High on Our Own Supply

 I didn’t stumble into Band of Heathens on purpose. That ain’t how it happens with bands like this.

They come in sideways.

First time I heard the name was through the Vandoliers — and when they tip their hat, I listen. Those folks don’t run with just anybody.

Then I see Hayes Carll drag a chair up to the table and cut a record with ’em — Hayes & the Heathens — and that sealed it. Hayes doesn’t collaborate out of charity. If he’s in, it’s because the songs can stand up without help.

Fast forward and now I can’t turn the dial without hearin’ High on Our Own Supply gettin’ spun like it owes money on Outlaw Country Radio.

Twice a day.

Every day.

Like they’re daring you to change the station.

And here’s the thing — it don’t get old.

That song sounds like a band that quit askin’ for permission a long time ago. Loose. Confident. Slightly smug in the way only people who’ve earned it can be. Not drunk on hype — drunk on mileage.

“High on our own supply” ain’t a punchline. It’s a shrug. It’s a band sayin’, “Yeah… we know what we’ve got.”

And it ain’t just a stray single either. It’s the front porch creak before the door swings open on a new record — Country Sides — due later this year.

That title alone tells you this ain’t a radio grab. It’s for the edges. The B-roads. The parts of country music that don’t clean up nice but last longer.

This feels like a band deep into their grown-man phase —

If the rest of Country Sides carries the same dirt-under-the-fingernails energy as “High on Our Own Supply,” then this one’s gonna stick around long after the trend-chasers move on.

No hype train.

No reinvention arc.

That’s the good stuff.

— Pancho’s Picks

Trust the bands that sound like they’ve already been counted out

and kept playin’ anyway.

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