For Immediate Release
August 6, 2025
With Their New Album Peach Blossom Youth,
Mic Harrison and The High Score Reaffirm their Emphatic Americana Imprint
With their dynamic, determined and descriptive new album Peach Blossom Youth, East Tennessee’s renowned outfit, Mic Harrison and The High Score, take a further leap forward into the Americana environs that have informed their music from the very beginning. With noted producer, Eric ‘Roscoe’ Ambel behind the boards (an artists whose resume includes work with Nils Lofgren, Steve Earle, Joan Jett, Mojo Nixon, Freedy Johnston et. al.), the band found the opportunity to once again mine the distinctive sound they’ve established from the very beginning.
“When Mic Harrison speaks people listen,” Eric Ambel declares. “I really wanted to get his raw conversational truth on the record. When The High Score is hitting on all cylinders, they stand tall behind Mic’s truth. They musically dare you to question him. Make no mistake, there’s a new power in these new tracks, and that power coming from Mic’s voice and his uncompromising band.
In fact, working with a producer of Eric Ambel’s stature gave the band new impetus to mine themes and ideas through a renewed pursuit of promise and purpose. There are definitely a lot of very personal songs on this record,” Mic explains. “At the same time, this is the first album we’ve done that we purposely ran the gamut from some pretty dark subject matter to some otherwise lighthearted material. I hope it’s an emotional ride. No way it would have turned out as good as it did without the production of Eric ‘Roscoe’ Ambel and the playing of The High Score.”
With Mic at the helm on vocals and guitars, The High Score — Robbie Trosper (vocals, guitar), Vance Hillard (bass, vocals), Kevin Abernathy (vocals, guitar, mandolin), and Mark T. Dunn (drums), along with guest musicians Eric Ambel on guitars, keys and vocals and Mary Lee Kortes singing harmonies — found new incentive and inspiration while making an album Mic himself describes as “sonically, the best record we’ve ever made.” That’s evident in each of the album’s entries, from the forward thrust of the autobiographical opening track “Straight Back,” the steadfast drive and determination shared in “Keep Drivin’,” the intensive energy conveyed through “Call the Dogs,” and the relentless rock and clever character description detailed on “Outlaw Papaw,” to the inspired heartfelt ballad “Old Man,” the candid and confessional “A Wino’s Wishes,” and the rollicking twosome “Dallas Sutton” and “Gotta Go.”
A concept album of sorts, the songs are as personal as they are provocative. “‘Scrap Iron Man’ is loosely based on a character from my home town,” Mic says. “Every community has somebody like this, an individual that kind of does his or her own thing, which is why people love to talk about them.”
He admits that very few people might fully understand the backstory behind “Picnic at Shiloh,” but he elaborates regardless. “Back in my younger days, going to Disney World was like taking a European vacation,” he reflects. “But state parks were our deal. At least a couple times a year, the family would load up and head down to Shiloh National Military Park. We weren’t the only ones of course, but our weird little picnic on a battlefield will always remain special to me. You definitely feel something when you are there.”
That said, “Lose You Over This” resonates in another way. This is very personal,” Mic said. “It’s about a person who is close to me and who tried to commit suicide.”
It’s little wonder that the critics have shared their praises since the very beginning. Twangville once noted, “There is something extremely satisfying listening to some straight-forward, guitar-driven rock and roll. The best of it holds no pretense, just an energy that is genuine and invigorating. Mic Harrison and The High Score make that kind of music.”
Then there was this comment from Radio Free Americana, which described an early album as “yet another in a consistently fine string of albums that expertly blends roots rock with elements of bluegrass.”
Goldmine once described one of Mic’s seminal releases as “Easily one of the must-have albums of the year,” while Americana UK proclaimed Mic had created “An album to be savored.” Performing Songwriter offered its own opinion when describing Mic’s music as a blend of blue-collar values, the history of the heartland, and an ample dose of alcohol-soaked reflection.”
