Gravitational Forces
Robert Earl Keen
Gravitational Forces is the ninth studio album by Texas-based country/folk singer-songwriter Robert Earl Keen, originally released on August 7, 2001 by Lost Highway Records. Recorded with producer and multi‑instrumentalist Gurf Morlix and Keen’s longtime road band, the record nudges his sound “just a hair more to the country side of the folk‑rock‑country axis,” leaning into fiddle, steel guitar, and a warm, organic production approach that emphasizes live‑band feel over studio gloss. Across 12 tracks—My Home Ain’t in the Hall of Fame, Hello New Orleans, Wild Wind, Not a Drop of Rain, I Still Miss Someone, Fallin’ Out, High Plains Jamboree, Walkin’ Cane, Goin’ Nowhere Blues, Snowin’ on Raton, the title track Gravitational Forces, and a new version of The Road Goes on Forever—the album balances new originals with carefully chosen covers that trace Keen’s musical lineage from traditional blues and country to fellow songwriters like Townes Van Zandt and Terry Allen.
Lyrically, Gravitational Forces is centered on narrative stories and character sketches of “everyday people pulled, led, and sometimes dragged by some outside strength,” with Keen himself joking that “the body count’s a little lower this time,” a nod to the less violent tone compared to some earlier songs. Tracks like Wild Wind and Goin’ Nowhere Blues introduce tragic small‑town figures and drifters grappling with bad luck and limited choices, while Hello New Orleans and Not a Drop of Rain deliver more reflective, bittersweet portraits of place and perseverance. The title track stands out as the album’s most experimental moment: a spoken‑word, free‑jazz-backed stream of consciousness about the “temporal distortion of a four-hour soundcheck,” which critics have likened to Allen Ginsberg reading Howl with a modern ensemble. Reviews from outlets like AllMusic and later retrospectives praise Gravitational Forces as a nearly flawless set that showcases Keen’s keen eye for everyman storytelling, memorable melodies, and superb instrumental backing, and it went on to peak at No. 10 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart, cementing its place as one of his defining records.
Gravitational Forces
Robert Earl Keen
Gravitational Forces is the ninth studio album by Texas-based country/folk singer-songwriter Robert Earl Keen, originally released on August 7, 2001 by Lost Highway Records. Recorded with producer and multi‑instrumentalist Gurf Morlix and Keen’s longtime road band, the record nudges his sound “just a hair more to the country side of the folk‑rock‑country axis,” leaning into fiddle, steel guitar, and a warm, organic production approach that emphasizes live‑band feel over studio gloss. Across 12 tracks—My Home Ain’t in the Hall of Fame, Hello New Orleans, Wild Wind, Not a Drop of Rain, I Still Miss Someone, Fallin’ Out, High Plains Jamboree, Walkin’ Cane, Goin’ Nowhere Blues, Snowin’ on Raton, the title track Gravitational Forces, and a new version of The Road Goes on Forever—the album balances new originals with carefully chosen covers that trace Keen’s musical lineage from traditional blues and country to fellow songwriters like Townes Van Zandt and Terry Allen.
Lyrically, Gravitational Forces is centered on narrative stories and character sketches of “everyday people pulled, led, and sometimes dragged by some outside strength,” with Keen himself joking that “the body count’s a little lower this time,” a nod to the less violent tone compared to some earlier songs. Tracks like Wild Wind and Goin’ Nowhere Blues introduce tragic small‑town figures and drifters grappling with bad luck and limited choices, while Hello New Orleans and Not a Drop of Rain deliver more reflective, bittersweet portraits of place and perseverance. The title track stands out as the album’s most experimental moment: a spoken‑word, free‑jazz-backed stream of consciousness about the “temporal distortion of a four-hour soundcheck,” which critics have likened to Allen Ginsberg reading Howl with a modern ensemble. Reviews from outlets like AllMusic and later retrospectives praise Gravitational Forces as a nearly flawless set that showcases Keen’s keen eye for everyman storytelling, memorable melodies, and superb instrumental backing, and it went on to peak at No. 10 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart, cementing its place as one of his defining records.
