Artist's albums
Drink The River
2023 · album
Merigold
2023 · single
Property Line
2023 · single
Drink The River
2023 · single
Even Jesus Got The Blues
2023 · single
Eveline
2023 · single
Run Run Rudolph
2022 · single
The Hometown Kid
2022 · album
Long Gone
2022 · single
Wide Open
2022 · single
Over You
2022 · single
Rusty
2022 · single
Dishes Ain't Done
2022 · single
Common Law
2022 · single
Memphis (Live)
2021 · single
Lyra (Reimagined)
2021 · single
Ol' Smokey (feat. King Margo) [Reimagined]
2021 · single
Talk to You
2020 · single
Honky Tonk Hell
2020 · album
Emmylou
2020 · single
Honky Tonk Hell
2020 · single
Christmas Day
2019 · single
farmland
2019 · album
Eveline
2019 · single
Alright Ok
2019 · single
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Biography
Equal parts classic songwriter and modern-day storyteller, Gabe Lee has built his own bridge between country, folk and rock. Lee has been collecting stories for years, both onstage and off. With critically-acclaimed albums like 2019's farmland, 2020's Honky-Tonk Hell, and 2022's The Hometown Kid, Lee created a connection with his fanbase by delivering his own stories to an ever-growing audience. His fourth record, Drink the River, takes a different approach. This time, Lee isn't offering listeners a peek into his internal world; he's holding up a mirror to reflect their own. Storytelling has been an anchor of Lee's music since the very beginning. He launched his career as a genre-bending musician after returning to Tennessee, quickly progressing from dive bar gigs to high-profile opening slots (including shows with Jason Isbell, Los Lobos, and other artists who, like him, blurred the lines between roots-rock, country, and other forms of American folk music) to his own headlining shows. Throughout it all, he drew upon the narrative skills he'd sharpened as a student. If albums like Honky-Tonk Hell and The Hometown Kid often unfolded like autobiographical entries from his road journal, then Drink the River shows an even broader range of his storytelling abilities. Lee isn't just writing songs about himself; he's writing songs about all of us. And maybe, in doing so, he can bring us a little closer together.