Charley Crockett

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A distant relative of Davy Crockett, Charley Crockett taps into Americana mythos in his music. Originally a blues singer, Crockett strayed into other American roots music the longer his career lasted, incorporating soul, gospel, and especially country. The latter was the focus of Lil G.L.’s Honky Tonk Jubilee, a collection of covers of country classics, but that 2017 album also illustrated how Crockett fused all these sounds into a distinctive, earthy signature. He pulled off the same trick on Lonesome as a Shadow, a 2018 album that helped him consolidate a following in the Americana circuit. Signing a deal with Thirty Tigers with 2019′s The Valley, Crockett became one of the hardest-working musicians in America, touring constantly and establishing a pattern of releasing a covers album under his Lil’ G.L. moniker balanced by a collection of original material each year: 2021 brought 10 for Slim: Charley Crockett Sings James Hand and Music City USA, while Jukebox Charley and The Man from Waco followed in 2022.
Charley Crockett was born in San Benito, a southern Texas border town that also claims Freddy Fender as its own. Crockett was raised in the nearby Los Fresnos by a single mother who sang the blues in her spare time. Originally a fan of hip-hop, his musical horizons were expanded by an uncle who had a fondness for New Orleans brass bands. Crockett’s mother moved his family to Dallas, but once he entered his late adolescence, he wound up wandering to New Orleans, where he built up his chops busking, incorporating elements of country and swing into his blues-anchored Americana. He relocated to New York City in 2009, where he continued to sing on the streets and subways, eventually becoming part of a group called Trainrobbers.
Crockett split from Trainrobbers prior to the band recording a debut, and he headed out to California, where he played for a while until he moved back to Texas. He settled in Dallas and released his debut album, A Stolen Jewel, in 2015. The record played well in the Dallas area, earning Charley Crockett the title of Best Blues Act from the Dallas Observer Music Awards. A year later, he released In the Night, which found him moving toward country.
After touring for a year, he signed with Thirty Tigers and cut the country covers collection Lil G.L.’s Honky Tonk Jubilee in 2017. The following year, he released Lonesome as a Shadow, a collection of genre-bending original songs recorded at Sam Phillips’ Recording Service in Memphis. Following its April release, Crockett once again hit the road, this time backed by his band the Blue Drifters. However, in early 2019, Crockett (who was born with the congenital heart condition Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome) learned that he was suffering from bicuspid aortic valve stenosis, which meant two of his three aortic valve flaps were fused together. Subsequently, he successfully underwent open-heart surgery to correct the issue. He eventually returned to the studio, and in September 2019 issued his sixth album, The Valley, which included the single “Borrowed Time.”
2020′s Welcome to Hard Times featured production by Mark Neill and songwriting contributions from Dan Auerbach and Pat McLaughlin. The covers album 10 for Slim: Charley Crockett Sings James Hand arrived in February 2021, followed by his tenth studio effort, Music City USA, later that year. Crockett continued to work at a relentless pace in 2022, following the same template as the previous year by delivering a Lil’ G.L. covers album (Lil' G.L. Presents: Jukebox Charley) in April, then The Man from Waco arrived in September, becoming his first record to crack Billboard’s Top 200. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine