May 18, 2022 — Nashville Americana/folk duo The Rough & Tumble have announced a June 10 release for their latest single “Hard Times (You & Me)”.
The Rough & Tumble aren’t casual road dogs, but they aren’t letting on, either. From their upbeat, commanding stage presence and sharp banter, to their earworm-inducing melodies and heartstring lyrics, this dumpster-folk/thriftstore Americana duo refuses to bring the haggard road-worn stereotype to their audience — even though they’ve earned it. In fact, The Rough & Tumble have been elbowing out of most stereotypes.
The Rough & Tumble, on the song’s origins and overall message:
During the early days of the pandemic, we had a lot of people reach out to us to make sure we were alright, being that our livelihood disappeared overnight. Many of them asked if we still could write songs, which was the one thing we could do, and so we ended up doing a lot of song commissions for folks. “Hard Times (You & Me)” was written for a nurse and single mother. She said she wanted a song that her daughter could put on each morning when she would leave for work. We thought, “an everything’s gonna be alright song, easy enough.” And she said, “No. I have a teenage daughter. She’s too smart for that. I want a song that says things are really scary right now, and that whatever she’s feeling is probably the right thing to be feeling. There is no wrong emotion in these hard times.”
That was exactly what we needed to hear, too. We’ve been playing it at shows as things have been opening up this year, because as much as we’re getting back to normal, things are still just really weird and hard for everyone. It’s a good reminder for us to allow ourselves all of our emotions in these unprecedented days.
Writing and performing together since 2007, Mallory Graham and Scott Tyler inevitably formed The Rough & Tumble in 2011 as the friends turned into bandmates. In 2015, after a bad Nashville landlord left them without heat for 12 days during an ice storm, the bandmates-turning-spouses decided to hit the road. They sold everything they could, bought a 16′ camper (despite the warning of their families and the lot salesman), packed up their instruments, their dog, and a couple of small trinkets they couldn’t part with, and hit the road. They’ve been touring relentlessly since with their two 100-lb. rescue dogs, Mud Puddle and Magpie Mae, in spite of multiple burnt up axles, busted tires, and consistent water leaks.
On February 19, 2021 The Rough & Tumble dug into the severed branch of their family tree, bringing their newest work, We’re Only Family If You Say So, a full length record about what it takes to be family — and what it means to lose it. As with their previous two albums, it was recorded in East Nashville, TN with producer/engineer Dave Coleman. With its release, fans are “Saying So.” The raw, emotive nature intersects with the sweet, nearly upbeat tone that touches a nerve unfortunately familiar to listeners, particularly in the aftermath of division in both nation and families alike.
We’re Only Family If You Say So follows on the 2019 release Howling Back at the Wounded Dog, a 10-song album wherein response was audible, with audiences literally howling back at performances coast-to-coast. The opening track “The Hardest Part” won the Independent Music Award’s Best Americana Song of 2019.
In 2022, the duo is tackling less defined matters of the heart — love. When the 2020 pandemic hit, The Rough & Tumble were dependent on the loyalty of fans to keep them afloat through song commissions. The latest EP, Love is Gross (but it looks good on you) is a compilation of the sweeter songs Graham & Tyler were asked to write, with a couple of nearly-love songs the couple wrote for themselves. The February 11th release is welcome levity on the heels of the harder matters of their previous release– the balance feeling not unlike their live performances.
The Rough & Tumble were voted The Listening Room Network’s 2019 Artist of the Year, and were one of the Southeast Regional Folk Alliance’s Official Showcase Artists in 2018. Graham and Tyler have been hardworking and constant in their dedication to their craft, releasing an album or EP a year since 2014’s Holiday Awareness Campaign, a project where they took 24 under-appreciated holidays and wrote 24 under-appreciated songs for them. 2016 saw the band writing the soundtrack to the award-winning Alyssa Pearson short film, Pieces and Pieces, and in 2017 they teamed up with Asheville pop producer, Matt Langston, for an EP called Cardboard and Christmas Lights. In 2018, they released their first full length record, We Made Ourselves a Home When We Didn’t Know, recorded and produced by Dave Coleman in East Nashville, TN. When the band’s touring plans were derailed by the pandemic in 2020, the songwriters took to recording fan-supported song commissions on the tape deck they were quarantined with, an ongoing project called Everything Goes Viral But My Band. After years of research and seven months of being stuck inside, The Rough & Tumble released a special Halloween project in October 2020, called Be Good, Little Children: The Lullafrights, Vol. 1, a collection of scary lullabies for grown ups.
Songwriters and storytellers Mallory Graham and Scott Tyler will have you in stitches one minute and falling apart at the seams the next. Joy and sorrow, comedy and drama all have the same punchline; it’s just the setup that’s different. The Rough & Tumble’s voices fluctuate between power and delicacy, demonstrating restraint while sinking the accelerator to give each song its due. Their close harmony weaves interchangeably. They aren’t afraid to take an audience from the lighthearted to the gut-wrenching, and they do it seamlessly, with care for their listeners and integrity to their craft.