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Chain Smoking Records

PREORDER Rachel Brooke: This One's For You LP

PREORDER Rachel Brooke: This One's For You LP

Regular price $30.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $30.00 USD
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Rachel Brooke: This One's For You LP

2026, Mal Records

Clear Blue Vinyl

Order will ship on or before April 24, 2026

Raised in Northern Michigan on bluegrass and traditional country, Rachel Brooke grew up playing in her family band, learning early that music was a place to be human. Immersed in discipline, humor, and storytelling, she carried those values into a decades-long career spent on the fringe of country music - choosing craft over trends, substance over spectacle, and artistry over automation.
After stepping back to focus on her mental health, quietly observing the ever changing, and fleeting expectations of the industry, This One’s For You marks a return made with intention and clarity.

Grounded in honky-tonk and classic country forms, This One’s For You pushes back with Brooke’s signature wit and grit. It stands apart through sharp, intelligent writing and unexpected turns of phrase. The title track, “This One’s for You,” is a rallying cry for working musicians navigating an increasingly artificial landscape. “The Ballad of Bald Hill” reflects on sacrifice, identity, distance, and the enduring pull of home. “I Chose Poorly” and “The Real Pretender” bring humor and self-awareness, skewering the absurdities of independent artistry, while When Dube Gets the Crud goes viral the old fashioned way, delighting in vivid, character-driven storytelling rooted in family, resilience, and loss.

Like a true rattlesnake shedding its skin, Brooke continues to evolve, sacrificing the self and the meaningless expectations that no longer fit - leaving behind illusion in favor of instinct. With a self-awareness that only comes from time spent on the long road, Brooke taps into that existential weight of being a working musician in a culture where art is measured instead of felt. She pokes fun at it, grieves it, forgives it, and keeps going. In doing so, she doubles down on independence, storytelling, and the belief that real songs told well, still matter."

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