Hailing from a rural Louisiana village called Oak Ridge (population: 124), singer/songwriter Graham Barham infuses his music with so many unforgettable images specific to small Southern towns: moss ponds and magnolia trees, pickup trucks and one-lane roads, to name just a few. But as shown on his breakout single “Preachers Need People”—a 2022 release that brought him massive viral success—the Nashville-based musician has a rare gift for turning that homespun storytelling into songs epic in emotional scope. After years of co-writing in such eclectic genres as alt-pop and hip-hop, the 24-year-old artist is now set to make his Virgin Records debut with a batch of songs showcasing his singular brand of country: soulful, straight from the heart, and steeped in lived-in detail.
The son of a farmer and a schoolteacher, Barham grew up on his family’s farm and got his start singing in church as a little kid. By age 10 he’d taught himself to play guitar and begun writing songs of his own, mining inspiration from classic country artists like George Strait as well as heavy-hitters from the pop world (an element that still informs his knack for crafting immediately catchy melodies). “I pretty much fell in love with songwriting right away, but coming from a place that’s extremely blue-collar, I didn’t understand how to make a living from music,” says Barham. “But when I was 16 my best friend’s mom passed away and I wrote a song for her and played it at her funeral, which was the first time I really saw how much power music could have on people. That was a huge turning point for me, and I knew I had to find a way to write forever.”
At age 18, Barham moved to Nashville and soon started writing for other artists, steadily honing the potent balance of humanity and honesty and self-aware humor that now defines his lyrics. In early- summer 2022, he experienced a major breakthrough with the writing of “Preachers Need People,” a slow-building and undeniably poignant track spotlighting his gritty yet nuanced vocal work (from the chorus: “Like headaches need hangovers and gypsies need a road/Cussin’ need a tongue to talk and these cigarettes need smoke/To keep this world spinning and sinners in them seats/Yeah, preachers need people like me”). “That song came to me when I was bartending one night and saw a guy still sitting at the bar even though it was past closing time,” recalls Barham, who co-wrote “Preachers Need People” with his hometown friend Beau Bailey and singer/songwriter Kasey Tyndall. “I thought to myself, ‘Man, that guy looks terrible—he really needs me to pour him a drink to get him through whatever’s going on with him.’ It was a Saturday and I had to go to church in the morning, and the whole situation got me thinking how preachers need people like me, because otherwise they wouldn’t have anyone to pray for.” Not long after playing “Preachers Need People” live for the first time,
Mostly produced by Will Bundy (a songwriter/producer who’s also worked with Keith Urban, Thomas Rhett, and Jason Aldean), Barham’s debut body of work delivers plenty of bittersweet reflection on the ups and downs of finding your way in the world. Along with “Preachers Need People” and the heavy-hearted but irresistibly fun “BREAK IT IN A BAR”.
The project features songs like “TWO BROKE HEARTS”—a scorching take on the breakup blues, fueled by Barham’s gloriously twangy vocals and smoldering guitar work. “I was coming off a relationship and met someone who’d also just ended something, and came up with that whole concept of two broke hearts being better than one,” says Barham, who co-wrote the track with Bundy and singer/songwriters Summer Overstreet and Justin Wilson. “It’s sort of laughing at the irony of relationships, and making it into a feel-good song.” And on “Beer By My Bed,” Barham offers up a slow-burning and all-too-real portrait of post-blackout regret. “I like to have a good time, and I definitely enjoy beer or really anything alcoholic that’s wet,” says Barham. “One night I was hanging out with a girl, and when I woke up in the morning there was a beer by my bed and a