Then again, Mic’s homegrown roots and commitment to cause have always been an integral part of his efforts. “Growing up in West Tennessee in the late 80’s, early 90’s, we didn’t know what Americana music was,” Mic recalls. “To us it was just American rock — CCR and John Mellencamp, just to name a couple examples. We were fortunate enough to live within driving distance of the Exit/In in Nashville, and that’s where I found a lot of my musical inspiration, particularly after seeing bands like Jason & The Scorchers, Webb Wilder, Government Cheese and so many more.”
Although he started writing songs while still in high school, Mic was truly able to formulate his interest and intent once he moved to Knoxville, Tennessee in the 1990s. It was there that he joined The V-Roys, pioneers in early Americana realms. Among its own dutiful distinctions was the fact that for a time they served as the backing band for Steve Earle. Mic later served a stint with power pop provocateurs Superdrag before embarking on a solo career courtesy of Pallbearer’s Shoes. His tenure with The High Score has been ongoing since the beginning of the new millennium and their combined input and interaction grows stronger with each new effort.
Peach Blossom Youth offers yet another outstanding example.
– Lee Zimmerman
Release date: October 3, 2025 on Deaf Goat/Real Much Records
BIO (2025)
On April 7, 1862, the morning after the first day of the battle of Shiloh in West Tennessee, it frosted. The peach trees that were on the fields where the battle took place had recently blossomed and fell with the frost, covering the dead bodies of the young soldiers like pink snow. As a child growing up in the 1970s, Mic Harrison had no idea of the significance that Shiloh held in history. He only knew that it was his family’s favorite place for picnics and reunions.
Those memories make up “Picnic at Shiloh,” the final track on Harrison’s new album, “Peach Blossom Youth.” Now a noted singer-songwriter and amateur historian, Harrison feels the full irony of the sweet memories contrasted with the area’s bloody past.
Harrison has been writing songs since he was a high school student in Bradford, Tenn.
“Even early on I hardly ever wrote songs about girls and all that,” says Harrison. “I wrote about life, history… that stuff.”
Harrison moved to Knoxville in the 1990s to join proto-Americana act The V-Roys, and later joined power pop favorites Superdrag before recording his solo album “Pallbearer’s Shoes.” When he teamed up with The High Score early in the new millennium he found the perfect collaborators. The band now consists of guitarists Robbie Trosper and Kevin Abernathy, bassist Vance Hillard and drummer Mark T. Dunn. Harrison’s 20-year collaboration with The High Score has resulted in a stack of albums as well featured spots in music festivals, including Bonnaroo, Rhythm N’ Blooms, and Easyriders Rodeo, and national tours in elegant concert halls, sweaty bars, and listening rooms across America.
To make sure the recording of these new songs were as good as possible, Harrison brought in famed producer Eric “Roscoe” Ambel, whose credits include producing albums for The Bottle Rockets, Nils Lofgren, The Backsliders, and many others, co-leading the Del-Lords and The Yayhoos, as well as playing guitar with Joan Jett and the Blackhearts and Steve Earle.
“Sonically, this is the best record we’ve ever done,” says Harrison.
Nearly all of the songs are about real people – from a West Tennessee character named Bobby Jack, who inspired “Scrap Iron Man” to a Mexican American War soldier in the song “Dallas Sutton.”
“A lot of these songs are very personal,” says Harrison. “It could be a book.”
“Lose You Over This” was written after a family member’s suicide attempt. “Keep Drivin’” was inspired by a beloved niece being kicked out of church because she is gay. “Old Man” is about Harrison’s late father, who died of Alzheimer’s disease.
With their upbeat melodies and energetic delivery, it would be easy to miss the sometimes-dark subject matter of Harrison’s new songs. Yet, that’s what makes this and all of Harrison’s work special. It draws you in and delivers a good time, but if you care to dig a little deeper, there’s plenty more to discover.
– Wayne Bledsoe

– Lee Zimmerman, American Songwriter
– Matt Hickey, Magnet Magazine
