NPR

First Listen: Kip Moore, 'Slowheart'

The Nashville singer and songwriter filters elements of heartland rock, heroic rebellion and heart-on-sleeve emo through a soulful, solitary misfit persona.
Kip Moore's <em>Slowheart </em>is out Sep. 8.

A cursory survey of the country charts virtually any time this decade could have yielded the perception that the format favors uniformly party-hearty hits by interchangeable performers. But country music has been largely a personality-driven world, its audiences more invested in following singers who embody distinct personas with commitment and charisma. Country artists whose aesthetic choices, public images and revelations of relatable private lives add up to cohesive wholes have inspired varying intensities of long-haul loyalty.

The first six years of Georgia-bred singer and songwriter Kip Moore's Nashville recording career offer a fascinating illustration. He had an early hit with that joined blues-basted, heartland rock with lyrics that reeled off the down-home as fighting for expression that's more authentic to him and more gratifying to his fans, and in the process becoming one of country music's most artful and compelling rascals. (Witness how well he played the role in the video for "" from , a headstrong sophomore album that helped multiply the size of his live crowds.)

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