumble alt-country Irish travelogues to off-the-speedometer Allman Brothers rumblers and nasty white-boy overdrive blues-rockers. Songwriting has always been a Reckless forte, and front man Willie Braun and his co-writing friends and relatives have once again hit the lyrical bull’s-eye with lines such as these: “My first love was a wicked twisted road/Hit the million-mile mark at 17 years old” (from “Wicked”). The album takes the long view of the band’s catalog, showcasing the wide range of styles employed in both its recorded work and its live presentations; tracks such as “Sixgun” and “Wretched Again” illustrate the increasingly loud and hard-rocking direction the group is taking onstage. Call it alt-country if you want, but most of it is way too muscular to fit neatly into that niche.

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...