LAYNG MARTINE JR.

Layng, a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, is an engaging, energetic character at 81 years old who's had his songs covered by Elvis, Reba, Jerry Lee and others back in his Nashville writing heyday. Now 81, Layng and his wife Linda split their time between Nashville and Rhode Island. His life has had its share of triumphs and tragedies. Layng’s 2019 memoir, Permission to Fly, details his early wandering days, his time as a songwriter in Nashville, and the car accident that left his wife a paraplegic. He was inspired to write a memoir after his ”Modern Love” essay for the New York Times about the incident, which shared details of their life post accident with candor and humor and became one of its most shared columns.

A long-time dream project instigated by his son, Portland Oregon based super-producer Tucker Martine. A new Tucker Martine production is in itself an event due to his track record. His studio, Flora Recording and Playback has brought us wonderful albums by the likes of My Morning Jacket, Sufjan Stevens, Neko Case, Case/Lang/Viers, The Decemberists, M. Ward and Laura Veirs (who happens to be his wife as well as one of the country’s most underrated artists) among many others. Layng is a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and has quite the track record as a workingman songwriter (Elvis Presley’s last-ever session included a Layng Martine Jr. song) and quite the fine voice himself. You can add in the Father/Son part of the story, which is alway an interesting dynamic, but the cherry on top of it all is that the album is a damned fine record. Period. 

Notable among the players, Peter Buck (R.E.M.), Bill Frisell, Laura Veirs and K.D. Lang as well as a wealth of other talented musicians. Special kudos to Tucker for handling the drum duties with aplomb. The resulting album is neither retro nor modern, inhabiting some timeless space that speaks of the generations of songs it contains. The songs literally sparkle with excitement and vitality and give new credence to the term “good time music”. 

Immediately evident in talking to the two generations of Martines was the deep love and mutual respect for each other. As artists, fathers, people. They both spoke of what each had personally gained from the wonderful time they had creating this project and an appreciation of the gift they were to each other. Neither harbored any illusions about the nature of the current music business and where an album like this would sit in the grand scheme of such things. A hit record wasn’t ever the point of this type of thing. What they did create is a fantastic record that rewards repeated listens and holds its own among the best of the releases we’ll hear this year. A record that holds up alongside the best of both of the artists who created it. A record I plan to return to again and again. 

— Patterson Hood (writer, artist and long time member of Drive-By Truckers. Like Tucker, also a second-generation musician and son of Muscle Shoals bassist David Hood.)