**David Ramirez with special guest Ryan Culwell live at Eddie's
Attic!** *“I’m over the anger, the sadness, all the not so gentle
reminders of my nature. I’m moving forward; I can see it coming
soon.”* From “Waiting On The Dust To Settle” David Ramirez took
a little time to get back to himself, and now he’s dead set on
making music for himself—for the sake of the music, and nothing
else. “I love all the records I’ve made in the past,” says
Ramirez. “But in making them, there was always the thought in the
back of my mind of where and what it could get me. I made both
creative and business decisions with a goal in mind; a goal that often
never came. This time it was all about just the joy of making it,
about having fun with it.” The Austin, TX-based
singer-songwriter—whose career has seen six full-length studio
albums, three EPs, countless collaborations, and an illustrious
supergroup project in Glorietta—spent a season of rest away from his
focus on writing songs. In the wake of the end of a long relationship,
he wanted to prioritize processing his grief as a human, not as an
artist bleeding onto the page. “The last thing I wanted was to write
a heartbreak record. So I stopped writing altogether, and I just
waited until I saw my heart start coming back to life. I wanted the
next thing to be hopeful and sweet and beautiful—a testament to
music and my love for it.” Ramirez’s new record, All the Not So
Gentle Reminders, is exactly what he was waiting for. The 12-song
album is an expansive succession of dreamlike songs that indeed tell
his stories—but more than anything, lean into the possibilities of
the trip that music can take us on. “I’ve been a songwriter for a
long time. I love words and stories. But this was about music. I
wanted the long musical intros and outros \[as heard on “Dirty
Martini,” “Twin Sized Beds,” “A Bigger World,” and “Dreams
Come True”\] to contribute to the stories and be a part of them.”
The lead track, “Maybe It Was All a Dream,” sets this theme of the
ethereal and dreamy from the outset. It’s a three-and-a-half-minute
musical tour de force—at first, a simple synth line over a subdued
drum machine, that eventually morphs into a grandiose rollick of
organ, drum rolls, and electric guitars. All the while, staticky,
broken voices repeat the almost-haunting coda that gives the record
its name. In the end, this “dream” is interrupted and punctuated
by a recording of Ramirez’s own mother saying, “David... David...
it’s time to get up.” In “Deja Voodoo,” Ramirez questions his
own memory, wondering if he remembers his life as it really was, or if
even the past itself is a dream colored by time and distance. He
sings, “Maybe it was in another life. Maybe it was just a dream. Was
it a memory passed down from another? A cosmic sunflare? Or just deja
vu?” It’s easy to wonder whether the not-so-gentle reminders are
themselves facts, or just figments of our imagination—something to
be trusted or something to move on from and reclaim our lives. The
songs for the album were written during a writing getaway David went
on for two weeks, where he holed up at Standard Deluxe—a music venue
and art space in the tiny 100-person town of Waverly, Alabama. His
goal was to get out of the noise of Austin for a while, to be alone,
to get back to writing with the “uninterrupted silence \[he had\]
been missing.” All the Not So Gentle Reminders was recorded at
Spectra Studios in Cedar Park, TX just outside of Austin, engineered
by Charlie Kramsky at the helm. He tapped local staples as the house
musicians for the sessions, including Barbara Frigiere, Jeff Olson,
James Westley Essary, and Christopher Boosahda (who also helped to
produce the album alongside Ramirez). And in the spirit of the
exuberance and joy of the recording, he also called upon a handful of
friends to contribute and sing background vocals throughout the album.
“It made sense to bring in this group as we were so tight musically
and relationally from touring together the last few years. Like all my
albums before this I never want to repeat what I’ve previously made.
This was no exception. I brought in Boosahda to co-produce because I
had never tried my hand at the captain's wheel, and I wanted someone
experienced and with a different musical background than me to bring
some extra shine.” Throughout the album, David tackles memory and
dreams, fleeting romance, the possibility of something better ahead,
and his own deep appreciation for music and his place in making it.
The fact that he considered giving it up altogether—a decision he
thankfully didn’t follow through with—All the Not So Gentle
Reminders only serves to be that much more impactful as a testament to
music and its power. Most pointedly in “Music Man,” he recalls his
own turning point as a boy, listening on a Walkman his father gave
him... a fateful turn that led him to where he is today. “So take a
look at me now. I’m quite the music man. Take a look at the crowd.
We’re all here for the music, man. It’s the music, man.” On what
is his most ambitious, lush, and exuberant record to date, David is
leaning in full-hearted to who he knows he is at his core—and not
letting anything else stand in his way. “I will always be me. I’ve
seen enough of the business to know that chasing its praises will only
land me in a world of disappointment and self-doubt. I’m wholly back
in my chi and, fingers crossed, have the strength to stay.” **Ryan
Culwell** Walk around throwing punches everywhere and you’ll earn
yourself an almighty ass whooping. Keep your hands in your pockets all
day, though, and you’ll start to feel like you’ve already whooped
your own. It’s a paradox that Ryan Culwell finds himself wrestling
with frequently on his extraordinary new album, Run Like A Bull.
Recorded with longtime collaborator Neilson Hubbard (Mary Gauthier,
Kim Richey), the collection is raw and magnetic, cutting close to the
bone as it searches for a middle ground between release and restraint,
recklessness and responsibility. Culwell faces down his own worst
instincts here, grappling with weighty, existential notions the way
Flannery O’Connor might, conjuring up images of alternating beauty
and brutality set against a distinctly American backdrop. “We all
laugh when a young calf struggles to his feet,” Culwell sings in his
gritty rasp. “When an old bull falls down on his ass I guess it
ain’t so sweet.” Born and raised in the Texas panhandle, Culwell
earned widespread acclaim with his first two albums, 2015’s
Flatlands and 2018’s The Last American, which prompted Rolling Stone
to hail his writing as both “gorgeous and bleak” and NPR to rave
that his songs “wring grace from plain and often dark details.”
The music earned Culwell dates with Patty Griffin, Billy Joe Shaver,
Hayes Carll, Patrick Sweany, and Ashley Monroe among others, alongside
a full calendar of his own headline shows around the country and
millions of streams across platforms. Presented by Eddie's Attic. This
is an all ages event.
music
97
Views
10/07/2025 Last update