Lucky Break Side Pony

Album info

Album-Release:
2021

HRA-Release:
08.10.2021

Label: Mule Kick Records

Genre: Country

Subgenre: Country Pop

Artist: Side Pony

Album including Album cover

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Formats & Prices

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FLAC 44.1 $ 8.80
  • 1 Bad Ideas (feat. Alice Wallace & Caitlin Cannon) 03:35
  • 2 Lucky Break (feat. Alice Wallace & Caitlin Cannon) 02:54
  • 3 Heels (feat. Alice Wallace & Caitlin Cannon) 03:22
  • 4 All I Have is Want (feat. Alice Wallace & Caitlin Cannon) 03:24
  • 5 Old Woman (feat. Alice Wallace & Caitlin Cannon) 03:16
  • 6 Under the Surface (feat. Alice Wallace & Caitlin Cannon) 03:54
  • 7 Pressing My Luck (feat. Alice Wallace & Caitlin Cannon) 03:41
  • 8 All the Time in the World (feat. Alice Wallace & Caitlin Cannon) 04:38
  • Total Runtime 28:44

Info for Lucky Break



From the moment they first sang together, Alice Wallace and Caitlin Cannon knew they had something, they just didn’t know what to call it. The “lovely harmony,” extolled by The Boot after the release of their first single, “Lucky Break,” in April 2021, describes musical kismet that can’t be manufactured or even learned. As artists with vastly different styles and personalities, the pair recognized there was strength in the depth of their differences. A shared love for a heartbreaking hook and punchy turn of phrase led to an album’s worth of co-written songs that deftly straddle the line between class and crass. This demanded they finally put a name to that intangible something between them--they call that thing Side Pony. 

The release date for the Side Pony debut album is October 8, 2021. The release, also entitled Lucky Break, was recorded in the East Nashville studio of producer/guitarist Doug Lancio (Patty Griffin/John Hiatt/Todd Snider.) It features eight original tracks that ooze swagger and sweetness and lean into the “neo” of neo-country.

“Alice Wallace is a powerhouse of a singer, in the classic definition,” says Lancio, who spent 14 years playing guitar with Patty Griffin, and produced her critically acclaimed 2002 album 1000 Kisses. “I’ve wanted to work on a record with her since I first heard her voice. Alice introduced me to her collaborator/co-writer Caitlin, and turns out, Caitlin has an equally compelling voice with a distinct personality. It’s rare enough to work with singers of this caliber on their own, let alone have both of them singing material they’ve discovered together.”

When Wallace and Cannon first went into the studio to record the song “Lucky Break” in late 2020 with Lancio, he brought in Nashville ringers bassist Chris Autry (Josh Turner), drummer Bryan Owings (Emmylou Harris), and Danny Mitchell on keys to bring the song to life. But when the duo went back in May to record the remaining 7 tracks on the full album, they invited their Nashville bandmates Andrew Sovine (Ashley McBryde/Wynonna/Kelsey Waldon) on guitar, bassist Caleb Mundy, and Erin Nelson (Ian Noe) on drums to capture the energy and camaraderie of their live shows. With additional accompaniment from Michael Webb (Poco/Hank Williams Jr/John Fogerty) on keys and Dan Dugmore (Linda Ronstadt/James Taylor) on pedal steel, it was a chance for Cannon and Wallace to record with some of the best Nashville has to offer. 

In the increasingly accessible world of digitized music and bands in the “box,” it can be a real luxury to hole-up in the studio for several days with some creative juggernauts and Beta 58’s. While to some, it may be a lost art, producer Lancio’s nostalgic sensibilities foster the kind of happy accidents that become the visceral melodic hooks that beckon the listener inside the song.

Like the title track, “Lucky Break,” which lobs a metaphorical curveball in the direction of a pandemic that has upended the careers of so many in the music industry, the songs on this new Side Pony album pull no punches. The lead track on the record, “Bad Ideas,” barrels out of the gate with a rollicking nod to the morning after a night (or a lifetime) packed full of bad decisions. The Waylon-reminiscent 70’s groove of “Heels” sets the stage for a slew of tongue-in-cheek jabs at the archaic expectation that women should diminish themselves to please a man. And on the lilting and heartrending “Old Woman,” the duo sing about the kind of love they’ve always wanted to have but have accepted they may have to wait until old age to find.

Also on the album is “All I Have is Want,” an homage inspired by the ache felt in Gary Wright’s “Long, Long Time” recorded by Linda Ronstadt in 1969 (which Wallace also recorded with Lancio in 2019.) The raucous live track “All the Time in the World” pokes fun at how a worldwide quarantine led to some interesting technological advances and tendencies. Amidst its throwback shuffle and vaudevillian humor, it nods to timelessness during a period in which time did standstill. Then there’s “Under the Surface,” their petition for equality disguised in a song about the plight of being a mermaid. But perhaps it was the duo’s first auspicious co-write, “Pressing My Luck,” that set the tone for a bold album that digs at the boundary between country traditionalism and innovation.

Respectively, Wallace’s voice rings with echoes of the 70s country and rock of her California roots, with influence from artists like Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, and Joni Mitchell. Cannon, on the other hand, spent the entirety of her twenties in New York City and developed a grungier songwriting style that brings to mind Nanci Griffith or Kelly Willis and derives influence from the likes of Shovels and Rope and Elizabeth Cook. On stage as Side Pony, Wallace’s mesmerizing, powerhouse performance skills are expanded by Cannon’s evocative and resonant harmonies, and their combined affinity for sucker-punch lyrics and truth-telling leaves no empty spaces.  

