Lucero | Lucero

Lucero Streams Detroit Show Live on Yahoo!

Lucero has Partnered with Live Nation and Yahoo! to bring you Live coverage of Lucero’s Detroit performance at St. Andrews Hall! Catch their live performance full of songs from their new album All A Man Should Do!

Coverage begins this Saturday Night, October 17th at 9:00 PM Eastern Time.

In case you can’t catch it, the show will continue to be available on Yahoo Live after the show!

WATCH LINK: https://screen.yahoo.com/live/event/lucero

Download the Yahoo Screen App on Your Phone and Watch It Mobile!

 

See Lucero On Tour!
Tickets Here
https://luceromusic.com/tour/

Grab The New Album!
https://lucero.merchtable.com/

American Songwriter Review

A Read From American Songwriter Magazine​ About ‘All A Man Should Do’ :

“The old feral fire is still there, as much as it was when I first caught their live act in 2006. And it’s mind-blowing to consider that the original line-up is still intact.” – American Songwriter
Check Out the Article Here: http://www.americansongwriter.com/2015/10/luceros-never-ending-tour/

On Tour Now: https://luceromusic.com/tour/

Grab the Album:
https://lucero.merchtable.com/
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/all-a-man-should-do/id1002195310


 

Lucero’s Never-Ending Tour

Written by October 13th, 2015 at 9:19 am

DSC_3782

I caught my first Lucero show in 2006. The band played Nanci Raygun, a storied hardcore punk club in Richmond, Virginia that has since closed its doors. The show appropriately veered more toward punk than country in sound and spirit that night, and found frontman Ben Nicholsdonning his best Paul Westerberg impression. The band had released seven albums by that point since forming in ‘98 and had amassed a sizeable following in Richmond. The show felt like a good hang among friends, almost to the point that it resembled a house show. Back then, in Richmond, you could still buy PBR in a can for a dollar in the Fan district. Those were the days indeed.

Lucero launched its tour for eleventh studio album All A Man Should Do in Nashville last month. It’s a record that muzzles some of the band’s raucous tendencies and finds Nichols mining more introspective terrain as a songwriter, but without compromising that beloved balls-to-the-wall spirit. Nichols has said this is the record he wanted to make in 1989 – what is it about that year? — when he was 15 years old, but it took “25 years of mistakes” to actually get it done.

The band recorded the new record in Memphis at the famed Ardent Studios, where Memphis legends Big Star recorded all three of their albums in the early ’70s. Lucero even covers Big Star’s “I’m In Love With A Girl” – the first cover song they’ve ever committed to an album – and it features Big Star drummer Jody Stephens singing back-up. It’s a fitting tribute to a band that still reigns supreme as the spiritual godfathers of independent music in the River City. All A Man Should Do is part three of a trilogy of albums, according to the band, that began with 1372 Overton Park, the first record that featured a horn section and marked a turning point sonically.

“This is a Memphis record in the greatest sense and a perfect finish to the three-part love letter to a city that brought us up and made us what we are today,” guitarist Brian Venable said.

Lucero has never tried to reinvent the wheel, and the new album is no exception. Like the novels of Jane Austen, the songs that make up the Lucero catalog are concerned with variations on a few themes, and in their case, the themes are women, work and whiskey. (Their 2012 album was titled Women & Work, after all, a term that Nichols confessed to being very Bukowski in its nomenclature.) 

These themes still abound on All A Man Should Do, only this time they are looked at from the vantage point of one too many Sunday mornings that have come crashing down. The songs are about making peace with the life you’ve chosen, knowing full well that you can’t turn back. And their path is the long and winding road of a touring rock band, and its attendant occupational hazards, namely drinking and the difficulty of maintaining any semblance of a stable romantic relationship. Watching the show in Nashville and hearing the words to the new songs I was reminded of the Drive-By Truckers lyric, “Rock and roll means well but it can’t help telling young boys lies.”

