Ken Holt’s I Did Not Know doesn’t attempt to be intelligent. It doesn’t should be. It’s sincere, uncooked, and grown-up—qualities briefly provide in a music world obsessive about instantaneous gratification and surface-level sentiment. This can be a tune that comes from a spot most artists keep away from: the lengthy, quiet reckoning that follows a lifetime of doing all of your finest and realizing it wasn’t at all times adequate.
That’s to not say Holt is throwing himself a pity celebration. Removed from it. What he’s doing right here is extra highly effective: telling the reality. The sort that involves you late, typically when it’s too late to repair what’s damaged, however not too late to be taught from it. I Did Not Know is Holt’s approach of proudly owning that second—and providing it up for the remainder of us to take a seat with.
This tune is constructed like the nice Americana and nation information was—earlier than the style received swallowed up by stadium-pop sheen and pseudo-Southern clichés. Holt leans right into a heat, understated groove, one thing that feels nearer to Kristofferson’s Jesus Was a Capricorn than something you’ll hear on fashionable nation radio. The instrumentation is straightforward: acoustic guitar, a heartbeat rhythm, and concord vocals from Mary Kate Brennan that really feel like reminiscence itself. It’s not fancy. It’s not speculated to be. It’s actual.
The lyric is the place Holt hits hardest. “You disappeared like a ghost who’s been wandering for therefore lengthy,” he sings. “I didn’t know that you just had been lonely / thought you solely favored to be alone.” These strains don’t pull punches, however they don’t romanticize the previous, both. Holt isn’t asking for sympathy—he’s telling us what occurred, stripped of excuses. And when he hits the chorus—“I didn’t know all that I do know now”—he’s not simply reflecting. He’s confessing. The perfect songs don’t at all times resolve; they reveal.
What separates Holt from so many singer-songwriters attempting to package deal vulnerability for mass consumption is that he doesn’t write for the algorithm. He writes like a man who’s lived by way of the laborious components—parenthood, marriage, loss, the entire deal—and has come out the opposite facet with tales that matter. Not the fireworks. The gradual burns. The cracks within the basis. The little belongings you miss till it’s too late.
That is what rock ‘n’ roll was at all times speculated to be about—not simply rebel, however revelation. Holt brings that ethos into the Americana area with integrity and grit. The truth that he’s a former rocker, a pastor, and a road-seasoned veteran solely provides to the authority of his voice. This can be a man who’s walked it like he talks it.
I Did Not Know isn’t a blockbuster single. It’s not attempting to be. It’s a tune you develop into. A tune you hear in another way at 30 than you probably did at 20—and once more at 50, and once more at 70. Ken Holt didn’t simply write a tune. He gave us a mirror. And if we’re keen to look into it, we’d simply be taught one thing, too.
–David Marshall
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