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Wilder Woods

Fever and sky. For more than two decades, Bear Rinehart — road warrior, storyteller, and ever-evolving songwriter — has seen plenty of both. He strikes a new balance between cathartic roots-rock and contemplative, cinematic moments with FEVER / SKY, his second album as Wilder Woods. Rinehart unveiled the solo project in 2019, releasing a self-titled debut record of nuanced neo-soul. FEVER / SKY covers different territory, with Rinehart refocusing his attention not upon the horizon ahead, but upon the road itself. Recorded with old friends and new collaborators, it's a personal record about enjoying the modern moment, stacked high with soulful R&B textures, heartland hooks, and the willingness to chase the muse into unexplored places. "I've been in a band for 20 years, and a band is a democracy where you make decisions together," explains Rinehart, who also fronts the Grammy-nominated, chart-topping band NEEDTOBREATHE. "Wilder Woods is a different outlet. I'm giving myself the freedom to do what I want to do and say what I want to say. I've stopped worrying so much about imaging. This isn't the kind of journey where I'm worried about the places I'm headed or the places I've left; it's a journey where I'm just happy to be in the car, driving forward." Fittingly, the music on FEVER / SKY often unfolds like the soundtrack to a cross-country road trip. "Go Ahead," with its Springsteen-sized hooks and spacey guitar textures, evokes the western wooziness of a desert landscape. "Heartland" sketches a portrait of wild, uninhabited spaces while nodding to Rinehart's southern roots, pitting gospel harmonies against a backdrop of swirling B3 organ and electric guitar. "Be The Man" is all big-city bombast and retro rhythms, like the long-lost soundtrack to some 1970s action film, and "Criminal" nods to Memphis with its Stax-sized blasts of brass. During the album's final moments, Rinehart brings his attention back home, preparing his three sons for their own lifelong journeys with "Make Your Own Mistakes." FEVER / SKY is even dedicated to his youngest child, Waters, while his two older boys — Wilder and Woods — inspire the name of his solo project itself. Rinehart doesn't have to look far for inspiration these days. A proud family man, he sings to his wife during "Maestro (Tears Don't Lie)," a festival-ready rocker that charts the early days of the couple's courtship. A longtime touring veteran, he sings about long goodbyes and painful partings with "Wish It Was Mine." An award-winning college athlete who shined on the football field long before he earned his first gold record, he encourages listeners to chase down their dreams with the seize-the-day song "Go Ahead." While riding out the Covid-19 pandemic that brought his touring schedule to a temporary standstill, he wrote most of FEVER / SKY at home in Nashville, fusing his personal lyrics with thrilling musical textures inspired by two decades of booming live concerts.

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