Review: Lonnie Holley – Tonky

Lonnie Holley is singer, songwriter, artist, educator, and poet…and, surprisingly to me, a trip hop artist. I knew that his new album, Tonky (named after his nickname from growing up in and around honkytonks), would be full of gripping tales from his life and views on the current American landscape. I didn’t expect it to be layered with found sounds, electric beats, and trip hop touches.

The opening track, “Seeds,” is the longest at over nine minutes and has Holly telling about how fields he worked as a child until he was exhausted or often beaten so bad he couldn’t sleep. The string instruments strum out growing tension while simple synth chords are like the hums of spectres watching from the other side of the veil. “Life” is a short poem of hope with Holley encouraging us to use small actions to grow big change.

“Protest with Love” is the most punk rock song I’ve heard in a long while, and it’s wrapped in a lush trip hop track. “If you’re gonna protest, protest with love…Let love do its thing,” Holly advises. Loving thy neighbor, heck, just being nice, is one of the most rebellious acts you can do in 2025. In the jazz and post-funk (Is that a thing?)-inspired “The Burden,” Holley tells us all that it’s on us to remember those who came before and how we need to honor them (“The burden is like a spell that’s been cast upon you. Burdens of our ancestors to unravel and clarify in history.”).

“Let those who have ears, let them hear…We might not have it all together, but together we have it all,” Holley preaches in the beginning of “The Stars” — a powerful track about how people brought over on slave ships saw the same stars we now see, but how much have we progressed since then? The included rap by Open Mike Eagle is so slick it might drop you to the floor.

Holley makes sure you’re paying attention on the growling (and slightly funky) “We Were Kings in the Jungle, Slaves in the Field.” “Strength of a Song” has some of Holley’s strongest vocals on the record as he sings about finding hope and power in music. Near-industrial drums make “What’s Going On” sound like a roaring muscle car engine. “I Looked Over My Shoulder” is psychedelic jazz mixed with dark-wave synths.

“Wait a minute…” Holley says at the beginning of “Did I Do Enough?” Good heavens, haven’t we all thought that at some point — especially if you’ve been through a tragedy, or someone close to you has? The song is just Holley’s heartfelt vocals above ambient synths that build to gospel-like grandeur and it’s a stunner. “That’s Not Art, That’s Not Music” has Holley firing back the criticisms aimed at black music and culture upon their detractors.

The album ends with the hopeful “A Change Is Gonna Come,” but Holley asks, “Are we ready for something to happen?” One has to recognize the signs, when to stand up, and when to take flight. We have to be willing to accept change from divisiveness to inclusion. “How can I love God without loving you?” a woman asks not only herself, but also all of us. It’s the main message Holley wants to convey, and one we all must hear.

This is already one of the best albums of the year.

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe.]

[Thanks to Sam at Pitch Perfect PR.]

Lonnie Holley’s new single, “That’s Not Art, That’s Not Music,” turns the spotlight back on critics.

Photo by Viva Vadim

Lonnie Holley unveils the new single, “That’s Not Art, That’s Not Music,” from his new album, Tonky, out March 21st via Jagjaguwar. Following Holley’s “deeply moving, genre defying” (NPR Music) single “Protest With Love,” “That’s Not Art, That’s Not Music” is about Holley’s early experiences in the art world and larger institutions’ apprehension in accepting Black self-taught art as fine art. Holley is once again joined by Jacknife LeeThe Legendary IngramettesKelly Pratt, and Jordan KatzBudgie also contributes here. Atop atmospheric horns, flute, and marimba, Holley sings: “Gathering our arts / Gathering our music / Incorporating it into song / Us being rejected / They were saying, ‘That’s not good enough’/Not good enough / That’s not art / That’s not music.”

Watch/Stream “That’s Not Art, That’s Not Music”

Tonky is a work born out of the delight of finding a sound and pressing it up against another found sound and another until, before a listener knows it, they are awash in a symphony of sound that feels like it stitches together as it is washing over you. The layers of sound found on Tonky are the result of decades of evolving experimentation. Tonky takes its name from a childhood nickname that was affixed to Holley when he lived a portion of his childhood life in a honky tonk. Lonnie Holley’s life of survival and endurance is one that is required – and no doubt still  requires – a kind of invention. An invention that is also rich and present in Holley’s songs, which are full and immersive on Tonky.

Portions of this press release are pulled from the Tonky bio written by Hanif Abdurraqib.

Pre-order/save Tonky

Watch The Video For  “Protest With Love”

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe.]

[Thanks to Sam at Pitch Perfect PR.]

Lonnie Holley gets Zen on “I Am Part of the Wonder.”

Photo Credit: David Raccuglia

Today, the Atlanta-by-way-of-Alabama artist Lonnie Holley unveils his new single“I Am A Part of the Wonder” (with Moor Mother), from his forthcoming album Oh Me Oh My, out March 10th on Jagjaguwar. “I Am A Part of the Wonder” follows the previously shared title track with REM’s Michael Stipe, “an opportunity to experience beauty moment by moment” (NPR Music), and is one of two Moor Mother collaborations boasted on Oh Me Oh My. Written by Holley alongside Camae Ayewa and Jacknife Lee (The Cure, REM, Modest Mouse), “I Am A Part of the Wonder” also features Lee on percussion, drums, bass, marimba, kalimba, vocals, keyboards, and synthesizer programming. During each Oh Me Oh Mysession, Holley and Lee would discuss the essence of the songs and distill Holley’s words to their most immediate center.

 
Listen to Lonnie Holley’s “I Am A Part of the Wonder” (with Moor Mother)
 

Oh Me Oh My is an achievement in the refinement of Holley’s impressionistic, stream-of-consciousness lyrics. Both elegant and ferocious, it sharpens the work contained on Holley’s 2018 Jagjaguwar debut, MITHOh Me Oh My is both stirring in one moment and a balm the next. It details histories both global and personal, and taps collaborators like Moor Mother, Michael Stipe, Sharon Van EttenJustin Vernon of Bon Iver and more to give Holley’s message flight, and to reaffirm Holley as a galvanizing, iconoclastic force across the music community.

Holley’s music and visual art (which is in the collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art and National Gallery of Art, and is represented by the illustrious Blum & Poe) is much more about our place in the cosmos itself. It’s about how we overcome adversity and tremendous pain; about how we develop and maintain an affection for our fellow travelers; about how we stop wishing for some “beyond” and start caring for the one rock we have. Holley has never delivered this message as clear, as concise, and as exhilaratingly as he does on Oh Me Oh My.

Next month, Holley will perform at the Royal Academy in London, followed by two performances at Big Ears Festival in Knoxville, Tennessee. Dates are listed below and tickets are on sale now.

 
Pre-order Oh Me Oh My
 
Listen to “Oh Me, Oh My” (with Michael Stipe)
 
Lonnie Holley Tour Dates
Fri. Mar. 17 – London, UK @ Royal Academy
Sat. Mar. 18 – London, UK @ Café Oto
Thu. Mar. 30 – Sun. Apr. 2 – Knoxville, TN @ Big Ears
Thu. May 18 – New York, NY @ The New York Society for Ethical Culture

Keep your mind open.

[I wonder if you’ll subscribe today?]

[Thanks to Patrick at Pitch Perfect PR.]