No Depression Readers’ 50 Favorite Roots Music Albums of 2021

No Depression Readers’ 50 Favorite Roots Music Albums of 2021

In a year where people were mostly kept apart by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, music brought us together. By summer, we were venturing out to see live shows, mostly outdoors, often at a distance still, but all through 2021, recorded albums brought solace and strength, even if we were just dancing alone in our living rooms.

And while chicken wings and cream cheese and semiconductors may have been in short supply, good albums absolutely were not. We asked No Depression readers to share their favorite roots music albums of 2021, and this list is the result. We hope you’ll see some of your favorites here, and find some new ones as well!

Tune in next week for the results of our Critics Poll — a list of the roots music albums that captured the hearts and minds of No Depression staff and contributors. (UPDATE: The Critics Poll is now posted.) And don't miss our playlist of songs from both the Readers Poll and the Critics Poll at the end of this post.

For the Top 10, click on the album name to read ND’s full review or story from earlier this year. We reviewed most of the rest of the list too —use the search function at the top of the page to find those. 

1. Jason Isbell – Georgia Blue

Back in November 2020, Isbell promised to record a cover album of songs from Georgia-born artists if the electoral results from the Peach State came out in favor of Democrat Joe Biden, or, in the parlance of political pundits, went from red to blue. It did, and Isbell has fulfilled that promise with the release of Georgia Blue. If the 2020 election showed that the South isn’t a political monolith, Isbell’s track selection highlights the musical and cultural diversity of the region as well. — Jim Shahen

2. James McMurtry – The Horses and the Hounds

Though McMurtry spends little time worrying about his identity, it’s clear that he will forever be celebrated as an inimitable songwriter. Whether he’s a “road dog” or, in the pandemic era, a YouTube livestreamer, it’s his writing that sets him apart from nearly everyone around him, and that gift reaches new heights on The Horses and the Hounds. — Chuck Armstrong

3. Brandi Carlile – In These Silent Days

From the outside, the past few years have seemed nothing short of sublime for Carlile: on-stage collaborations with nearly everyone at the 2019 Newport Folk Fest, the rip-roaring success of The Highwomen, multiple Grammy nominations for her own work and for her turn at producing on Tanya Tucker’s triumphant album, the publication of her blockbuster memoir Broken Horses, winning the Americana Music Association’s award for Artist of the Year. But In These Silent Days grapples with the rockier aspects of Carlile’s life. — Rachel Cholst

4. Robert Plant and Alison Krauss – Raise the Roof

Much of Raise the Roof is comparable to Raising Sand. Amid a similar running length and number of tracks, Burnett maintains a similar sonic hue. But what helps Raise the Roof stand on its own is the track selection, which incorporates a few styles unexplored on its predecessor. — Jim Shahen

5. Hayes Carll – You Get It All

On his latest release, You Get It All, Carll keeps things straightforward. Its country compositions are lean, even simple — think Townes Van Zandt or Billy Joe Shaver — and serve as ideal vehicles for Carll’s primary gift as a mesmerizing wordsmith. — Matt Conner

6. Sturgill Simpson – The Ballad of Dood & Juanita

In less than 30 minutes, Sturgill Simpson weaves an incredible tale of love, friendship, heartache, and death on his new album, The Ballad of Dood and Juanita. Though it’s broken into 10 individual tracks, the record stands as a singular experience, one that tells the story of Dood, a Kentuckian whose father was a mountain miner and mother was a Shawnee maiden. — Chuck Armstrong

7. Billy Strings – Renewal

Billy Strings and his band continue to show the direction bluegrass can go, offering multiple paths full of promise, beauty, and explosive joy. Renewal will assert to new listeners what his fans already know: Strings is a singular talent pushing his genre into new territory. — Matt Ruppert

8./9. (tie) Steve Earle and the Dukes – J.T.

