Ryan Orton’s I’m On The Loose is the kind of country album that feels more interested in mood than perfection. At its best, it delivers genuine emotion, strong melodies, and flashes of sharp songwriting. At other moments, it struggles to fully separate itself from familiar country themes and structures. Still, there’s enough personality here to make the record worth the ride.
The album opens with “All I Really Need is This Guitar Anyway,” a stripped-back introduction that immediately establishes Orton’s blue-collar, independent spirit. It’s not groundbreaking lyrically, but the sincerity in the performance gives it weight. Orton’s voice carries a roughness that works well for material centered around hard living and restless nights. That sense of wandering continues with “Nowhere’s Where I’ll Go,” one of the album’s more atmospheric tracks. The song captures loneliness effectively, though it occasionally leans too heavily on familiar highway-country imagery. Even so, the production keeps things grounded and organic, avoiding the glossy overproduction that hurts a lot of modern country releases.
“My Sunshine” and “Little Man” are where the album starts to show more emotional depth. “Little Man” in particular stands out because it feels personal rather than manufactured. There’s a maturity in the writing that gives the song staying power, and Orton wisely avoids oversinging it.
The title track, “I’m on the Loose,” injects energy into the middle of the album with a swaggering country-rock sound that feels built for live crowds. It’s catchy and confident, though also one of the more predictable songs structurally. Still, it’s hard to deny the track’s momentum, and Orton sounds fully committed to it.

The darker material on the album is more uneven but also more interesting. “Addiction” reaches for emotional complexity and mostly succeeds thanks to Orton’s convincing vocal performance, even if some of the lyrics feel a bit broad. “Black Heaven” creates a strong mood and hints at a more adventurous artistic direction, though the song never quite reaches the emotional payoff it seems to be building toward. “That Body” shifts gears with a lighter, more playful tone. It’s fun, radio-friendly country, though probably not one of the album’s more memorable moments lyrically. It works best as a break from the heavier emotional material surrounding it.
Late-album tracks like “Alone” and “Don’t You Go Lookin in My Eyes” return to heartbreak and introspection. By this point, the album occasionally begins to blur together sonically, but Orton’s voice remains compelling enough to keep the listener engaged. He sounds believable throughout the record, and that authenticity carries weaker moments farther than they might otherwise go.
Overall, I’m On The Loose succeeds more often than it misses. Ryan Orton may not be reinventing country music here, but he doesn’t need to. His strength lies in creating songs that feel lived in and emotionally honest. While some tracks rely on familiar themes and a few moments blend together, the album’s sincerity, solid songwriting, and grounded performances make it an enjoyable and promising release. There’s enough heart in I’m On The Loose to suggest that Ryan Orton has the potential to develop into an even stronger artist moving forward — especially if future releases continue pushing deeper into the darker, more personal territory that works best here.
Reviewed by Eddie Clayton