
Eric Paslay. Photo: Joseph Llanes
Singer-songwriter Eric Paslay, known for the radio-friendly grooves of songs like âFriday Nightâ and âSong About A Girl,â as well as the smooth, soulful âShe Donât Love You,â will take fans deep into the earliest moments of the album-making processâsongwriting–with his new five-song digital release The Work Tapes, which is available today (Friday, July 28) on various digital outlets.
Paslay, who has also constructed hits for Lady Antebellum, Jake Owen, Eli Young Band, and Rascal Flatts, found he still had plenty of his own songs to mine while assembling songs on the follow-up to his 2013 debut projectâa catalog of about 1,500 songs.
âWe havenât made it through all of them honestly,â Paslay tells MusicRow. âWeâve made it through maybe half of them, so if people dig what we are doing with the work tapes, weâve got plenty more to share.â
Instead of letting old acoustic recordings go forgotten, Paslay and his wife Natalie, who also works in music publishing, sifted through older work tapes and found among them five makeshift acoustic recordings, often created just moments after the songs were written.
âThese songs didnât fit with the album Iâm making, but they sounded so good, I wanted people to hear them,â Paslay says.

âBack Home To You,â finds Paslay and co-writer Carey Ott trading harmony lines while Ott’s electric guitar work complements Paslayâs acoustic pickings.
âItâs a sweet song of us traveling and a lot of people travel for work, so lines like Iâll pick a different colored flower from every field I pass and bring it back home to you,â itâs just saying Iâll share the journey with you when I get back. It could be a kid or something, too. I donât have kids yet, but a father might share that with his kids.â
Amy Stroup co-wrote and provided harmony vocals on âAmarillo Rain,â which she and Paslay wrote in about 45 minutes.
âSheâs from Abilene and I was born in Abilene but I think we just figured Amarillo sings better. Amarillo sings so beautifully. I think rainâs more precious in Amarillo than in Abilene, but donât tell the Abileners I said that,â he quipped.
The majority of the songs were written and recorded at the former Cal IV building on 19th Avenue. Spirit Music Group acquired Cal IV in 2014. âItâs one of the last-standing old houses over there on 19th avenue, between all the condos,â says Paslay. âso Iâm glad itâs still there. Itâs cool to still have the building where all the songs were written and recorded.â
âLet Go,â one of the oldest recordings on the release, was penned six years ago with Dylan Altman and Rose Falcon. At the time, Paslay was promoting his very first major label single, âNever Really Wanted,â to country radioâand it wasnât going well.
âThe day I wrote âLet Go,â was the day I found out âNever Really Wantedâ was dying at radio, and you have a little disappointment that it didnât work out. I donât think I was completely broken hearted, but you know, you put your heart and soul into finally getting a record deal and trying to get songs to work and you want them to work so badly, and also you think, âThe world is over. My first single didnât go to No. 1.â But then you realize, âNo, this is the first stage, itâs all good.â But that day we just tried to channel a disappointment of the outcome of something into something people can relate to, to a love relationship. Now, listening to it six years later, you go, âYeah, that did hurt, but what a beautiful song.ââ
Paslay would go on to pen his own Top 5 hit, âFriday Night,â with Falcon, and pen Jake Owenâs âBarefoot Blue Jean Nightâ with Altman.
Fans wonât have to wait long for music from Paslayâs forthcoming full-length sophomore album. He anticipates a new single to release later this year, and heâs well on his way to having the full album completed.
âI think weâve got one more recording session left, and weâve been overdubbing and cutting vocals. I have plenty of songs. We went in and recorded about six songs and I was like, âThere are four singles in here for sure and the other two are just going to be great live,â says Paslay. âThen we wrote five more songs that were like, âThese need to be recorded.ââ
For now, Paslay is excited to give fans a glimpse into the earliest stages of the album-making process.
âI think they are special songs and thereâs that âit factorâ magic in a work tape that I think only the business even knows exist. So itâs cool to let people kind of go behind the scenes to find out this is how a song gets born.â
The Work Tapes Track Listing
Less Than Whole (Paslay, Big Kenny)
Amarillo Rain (Paslay, Amy Stroup)
Back Home To You (Paslay, Carey Ott)
Come Back To This Town (Paslay, Dean Alexander)
Let Go (Paslay, Dylan Altman, Rose Falcon)