Blues-rock unusualist Troy Mercy just released his new debut studio album “Let The Night Begin” and critics have been unanimously singing its praises! Here are but of few of the positive press quotes in thus far…
“While the minimal instrumentation stays raw and focused, Mercy writes sharp songs with changes and hooks that slither around bluesy and indie rock, but stay tethered to his rootsy inclinations. Mercy also boasts a strong, soulful voice, bringing further fearlessness to music that connects on first listen.” – Hal Horowitz, ROCK & BLUES MUSE
“A Place of Our Own” is a proper slice of effortlessly cool throwback rock that finds Mercy adding elements of blues, soul, and glam like a chef adding ingredients to make his own signature dish. Mercy’s vocals seem to levitate over his groovy guitar work, creating a sound that feels simultaneously psychedelic and ready for the late-night club. You can hear plenty of influences from acts like Booker T. Jones and Sly and the Family Stone, as well as revivalist contemporaries like the Black Keys, GA-20, and Patrick Sweany.” – Neil Ferguson, GLIDE MAGAZINE
“This is not polished Americana designed for coffeehouse playlists. It’s late-night rock & roll with grease under its fingernails and amplifier hum still ringing in the walls after closing time. Mercy sounds less interested in preserving tradition than in proving it can still hit hard in 2026. Let The Night Begin doesn’t ask permission to enter the conversation. The album’s 10 songs kick the door open and turn the amps up.” – Preston Frazier, SLANG OF AGES
“While he’s a certified six-string master, the Massachusetts-based musician puts sharp songwriting first. Troy Mercy’s debut full-length, Let The Night Begin, is a fuzz-soaked jolt of raw, vintage-toned rock ‘n’ roll in a loose blues jacket. – ADD TO WANTLIST
“A fuzz-soaked jolt of freedom—‘Traveling Light’ sounds like a lifetime of blues muscle finally cutting loose. Harrison Foti’s drums drive the whole thing forward like a runaway engine, while Mercy’s guitar tone stays gloriously blown-out and unapologetic. There’s no narrative gimmick here—just performance, attitude, and the kind of reckless joy that made rock & roll feel dangerous in the first place.” – THE FIRE NOTE
“The blues-rock landscape is shifting, and Troy Mercy is the one holding the compass. His solo work reveals a songwriter of surprising depth.” – Richard Bolwell, MNPR MAGAZINE
“Think the scrappy edge of The White Stripes or The Black Keys, but with a deeper blues backbone running through it. Let the Night Begin, produced by Tim Carman, leans hard into that mix of rawness built around guitar with enough focus on songwriting to keep it from drifting into empty shredding.” – Klemen Breznikar, IT’S PSYCHEDELIC BABY MAGAZINE
“Built around gritty guitar work and tongue-in-cheek spy film imagery, ‘Compromised Blues (A Spy Goodbye)’ blends blues rock swagger with cinematic tension.” – Pete Francis, BLUES ROCK REVIEW
★★★★ “Let The Night Begin smashes into the mind and lays the foundations for the listener to feel the blessing of favourable mischief, of understanding that the night is not about darkness, it is the absolution that illumination reveals, that the shadows don’t matter if they can be filled with brilliance and the cool wind of radiance.” – Ian D. Hall, LIVERPOOL SOUND & VISION