The band is performing two sets on this tour, one acoustic and one electric, with an intermission in between and no opener, so be sure to get there on time. Much of the first set involves tracks from the new album, along with fan favorite “Texas and Tennessee,” a song off their 2013 EP of the same name that deals with a long-distance love affair but also unites the musical histories of the Volunteer and Lonestar states. Whatever regret about the night life is evinced in the songs of the opening set is non-existent in the second. This is the hard rocking portion of the show and features songs like “On My Way Downtown,” “Nights Like These,” and “Women and Work,” a high-octane number that boasts the lyric: “A honky tonk and a jack knife/ A tomahawk and an ex-wife/ Come on kid let’s drink ‘em down/ Kid don’t let it get you down.” It’s a call the crowd took to heart, as if it needed any encouraging. 

When you consider how many shows Lucero has played in its time, and it’s not uncommon for the band to play 250 shows a year, you might forgive them if they seem a bit enervated from a decade and a half on the road. But amazingly, the old feral fire is still there, as much as it was when I first caught their live act in 2006. And it’s mind-blowing to consider that the original line-up is still intact. Of what other band of their longevity can that be said? 

The crowd at Cannery Ballroom in Nashville was characteristically a sea of plaid-flannel, and heavily male. In fact, it would take seeing 1,000 Morrissey shows to match the level of testosterone present that night. “I dare anyone to try and not drink whiskey at a Lucero show,” my friend Tom said early into the second set. One look around the room and you saw he was right.


 

Village Voice: “RAW, REVEALING GUT-PUNCH FOR BEN NICHOLS”

“I think at that point in my life I just needed a punch in the gut and that’s how some of these songs ended up on our record.”Ben Nichols

Ben Nichols and his band Lucero have been touring for twenty-plus years, but the jaunt they just embarked on has the frontman feeling a bit shaky.

The heartbreaking Memphis country punks have just hit the road behind their eleventh long player, All A Man Should Do, and it’s the album’s more “nuanced” vibe that has Nichols a bit worried for how crowds are going to react. For the first time in his career Nichols played strictly

acoustic guitar on the record, so for a band known for drunken, ass-kicking live experiences, it makes sense he take heed.

“When you’re playing loud and fast, it’s a little easier to pull through anything because you can get drunk and turn it up,” the raspy-voiced frontman says, calling in from his Memphis home. “I don’t get too nervous before a tour anymore, but I’m feeling anxiety with this one. It feels a bit like going back to where we started from musically, which is scary but also exciting.”

All A Man Should Do is the third album in a row the band has recorded at “old school” Memphis studio Ardent Studios. Lucero’s previous two albums focused more on a horn- and keyboard-heavy Memphis sound, so with the new one they were looking for a bit of a different sonic direction. The songs Nichols had been writing at that point in his life dictated more of a somber — or “nuanced,” as he puts it — approach.

“There are a couple songs that could have been on the last two records, but in the recording process we were molding songs into the appropriate vibe we were going for,” he says.

So, there was a sonic consciousness in the studio, but like most good art, many of the new songs were born from a rocky relationship. For Nichols it was a doomed one with a woman out in Los Angeles, far from Memphis and his roots.

“I had been in a relationship with a woman in L.A. and, yeah, unfortunately that did not work out. A lot of the more heart-wrenching stuff and the record’s sound comes from that,” he says about his time out west. Some of this seeps into “Went Looking For Warren Zevon’s Los Angeles,” as Nichols says he was revisiting the late great singer-songwriter’s music, grabbing a margarita at a California hotel Zevon might have mentioned and maybe a few more drinks to cap those evenings off.

These nights were the catalyst for the album’s more soul-baring moments, where he says his writing skewed a little more personal than usual. The music dictated that, but he needed to write that way on an emotional level, too.

“With a song like ‘I Woke Up In New Orleans’ it’s a little less subtle than I’d prefer. It’s got some lines in it that are pushing what I’d like to share, but I felt like I had to take a chance with it,” he says. “I think at that point in my life I just needed a punch in the gut and that’s how some of these songs ended up on our record.”

