Joe Pug Releases New Single Off Upcoming LP Feat. Brandon Flowers (The Killers), Members of My Morning Jacket, The 400 Unit And More

Article Contributed by Clarion Call Media | Published on Monday, June 13, 2022

Nation of Heat Records and celebrated singer-songwriter Joe Pug are excited to present “I Do My Father’s Drugs | Revisited,” the latest single to be lifted from the Friday, July 22 release of Nation of Heat | Revisited, a reimagined, full-band version of Pug’s acclaimed 2008 debut (pre-order). A tongue-in-cheek turn of phrase, of course, “I Do My Father’s Drugs | Revisited” is intended to explore the idea that once a counter-culture gains enough adherents, it actually becomes the dominant culture itself. Stream the track on YouTube HERE and on all platforms HERE.

Featuring contributions by Brandon Flowers (The Killers), Derry deBorja (Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit), Carl Broemel (My Morning Jacket) and Courtney Hartman, Nation of Heat | Revisited is a collection of songs that have earned themselves a passionate following over the years but are given the proper treatment here that Pug had originally intended for them. Revisiting and reinterpreting these songs from a place of experience and perspective. Nation of Heat | Revisited sounds livelier, rowdier, punchier, but also more sophisticated, headier. “It’s how I would’ve wanted the record to sound in the first place if I’d had the money and the ability to do it this way,” Pug says. “But I knew this album couldn’t just be the original songs with a bar band behind me as I played an acoustic guitar. I didn’t want to just add a rhythm section. It had to be a complete reimagining.”

“The songs on this EP are familiar to me, and other people like me, who have been Joe Pug fans from the very beginning. I, for one, welcome this new more fully realized version of these songs, because now I have an excuse to turn them up and listen out loud again.” — Steve Earle

When Joe Pug snuck into a Chicago studio in 2007 to record his debut EP, he had more misgivings than songs. “My most vivid recollections from those sessions,” he says with fifteen years’ hindsight, “involve sitting in the studio between takes and thinking to myself, I have no idea what I’m doing. I can barely play guitar. I can barely play harmonica. I can barely sing on key. I can barely keep time. But there was still something about these songs—something extra about these songs.” They were austere and rough, wounded and bruised, yet they were full of vivid, visceral imagery and turns of phrase both clever and caustic, all delivered in a voice that came across as convincing precisely because it was so untrained and guileless.

A lifetime later, Nation of Heat remains Pug’s most popular release, with more than 20 million streams on Spotify alone, and he keeps these songs in his setlist even now, as though he’s still trying to puzzle out their implications. So with the forthcoming Nation of Heat | Revisited, it couldn’t be simply a do over. Pug had to transform the songs, breathe new life and meaning into them, and open them up to new possibilities. The skeleton key was “Hymn #101”—the opening track of the album and of his career, the song that plants a flag in rocky Americana soil. After that song fell into place, the rest of Nation of Heat | Revisited followed, full of moments that would have been impossible fifteen years ago: the gracefully uneasy sway of “Nobody’s Man,” the resigned yet promising mantra of “Speak Plainly, Diana,” the grim lullaby melody of “Hymn #35.”

It helped that he had so many close friends that he could ask for contributions, all of whom responded enthusiastically, such as Brandon Flowers (the Killers), Carl Broemel (My Morning Jacket), Derry deBorja (Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit) and Courtney Hartman, among others. “What this project showed me is that there are a lot of different forms of wealth in this world and there’s a very important kind of wealth that I didn’t even know I had,” Pug says. “I have this community that is committed to the same artistic values that I’m committed to.”

Nation of Heat | Revisited isn’t meant to replace Nation of Heat. Rather, Pug intends this new album to comment on his debut and to sum up everything that has followed it. It’s more thoughtful than a greatest hits package, more revealing than a memoir, and it retains the extra-ness of these songs.

“I’ve never been far away from them,” he says. “These songs are how I’ve paid my rent and my mortgage. They’re how I’ve bought my kids diapers. When I got out on the road, these are the songs that people want to hear, and they’re the songs I want to give people. I’ve spent more than a decade playing them in different cities all over America, all over the English-speaking world, and I trust that they’re able to convey what I want them to convey. For a certain type of listener, I know they’re going to connect.”

Joe Pug will be making the following U.S. appearances in 2022. Dates below with more to be added soon.

JUNE

24 — Catonsville, MD — State Fare

JULY

02 — Three Oaks, MI — Acorn Theater

04 — Berwyn, IL — Fitzgerald’s American Music Festival 2022

SEPTEMBER

07 — Park City, UT — Park City Song Summit 2022

NOVEMBER

17 — Austin, TX — 3TEN

19 — Houston, TX — McGonigel’s Mucky Duck

DECEMBER

01 — St. Paul, MN — Turf Club

02 — Chicago, IL — Hideout

03 — Chicago, IL — Hideout

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