Jon Wolfe - It All Happened In A Honky Tonk

Just like you'd expect with a title of It All Happened in a Honky Tonk, Jon Wolfe's record is chock full-o tunes about bars, love found and lost in 'em and about lost souls looking to get over a lost love.  Read more ab

After a little more time working in Nashville, Jon Wolfe returned to Texas, built up a fan base and set about finally getting an album out.  That album, the fantastic It All Happened In A Honky Tonk showcases a singer/songwriter with a penchant for writing and recording tunes that feel like a good pair of comfortable Wrangler jeans.   As mentioned in the first paragraph, Jon Wolfe possesses a voice that easily recalls George Strait, perhaps even more than Easton Corbin does.  It’s not just the phrasing in his singing but the way he growls and sings about honky tonks, rodeos and country and ranchin’ life.  “Let A Country Boy Love You” shows off all of this stuff as Jon Wolfe sings about an oft-worn story about a girl who left the small town life for the big city lights and yet when she comes back, Wolfe proclaims that he could sweep her off her feet and treat her the way that only ‘a country boy’ can and ‘love you like you deserve.’  Being marketed to Texas and Oklahoma markets instead of a broader national set-up (at least at first), the single stands a fair shot at getting up the Texas Music Charts, something that will likely happen to a majority of the songs on It All Happened In A Honky Tonk.

“I Don’t Dance” is song that turns into an interesting story of a song about a guy who doesn’t want to risk a relationship with a beautiful woman he meets at a dance hall due to the fact that he will be bringing his own past baggage into the encounter, particularly because he’s been there before and how that dance leads to other stuff and broken hearts.  It’s an interesting song and one that would certainly fit in mainstream country music radio just as well as any other tunes on the charts, particularly given strong, interesting lyrics and Wolfe’s tasteful delivery (which is backed up by fantastic production that never gets in the way of the lyric).  “You Might Have Told Me” is an interesting song about a guy who ends up being a sad sack who didn’t know a relationship has come to an end (or that he conveniently forgot ‘the sad and painful truth’). 

Like many ‘tear-in-your-beer’ tales, “Play Something I Can Drink To” Is a fantastically ‘retro’ tune that finds Jon Wolfe asking for stuff to be played on a jukebox that will help him wallow in the fact that he now has an ex-girlfriend.  The more ‘contemporary’ sounding “If She’s Looking For Love” finds Jon Wolfe describing a female bar patron who is hoping to ‘find the one who will love her through the years’ but goes on to proclaim ‘she’s in the wrong place, if she’s lookin’ for love.”  It’s another strong radio-ready song on a record full of radio ready tunes, like the title track and “The Only Time You Call.” While Jon Wolfe’s latest album is steeped in the kind of neo-classicism that has guided every George Strait record since the mid 1980s, It All Happened in a Honky Tonk is like a fine shot of single malt scotch whiskey.  It goes down easy and smooth but the notes of it linger with you long after you’ve finished it.



You can support Jon Wolfe by purchasing this album at Amazon | iTunes | eMusic.

If you prefer your music to be more than ones and zeroes you can purchase the CD from Jon directly.

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