Raised in Memphis and based in Nashville, singer-guitarist Drew Holcomb is, on one level, the sum of those musically iconic cities, a songwriter/performer able to balance feel and craft in a way that can only come from someone informed at once by the likes of Al Green and Steve Earle.
But the main catalyst behind Holcomb’s musical voice has been the road. In the past five years, he has logged in more than 700 concert dates across the country from solo coffeehouse gigs to clubs, festivals, and colleges with his band, the Neighbors. He has also opened for Ryan Adams, Los Lobos, Susan Tedeschi, Marc Broussard, Sister Hazel, and the North Mississippi Allstars, to name but a few.
That Holcomb has sold almost 15,000 CDs in the process is equally impressive given he has done it all without any major label or music industry support. Not bad for someone who laughingly calls himself a “recovering singer-songwriter.”
Holcomb, 26, began playing the guitar and writing songs while a student at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. Two school terms living abroad in Edinburgh, Scotland – a place of spellbinding beauty for the impressionable musician – sealed his songwriting fate.
“It’s a magical place,” he says. “I grew up reading Narnia and Tolkien. Edinburgh is one of those worlds . . . When I got over there, I had all this free time. I didn’t know that many people, so I grabbed my guitar and wrote every day.”
Those songs found their way on two records, a 2004 EP, Lost & Found, and the acclaimed follow-up, Washed in Blue (its track, “Long Gone Away,” has been featured on the Lifetime series Army Wives). A concert album, Live in Memphis, came next, marking the end of his musical tenure in the Bluff City.
In 2006, Holcomb married his longtime friend and singing partner, Ellie Holcomb (née Bannister), and relocated to her hometown of Nashville – and the way her vocals wrap so knowingly around her husband’s will inevitably earn comparisons to Music City’s royal couple Buddy and Julie Miller. Holcomb’s backing band, the Neighbors (guitarist Nathan Dugger, bassist Rich Brinsfield, and drummer Jon Radford) also lives in the same East Nashville area, hence the group name.
The fruition of Holcomb’s many travels and life changes can be heard in his new studio album, Passenger Seat, a record of big songs, big gestures, and big heart that asks “How are you going to make it if you go alone?” For Holcomb the answer is, “You can’t.”
Explains the musician, ““Jeff Tweedy talks about why people go to rock concerts and it was an epiphany for me. He said people go to rock concerts because they feel alone and they want to go and suffer with other people. And I was like, yeah, that’s why I love music.”
“We’re all looking for somebody, and sometimes you find that in music.”
i did work crew at windy gap second session and was on ODC. i miss you guys alot and im pretty sure i fell in love with a girl during one of the concerts.. we still talk and the feeling is still there. "when im with you" was the song that did it. thanks guys
Thanks for the add! I'd love to hear what you think about my music. Keep checkin' my page for upcoming shows and updates! Next show in Nashville will be November 6th @ 12th and Porter. Hope you can make it out. Keep in touch....Ben.
Ya'll are so amazing. I loved yall at Crooked Creek this past week!! and thank you again Ellie for helping me. I owe you BIG time haha. Cant wait to see you again. Be safe.
Hey guys! Just hanging out on your page :) I really love Hung the Moon! If you guys are in town let's get coffee soon! Maybe I will show up at church or something crazy like that :) Hope you're doin well!