Ward Hayden and The Outliers Debut Lyric Video for "Crazy Love"
Published
“With a smooth vibe of honky tonk mixed with rock ’n’ roll vibe inspired by artists like Hank Williams, Gene Autry and Johnny Cash, the concept album delves into what it means to leave a small town behind.”
– Rochester Beacon
“Mellow, insightful, calming sounds that allow you to just sit back, relax and let your worries drift away. Like previous albums every song tells a story …’Crazy Love’ is about just that, crazy love. Was it a first crush? First long term relationship? It doesn’t matter, we have all been there to certain degree.”
– NYS Music
Ward Hayden and The Outliers
Debut New Lyric Video For “Crazy Love”
New Album, South Shore,
Out Now
Collection of Original Songs
Explores Life in a Small Town
And Everyday Concerns
With a Style And Sound
That Rocks the Honky Tonks

“Love, crazy love.
Now I’m asking favors and I’m taking drugs.
To escape this crazy love.”
-“Crazy Love” lyrics by Ward Hayden

Released earlier this month on the band’s own Faster Horses Recordings, South Shore, is a 10 song collection that delivers further winning iterations on the band’s “smooth, authentic Honky Tonk, early Rock & Roll vibe that’s incredibly endearing” (Cincinnati City Beat). It’s an album that brings it all back home to the small coastal town of Scituate. MA, some 30 miles south of Boston, where Ward Hayden hails from and returned to five years ago.
The original songs hold deep personal meaning to Hayden, a sentiment that bonds all of the tracks together. “It’s the closest thing I’ve ever done to a concept album,” Ward notes. “I wanted to just recount my experience of growing up in a small town and what it meant and what it took to get out and leave that behind and try to pursue something, chase after something that was and is a dream. I used to joke that my greatest achievement was I got out of here because it was no easy feat.”
South Shore opens with the mission statement of “Write a Song,” followed by observations, memories, and contemplations on the place he hails from, both then and now, on the title track as well as “(Breaking Up with) My Hometown.” Hayden explores such themes as toxic relationships on “Crazy Love,” his place in the world in “Gasoline” and “Things These Days,” and how quickly and constantly things change in “Blink of an Eye. In the wake of a tumultuous time in his life, in “Can’t Wake Up” Ward recounts a prophetic dream he had about the ravages of warfare that chillingly became reality in the conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Being the father of a two-year-old daughter sparked “Hush,” about a mother offering life lessons to her child. And Ward closes the LP with a philosophical meditation on what’s to come that he wrote for his wife, “The Great Unknown.” It’s all set within the band’s “amber-soaked melodies, tight musicianship, and casual elegance,” as The Boston Globe describes their sound.
Soon after starting his band in his mid-20s, Hayden got out of Scituate to Boston, just up the coast. Known as a great American music city, it proved to be an ideal launching pad for his group. Ward Hayden & The Outliers (formerly known as Girls Guns and Glory) are the only act to win both a Boston Music Award for Act of the Year (as well as with six other BMAs) and legendary Beantown radio station WBCN’s annual Rumble.

On their musical journey, Ward Hayden & The Outliers – currently Josh Kiggans on drums and percussion, Cody Nilsen on guitar and pedal steel, and Handsome Greg Hall on bass – have cut albums with such noted producers as as Boston studio legend Paul Kolderie (Radiohead, Hole, Warren Zevon, Morphine, The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Uncle Tupelo) and roots rock guru Eric Ambel (Nils Lofgren, Marshall Crenshaw, The Bottle Rockets, Blue Mountain). South Shore returns them to recording in Hayden’s Atlantic coastal homeland with producer Rob Loyot, who recorded Ward’s first three albums, and who Hayden feels “might be my musical soulmate.”
Hayden’s career playing his “own brand of American roots music that satisfies like homemade apple pie” (Farmington Valley Times) has had benefits and challenges that he both enjoys. “I had a hankering and a desire to have some adventure and to just get out there and see the country and hopefully see the world. I’ve just been traveling around almost non-stop for pretty much my entire adult life,” Ward concludes. “Once I made the decision to do this, I knew it would be a roller coaster. I was obviously hoping for good things to happen, but it’s been ups and downs. For me, it’s been about hanging in there through all aspects of the ride and whether things are going well or when things get tough, not giving up.”
Ward Hayden & The Outliers on Tour
May
26 – Pembroke, MA – Soundcheck Studios
5/27 – Brownfield, ME – Stone Mountain Arts Center
June
3 – Bethlehem, PA – Godfrey Daniels
4 – Union Dale, PA – Arlo’s Country Store
10 – Newburyport, MA – NBPT Brewing 11th B-day Bash
17 – Cohasset, MA – South Shore Arts Festival
24 – Boston, MA – Leader Bank Pavilion
July
1 – Norwich, CT – Rose Arts Festival 2023
2 – Marblehead, MA – Marblehead Festival of Arts
3 – Mystic, CT – Blue Monday Concert Series
11 – Breim, Norway – Stiftinga Norsk Country Treff
14 & 15 – Breide, Norway – Norsk Countrytreff Festival 2023
20 – Bridgewater, MA – Music Alley Concert Series
21 – Salem, NH – Tuscan Village Summer Concert Series
27 – New Shoreham, RI – Captain Nick’s
August
14 – Union, ME – Sunset Concert Series
18 – Heath, MA – Heath Fair
19 – Gloversville, NY – Caroga Lake Music Festival w/ The War & Treaty
26 – Plymouth, MA – Plymouth Waterfront Festival
September
3 – Charlestown, RI – Rhythm & Roots Festival
4 – Salem, NH – Tuscan Village Summer Concert Series
15 – Northampton, MA – The Parlor Room
17 – Boston, MA – City Winery Boston
29 – Fall River, MA – Narrows Center for the Arts
October
20 – Portsmouth NH – The Music Hall
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