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"Everyone knows that you can sing…" For The White Buffalo – aka singer / songwriter / guitarist Jake Smith, Oregon-born, Southern California-raised – it was time to take the less travelled path to assemble notions for studio album Number 8, the follow-up to ‘On The Widow's Walk' (Snakefarm, 2020), and embark on a voyage of discovery. Out with the old, the organic, the expected, the tried in with the new – new producer, new studio, new location, no distractions, no looking back… Enter ‘Year Of The Dark Horse'… "You think we're a country band? A folk band? Americana? Rock? What the fuck are you gonna say now?!" laughs Jake. "With this album, I wanted something outside of what I've ever done. I wanted to open up. Do something dangerous. I'm hard to put into a singular genre as it is, but now I really wanted to take away any kind of preconception or pigeon-holing. "And don't ask me, cos I don't know what it is! It's a genre-bending thing – there's elements and influences from ELO, Daniel Lanois, Tom Waits, The Boss, circus, pirate music, yacht rock, and I'm driving and pushing some of these numbers in a way I've never done before. "At the top of the pandemic, I put the acoustic guitar on its stand, got a synthesizer and began writing on it, not really knowing how to play keys, just exploring the different sounds and landscapes. In the not knowing, it allowed me to expand my vocal melodies and compositions in ways the guitar had possibly limited." When Jake, flanked by regular touring / recording compadres, bassist / keyboard player / guitarist Christopher Hoffee and drummer Matt Lynott, crossed the threshold of East Nashville's Neon Cross Studio, a converted Southern Baptist Church, he wasn't chapter an' verse prepared, as usual. The time before recording had been a crazy one, so there were a bunch of loose ends to be tied ("I'm a perpetual procrastinator" – Jake), plus only three of the 12 songs had been completely written. Jake had maps in his head, but most were mere bones of compositions with only a few key lyrics penned. This allowed producer / studio owner Jay Joyce – plus trusted assistant, Jason Hall – the wiggle room to really get involved, to guide and explore new frontiers … "It was a whirlwind of creativity," recalls Jake. "We tracked 12 songs in 11 days no over-thinking, no looking for perfection, no egos, no playing it safe, just feel, and I've never had a producer act so much like a producer… twisting, elevating and contorting our talents!" With an impressive clientele numbering Eric Church, Brothers Osborne, Fidlar, Ashley McBryde, Halestorm, Little Big Town, Cage The Elephant, to name just a few, multi-instrumentalist Joyce has a reputation for working at an intense level. He's a Grammy Award-winning Producer of the Year (2018), has 4 CMA and 5 ACM Awards, and when it comes to making music, the Ohio native is never one to take the obvious route – perfect for an album featuring a dozen musical vignettes, individual yet constant in flow an album loosely based around the shifting of the seasons and the shifting of a relationship an album showing off the complete scope of Jake's song-writing craft, from the stripped back to the fully loaded… "Jake is fierce, he basically wrote a whole movie," says Jay. "We holed up in an old church, in the midst of the pandemic. It was just the four of us, making the soundtrack to his movie, and I have to say, it was inspirational."