Ryan Davis & the Roadhouse Band Delight in Spite of New Threats From the Soul
Paste Pick: The Louisville singer-songwriter’s second album with his backing band from all over is jam-packed with arresting turns of phrase, collapsing structures, and revelatory and bizarre unions of form.

Ryan Davis doesn’t remember much about his earliest childhood home in Louisville, Kentucky, except for the ceiling fan in his bedroom. “One of my favorite things to do was to throw stuffed animals into it when it was on and watch them get slapped around the room at random, depending on how the blades hit them,” the singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, visual artist, and Sophomore Lounge label head said in an interview published in January. “I thought it was hilarious.”
It seems Davis, now 40, retains this penchant for torturing his playthings, even as he’s graduated from stuffed animals to his own characters—but crucially, his attitude towards them could not feel more different. While the fictional protagonists that populate his songs are certainly put through the ringer, the stories of their lives are told not with sadistic glee, but immense humanity and empathy. It’s from their perspective that the former State Champion bandleader often writes, embodying each and every lowlife struck by a cruel fate and in dire need of direction. Davis spells things out plainly on the titular country-punk opener to his sophomore record with the Roadhouse Band, New Threats From the Soul: “It’s hard to know sometimes if I’m on the right course / I’m scrambling to find Christ in all the places I’m told he likes.” Drenched in vomit and tears, his cross-album search for something to fill the gnawing inner void isn’t glamorous, but it makes for one of the year’s most thrilling, replayable indie-rock ventures. “It’s not much of a story,” Davis croons towards the end of the album. “But by God, I’ve got to dog-ear a chapter or two.” It’s a perfect thesis.
As a survey of the state love leaves us in, New Threats From the Soul is unflinching; in lieu of spewing vague sentiments, Davis channels loss into precise, tangible imagery. On the desperate and borderline creepy vignette “Monte Carlo / No Limits”—a sort of spiritual successor to the Replacements’ equally desperate, not-so-creepy dirge “Answering Machine”—a non-functioning doorbell delivers a crushing blow to the narrator’s efforts towards reunion with an ex (it “doesn’t work, but it don’t need to if there’s no one at home”). Mundane tragedies, like “daffodils dyin’ in a theme park pint glass,” take the foreground, while the celestial and conceptual are defanged, distorted into bit parts and props: the moon’s face is scarred with acne; life is cast as a blundering, game-show host type (who does it “think it is to deprive its contestants of joy?”); time is neither friend nor foe, “more like one of the guys from work.” New Threats From the Soul is jam-packed with arresting turns of phrase, but never flounders under their weight—each witticism feels earned and essential rather than shoehorned or self-indulgent. Instead, each line contributes to an exhaustive document of how extensively heartache blurs our lenses—how we find it everywhere, in everything. How it finds us.
By equal measure, the familiarity of this worldview is devastating and, well, pretty damn hilarious. On “Mutilation Springs,” for example, when Davis bluntly asks, “What even am I?!,” I’m not sure whether to chuckle at the dissonance between his hammy delivery and the question’s existential heft or to wince at the pathetic mental image it conjures: a past-prime lounge singer working at some sleazy joint, unable to suppress a budding existential crisis on the job. Though Davis’ vocal range isn’t quite dazzling, moments like these attest to the rich expressiveness of his singing; with slight vocal modulations, he shades even his most plainspoken lyrics with nuance. It’s an understated ability he perhaps employs best on “Better If You Make Me.” While the last-ditch apology “I could change for the better if you make me” could easily come across as tossed-off, the way his warble gradually frays into a raw, punk-ish howl with each repetition conveys the rising panic of someone who’s being forced to face a relationship past salvaging—and, worse, to accept that it’s deteriorated by his own fault.
This reluctance, or inability, to move on is a throughline across New Threats From the Soul: last night’s sweet nothings acquire sour aftertastes in the lonesome morning’s silence; the mattress’s memory foam forgets an ex-lover’s shape before the narrator can. Davis’ writing ought to make anyone who’s found themselves unable to “just get over it” feel a little less alone; he succumbs to humiliating depths to show that it’s impossible to move forward when you’re dragged down by absences invisible to everyone but yourself. “Late at night, I slip outside, a’foraging for crumbs of circumstance,” he laments on “Mutilation Falls” over a sigh of pedal steel roving through restlessness. It’s a confession sure to resonate with anyone who’s been driven animalistic by combing through an ex’s social media or text messages for a sign that, just maybe, they miss you too.