![]() ![]() It’s About To Get Western gets better with each listen, and features really excellent instrumentation and arrangement that’s fit smartly to the songs and vision Bo DePeña had for this work. But he’s not about to catch the disease of the modern hustle to make that happen. He sings what he lives and lives what he sings, and hopes the world catches on. ![]() Looking over his live schedule for the upcoming summer, there’s only one date outside of the Mountain time zone. ![]() Recently deleting his Facebook and Instagram accounts, Bo DePeña is a guy that would rather be out in the woods fishing and hunting than doing the hustle to get his music to the masses. In “Smile” and “If I Let You Go Again,” he finds his voice, which is one born about 70 years too late. DePeña has a good singing voice, but sometimes struggles a bit to find its sweet spot as he veers back and forth between various styles of classic country. As much of a wild card as it may seem for a Western album at first, it’s the perfect conclusion to this work. The album ends with Bo singing the old classic song “Smile” said to be written by Charlie Chaplin, and recorded by Nat King Cole. “Any Old Reason” calls upon Colorado’s mountain folk traditions just as much as country and Western, and is one of those songs that sparkles just as much from what is says as what it doesn’t say. But lo and behold, it sprung from the pen of DePeña. “Second Cup of Coffee” feels too slyly written, and too classically simple and eloquent to not have been picked off of some dusty old Western Swing record. Nonetheless, it might be the songs on the album that have little to do with Western expanses, and more to do with love and leaving where Bo DePeña’s writing excels the most. This results is a fruitful marriage of music and words for It’s About to Get Western, whether it’s the love story with a diabolical twist in “The Ballad of Rat Creek,” or “El Camino Lounge” that will get just about any mountain saloon or ranch hand bunkhouse jumping, or poor Bo’s love for a hard-to-tame rodeo queen in “Colorado Rose.” Infusing most everything on the record with the Rocky Mountain experience stirs the imagination and spirit while you listen. To give this record the Western flavor he was looking for, he didn’t assemble a team of players from various ports of call he called upon Houston’s two-step and swing experts Western Bling to play the role of backup band, along with the band’s drummer Gus Alvarado as producer to create a cohesive and authentic Western sound to fit behind his songs. Nunn to start the set off, and then takes the reigns himself from there. And that’s in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains, making music inspired by the rugged landscapes and people found there.ĭePeña borrows the title track written by Mike Blakely and popularized by Gary P. On It’s About To Get Western, he’s found where he wants to be, at least for now. His previous, self-titled record found this young man originally from Laredo looking for himself both sonically and personally in the expanses of country music and North America. Exploring the Western side of country music is what the now third record from Texas native and current Colorado resident Bo DePeña is all about. ![]()
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