Photo: Molly Matalon

Waxahatchee duets with MJ Lenderman on the twanging “Right Back To It”, announces new album

Katie Crutchfield aka Waxahatchee will release her new album Tigers Blood on 22 March through ANTI-. The follow-up to 2020’s Saint Cloud is previewed by lead single “Right Back To It”, which finds Crutchfield dueting with MJ Lenderman, who also provides guitar.

Crutchfield says of the song: “I wrote it backstage at Wolf Trap when I was on tour opening for Jason Isbell and Sheryl Crow. I’m really interested in writing love songs that are gritty and unromantic. I wanted to make a song about the ebb and flow of a longtime love story. I thought it might feel untraditional but a little more in alignment with my experience to write about feeling insecure or foiled in some way internally, but always finding your way back to a newness or an intimacy with the same person.”

The song’s twanging guitar and gentle lope suggests a humid atmosphere – enhanced by the boat trip seen in the video – and this perfectly accompanies Crutchfield’s words about love and moving through the motions of a life shared. Crutchfield paints her paranoia in lines like “you come to me on a fault line” and “I get ahead of myself / bracing for a bombshell”, but she finds the solace she needs in her long-term lover: “I’ve been yours for so long we come right back to it”, she sighs; “you just settle in like a song with no end”. Crutchfield’s voice is perfectly pitched; a cry for companionship that resounds across the swamps and is tempered by the warmth of her partner, played perfectly here by MJ Lenderman. “Right Back To It” is a simple but resounding ode to the privilege and perseverance of long-term romance.

Watch the video for “Right Back To It”, directed by Corbett Jones & Nick Simonite, below, or find the track on streamers.


Waxahatchee’s new album Tigers Blood will be out on 22 March through ANTI- (pre-order/save). You can find her on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

She has also announced these tour dates:

April 18 – Kansas City, MO – Uptown Theater ^
April 19 – St. Paul, MN – Palace Theatre ^
April 20 – Chicago, IL – Salt Shed ^
April 21 – Detroit, MI – Majestic Theatre ^
April 23 – Toronto, ON – Massey Hall ^
April 25 – New Haven, CT – Toad’s Place ^
April 26 – Boston, MA – Orpheum Theatre ^
April 27 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Paramount Theatre ^
April 28 – Richmond, VA – The National ^
April 30 – Asheville, NC – The Orange Peel ^
May 1 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium ^
May 3 – St. Petersburg, FL – Jannus Live ^
May 4 – Orlando, FL – The Beacham Theater  ^
May 5 – Atlanta, GA – Shaky Knees Festival
May 6 – Birmingham, AL – Lyric Theatre ^
May 8 – Tulsa, OK – Cain’s Ballroom ^
May 9 – Fort Worth, TX – Tannahill’s Tavern & Music Hall ^
May 10 – Houston, TX – The Heights Theater ^
May 11 – Austin, TX – ACL Live at the Moody Theater ^
May 13 – Phoenix, AZ – The Van Buren ^
May 14 – San Diego, CA – The Observatory North Park ^
May 16 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Palladium ^
May 17 – Paso Robles, CA – Barrelhouse Brewing Co. ^
May 18 – Oakland, CA – Fox Theater ^
May 19 – Sonoma, CA – Gundlach Bundschu Winery ^
May 21 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Depot ^
May 23 – Denver, CO – The Mission Ballroom ^

August 19 – Boise, ID – Treefort Music Hall  %
August 21 – Fort Collins, CO – Washington’s %
August 23 – St. Louis, MO – The Pageant %
August 24 – Madison, WI – The Sylvee %
August 25 – Kalamazoo, MI – Bell’s Beer Garden %
August 26 – Pittsburgh, PA – The Warhol at Carnegie Music Hall %
August 28 – New York, NY – Beacon Theatre
August 29 – South Deerfield, MA – Tree House Summer Stage &#
August 30 – Portland, ME – State Theater &#
August 31 – Accord, NY – Arrowood Farms &#
September 1 – Asbury Park, NJ – Stone Pony Summerstage &#
September 6 – Vienna, VA – Filene Center – Wolf Trap &#
September 7 – Philadelphia, PA – The Fillmore #@
September 8 – Philadelphia, PA – The Fillmore  &+

^ w/ Good Morning
% w/ Tre Burt
# w/ Tim Heidecker
& w/ Snail Mail
+ w/ Greg Mendez
@ w/ Gladie