Dori Freeman has announced her fifth studio album, Do You Recall, will be released November 17 on her own Blue Hens Music imprint. The 11-track collection’s first single and title track is out now (Listen/Share). Having sharpened her vision of Appalachian Americana, ranging from the country traditionalism of her self-titled debut in 2016 to the amplified folk of Ten Thousand Roses in 2021, it's a sound that nods to her mountain-town roots in Galax, VA where she grew up and still resides to this day, even as it reaches beyond them. Freeman continues creating her own musical geography with Do You Recall, the songwriter's most eclectic—and electric—record yet.
Like a counterpart to Ten Thousand Roses that found Dori Freeman trading the acoustic textures of her earlier work for a more expansive, electrified version of American roots music, Do You Recall nods to the full range of Freeman's influences and abilities. She still sings with the unforced vibrato of a classic folk singer, but she's more of a modern trailblazer than a throwback traditionalist, funneling her Blue Ridge identity into a contemporary sound that's both broad and bold.
"I grew up in a family that played a lot of traditional music, but my dad played a lot of other types of music for me, too," says Freeman. "I'd go fiddler's conventions, but I'd also watch my dad play jazz, swing, country, and rock & roll. He was a big fan of singer-songwriters. I think that variety has a lot to do with the way my own songwriting has developed."
After traveling to New York City to record her first three albums with producer Teddy Thompson, Freeman chose to stay in Virginia for the Ten Thousand Roses sessions. She remained there for the creation of Do You Recall, too, tapping drummer Nicholas Falk—her husband, as well as a touring member of Hiss Golden Messenger, Caamp and Seth Walker—to produce. The two musicians worked out of a small, timber-framed recording studio in the couple's own backyard, tracking songs during the daytime hours while their daughter attended school. Grounded in sharp songwriting and layered with electric guitar, organ, pedal steel, percussion, and vocal harmonies, Do You Recall finds Freeman delivering tales about motherhood, marriage, and life in modern-day Appalachia.
The results are as stunning as they are diverse. On "Why Do I Do This To Myself," Freeman nods to the glory days of '90s country with a combination of pop hooks and amplified power chords. She gets psychedelic with "River Runs," lacing the folk song (which she wrote alongside Falk) with banjo, feedback, and hazy clouds of reverb. Her longtime champion Teddy Thompson sings harmony on "Good Enough," whose nostalgic keyboard textures evoke the garage-rock era, while her father contributes to "Laundromat"—in which Freeman nurses a broken heart by turning to the washing machine and running a load of colors, taking solace in life's more mundane tasks—as a co-writer. For Freeman, who penned every song on her previous albums without outside help, collaborating with other writers marks another milestone in her evolution as a singer, storyteller, and songwriter.
That evolution is highlighted by songs like "Soup Beans Milk and Bread" and "They Do It's True," two songs that ground themselves in Freeman's experience an an Appalachian native who's traveled the country for years, broadening her horizons far beyond the Blue Ridge. Both tunes explore the physical beauty, social challenges, and musical hallmarks of the area, and Freeman sings them with warmth and unflinching honesty.
"I want people to associate different things with Appalachia than what's become the standard," Freeman says. "You can't define this area as one thing. I know my perspective on it, and I love sharing that perspective and representing Appalachia in my own way."
Do You Recall offers a closer look at Dori Freeman's brand of expansive Americana. It's an album that both reaffirms her roots and reaches past them, exploring the sounds and stories that lay between traditional formats. Freeman does her best work in those grey areas, bringing her own color to a sound that's varied, versatile, and unmistakably her own, while deeply proud of her Appalachian heritage. With Do You Recall, though, she's making her own traditions..
Dori Freeman
Do You Recall
1. Do You Recall
2. Wrong Direction
3. Soup Beans Milk And Bread
4. Movie Screen
5. Good Enough
6. Why Do I Do This To Myself
7. Rid My Mind
8. River Runs
9. They Do It's True
10. Laundromat
11. Gonna Be A Good Time
Available November 17 via Blue Hens Music
on CD, Vinyl & Digital Formats
Pre-Order / Save Available Here