Eighteen Mile’s debut album Peace Be Still brings bluegrass gospel’s most compelling new voices into focus

AMY TURNER

They grew up inside someone else’s ministry. For years, the five young musicians who now call themselves Eighteen Mile built their chops and shaped their faith on the road with the Steve Pettit Band, learning what it meant to play music in service of something larger than themselves. It was formative, honest work. But it wasn’t entirely theirs.

“As a band of songwriters, this album is special,” says Carson Aaron, one of the group’s founding members. “It’s the first project we’ve worked on where we’ve written almost every song.”

That shift in ownership, from interpreters to authors, is what makes Peace Be Still, the group’s debut for Mountain Home Music Company, feel like more than just a promising first record. It feels like an arrival.

Formed in South Carolina by Aaron and his partner Savannah, alongside siblings Jack and Hallie Ritter and vocalist Emily Guy, Eighteen Mile signed with Mountain Home in the summer of 2025. The label’s A&R Director Jon Weisberger wasn’t hedging when he described their appeal. “Eighteen Mile’s distinctive identity and commitment to their vision deeply impressed us,” he says. “We’re excited to help bring their music to a wider audience.”

That vision is already part of Bassist Hallie Ritter’s lead single “Above the Clouds.” It has become a reliable presence on the Bluegrass Today gospel chart, followed by Aaron’s “What Mercy Means” and a luminous take on Kristyn and Keith Getty’s “Living Waters.” Each release has built momentum in the way that matters most in this corner of the music world: steadily, genuinely, without shortcuts.

Produced by Andy Leftwich, Peace Be Still carries the emotional weight that only comes from lived experience. The arrangements are polished without feeling laboured, and the performances carry a confidence that doesn’t announce itself. Whether the band leans into straightforward bluegrass or lets the arrangements breathe into something closer to contemporary folk, the result is music that feels at home in both the church hall and the festival field.

The album’s title track is perhaps its centrepiece. Written and sung by multi-instrumentalist Jack Ritter, with Rob Ickes contributing resonator guitar work that is as sympathetic as it is technically masterful, the song crystallises everything the band is reaching for. Its lyrics trace a prodigal arc familiar to anyone who has taken a longer road back to themselves, and arrive at a refrain that functions almost like a breath:

“Peace be still” He says to me / Grace unmeasured, boundless, free / Keep me Lord from unbelief / Let me rest in perfect peace.

The rest of the album moves through doubt overcome by faith, fear quieted by the certainty of salvation, and the recurring recognition of grace that costs the receiver nothing but demands everything in return. Two covers round out the set: a tender treatment of Ron Block’s enduring “He’s Holding on to Me” shows the band’s roots, while “Living Waters” confirms they can bring reverence to someone else’s song without losing their own voice in the process.

“We know the stories behind each song because they are our stories,” Aaron says. “The common thread through all these songs is the grace of God that has transformed our lives. In several of the songs, you’ll hear a clear invitation to consider His grace; we offer that invitation because each of us have heard God say to our souls, ‘Peace Be Still.’ We hope you find the peace of God in this album.”

There is something quietly remarkable about a group of young musicians who spent their early careers playing other people’s music and emerged not bitter or impatient, but grateful and ready. Eighteen Mile didn’t need to reinvent bluegrass gospel. They simply needed to find the words for what they already knew to be true.

Peace Be Still is out now on Mountain Home Music Company.

Eighteen Mile shares new song about Biblical story and personal faith

TEXAS GOSPEL VOLUNTEER

Mountain Home Music Company artist Eighteen Mile has released their second single after finding success with their first release. The young five-member group put out “Above The Clouds” in September, and that song has reached the top of the Bluegrass Today Gospel chart multiple times. Now they have followed up with “What Mercy Means.”

Carson Aaron, who plays multiple instruments for the band, wrote the new song and performs the lead vocals. He said the song came from thinking about a story in the book of Exodus, chapter 34, where Moses went up Mount Sinai to meet with God.

What Mercy Means β„— 2025 Mountain Home Music Company Released on: 2025-11-14

Aaron explained that the Bible describes the mountain as dark and frightening during that meeting. The text mentions earthquakes and thunder happening because God was present there. He wanted his song to express the contrast between a powerful and holy God meeting with a person who is not holy.

The song connects that ancient story to Aaron’s own life. He said that as a person who has sinned, he deserves punishment when standing before a holy God. However, he experiences mercy from God each morning instead.

The song features musical work from fiddler Savannah Aaron, who plays a thoughtful melody line. Sometimes she plays alone, and other times banjo player Jack Ritter joins her with quieter accompaniment. Ritter and Emily Guy provide harmonies that support the chorus Aaron wrote.
Andy Leftwich produced “What Mercy Means,” just as he did with the previous single. Leftwich is known for his work playing fiddle and mandolin. The song fits within the tradition of bluegrass gospel music that has been popular for many years.

People can now listen to “What Mercy Means” on streaming services. The song is available in Dolby Atmos spatial audio format on Apple Music, Amazon Music, TIDAL and throughout the day on Texas Gospel Canada.

Eighteen Mile releases debut single,”Above The Clouds”

SPECIAL: MOUNTAIN HOME MUSIC COMPANY

August 29, 2025 β€” Newly signed to Mountain Home Music Company, bluegrass gospel quintet Eighteen Mile took shape when young musicians performing in the ministry-supporting Steve Pettit Band felt called to seek their own professional path after wrapping up an album with producer Andy Leftwich, who recommended them to the label’s attention. For their debut Mountain Home single, the group presents “Above the Clouds,” a gently flowing meditation on the blessing of assurance.

“I wrote ‘Above the Clouds’ during a season when I was wrestling with uncertainty and learning to trust God more deeply,” says the song’s lead vocalist and Eighteen Mile bassist, Hallie Ritter. “The song became a reminder to myself that no matter what we face β€” doubt, anxiety, or pain β€” God is steady and present above it all. I wanted the music to feel hopeful, something that lifts listeners up and reminds them that the sun still shines above every storm.”

Bandmates Carson Aaron (guitar, mandolin) and Emily Guy complement Ritter’s confident voice on the chorus’s elegantly phrased simplicity:

This old world can’t hold me down, I’ve got another life I’ve found
And a greater God
This old man can’t change my mind, I know the sun will always shine
Above the clouds

Eighteen Mile’s other multi-instrumentalist, Jack Ritter, offers some delicate guitar picking that underlines the tranquillity of that other life, while fiddler Savannah Aaron delivers the arrangement’s signature figure that punctuates the song from beginning to end. The combination of vocal strength, sympathetic instrumental work and well-crafted writing exemplified by “Above the Clouds” make Eighteen Mile artists to watch β€” and to listen to.

Says the group, “We hope this song is an encouragement to listeners in all areas of life who may be dealing with clouds of doubt, pain, and anxieties. The sun will always shine above the clouds.”

“Above the Clouds” is streaming in Dolby Atmos spatial audio on Apple Music, Amazon Music and TIDAL. Listen to it HERE.