Beyond “Tennessee Orange,” Megan Moroney draws listeners deeper into her songcraft, and offers Loretta Lynn and John Prine as influences.
She trades Georgia red for her lover’s Tennessee orange, but just as the heart-capturing essence of the song reaches far beyond college football and any Georgia/Tennessee rivalry, Moroney’s debut album, out Friday, showcases the substantive musicality and intuitive songwriter beneath Moroney’s aesthetic as a fashionable, bubbly blonde with a hit song and vocals featuring an intriguing blend of honeyed and raspy.
A significant chunk of the album deals in weary heartbreak, including “Kansas Anymore,” “Sleep on My Side,” “Mustang or Me.” In “Why Johnny,” written with Matthews, Moroney focuses on the 35-year marriage of late country music icons Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash.
“They are legendary songwriters and I think their songwriting carried their careers. That influence came from my dad,” Moroney says, recollecting summers spent driving to New York to visit her father’s family with the music of Emmylou Harris and Gram Parsons as the soundtrack. “I put the names of John Prine and Loretta in my songs, because I know some of my fans may not know who they are, but maybe they’ll go back and listen to some of their music.
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