‘These New Yorkers recorded their sophomore LP on a 60-acre ranch in Texas, and the album’s airy country rock feels appropriately spacious and uninhibited. ‘Travel In Herds’ features a honky tonk instrumentation-pedal steel, piano-but much like early Wilco, nods to the Rolling Stones as much as Waylon Jennings. The skronking ‘I Can’t Be What U Want’ is built around an addictive banjo line, lifted up by trumpet and sax. All that unadulterated plucking, though, inevitably leads you dreaming of flat, unending pastures.’ – spin magazine
‘their dreamy west coast folk was drifting me off to a place where vw vans cruise the horizon, the weather isn’t perpetually set on “march,” and gram parsons is jesus. i dare you to listen.’ – ’sup magazine
‘brian harding is pretty darn phenomenal: if it’s a fair universe, people will be compared to him in the next few years.’ – stuck magazine
‘Brian Harding and Jason Roberts have been playing together since grade school and it shows, their riffs and leads flawlessly intertwining, gracefully switching roles until they make a nonsense of the terms “rhythm” and “lead” guitar. As supple as they are subtle, the pair blur genre lines along the way, but in the end, their North Carolina roots inevitably show, all those years picking away on the porch shining through.’ – allmusic
‘Roberts and the band’s front man Brian Harding have known each other since they were little kids, been playing music together almost as long and it shows — the two have a tight, effortless chemistry on stage, and along with drummer Tony Kent and their newest member, bassist Matt Shaw, they play a show that offers Southern fried good times, start to finish.’ – john norris, mtv
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