Jason IsbellSoutheastern

Label:

Southeastern Records (2) – none

Format:

CD , Album , Digipak

Country:

US

Released:

Genre:

Folk, World, & Country

Style:

Tracklist

1 Cover Me Up 4:52
2 Stockholm
VocalsKim Richey
2:49
3 Traveling Alone
DrumsPaul Griffith
Fiddle, VocalsAmanda Shires
4:27
4 Elephant 3:37
5 Flying Over Water 3:58
6 Different Days 3:34
7 Live Oak 3:35
8 Songs That She Sang In The Shower 3:56
9 New South Wales 3:53
10 Super 8
VocalsWill Johnson
3:25
11 Yvette 4:28
12 Relatively Easy
VocalsKim Richey
4:45

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright ℗Southeastern Records (2)
  • Copyright ©Southeastern Records (2)
  • Recorded AtFalling Rock, Nashville
  • Mastered AtInfrasonic Sound
  • Published BySongs Of Emchant
  • Published ByFame Music Publishing
  • Manufactured ByThe ADS Group – 5533-CD-0030

Credits

  • Art DirectionChris Kro
  • BassBrian Allen (13)
  • DrumsChad Gamble
  • Engineer, Mixed ByMark Petaccia
  • Guitar, Vocals, Written-ByJason Isbell
  • Keyboards, MellotronDerry deBorja
  • Mastered ByPete Lyman
  • Photography ByMichael Wilson (8)
  • Producer, PercussionDave Cobb
  • Technician [Drum]John Michael Brady

Notes

© & ℗ 2013 Southeastern Records (2)
4 Digipack package.
Includes a folded poster of larger than A4 size. One side of the poster is lyrics and the other a poster advertising the New Album "Southeastern 2013".
This edition shows no catalogue numbers on the digipack or on the CD face, There are no rights societies or distribution codes on this release.

There is certainly Right Society, BMI, on this release. It can be seen at the bottom of the third image that has already been posted. Notes should be updated.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (Scanned): 794504799842
  • Barcode (Text): 7 94504 79984 2
  • Matrix / Runout (Variant 1): [the ADS Group] 5533-CD-0030 13-106-05-2
  • Mastering SID Code (Variant 1): IFPI LY89
  • Mould SID Code (Variant 1): IFPI L821
  • Matrix / Runout (Variant 2): [the ADS Group] 5533-CD-0030 15-041-19-2
  • Mastering SID Code (Variant 2): IFPI LY89
  • Mould SID Code (Variant 2): IFPI L825
  • Matrix / Runout (Variant 3): [the ADS group] 5533-CD-0030 13-106-05-2
  • Mastering SID Code (Variant 3): IFPI LY89
  • Mould SID Code (Variant 3): IFPI 3V43
  • Rights Society: BMI

Other Versions (5 of 20)

View All
Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year
New Submission
Southeastern (LP, Album, Limited Edition) Southeastern Records (2) SE-9984 US 2013
Recently Edited
Southeastern (LP, Album) Southeastern Records (2) SE-9984 US 2013
New Submission
Southeastern (LP, Album, 180 gram) Southeastern Records (2) SE-9984 US 2013
New Submission
Southeastern (12×File, MP3, Album, 320 kbps) Southeastern Records (2) none UK & Europe 2013
New Submission
Southeastern (12×File, FLAC, Album) Southeastern Records (2) none UK & Europe 2013

Recommendations

  • Decoration Day
    2003 US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop
  • A Blessing And A Curse
    2006 US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop
  • Something More Than Free
    2015 US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop
  • Brighter Than Creation's Dark
    2008 US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop
  • The Dirty South
    2004 US
    CD —
    Album, Stereo
    Shop
  • Sirens Of The Ditch
    2007 US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop
  • Live From Alabama
    2012 US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop
  • Here We Rest
    2011 US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop
  • The Nashville Sound
    2017 UK, Europe & US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop
  • The Fine Print (A Collection Of Oddities And Rarities) 2003-2008
    2009 US
    CD —
    Album
    Shop