Before meeting, the two artists garnered plenty of accolades on their own: Wallace’s 2019 release Into the Blue led to her touring festivals and venues across the U.S. and Europe and receiving praise in publications like Rolling Stone Country and American Songwriter. And even though Cannon released her solo debut The TrashCannon Album amid a global pandemic in May 2020 and could not tour, the reception was stellar - earning her a 9.5 rating and a spot on the list of Essential Albums of 2020 by Saving Country Music, as well as features in Billboard, Wide Open Country and more.

As women in the music industry celebrate each other more in recent years, spurred by changes in the culture, the noticeable gender inequality in the music business, and the rallying cry of the #MeToo movement, “Side Pony find the good in the bad,” declares The Boot, as Cannon and Wallace embrace the power of their collaboration. They’ve also joined forces with female-led record label Mule Kick Records to release their debut single, with plans for a full album later in 2021. Co-founded by artists KP Hawthorn and Adrienne Cohen-Isom, both whom Alice worked with on her Into the Blue album,) Mule Kick was formed last year to release LA-based band NOCONA’s new record Los Dos and will soon be releasing a single from the Rockabilly Filly herself, Rosie Flores, as well as athe debut EP of new Los Angeles duo Desert Hollow.

Alice Wallace, vocals, guitar
Caitlin Cannon, vocals, guitar



Side Pony
In a town bursting at the seams with songwriters, it was a stroke of Nashville serendipity that found Americana artists Alice Wallace and Caitlin Cannon seated next to each other at songwriter’s round back in 2018. Now, two and a half years later, with an armful of co-written songs that deftly straddle the line between class and crass, Wallace and Cannon have decided to take their shared love for a heartbreaking hook and punchy turn of phrase and form their own band.

They call that band Side Pony.

To introduce Side Pony to the world, Wallace and Cannon plan to release a timely single called “Lucky Break” this spring, which lobs a metaphorical curveball in the direction of the pandemic that has upended the careers of so many in the music industry. The song aims to flip perception inside-out, as if the gift of time had been given to us for a collective reevaluation.

“Lucky Break” was recorded at the East Nashville studio of producer/guitarist Doug Lancio (Patty Griffin/John Hiatt/Todd Snider), with accompaniment from Chris Autry (Josh Turner) on bass, Bryan Owings (Emmylou Harris) on drums and Dan Mitchell on keys. It was a chance for Cannon and Wallace to record with some of the best Nashville has to offer. Combine that with the sound that neo-meets-timeless producer Lancio was able to capture, and the entire experience was very lucky, indeed.

“Alice Wallace is a powerhouse of a singer, in the classic definition,” says Lancio, who spent 14 years touring with Patty Griffin, and produced her 2002 album 1000 Kisses. “I’ve wanted to work on a record with her since I first heard her voice. Alice introduced me to her collaborator/ co-writer Caitlin, and turns out, Caitlin has an equally compelling voice with a distinct personality. It’s rare enough to work with singers of this caliber on their own, let alone have both of them singing material they’ve discovered together.”

When the two songwriters first met, Cannon was spending half of her time in Nashville, writing sometimes 3 songs a day in a mad frenzy of creativity before packing it up and heading back home to Colorado to tend to the hair salon she owned. And Wallace, then based in California, was in Nashville for only two weeks that September to perform at the Americana Music Festival when she found her way into a songwriter night on the west side of town. So it really was a touch of that sometimes elusive luck that found the two writers in the same place at the same time on that night back in 2018. The chemistry between the two was immediate, and they wrote their first song the very next morning sitting on the teal songwriting couch at Cannon’s Hermitage home. The first song of many.

Since then, the two artists have garnered plenty of accolades on their own: Wallace’s 2019 release Into the Blue led to her touring festivals and venues across the U.S. and Europe, and receiving praise in publications like Rolling Stone Country and American Songwriter. And even though Cannon released her solo debut The TrashCannon Album in the midst of a global pandemic in May 2020 and could not tour, the reception was stellar - earning her a 9.5 rating and a spot on the list of Essential Albums of 2020 by Saving Country Music, as well as features in Billboard, Glide Magazine and more.

Though Wallace and Cannon are each well-established songwriters and performers individually, the strength in the pairing of these artists is in the depth of their differences – which is as great as the space between the East and West coasts. Wallace’s voice rings with echoes of the 70s country and rock of her California roots, with influence from artists like Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris and Joni Mitchell. Cannon, on the other hand, spent the entirety of her twenties in New York City and developed a grungier songwriting style that brings to mind Nanci Griffith or Kelly Willis, and derives influence from Alt-C artists like Shovels and Rope and Elizabeth Cook. On stage as Side Pony, Wallace’s mesmerizing, powerhouse performance skills are expanded by Cannon’s plaintive and earnest harmonies, and their combined affinity for sucker-punch lyrics and truth-telling leaves no empty spaces.

As women in the music industry celebrate each other more in recent years, spurred by changes in the culture, the noticeable gender inequality in the music business and the rallying cry of the #MeToo movement, Cannon and Wallace are embracing the power of their collaboration. They’ve also joined forces with female-led record label Mule Kick Records to release their debut single, with plans for a full album later in 2021. Co-founded by artists KP Hawthorn and Adrienne Cohen-Isom (whom Alice worked with on her Into the Blue album), Mule Kick was started last year to release LA-based band NOCONA’s new record Los Dos, and will soon be releasing a single from the Rockabilly Filly herself, Rosie Flores, and the debut EP of new Los Angeles duo Desert Hollow.

This album contains no booklet.

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