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Joe Henry's Code of the Road
ByJoe Henry
guitar and vocalsHenry's road has taken him across both the literal and metaphorical map of American music. Born in North Carolina, raised in Georgia and Ohio, and coming of age in Michigan, he grew up suspended between North and South, white and Black, rural and urban. This early sense of duality, of living between poles, helped shape his identity and fed a lifelong curiosity. Alongside his brother Dave, he immersed himself in records, films, and books that would later form the bedrock of his creative work.
Over the past four decades, Henry has become one of the most respected songwriters and producers in American music. His solo albums, beginning in the late 1980s, blend literary songwriting with genre-bending arrangements. As a producer, he's worked with artists like

Allen Toussaint
piano and vocals1938 - 2015

Mavis Staples
vocalsb.1939

Solomon Burke
vocals1940 - 2010

Bonnie Raitt
guitar and vocalsb.1949
Rodney Crowell
vocals
MeShell NdegeOcello
bass, electricb.1968

Jon Batiste
pianob.1986
This year he is releasing three of his classic albums on vinyl for the first time, starting with 2007's Civilians (Anti-) in August.
We spoke recently about his love of character-driven songwritingan approach influenced early on by

Randy Newman
pianob.1943

Bob Dylan
guitar and vocalsb.1941
He talks about the influence of Southern gothic writers like Eudora Welty and Flannery O'Connor, his long creative relationship with producer T Bone Burnett, and his deep admiration for (and eventual collaboration with)

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
Through it all, what emerges is a portrait of an artist who strives to hold space for others and for the mystery of the music itself. For Henry, being a producer isn't only about shaping sound, it's about creating a safe environment for truth to emerge. And in a time when the American story feels increasingly fragmented, his work offers something rare: continuity, clarity, and care.
Joe Henry's songs offer a quiet kind of resistancethrough devotion, through poetry, through presence. And, above all, through truthno matter what the facts may say.
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