“RICH MAN” BY LOVELESS & COMPANY WILL CONVERT ROCK FANS TO COUNTRY LOVERS

Loveless & Company doesn’t stick to one lane, and that’s exactly what makes their music work.

The three-track release draws on country, rock, and heavier influences without forcing any of them, but it’s the title track that everything revolves around. “Rich Man” sets the tone right away with rattles, light strumming, and that wide, desert atmosphere that gives it room to build into something bigger.

And it does. What starts grounded in country slowly picks up weight. The guitars get thicker, the drums hit harder, and the whole thing grows into something that feels a lot heavier than you expect going in. It’s a natural progression, not a hard left turn.

Lyrically, it leans into struggle and perspective. It’s not about money, it’s about what actually matters when everything else falls away. There’s a reflective tone, but it’s not soft. It feels lived in.

The other two tracks add to that world. “Night in the Country” is more stripped-back, with soulful guitar picking that evokes a 70s Led Zeppelin kind of feel under strong vocals. It’s clean and well-produced, but you still get flashes of heavier energy creeping in.

“Bonnie And Clyde” leans into that outlaw vibe. It starts slower, but there’s a steady pulse that carries it through. The guitar work stands out here, especially a simple, haunting solo that sticks. There are small details throughout, too, like how certain lyrics lock into the rhythm or the shotgun sound hitting right on cue.

Across all three tracks, nothing feels accidental. There’s an intention behind how everything is arranged and how the songs build.

Loveless & Company doesn’t try to fit neatly into one genre, and that’s the point. If you don’t usually reach for country but want something with more weight, this is an easy entry point.

Previous
Previous

RINGING BUILD FROM BREAKDOWN TO BREAKTHROUGH ON “ROSE/BUD/THORN”

Next
Next

LOTUS DROP BLISTERING HARDCORE PUNK RAGER TITLED “HAUNTED LIKE A HOUSE”