Patterson Hood Looks Inward on Exploding Trees & Airplane Screams
The Drive-By Truckers co-founder tries something different on his fourth solo album, and the result is an expansive but subtle collection of songs.

Patterson Hood has long demonstrated a knack in his songs for finely wrought character studies, from everyman working-class folks to Southern rock icons to abusive preachers whose kinks get them killed. This time, Hood applies his powers of observation to his own life. To be sure, the singer, guitarist and songwriter has written about his (misspent?) youth before. In fact, it’s the subject of “Let There Be Rock,” one of the best songs by his band the Drive-By Truckers. Hood’s scope is fairly narrow on that track, which focuses mostly on the bands he saw, and the substances he consumed, as an adolescent growing up in Alabama in the early ’80s. Also, the three-guitar solo that closes the song still cooks like a bolt of lightning nearly 25 years later.
Hood takes a different approach on Exploding Trees & Airplane Screams, his first solo album since 2012 (and fourth overall). For one thing, there’s much less screaming guitar on these 10 songs. In fact, Hood plays piano on many of the tracks here, marking his recorded debut on keyboards. In addition, there’s an introspective cast to Hood’s songwriting as he looks back at his past selves, from childhood all the way up to when he moved from Alabama to Athens, Georgia, around the time he turned 30.
The result is an expansive but subtle collection of songs that include strings, woodwinds and analog synthesizers—sounds you don’t really hear on Drive-By Truckers albums. There are also a lot of guest contributions, from musicians including Chris Funk of the Decemberists (who produced), Kevin Morby and Steve Berlin of Los Lobos. That’s Lydia Loveless duetting with Hood on “A Werewolf and a Girl,” a somber meditation on the uncertainty and tentative fumbling of a first love, underpinned by moaning saxophone. A track later, on “The Forks of Cypress,” Waxahatchee’s Katie Crutchfield adds earthy harmonies to an earthy song full of naturalistic imagery, accompanied by the sharp whisper of a brushed snare drum, whirring keyboards and a rhythmic sound that evokers drops of water falling into a drain in an echoing space.