1
/
of
1
WILLI CARLISLE
SIGNED - The Universal Bubba CD - PRESALE
SIGNED - The Universal Bubba CD - PRESALE
Regular price
$30.00 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$30.00 USD
Unit price
/
per
Couldn't load pickup availability
RELEASE DATE NOVEMBER 6TH, 2026
Orders containing any presale items will not ship until after November 6th, 2026
-
The Mason Jar at the Center of the World
-
Gas Station
-
Use Me Up
-
Good Morning, Midnight
-
Marlboro Vinyasa
-
The Master’s Hammer
-
Contact High
-
The Universal Bubba, Part One
-
The Universal Bubba, Part Two
-
She Only Loves Horses
-
Ditchdigger’s Song (Dust and the Devil)
-
Sadly Enormous
-
I Ain’t Crazy
-
Red Leather, Yellow Leather
-
Old Milwaukee Onestep
-
Bigger’n Dallas (Feat. Amanda Shires)
-
Golden Dragon Buffet
With a heavy-duty catalog of new material for a career first double album, The Universal Bubba marks a half dozen releases for folksinger Willi Carlisle and reaches new heights with the added accelerant of first time producer Tyler Childers. In an all-time DIY effort, Childers and his band convened to a makeshift home studio nestled in the Bywater District of New Orleans for two weeks to cut 17 tracks that expand Carlisle’s sonic scrapbook and capture the off-kilter characters living in his songs.
“I think this one goes to outer space,” says Carlisle. “I think this is the widest range of influences that I’ve ever had. It touches on funk, it touches on Americana, Cajun, oldtime, and experimental music.” With Childers’ band behind him, Carlisle embraced the freedom to wander across genres both familiar and new, testing out instrumentation and toying with the surreality of traditions being turned on their head. “It feels like getting drunk at the Civil War reenactment, or cruising at the cattle auction, or doing molly at the square dance,” says Carlisle. “It’s the first time I’ve ever used synthesizers and double electric guitars. There’s also more fretless 19th century style banjo on it than any record I’ve ever made.”
Exploration aside, Carlisle’s mission as a folksinger largely remains the same - documenting the stories and struggles of the people and balancing the humor and hope of existence. “I want to make a universal folk music. Songs for all kinds of weirdos,” says Carlisle. “With the idea that there is nobody that doesn’t have folk songs and everyone deserves folk songs. I want to write songs that prove the old weird America didn’t go anywhere, that we are living and dying for it everyday. I believe there’s noble work to do in that context. That if we feel despair, we don’t need to because there’s so much good work to do.”
Artwork by Whit Stone
