Sweet Delusions

Eddy Lee Ryder

Independent release, 2024

http://www.facebook.com/EddyLeeRyder

REVIEW BY: Jason Warburg

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: 01/10/2025

“I want my music to carry multiple emotions, just like every experience,” says the writer and performer known as Eddy Lee Ryder. “Nostalgia, absurdity, humor, and sorrow.” It’s a deft summary of an album—Ryder’s 2024 release Sweet Delusions—that hits that bullseye dead center.

Ryder’s kaleidoscopic singer-songwriter material ranges from country-folk to traditional vocal jazz to classic rock; what binds it all together is Ryder’s unique persona and perspective, born of experience but also infused with stagecraft from the very start. For example: Eddy Lee Ryder is a moniker, a neon silhouette of the outsized persona and attitude that singer-songwriter Liz Brennan takes on when writing and performing.

Ryder has described Sweet Delusions as a breakup album, a catalog of life lessons centered around a friendship that flared brightly before crashing and burning. Each track here is built around Ryder’s penetrating, effortlessly charismatic voice emerging from within a sort of gauzy, dream-state sonic landscape, the kind where everything you want stays just out of reach.

The opening title track sets the tone, framed and arranged like a Motown fantasia co-produced by Phil Spector, complete with pulsing backbeat, heavy echo and sweeping strings as Ryder sings “You’re holding onto her / I’m holding onto sweet delusions.” The message is clear: even self-awareness isn’t always enough to save us from ourselves when we’re in the grip of a crush. my_heart_sings_the_harmony_web_ad_alt_250

Next, Ryder delves further into her self-described “demented Americana” bag of tricks, as “Highwaymen” delivers a thrummy, pulsing number about the aforementioned friendship, complete with the suggestion that they “Take to the sky like Thelma and Louise.” Then “Bad Decisions” presents a laconic, soulful country-folk ballad featuring acoustic guitar and slide accents as Ryder sings: “Don’t say you love me if you’re just passing by… I feel the wild winds blow / And they’re blowing me apart.”

From there she offers a smorgasbord of slightly off-kilter renderings: “Joke Is On Me” is a cantering mid-tempo number drenched in shimmery echo; “Antarctica” features more echo and evocative piano; “Shoop Shoop Shut Up” is a bluesy Motown lament featuring Hammond and a chorus of background vocalists surrounding Ryder’s luminous lead; and “Only Real Cowboy” sketches a loping, countrified story-song.

Mixed in between and all around are a scattering of memorable moments. Ryder sings in the swaying, oh-so-bittersweet “Pennyroyal Tea” that “I was never home to you / You were home to me” (ouch), before returning to the chase with “Simple Touch,” an upbeat entreaty for a little physical affection, as straightforward as its title. Later on, “Smoke and Mirrors” brings a taste of honky-tonk rock and roll to the party as Ryder and her married friends play a game of “the grass is always greener.”

The album finishes with “Country Fair,” dreamy acoustic ballad of longing and missed opportunities. “If I write you a beautiful song, will you call for me today? / I got me a wandering heart that was yours to lock away.” Ryder receives sterling support here and throughout from producer Dave Cerminara (Father John Misty) and longtime FJM drummer / musical director Dan Bailey, along with multi-instrumentalist Daniel Chae (Zach Bryan, Kacey Musgraves) and keyboardists Todd Caldwell (Crosby Stills & Nash, James Taylor) and Dave Shepard.

Sweet Delusions is one of those albums that feels like it takes place in a pocket universe all its own, a series of familiar soundscapes tweaked and reformed around the distinctive, beguiling voice and songs of Eddy Lee Ryder. As its gently kitschy album art suggests, Sweet Delusions offers a ride you won’t soon forget.

Rating: B

User Rating: Not Yet Rated


Comments

 








© 2025 Jason Warburg and The Daily Vault. All rights reserved. Review or any portion may not be reproduced without written permission. Cover art is the intellectual property of Independent release, and is used for informational purposes only.