The Statesboro Review – “Sweet On Me”

The Statesboro Review - Sweet On Me
The Statesboro Revue brings a soulful swagger to “Sweet On Me,” a track that rolls like a slow Sunday drive with the windows down and the heartbreak riding shotgun. It’s got Southern charm, barroom blues, and just enough outlaw strut to let you know they don’t play by Nashville’s rules.

From the first few notes, “Sweet On Me” lays it down thick — grooving guitars, a whiskey-warm rhythm section, and Stewart Mann’s vocals that fall somewhere between a preacher’s plead and a sinner’s confession. It’s smooth, but with gravel underneath — like something that’s been lived through, not dreamed up.

Lyrically, it’s a bittersweet tale of missed chances and fading affection. “You used to be sweet on me / Now you don’t even look my way,” he sings, not with bitterness but resignation. This isn’t a plea to come back — it’s the slow exhale after the fire’s gone out. And that honesty gives the track its weight.

The production leans into that retro-soul/country blend — organ hums like it’s coming from a dusty chapel, while the guitars drip with bluesy melancholy. It’s the kind of sound that would be just as at home in a juke joint as it would be drifting out of a vintage El Camino stereo.

The music video adds another layer — shot live at Coupland Dance Hall, it’s gritty, smoky, and full of sweat-soaked charm. You feel like you’re right there, shoulder to shoulder with the crowd, cold beer in hand and heartache in the air. No fancy effects, no pretense — just good music played loud in a place that means something.

Final Verdict:

“Sweet On Me” is a throwback in all the right ways — soulful, sincere, and soaked in the kind of heartbreak that only comes with time. The Statesboro Revue isn’t here to chase trends — they’re here to remind us what real country soul sounds like. And damn if they don’t deliver it with style.

Continue reading