The single cover for Lonesome River Band – Blues features a sunlit beach scene with a black acoustic guitar planted in the sand, a white cowboy hat resting on its headstock. In the foreground, a relaxed pair of cowboy boots. The sky is clear, and the ocean calm, while bold, distressed blue text emphasizes the word “Blues”.

Pickin’ Up the Blues — Lonesome River Band Plugs In

Lonesome River Band leans into electric twang on their latest single, “Blues,” released via Mountain Home Music Company. The track combines traditional bluegrass instrumentation with the sharp, percussive tone of a Telecaster guitar, a hallmark of chicken pickin’ long embraced by bandleader and banjoist Sammy Shelor.

Since the early 1990s, Shelor has occasionally swapped his banjo for a red Telecaster during live performances of the group’s staple “Hobo Blues.” That electric flavor now returns more prominently in “Blues,” featuring guitarist Rod Riley and serving as a preview of the group’s forthcoming Telegrass project.

Written by Adam Wright, the song uses lighthearted wit to flip the typical breakup narrative. Mandolinist Adam Miller delivers a dry, understated lead vocal, capturing the ironic humor in lines like:

I’ve had the blues since you said goodbye
I’ve been watching these big blue waves rollin’ in under a big blue sky
With a girl in a chair with the prettiest pair of baby blue eyes…

Musically, “Blues” builds around a fiddle-led intro, layers in the Telecaster beneath each verse, and crescendos with a round-robin breakdown where electric guitar, fiddle, and banjo trade licks. The track closes with an extended outro, reinforcing its playful spirit and genre-blending intent.

Author: World Music Central News Room

World music news from the editors at World Music Central
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