Tim Barry - Clear Blocks Ahead (2026) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Tim Barry
Title: Clear Blocks Ahead
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Chunksaah Records
Genre: Acoustic, Folk Rock, Alt Country, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 44:30
Total Size: 102 / 251 / 852 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Clear Blocks Ahead
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Chunksaah Records
Genre: Acoustic, Folk Rock, Alt Country, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 44:30
Total Size: 102 / 251 / 852 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. W.W. Pool (04:15)
2. Still Lit (03:38)
3. Wreck-Less (03:01)
4. Waltzing the Cell (03:22)
5. Hello from Roanoke (02:59)
6. Too Richmond for Rva (03:23)
7. Miller & Rhoads (03:13)
8. Steady Locomotion (03:12)
9. Iron City Break [Down] (03:15)
10. It Ain’t Easy (04:07)
11. Broken Songs (03:22)
12. Loads East, Empties West (02:39)
13. Thank You (For All the Songs) (04:04)
When Tim Barry sat down to create his latest album, Clear Blocks Ahead, the veteran singer-songwriter saw two potential paths: he could create something stripped to the bone, just vocals and acoustic guitar. Or he could go bigger, and build the record around a full band.
Sifting through nearly 40 songs, some of them dating back to the 1990s, Barry chose Door 2.
He partnered with the Spacebomb House Band, a tight unit of studio players based in his home town of Richmond, Virginia, and set to recording 13 tracks. The end product is a departure from his last record, 2022’s Spring Hill — and the rest of his two-decade career. Most of the Americana trappings are gone. In their place are ringing electric guitars and big rock n roll hooks. We’re not talking Marshall stacks cranked to 11, but Clear Blocks Ahead marks a major change of the sonic palette.
Even the quieter tunes, like Iron City (Breakdown) (a deliciously bitter anti-ballad) and W.W. Pool (a chronicle of hard living), bristle with fresh musical ideas and an enhanced sense of collaboration. One new co-conspirator is Barry’s daughter, Lela Jane Barry, who lends her voice to four tracks.
Lyrically, the Clear Blocks Ahead is pure Barry. The songs feature lots of pathos-laden figures, the kinds of margin-dwelling characters who could star in a Sam Shepard play or a Denis Johnson novel. But he also brings a distinct sense of hope to the record, a useful feeling in the year 2026. Steady Locomotion is a gorgeous ode to simply surviving in a harsh world. And on the anthemic Still Lit, he sings: “Get up and out the door/Run like you never run before.”
Sifting through nearly 40 songs, some of them dating back to the 1990s, Barry chose Door 2.
He partnered with the Spacebomb House Band, a tight unit of studio players based in his home town of Richmond, Virginia, and set to recording 13 tracks. The end product is a departure from his last record, 2022’s Spring Hill — and the rest of his two-decade career. Most of the Americana trappings are gone. In their place are ringing electric guitars and big rock n roll hooks. We’re not talking Marshall stacks cranked to 11, but Clear Blocks Ahead marks a major change of the sonic palette.
Even the quieter tunes, like Iron City (Breakdown) (a deliciously bitter anti-ballad) and W.W. Pool (a chronicle of hard living), bristle with fresh musical ideas and an enhanced sense of collaboration. One new co-conspirator is Barry’s daughter, Lela Jane Barry, who lends her voice to four tracks.
Lyrically, the Clear Blocks Ahead is pure Barry. The songs feature lots of pathos-laden figures, the kinds of margin-dwelling characters who could star in a Sam Shepard play or a Denis Johnson novel. But he also brings a distinct sense of hope to the record, a useful feeling in the year 2026. Steady Locomotion is a gorgeous ode to simply surviving in a harsh world. And on the anthemic Still Lit, he sings: “Get up and out the door/Run like you never run before.”