With New Concept Album, Jacob Hilton Processes Mental-Health Struggles

Dakota Garrett
With New Concept Album, Jacob Hilton Processes Mental-Health Struggles

Jacob Hilton, a.k.a. Travid Halton, at home in his kitchen, where he enjoys cooking as a form of therapy.

PINK FLOYD'S THE Wall. Sinatra’s In the Wee Small Hours. Beyonce’s Lemonade. Three divergent examples of the album as a cathartic, psychological, conceptual work, meant to be experienced in a single sitting. Houston singer-songwriter Jacob Hilton, 37, who records as Travid Halton, a portmanteau of his mother and father’s names, might balk at being mentioned in such company. (This is a thoroughly unpretentious man, who describes himself as an “archaeologist turned singer-songwriter.”)


Nevertheless, Hilton’s brand-new Obsessions is a low-key though no less powerful contribution to the concept-album genre. Across 10 tracks, Hilton shares his experiences with childhood trauma and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

He’s joined by several H-Town luminaries, including Geoffrey Muller (bassist for The Suffers and Robert Ellis); Will Van Horn (pedal steel player for Khruangbin and Leon Bridges); Matt Serice (trumpet player for Bayou City Funk and Free Radicals); and Ellen Story (violinist for Slow Meadow and The Broken Spokes). For his part, Hilton is heard playing resonator guitar, dobro, steel-string acoustic guitar, banjo, and piano.

Throughout Obsessions, Hilton sings with a quiet urgency and a range of expression perhaps reminiscent of Jakob Dylan or Iron and Wine, but with a voice that is uniquely his own.

Hilton describes the album’s first two tracks as two halves of a whole: “Little Bayou Boy,” a bucolic homage to childhood, and “Blossom,” about his mother, Tracy Hall, in the throes of a psychotic episode. Hall, who died in 2010, was diagnosed with schizophrenia as a child. In 2016, Hilton went to a screening of a documentary about schizophrenia, and was then inspired to finish “Blossom,” which he began at age 15 to express his conflicting feelings about his mother. “The next day, I sat with my guitar and strummed the first few chords of the song, and the first few lines of lyrics just came out effortlessly.”

Hilton has come to manage the debilitating symptoms of OCD with therapy, sessions with a licensed psychologist, and sticking to a daily routine that includes regular exercise and healthy eating.

While Hilton, who is indeed an archaeologist by day, doesn’t have immediate plans to perform Obsessions live, he can imagine eventually playing it at a house concert, with all of the musicians on the album as special guests. In the meantime, his next four-song EP drops early 2025.

Art + Entertainment
Ancient French Wellness Cures Reimagined at Houston’s Escape Spa: The Power of Vichy

Serial entrepreneur and spa visionary LeBrina Jackson

NESTLED IN THE heart of France, the town of Vichy holds a rich history in the world of wellness and hydrotherapy. Acquiring fame for their alkaline springs in the 17th century, the Romans were among the first to recognize the therapeutic benefits of the springs. They established a French spa known as “Vichy,” which still exists today and continues to attract spa-goers from around the world to experience the transformative effects of hydrotherapy.

Keep Reading Show less

Photographer Jhane Hoang with two covers she photographed

ONE OF Houston CityBook’s most beloved photographers was recently diagnosed with stage four cervical cancer. Jhane Hoang has been behind the camera for some of the magazine’s most ambitious shoots — including an overnight shoot at the then-new Weiss Energy Hall at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, and a cold rainy shoot at the Houston Zoo where the crew used a concessions stand as a staging area for hair and makeup.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment

Betty Hrncir, Sidney Faust, Julie Baker Finck

ACTUAL WINTER WEATHER was in the forecast the night of the Winter Ball, benefiting the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation and honoring the Women of Distinction, a festive and fitting detail that sparked a flurry of conversation at the Omni Hotel.

Keep Reading Show less
Parties