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New England singer-songwriter Dan Pallotta is continuing his string of 2024 singles with “End of the Road,” a lonesome, vocal and harmonica-forward exploration of the grace and transcendence that can be found in hitting rock bottom.
“I’m sober myself in a twelve-step program and I remember that fork in the road when I hit bottom—and in recovery, I’ve seen many others arrive at it,” says Pallotta.
“Some choose recovery and some choose death. The bottom is in many ways the foundation of recovery. It’s a critical feature, and I wanted to bring that specific feature to life.”
This eerie yet warm folk song is narrated by the end of the road itself. “He’s seen this all before, a hundred million times with a hundred million addicts,” Pallotta explains.
“He’s impartial, matter-of-fact—just welcoming the addict to his new reality. He passes no judgment. He offers an opportunity to transcend.”
Marc Muller’s intricate banjo playing is layered with piercing harmonica by Pallotta, in and amongst playful additions such as toy piano.
Pallotta chose to evoke a “high-lonesome” sound, imagining this as a song that Johnny Cash could perform which poses crucial questions that arise in the depth of addiction.
“This is the situation you’re in. How do you want to handle it? Is it going to be acceptance or resistance? Grace or defiance?”