Those gut-punches and moving on from the rough relationship have been positive for Nichols, he says, as well in aiding his “Does this guy gargle with gravel?” vocals.

“The voice has been just fine lately,” he says. “That relationship is over so I’m not staying up in bars drinking and smoking myself to death quite as much [laughs]. I’m thinking I’ll be ready to go for these shows.”

The voice is good for the upcoming tour, but Nichols these doubts about the new tunes and revealing a bit more of the heart on his sleeve than he’s accustomed to remain. In the end, the band’s loyal fan base is giving him some respite as he believes they’ll ultimately be accepting of Lucero’s new wrinkles.

“Older fans will be in the mood to hear that earlier, quieter Lucero, and I think the new fans will be down as well,” he says. “I have faith people will be open to hearing both sides of us. Whatever happens, it’s going to be different but fun!”

We’re #1 On CIMS Vinyl and #4 On CIMS Top 100 Charts!

We’re really excited about our rankings on the CIMS (Coalition of Independant Record Stores) charts:

Lucero #1 Top 50 Vinyl
Lucero #4 Top 100

Chart Link: http://www.cimsmusic.com/weeklycharts/

If you haven’t grabbed the album yet here ya go…

Indie Stores – http://recordstoreday.com/upc/880882154912
Lucero Merchstore : hyperurl.co/jeve55
iTunes: http://smarturl.it/Lucero_iTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AmazonAllAMan


CIMSCIMS2

Thoughts From Hearya.com About Our New Album

We really like this review from Hearya.com. Thanks for the nice words, Woody.

Article Link:

http://www.hearya.com/2015/09/16/lucero-all-a-man-should-do-album-review/

I tire of hearing of fans complain about a band’s new output. This isn’t is as good as Yankee Hotel Foxtrot or It Still Moves, or in Lucero’s case – Tennessee. As long as band stays true to themselves and doesn’t become a caricature of themselves while selling out, I enjoy watching the progression. Let’s call that the Robert Plant vs. Mick Jagger dynamic. And while certain efforts might warrant more praise than others, I wouldn’t want the band to just spend the rest of their days trying to recreate something that can’t be recreated.

All that leads me to Lucero’s latest effort, All A Man Should Do – a title that comes from a lyric in Big Star’s legendary track, I’m In Love With A Girl. A track that Lucero covers on the album, with Big Star’s Jody Stephens lending some background vocals to boot. Over the last two albums, Lucero has really explored the Memphis soul sound with horn accompaniments that for the most part lent the music a fresh new sound, almost becoming a rock ‘n’ soul revue. For All A Man Should Do, the horns were toned down a bit and the melodies were emphasized.

The album consists of 10 track of mid-tempo rock that feels like it should be played live while the band all sit on stools. And while it may lack some of the bite of Lucero’s earlier stuff, it is in no way lacking in quality. And holding it all together is the whiskey-soaked rasp of Ben Nichols. Nichols’ vocals have always been the voice of an old soul and on an album that seems to be full of reflective moments, he couldn’t sound any better.

The first half of the album is the storm, the difficult times in Nichols’ life. Lead single, Went Looking For Warren Zevon’s Los Angeles seems to be a trail looking back at some of life’s decisions that took you from home looking for change and adventure, but in the end you realize that home is where you belong. A couple tracks later a ballad, I Woke Up In New Orleans, is built around Rick Sheff’s piano. It is beautiful song full of regret, complete with a subtle mournful horn section.

The latter part of the album represents the rising, including the Big Star cover which is fantastic. They Called Her Killer sounds like a fleshed out tune off the excellent Ben Nichols EP, The Last Pale Night In The West, where the protagonist finds himself head over heels for a new love. And the closer, Me & My Girl in ’93 looks back at a time in life where love seemed so much similar; “its us against the world.”

Lucero entered into that warm blanket phase a few years ago. By that I mean that they became one of those bands that I equated to a safe haven – never disappointing and always enjoyable. I look forward to their new releases and tour. Will they ever reach the pinnacle of This Mountain / Sing Me No Hymns / The Weight of Guilt (a better three song run I don’t know)? I can’t answer that question but they will always have a place carved out in my soul. And for that I am thankful.

