Khruangbin & Leon Bridges Take a Leisurely Ride Under the Texas Sun
The two former tourmates team up for an ultra-smooth EP

Khruangbin & Leon Bridges’ collaborative EP, Texas Sun, starts out taking it easy, then shifts gears and takes things slow, slower, then slower still. The four-track release is in no hurry to get where it’s going, and it doesn’t appear to have a destination in mind, either: Texan highways comprise the journey and the destination at the same time. Given that Texas is large enough to be broken down into five microstates; with their own unique identities, Texas Sun’s conception of the road trip as a harbor unto itself makes sense.
With Texas being so individualized across interstate regional lines, it follows that each region stacks distinct cultures and subcultures on top of one another. Musically, that means honky-tonk tunes bleeding over into Latin traditions and echoing off of smooth soul crooning, just a sample platter of the countless genres that define Texas’ music scenes. Texas Sun takes those samples, from psych to funk to country to R&B, and ties them together with Bridges’ velvety voice and Khruangbin’s cosmic jam aesthetic. If the pair doesn’t record a full-length record at some point in the very near future, it’ll be the king bummer of their careers: Their talents and character go together so well that Texas Sun reconciles the leaps that separate Bridges’ debut album, Coming Home, from his follow-up, Good Thing.