Earle and his band, The Dukes, pay beautiful, if painful, homage to Justin’s life and 13-year solo career with J.T., which comes out on what would have been Justin’s 39th birthday. To hear Earle sing words penned by his son — like “I know the difference between tempting and choosing my fate” on “Harlem River Blues” — is to hear the fatherly embodiment of sorrow. Though the songs are recognizable as Justin’s, Earle and The Dukes put their distinct spin on each, lifting them up as timeless stories that somehow break through that sorrow without ever breaking out of the agonizing reality in which they exist. — Chuck Armstrong

8./9. (tie) Allison Russell – Outside Child

Allison Russell’s first solo album, Outside Child, soars on wings of resilience and redemption, but not before walking through the valley of the shadows of pain and abuse and desolate loneliness. Although Russell bares the pain of the violent abuse she suffered as a child at the hands of her stepfather, she refuses to wallow in the pain or to be buried by it, and these songs are her exultant shout that such circumstances can be transcended. — Henry Carrigan

10. John Hiatt with the Jerry Douglas Band – Leftover Feelings

When Hiatt and Douglas talk about Studio B, there is a clear admiration for its history as well as a sort of disbelief that they were able to make a record in that room in the middle of a global pandemic. “There’s a little taped ‘X’ on the floor where Elvis had his sweet spot,” Hiatt remembers. “It was his spot for singing. I’ll never forget that. There we were.” ­— Chuck Armstrong

  1. Los Lobos – Native Sons

  2. Charley Crockett – Music City USA

  3. Son Volt – Electro Melodier

  4. Alejandro Escovedo – La Cruzada

  5. Yola – Stand for Myself

  6. Aaron Lee Tasjan – Tasjan! Tasjan! Tasjan!

  7. Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi – They’re Calling Me Home

  8. Jackson Browne – Downhill from Everywhere

  9. Sierra Ferrell – Long Time Coming

  10. Amythyst Kiah ­– Wary + Strange

  11. Béla Fleck – My Bluegrass Heart

  12. Sarah Jarosz – Blue Heron Suite

  13. The War on Drugs – I Don’t Live Here Anymore

  14. Morgan Wade – Reckless

  15. Hiss Golden Messenger – Quietly Blowing It

  16. /27. (tie) Rodney Crowell – Triage

  17. /27. (tie) Valerie June – The Moon and Stars: Prescriptions for Dreamers

  18. Molly Tuttle – … but I’d rather be with you too

  19. Aimee Mann – Queens of the Summer Hotel

  20. Emmylou Harris and the Nash Ramblers – Ramble in Music City: The Lost Concert

  21. Neil Young and Crazy Horse – Barn

  22. Adia Victoria – A Southern Gothic

  23. Lukas Nelson and The Promise of the Real – A Few Stars Apart

  24. American Aquarium – Slappers, Bangers and Certified Twangers, Vol. 1

  25. Kacey Musgraves – star-crossed

  26. /37. (tie) Tedeschi Trucks Band – Layla Revisited (Live at LOCKN’)

  27. /37. (tie) Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats – The Future

  28. Jesse Malin – Sad and Beautiful World

  29. / 40. (tie) John R. Miller – Depreciated

  30. / 40. (tie) The Black Keys – Delta Kream

  31. The Wallflowers – Exit Wounds

  32. Todd Snider – First Agnostic Church of Hope and Wonder

  33. Courtney Barnett – Things Take Time, Take Time

  34. Emily Scott Robinson – American Siren

  35. / 46. (tie) The Felice Brothers – From Dreams to Dust

  36. / 46. (tie) Various Artists – Broken Hearts and Dirty Windows: Songs of John Prine, Vol. 2

  37. /48. (tie) Various Artists – Highway Butterfly: The Songs of Neal Casal

  38. /48. (tie) Gov’t Mule – Heavy Load Blues

  39. The Flatlanders – Treasure of Love

  40. Christone “Kingfish” Ingram – 662