Follow me on Twitter at @WoodyHearYa or @HearYa

Lucero is here

https://www.facebook.com/Lucero

https://lucero.merchtable.com/

Slant Magazine: ‘All A Man Should Do’ Review

Nashville is such a musical mecca that it’s easy to forget the city lying about 200 miles west not only has better BBQ, but is home to one of the richest musical legacies of the 20th century. From W.C. Handy to Big Star to Three 6 Mafia, Memphis has birthed some of the most important artists in the history of pop music. If there’s a single band doing its best to carry the torch and embody (almost) all of those strains of Memphis music today, it’s Lucero. Over the better part of two decades, they’ve excelled at everything from tear-in-your-beer twang to straight-up Memphis soul, a range made cohesive by frontman Ben Nichols’s whiskey-soaked rasp and hard-drinking-ramblin’-man vulnerability. And on their eighth album, All a Man Should Do, they encapsulate a broader purview of Memphis’s influence, and their own stylistic capabilities as a band, than ever before.

The album includes a cover of Memphis power-pop band Big Star’s classic “I’m In Love with a Girl” (the album’s title comes from a lyric in the song), and Lucero recruited the band’s drummer, Jody Stephens, to sing backing vocals to boot. Lucero’s full-band arrangement nicely fills in the gaps of the acoustic original, even if Nichols’s vocals, pitched an octave lower than Alex Chilton’s high wail, don’t quite measure up. There’s a poppier underpinning to many of these songs, expressed through electric keyboards and unexpectedly hummable vocal melodies, to songs like “They Called Her Killer” and especially lead single “Went Looking for Warren Zevon’s Los Angeles,” on which Nichols’s double-tracked vocal hook, rueful-sounding though it may be, proves to be possibly his catchiest earworm to date.

But these forays into greater melodicism don’t come at the expense of Lucero’s identity as heavily tattooed brawlers and balladeers. All a Man Should Do retains the big-band Memphis-soul instrumentation that defined their last two albums, namely a horn section and Rick Steff’s honky tonk piano, while at times returning to a style of songwriting guitarist Brian Venable calls “cowboy emo.” For a band that, for the last few years, has seemingly taken great pains to transcend their alt-country roots, it’s a bit surprising to find that the new album begins with a song (“Baby Don’t You Want Me”) that would have fit comfortably on 2002’s Tennessee. The band successfully melds its past and present, maintaining an emotional pathos without sacrificing the musicality that’s come to define much of their recent work. The renewed preponderance of slow, sad songs may mean that much of the album lacks the high-watt adrenaline of their last couple of efforts, but the downbeat style suits Nichols’s lyrics, which are particularly vulnerable this time around. Years of singing about women who broke his heart and drinking the pain away seem to be taking their toll. “It’s too late to change the path I chose,” Nichols croons mournfully on the quavering “I Woke Up in New Orleans.”

On the album’s second half, however, Nichols quits wallowing in regret and elects to do something about it. Midway through the album’s most soul-influenced song, “Throwback No. 2,” the track becomes more upbeat and Nichols begins entreating a girl to marry him. Complete with pounding Wurlitzer and a fantastic, emotive sax solo by longtime Memphis session man Jim Spake, this section of the song is one of the album’s most musically exhilarating passages. And considering the way Nichols usually sings about girls, his pleas are almost as shocking as it would be to hear James Taylor unleash a violent torrent of gangsta rap. Even on an album full of obvious nods to music of the past, Lucero manages to surprise.

