Jackson Free Press logo

This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
Note that any opinions expressed in legacy Jackson Free Press stories do not reflect a position of the Mississippi Free Press or necessarily of its staff and board members.

Change has long been the status quo for singer-songwriter BJ Barham of alternative-country act American Aquarium, but rarely has so much happened in such a short span of time.

Since the release of 2016’s “Live at Terminal West,” the North Carolina native got sober, got married and had a child. On the opposite side of that coin, he also lost American Aquarium’s previous lineup, but soon gained a new one in lead guitarist Shane Boeker, bassist Ben Hussey, drummer Joey Bybee and pedal-steel guitarist Adam Kurtz.

That tumultuous time period ultimately inspired American Aquarium’s seventh studio album, “Things Change,” released June 1 on 3CG Records, and what Barham says is his best and most challenging batch of songs yet. The album reaches into new songwriting territory, but it also seems to have reached new fans, reaching No. 20 on the Billboard Top Country Albums list and No. 7 on the Americana/Folk Albums chart, and pushing the band to No. 5 on the Emerging Artists chart, among other rankings.

The Jackson Free Press recently spoke with Barham over the phone to find out more about the band’s latest record ahead of American Aquarium’s upcoming stop in Jackson on Tuesday, Sept. 11.

A lot of artists think their newest album is their best, but you’ve been saying that really frequently about “Things Change.” Why do you feel that way?

Yeah, every artist is egotistical and thinks that the newest thing is the best thing they’ve done and everything that came before that was just the work it took to get to the brilliance of the new record. But for me, you know, this is the first record (where) I got to step out and really write about a lot of things I’ve never written about before. We took a lot of chances on this record, and a lot of the chances paid off.

In the past, I made a career out of writing about my relationships and the road and how the road affects my relationships at home. This record is not really about that. This record is about our country. This record is about former band mates. This record is about my personal sobriety and struggle with addiction. I really branched out on writing this record and took a lot of chances, as far as just opening up. So that’s why I feel like this is my best record, and by “best,” I mean this is the work I’m the most proud of.

When you haven’t written about those topics in the past as much, what was the experience like writing about things that your fans don’t typically tie to your music?

I never underestimate our fan base. I think a lot of artists do, and that’s a detriment to them as artists. I really stand by the fact that your fans are a lot smarter than you think they are, and don’t ever say, “I don’t think my fans are going to get it,” because if they’re fans of you, they’re going to get it. And I trust that. I trust that my fans have taken this journey with me for the last 12 years.

I don’t think this was too much of a surprise for anyone who knows me, who knows me personally. A lot of things changed for me, no pun intended, since our last record. I got married, sober, I had a band quit, I had a band join, we had a presidential election that split our country in half, and I had a daughter.

So anyone who kept up with my personal life was going to realize that, “Oh wow, a lot of tides turned in the last three years for him; I guarantee he’s going to write about it,” just because that’s what I do. My records are kind of these autobiographical snapshots of where I am in life. And so, the true fans, I don’t think this record surprised anybody.

Video

American Aquarium – “Tough Folks” [Official Video]