Balsam Range’s “What The Years Do” tops monthly bluegrass chart

June 2, 2023 — After spending two weeks at the top of Bluegrass Today’s weekly chart, Balsam Range‘s latest single, “What The Years Do,” has reached No. 1 on the monthly chart, too.

On “What The Years Do,” the band’s first new single in over a year, the quintet not only offered a song as powerfully moving as any they’ve done, they also introduced acclaimed mandolinist Alan Bibey as the first new member of the group since it was founded over 15 years ago.

“I’m so honored and excited to see ‘What The Years Do’ hit No. 1!” says Buddy Melton, vocalist and fiddler. “It’s just one of those songs I truly felt connected to and I’m so grateful to have the opportunity to record it — and with the best group of guys and musicians. I feel blessed.”

Though the title and its opening verses might cast “What The Years Do” simply as a meditation on the passage of time and the changes in life it brings, there is a deeper theme that reveals itself as the song moves on. A gentle, syncopated opening led by Melton’s fiddle and Bibey’s mandolin gives way to the first two verses, which sound almost like a lament for the disappearance of youth and the accumulation of life responsibilities and lead to a sophisticated yet organic-sounding first chorus:

They’ll put a wallet size of a baby and a wife
Where all your money used to be
They’ll make you realize, they’ll shine a light
On the things you never used to see
Change everything you need
Yeah, that’s what the years do

Yet following a supple instrumental passage that turns once again to fiddle and mandolin, “What The Years Do” takes a deeper, even more heartfelt turn, as Melton delivers a verse that uses down-to-earth language to articulate an insight that speaks a universal truth:

I never was much on that touchy feely stuff, Heaven knows
But it’s just crazy, pretty damn amazing how a heart grows
‘Cause it ain’t nothing for me to say I love you (and to mean it, too)
Yeah, that’s what the years do

The following and final chorus amplifies and extends the acknowledgement of growth, and the final echo that trails away at the end of the song seems to suggest that its lesson will persist through years still to come. All in all, “What The Years Do”is a remarkable song, delivered by a group that knew just what to do with it.

Listen to “What The Years Do” HERE.

About Balsam Range
Balsam Range is Buddy Melton (fiddle, lead and tenor vocals); Dr. Marc Pruett (banjo); Tim Surrett (bass, dobro, baritone and lead vocals); Caleb Smith (guitar, lead & baritone vocals); and Alan Bibey (mandolin). The 2018 International Bluegrass Music Association’s Entertainer of the Year, Balsam Range, has become one of the genre’s most award-winning acts. Since forming in 2007, the group has garnered 13 IBMA awards on the heels of 13 critically acclaimed albums. Balsam Range has left audiences spellbound while headlining major festivals from coast-to-coast, selling out venues across the nation and in multiple appearances at the Grand Ole Opry. The band collaborated with the Atlanta Pops Orchestra Ensemble to record 2 albums, the second of which, Mountain Overture, debuted on the Billboard Bluegrass Chart at #5 and the Classical Crossover Chart at #6. Their album Mountain Voodoo debuted at #4 on the Billboard Bluegrass Albums Chart and remained on that chart for 45 weeks. Three singles from that album reached #1 on the Bluegrass Today Chart, including “Blue Collar Dreams,” which spent three consecutive months at the top. The follow-up album, Aeonic debuted at #1 on the Billboard Bluegrass Chart and spent 46 total weeks on the chart. The album featured hit songs like “The Girl Who Invented The Wheel,” “Get Me Gone” and “Angel Too Soon.” The band most recently claimed the #1 radio chart spots with their singles, “Richest Man,” “Grit and Grace,” “Rivers, Rains and Runaway Trains,” “Santa Barbara” and “Highway Side” all from their latest album (#13 for the band,) 2021’s Moxie and Mettle. In addition to winning Entertainer of the Year, Balsam Range vocalist Buddy Melton won IBMA’s Male Vocalist of the Year and bass player Tim Surrett won IBMA’s Bass Player of the Year in 2018.