JOHNNY DELAWARE

Para Llevar
(Normaltown Records)
Add date: 11.5.2024
Release date: 11.1.2024




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“This is a very nomadic album,” says Johnny Delaware. “I recorded it in studios in Mexico and
the United States and in hotel rooms all across Latin America, and if you listen closely, you
can hear bits and pieces of all those places and the people I met along the way. They’re all a
part of me now.”

It makes perfect sense, then, that Delaware would call his new collection Para Llevar, which
translates roughly as “to go” or “to take.” Drawn from Delaware’s years of journeying—both
physically around the world and internally to find himself—the record blends elements of
Laurel Canyon and Latin America with dreamy, psychedelic production to forge a mesmerizing
cultural swirl that transcends borders and traditions. Delaware produced the record himself in
addition to playing nearly all of the instruments, and his performances are consistently warm
and inviting, marked by airy, spacious arrangements centered on his raw, amiable vocals. The
lyrics, meanwhile, are rooted in perpetual motion, in an endless, primal search for meaning
and purpose and connection. The result is a deeply personal exploration of human nature as
seen through the eyes of an itinerant observer, an intoxicating meditation on the doubt and
hope and fear and love and loneliness that bind us all, no matter where we call home.
“You could live happily in a tiny shack or be miserable in a sprawling mansion,” Delaware
reflects. “The material things don’t change who you are. At the end of the day, you can’t
escape yourself, no matter how far you go.”

Born and raised in South Dakota, Delaware felt the pull of the road from a young age, and
after dropping out of college, he spent his 20s drifting between Nashville, Albuquerque, and
Austin, making music and picking up odd jobs to get by.

“I went through a particularly dark patch in Texas,” he explains. “That was the first time I
realized just how powerful a song could be, how it could heal you and change your life. That’s
when I knew I needed to make my own records so I could do the same thing for other
people.”

When a tree fell on his car and the insurance company paid out the exact amount he needed
to record his first album, Delaware headed east to Charleston, SC, where he teamed up with
producer Wolfgang Zimmerman for his 2013 debut, Secret Wave. The record earned glowing
reviews, with the Charleston City Paper declaring Delaware a “born charmer” and dubbing
him their Songwriter of the Year. Fate would soon intervene again, though, putting the brakes
on Delaware’s solo career as another Charleston project he helped co-found, Susto, began
taking off. Over the course of the next decade, the band would go on to become one of the
most critically acclaimed names in indie roots music, garnering raves from Rolling Stone and
Spin and touring with the likes of The Lumineers, Band of Horses, and The Head and the
Heart.


“While I was on a break from touring with Susto, an archaeologist friend of mine invited me
to come down to Mexico,” Delaware recalls. “I figured I’d just be there a couple of months,
but then life happened.”

Or more precisely, love happened. Delaware fell for the culture and the food and the people
and the art in Mexico City. He met his girlfriend, adopted a dog, and bought land. He
recorded a second solo album, 2022’s similarly well-received Energy of Light, and continued

bouncing back and forth across the border for tour dates with Susto while working on the
songs that would become Para Llevar.

“I decided I was going to produce this album myself, which was a huge leap,” says Delaware.
“I’ve always had someone else to lean on, so I had to learn to trust my instincts and have
faith in my intuition. When you can let go of all that outside stuff and remember that the only
person you need to please is yourself, the pressure starts to melt away. I think there’s
something really pure and beautiful about that.”

That purity of intention is plain to hear on Para Llevar, which opens with the equal parts
eerie and resolute “Jungle Full of Ghosts.” “I ain’t afraid to get lost down a backroad,”
Delaware sings over hypnotic, minor key guitars, propulsive drums, and droning synths. “I
ain’t afraid of the hard way or to be alone.” Like much of the album to come, it’s a track
about staring down the face in the mirror, about reckoning with the past to become a
stronger, more fully realized version of yourself in the present. The hazy “Running” comes to
terms with the futility of trying to escape your history, while the dreamy “Darkness” wrestles
with the siren song of cynicism and negativity, and the transcendent “Stubborn Faith” refuses
to let the weight of the world dampen the desire to be a part of it.

“You don’t have to pretend everything’s wonderful all the time,” Delaware reflects, “but if
you don’t seek out the light sometimes, if you don’t make the room to let it into your life,
the darkness will consume you.”

And so Delaware embraces love over fear on the album, allowing himself to sit still long
enough to appreciate the little moments of perfection that dot our decidedly imperfect lives.
The bittersweet “Caution Darlin’” finds peace in the beauty of romance and true surrender;
the gentle “Never Let Go” looks forward to the end of the road, when long-distance lovers
can finally reunite; and the breezy “You Alone (Are The Revolution)” unlocks liberation from
within.

“The most radical thing you can do is be your most honest, authentic self,” Delaware
declares. “Change doesn’t come from politicians or corporations; it comes from taking care of
yourself and your community, from being a good neighbor and a good friend and a good family
man.”

Ultimately, that’s what Para Llevar is all about. No matter where we go in this world or what
we consider home, it’s our responsibility to find the good and to take it with us, to go and to
spread it as far and as wide as we can. After all, as any nomad will tell you, happiness isn’t a
destination; it’s a journey.