Reviews

  • Lee_Armstrong's avatar
    Lee_Armstrong
    Jason Isbell had a nice voice. His guitar is in tune. This is what I like about "Southeastern." The songs are tepid and uninteresting to me. I have a friend who loves this artist and says he's great live. I fail to connect with the music.
    • streetmouse's avatar
      streetmouse
      Edited 6 years ago
      Known for his work with Drive By Truckers, Jason Isbell’s album Southeastern was like stepping into a room I didn’t know. Time and time again I read a line such as, “Southeastern is his most gripping and most personal album to date.” So you’ve got to tell me what’s wrong with me that I don’t hear it, don’t feel it, don’t believe it, feeling that music rag critics want to offend no one, wanting everyone to succeed other than the music purchasing public, who after all, are the ones paying for these packages … so don’t the listeners deserve the truth, as it seems that entertainment reviews are the only place it’s acceptable to flat out lie.

      Claiming that due to his alcoholism he re little from his stint with The Truckers, where aside from the song “Super 8,” is one long lamenting song after another that come off like watching the faded paper peel from the walls of that aforementioned room. There’s no curiosity here, there’s no emancipation, there’s no new vision, just beaten down songs that have no place in my life, not even on one of those early Sunday morning radio shows where they attempt to smooth over the night before. Jason goes on in other interviews to say that he’s not at all interested in recounting his long fall or his darkest moments, that this album doesn’t wallow in alcoholic squalor. Yet after even a single listen, it’s more than obvious that Isbell’s pointing his rehabilitation finger outward, saying, “The subject of these songs are about what happens when you pick yourself up.”

      Well man, I feel for you and I’m glad you’ve gotten your act together, that you realize you can’t hold a bottle or smoke a t without drinking the entire bottle and smoking the whole bag, but most of us can, and here you are, the guy who was poised at the top of the world, wanting to bring me into your submission, laying out verses as on “Live Oak” saying, “There’s a man who walks besides me, he is who I used to be,” … well from my point of view, Isbell’s doing just what he said he wasn’t going to do, attempting to turn himself into some sort of musical drugged out anti-hero. Of course Jason delights in pointing out that the song’s also a fictitious of a pre-Civil War murderer wandering the country aimlessly, who finds both redemption and forgiveness in the company of an understanding woman. (laughing) Though truth be told the murderer is Jason, the victim is Jason and the uneasy forgiveness he manages to find is bestowed on himself … and there you have it ladies and gentlemen, a three act play with three characters all played by one man. Then there’s the number “Elephant,” where one barfly attempts to comfort another who’s dying of cancer, leaving all of the other songs to move in and out of these same filthy dark shadows.

      Allow me to be as clear as I can be, “Mr. Isbell, I don’t care, you brought all of this on yourself and now you want me to refinance your world. I don’t think so.” Southeastern is slowly, purposely, methodically tugging at a hangnail that hurts so exquisitely as it’s laid back and bleeding, giving Jason a moment to exhale as he turns his insides out. All of this is not for me, I’ve had a good life because I made right choices, because I recognized my limitations and used my better judgement. Jason Isbell is all that’s wrong with Americans during these times, feeling that they can fall hard, take others down with them and that by the virtue of getting up and confessing their sins they somehow become bigger than life, an important aspect in their own re-creation, though now instead of tossing rocks at the moon, they turn in early, a worn deck of marked playing cards on their bedside table, all to avoid the ghosts who come for an endless nocturnal visitation.

      Review by Jenell Kesler

      Release

      See all versions
      Data Correct

      For sale on Discogs

      Sell a copy

      19 copies from $6.95

      Statistics

      • Have:1408
      • Want:132
      • Avg Rating:4.43 / 5
      • Ratings:90
      • Last Sold:
      • Low:$3.00
      • Median:$10.30
      • High:$24.94

      Videos (7)

      Edit

      Lists

      Contributors