James Gedda & The Big Breakfast Launch South of Mars — A Barroom Galaxy of Heartbreak, Humor, and Honesty

Every now and then an album drops that feels less like a release and more like a reunion — like the door swings open at your favorite dive, the lights are low, and someone you’d forgotten you missed walks back onto the stage with a guitar, a grin, and something to say. That’s what James Gedda & The Big Breakfast just did with their brand-new record South of Mars.

It’s a barroom universe — neon-lit stories, late-night wisdom, cheap-beer truth, and that weary-but-smiling grit only a songwriter who’s been through the wringer can deliver.

I first stumbled onto James Gedda back at a little DIY misfit circus called Sad By Southwest — the kind of half-chaotic, half-beautiful gathering where the amps buzz, the beer’s warm, and every songwriter is carrying two heartbreaks and a punchline in their back pocket. It was full of guys with a comb in their back pocket, punching a clock at day jobs just to keep their music habit supplied. The Zach Welches, the Mando Salases, the Peyton Matouses —

the ones grinding through the daylight so they can chase the dream after dark. That whole scene felt like the heartbeat of the forgotten, the hopeful, and the stubbornly creative.

Gedda was still working on this tune he called “Townes.” I remember him playing pieces of it — stopping mid-line, laughing at himself like a man who knew he had lightning but hadn’t quite figured out how to hold it yet. Just a few chords, a few lines, but the heart was there. You could feel it.

Fast-forward to South of Mars… and damned if that same song didn’t show up fully formed, heavier, wiser, and truer than anything I imagined back in that dusty tent.

And let me tell you something personal —

around my house, “listening to Townes God damn Van Zandt in the dark again” has basically become a phrase. It’s what I say after a day that’s taken too much out of me, when I need a quiet room and a voice that doesn’t lie.

Gedda somehow bottled that exact feeling — that wounded, cathartic, dimly-lit honesty — and turned it into a song that finally found its place in the world.

And honestly?

The whole dang record carries that same spirit. Stories about trying to stay outta jail, trying to moderate our drinking only to learn we can’t, the deep depression, the false love, the bad decisions, the almost-redemptions, the laugh-so-you-don’t-cry moments… Hell… the whole thing sounds damn near Panchoesque.

Americana Highways said this album “celebrates the comfort of community that takes place in a local bar,” and they weren’t lying — but let me put it in Pancho language:

This album feels like a last-call conversation with someone you trust. It’s the jukebox humming in the corner. It’s the bartender who’s heard it all. It’s the sound of a man who’s not trying to impress you — just trying to tell the truth before the neon flickers out.

There’s humor here, because Gedda’s a natural storyteller.

There’s heartbreak, because life doesn’t pull its punches.

There’s catharsis, because sometimes singing it out is the only way you make sunrise.

South of Mars plays like a constellation — each song a star, each story a little spark in the dark.

This is music for:

the late-night strugglers the working-class philosophers the misfits holding their world together with duct tape and last paychecks the dreamers who aren’t done dreaming, even when the stage lights dim

It’s an album built on human truth, the kind you only find when the show’s over and the broom is sweeping up the last of the night.

James Gedda didn’t just put out a record — he planted a flag. South of Mars is sincere, beautifully flawed, and honest enough to matter. It feels like the kind of album made by a man who knows the value of the grind… and the grace in keeping at it anyway.

Gedda’s been the real deal since the first time I met him in that dusty, chaotic Sad By Southwest tent — and this record proves he still is.

Give it a spin. All the way through. Let the stories wash over you like old friends returning.

Texas, Americana, barroom folk — they all needed this one.

And James delivered.

Pancho