Will Hoge, Erik Baker
Will Hoge
http://www.myspace.com/willhoge
Eight months after the incident he re-entered the studio in pursuit of that mission. He now has his health, an invigorated spirit, and a renewed sense of his musical journey. āMaking The Wreckage opened me up in a different way,ā says Hoge. āI felt a calmness, a purpose. Right now it feels like Iām getting to the core of what I want to do and why.ā
The Wreckage listens like a record with a purpose. Having stared down his own mortality, Hoge has now rediscovered the simple joys of making good music. āItās hard to explain, but I felt a certain serenity making this album,ā he says. āIt doesnāt come through in the songs, but the process has become easier, and I believe the songs flow with more confidence.ā
When Hogeās fans hear these songs, theyāll feel that resolve too. The Wreckage both curses lifeās wrong turns and celebrates its triumphs. āIāve always tried to make albums that have a good reason for every song, and for the sequence of those songs. On this album you get 40:18 of music, and hopefully youāll want to hear the whole thing start to finish.ā
The new album was crafted with a depth of sound and musicality that breaks new ground for Hoge. Rugged, pulsating rock fuels āJust Like Me.ā Spirited melody characterizes tunes like āHighway Wingsā and āEven If It Breaks Your Heart.ā The gruff ghosts of the barroom return on Hogeās āHard to Love,ā as does the searing country roots rock of āLong Gone.ā Ballads like āWhat Could I Doā and āThe Wreckageā are rife with the sort of brooding melancholy youād expect from a guy who has been to the edge and back. āāThe Wreckageā is one of the favorite songs Iāve ever sung,ā Hoge admits. āI couldnāt have sung this physically before the accident, because my voice just wasnāt suited to how quiet it is.ā
āEven If It Breaks Your Heart,ā his paean to rock and roll as lifeās true calling, is another tune Hoge admires. āThe minute we started recording it, it was one of those songs that drove itself. Everyone in the room understood the sentiment. There was magic in that moment you donāt get very often.ā
Even though half of The Wreckage was written and most of it recorded after the crash, images of the episode are only discreetly woven into the fabric of the album, like streaks of red on a dark surface. Thatās because Hoge would rather leave those lines, words, and phrases to interpretation.
Released one year almost to the day of his accident, The Wreckage is not, song by song, a celebration of life. The sentiments are too dark, his lyrics too biting, his voice brimming with moodiness. Risen from the ashes of Hogeās own āwreckage,ā the recording is an incredible achievement, hands-down his best work to date. And that is as good a cause as any for real celebration.

