Long way of saying, I personally am quite grateful for “alternative country”, because what it actually does is return country to music to its proper lineage of music by the people, for the people, about real things, not about cheap exploitation. And there are a lot of prominent country acts today that have gone in that proper direction (Sturgill Simpson, for instance), back to Hank and Johnny and Willie and Woody and Loretta and the times when it felt like the people’s music.
Now here’s a stunning new addition to the genre from an unknown who shouldn’t be. Dilauro is a Canadian music producer and studio owner who clearly has an affinity for old-time country, as well as the country-rock pioneered by The Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Michael Nesmith, etc. This singer-songwriter album is actually quite diverse, veering from trad country (“A House Ain’t a Home”) to country psychedelia (“Empire of Illusion”) to Townes Van Zandt-style folk (“Distant Shores”) to Byrdsy pop (“Back Again”), doo-wop (“Keep in Line”), Stonesy crunch (“Meet Me Halfway”), and even a touch of modern Brit-pop (“Song for You”). More authentic somehow than the similar stew presented by venerable Canadian country rockers Blue Rodeo, that’s still probably the closest reference, though you can hear bits of Wilco and other modern roots favourites in there as well.
Be aware that the LP version, which is very attractively packaged, contains fewer tracks than the digital download, but the download is included with the LP purchase.