Suzi Ragsdale’s exquisite new EP, Ghost Town, arrives at a pivotal time in our history, when personal contact is limited yet intimate connections remain as important as ever. With this fully original six-track collection, the veteran singer-songwriter and native Nashvillian’s first release in a decade, the themes of connection and transformation are explored with refreshing and reassuring wisdom, compassion and humor. Delivered in a wild-honey-coated voice that echoes her Southern roots, and helmed by British-born producer Sam Frank, Ghost Town is quintessential Americana, an all-encompassing expression of the mind-body-spirit connection that speaks right to the heart. That’s hardly surprising for a woman whose passions – music, cooking and yoga – also feed the soul.
“I’ve always tried to inject something positive into the songs I write,” says Ragsdale. “Even if it’s a sad song, there’s a redeeming, ‘Hey, it’s all OK’ quality. Yoga is compatible with my view of the world and my writing has to be compatible with my view of the world. It needs to mean something to me or I’ll just not write that song.”
The daughter of Country Music Hall of Fame legend Ray Stevens, Suzi was in kindergarten when her voice was first featured on a No. 1 record, as part of the chorus on her dad’s inspirational Grammy-winning hit, “Everything Is Beautiful.” She began recording children’s albums for the classroom at age 10 and singing on demos for other writers when she was just 13. “Every chance I got, I was in the recording studio, sitting on the console, listening,” she recalls. “I was doing what was right for me at the time,” she says. “Now I know I was on the right path, however long and winding it may have seemed.”
That long and winding path includes having supplemented her music-related income by becoming a certified fitness instructor and personal trainer through the Aerobics and Fitness Association of America (AFAA), since then teaching group cardio and weight training classes at health clubs in Nashville and Memphis, while back in the recording studio she was an in-demand backing vocalist, heard on more than 60 albums by an impressive array of artists that includes Loretta Lynn, Pam Tillis, Kathy Mattea, Suzy Bogguss, Ian Tyson, Tom Paxton, Watermelon Slim, Hank Williams, Jr., Jo-El Sonnier and many others. As a songwriter, artists including Dierks Bentley, Miranda Lambert, Jamey Johnson, Rodney Crowell, Hal Ketchum, Lari White, Darrell Scott, Anne Murray, Billy Dean, rock duo Nelson and more have cut her material. She also toured as a member in the bands of iconic songwriters Guy Clark and Darrell Scott, the latter of whom produced 1998’s Future Past, her solo debut album, and she recorded a pair of duet LPs with her ex-husband, Verlon Thompson, before releasing a pair of eclectic EPs, Best Regards and Less of the Same, produced by Tim Lauer. While the release of her solo material hasn’t been extremely prolific, it has always been wide-ranging and impressive, and her latest is no exception.
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