Sarah
McCombie, of the North Carolina duo Chatham Rabbits, is ready for change: “I’m
ready for our fans to get to know the people we are now. We’ve grown up
together and getting to reveal this album feels like our collective coming of
age.”
This
declaration is coming from a woman who has spent the past six years building a
robust catalog and passionate fanbase within the Americana community with her
husband and bandmate, Austin McCombie. A woman who knows there is more to the
band’s story than vows, banjos and vintage dresses.
The
duo has released three albums — All I Want from You (2019), The Yoke is Easy,
The Burden is Full (2020), If You See Me Riding By (2022) — that nod to the
old-time roots of their college stringband pastime, but with their new release,
Be Real with Me (February 14, 2025), they have demonstrably grown up.
“These
past two years have totally changed us,” describes Austin. “We’re not as
bright-eyed and naive as we were when we committed to Chatham Rabbits
full-time.” This honesty is the backbone of their fourth studio album. The
title is the ask — or rather the plea — Be Real with Me.
As
unified as ever being the McCombies, the two have faced challenges within their
marriage, an overhaul of faith and belief systems, a global pandemic, three
moves, the loss of beloved family pets, and the heartbreak that is unique to
getting really real and brutally honest with each other. Austin’s once fair
freckled arms are now adorned with tattoos by artists he’s met on the road, and
natural elements that bring him joy. Sarah’s closet is still brimming with
vintage pieces, but she’s likely to reach for a slip dress at the moment
instead.
With
their forthcoming release, Sarah is excited for fans to hear the band’s forward
momentum. The music speaks for itself.
As
Sarah explains, “we got married so young. We are simply not the same people we
once were because playing music for a living has consumed and transformed us.
This lifestyle has presented us with exhausting tour schedules, vulnerable
songs that force us to talk about our marriage, difficult business decisions,
and the ever-complicated dilemma of mixing art and money and friends and
employees. Ultimately, though, it has been a net positive experience.”
Written
post-pandemic by Sarah and Austin and recorded over a two-year period at the
Studio at Small Pond Farm, in Pittsboro, NC, Be Real With Me was co-produced by
Austin McCombie and the band's longtime collaborator, Saman Khoujinian (The
Dead Tongues, Lou Hazel). This record is the band’s "Return of Saturn,” an
astrological phenomenon that occurs around the age of 29, when one reevaluates
life, and through trial and error, figures out who and what one would like to
commit to moving forward. This record is about doing your best and still
failing, facing the imposter in the mirror, wanting to be reckless and young
while simultaneously mature and maternal. “Matador,” “Gas Money,” “Did I Really
Know Him?” and “Collateral Damage” speak to this sentiment directly,
particularly the latter, which has Sarah grappling with her desire for
motherhood and freedom on the road, two goals in polar opposite of each other.
That friction can be felt by the listener, especially to someone who also wants
two paths in life that are in constant conflict with one another.
“We’ve
never been a bluegrass band, but being from NC we cannot ignore the regional
influences all around us. We sampled organic tones and manipulated them into
synth pads and percussive elements on this record. It feels like a natural
progression because the foundational components of our music are still there,
we’ve just added to it,” says Austin. On this album, you’ll still hear the
banjo (Sarah McCombie), but right along with it is a drum machine (Saman
Khoujinian), synth (Saman Khoujinian), and pedal steel (Ryan Stigmon). But it’s
the lyrics that show the most maturity.
You
can hear the maturity in the topics, but also in the way the message is
portrayed. As Sarah sings in “One Little Orange," a startlingly tender
song about her relationship with her late grandfather. “I just have to trust
whatever I’ve been told” and trust me, dear reader, these lyrics hit close to
home with their precise word choices, full circle story-telling, and universal
themes of the human condition told by way of the songwriter’s specific life
experience.
“It
makes me fired up to sing about my life and my discoveries. It’s so cathartic,”
shares Sarah as she reflects on the future. “There’s a place for Abigail and
Bugle Boy,” she says, recalling two of the duo’s earlier songs, “But the songs
on Be Real with Me are representative of who we are today.”
