Caleb Caudle on the South, Merle Haggard and More

If there’s any good that comes from the death of an iconic artist, it’s that the resulting posthumous attention can often usher in a new generation of fans. For those who are already fans, it only fuels an existing appreciation. This passion is especially poignant when it comes to up-and-coming artists, whose admiration helps create something. In the case of Americana crooner Caleb Caudle and his fandom of country music legend Merle Haggard, Haggard’s influence on him is obvious, yet as a musician, Caudle—to paraphrase the Hag—“wears his own kind of hat.”
Along with his previous album, Caudle’s latest, Carolina Ghost, has earned him comparisons to Jason Isbell. As lyrical as Isbell but less esoteric, Caudle prioritizes the tangible as a songwriter. “I feel like giving songs a setting is really important,” he says. “All my favorite songs have a setting. When George [Jones] and Tammy [Wynette] sing ‘Golden Ring,’ you’re there in that pawn shop in Chicago. For this album, I wanted to use Southern imagery because you know where the songs are geographically. It makes it easier to access, easier to get the meaning. My goal as a songwriter is to connect with people. After shows, when folks say ‘this line meant so much to me,’ that’s the best thing in the world.”
While Southern imagery is rich and wildly evocative, to Caudle, a native Southerner, it also represents home. “The record is a country record, and it’s all about home,” he says earnestly. “I lived in NOLA for a while and moved back home. It means finding stability, working through things to get to that stable place. Writing it was very therapeutic. All that stuff.” He laughs. “Being ok with who you are so you can be loved. Getting sober was the first step for me in a long line of things. I got sober, I found clarity, realized some things needed to change, changing those things, making the change to be able to love yourself, and then finding love and being able to accept it.”