FOR THE LOVE OF COUNTRY MUSIC
- Mar 30, 2015
- 2 min read
On Towson’s metropolitan campus, there doesn’t appear to be much of a connection between the surroundings of students and the pastoral landscapes described in many country songs.
However, the campus made room for country music lovers on Sunday night in Paws when the Campus Activities Board (CAB) invited artists Love and Theft … to take the stage.
…

Traveling alongside… is 22-year-old country artist Joel Crouse, who has been performing with Love and Theft since October. Crouse took the stage as the opener for Love and Theft to play songs from both his album and new songs that have not been officially released yet.
Although he only released his first album “Even the River Runs” last August, Crouse said that most of the songs featured on it were finished roughly four years prior to their release. Since that time, Crouse’s life has changed drastically as he has moved out of his parents’ home, secured his record deal and begun traveling the country on tour.
“By the time the record label wanted to release it I had kind of already moved on from that record, which is weird to say,” Crouse said. “It’s still always going to be a part of me.”
Because of this, Crouse hopes that his newer music will help him to connect with his audiences more. He explained that the music he is writing now showcases a new but similar style, and contains lyrics a more personal message.

“My set now is probably the most personal that it has ever been,” Crouse said. “I play songs that I haven’t recorded, I play songs that I have recorded on my last record, I play covers, but mostly I just try to tell my story throughout the whole show, the good decisions and the bad ones.”
Like Love and Theft, Crouse also said that he enjoys playing at colleges and universities because of the energy in the crowd and the open-mindedness of that generation towards new styles of music.
“I really love playing colleges actually. One, it’s my peers and two, y’all can rock out,” he said. “I like our age group, and playing colleges is just probably one of the best things about what I get to do because I just relate with them so well, and I see people relating to my music and my show as well.”
Crouse also added that with his newer and more personal music, he hopes to show college students and his peers that, “there is more to life than Chevy trucks, tan lines and Fireball.”






![The Tennessee Life || CONCERT REVIEW: JOEL CROUSE [Lima, OH]](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/678a4a_761e5c4422474dd1b9ef08dfbf1bc795.jpg/v1/fill/w_187,h_250,fp_0.50_0.50,q_30,blur_30,enc_avif,quality_auto/678a4a_761e5c4422474dd1b9ef08dfbf1bc795.webp)
![The Tennessee Life || CONCERT REVIEW: JOEL CROUSE [Lima, OH]](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/678a4a_761e5c4422474dd1b9ef08dfbf1bc795.jpg/v1/fill/w_74,h_99,fp_0.50_0.50,q_90,enc_avif,quality_auto/678a4a_761e5c4422474dd1b9ef08dfbf1bc795.webp)












Comments