RELEASE DATE
September 18, 2015
LABEL
ATO
BUY
Amazon | iTunes

AV Club Album Review

Feedback on our new album, ALL A Man Should Do has been really great so far…  Check out this insightful review from AV Club:
http://www.avclub.com/review/lucero-makes-another-assured-memphis-rooted-record-224995
Album Purchase:   https://lucero.merchtable.com/
B+

Lucero

Album: All A Man Should Do
Label: ATO Records/Loose Music
How has it taken this long for Lucero to record a song called “Went Looking For Warren Zevon’s Los Angeles?” Like Zevon, Lucero’s singer-songwriter Ben Nichols works within a country-rock style that favors ballads as much as rave-ups, with simple melodies that are sneakily catchy. And Nichols too has a Zevon-like way of shifting almost imperceptibly between colorful fiction and stark confessional. “Warren Zevon’s Los Angeles” is the second song on Lucero’s 10th LP, All A Man Should Do, and it’s a moving mix of reportage and self-reflection, with Nichols singing about what he’s seen out in L.A. (the Troubadour, Harry Dean Stanton, Dan Tana’s, “a sea of lights”), as though he’s wondering whether he has a right to claim any of those images and characters as his own. It’s a powerful, pardoxical piece: assured in its humility.

The title of All A Man Should Do comes from the Big Star song “I’m In Love With A Girl,” which is covered on the album. (Which raises another question: How has it taken this long for Lucero to record a Big Star cover?) The version here expands on Alex Chilton’s acoustic take, adding drums, piano, background singers, and twangy guitar. It also features back-up vocals by Big Star’s Jody Stephens, and, like the original, was recorded in Memphis’ Ardent Studios. In way, “I’m In Love With A Girl” is a bookend for “Went Looking For Warren Zevon’s Los Angeles,” clarifying that being a Memphis band comes with its own legacies and opportunities.

“I’m In Love With A Girl” is also one of only three songs on this 1o-song album that clocks in under four minutes. From the five-minute, midtempo opener “Baby Don’t You Want Me” on, All A Man Should Do frames a mellower Lucero: one that trucks along steadily rather than rushing in and out. Aside from the Rolling Stones-influenced “Can’t You Hear Them Howl,” and the fast and funky “Young Outlaws”—two of the few songs that sport the horns that have been a big part of the recent Lucero sound—this is a record that takes its time, relying a lot on Rick Steff’s piano and organ to color in between the music’s straight lines.

That’s not to say that Nichols avoids hooks, or that the songs don’t still stick in the head. But All A Man Should Do tends to dwell on minutiae rather than stacking up big ideas or power chords. It’s filled with slight, sweet, backward-facing vignettes like “I Woke Up In New Orleans” and “My Girl & Me In ’93,” which speak plainly and soulfully about what it’s like to be middle-aged and on the move—taking in the sights while pining for home.

Album Stream: ‘All A Man Should Do’

‘All A Man Should Do’ is available to stream!  Big thanks to Paste Magazine for the article!

“Lucero has built a sturdy and emphatic following over the years, thanks largely to their raucous live shows and strong storytelling. This week, the band is set to release All A Man Should Do, their full-length and first studio release since 2012’sWomen and Work.

“I’m not sure if it was a conscience effort or [if it] just happened, but we’ve been wanting to get back to the older prettier sound,” said guitarist Brian Venable of the more acoustic direction the band has taken in this latest effort. The record was recorded at Ardent Studios in Memphis with producer Ted Hutt, who worked with the band on their previous two records and has also produced albums for Flogging Molly and Old Crow Medicine Show.

“I like the ideas of trilogies,” said Venable. “Once we break in a producer and learn how each other communicate, it becomes easier to work together.”

While an impressive collection of new original numbers on the album showcase Ben Nichols’ continued growth as a songwriter, All A Man Should Do also includes Big Star cover “I’m In Love With a Girl,” featuring Big Star drummer Jody Stephens.

“We are part of Memphis, and they are definitely a part of Memphis history,” said Venable. “We had never done a cover song on a record before, and it just seemed to make sense—especially with the sounds we were experimenting with on the new record. Jody was stoked to be apart of it. Recording at Ardent, he was always poking his head in to listen and say hey.””

If you like what you hear, pre-order our album:
-On Amazon: http://smarturl.it/lucero_amazon
-On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/Lucero_iTunes
-On Lucero Merchstore : hyperurl.co/jeve55

#luceroallamanshoulddo