Album Review – Charley Crockett’s “Age of the Ram”

Western (#512) on the Country DDS. AI = “clean”
Releasing three full-length albums in a year is a pretty ambitious feat. So is releasing a concept album of any kind, especially two in a row like Crockett has done now, and one with 20 tracks like Crockett’s latest, Age of the Ram, even if it includes a decent amount of short interludes. But leave it to one of the hardest working men in music to pull it all off, play a hundred-something dates as well, and never show as much as a wrinkle in his shirt as he takes the stage in front of his name emblazoned in the background.
Charley has touted releasing concept records in the past. That was his claim about 2022’s The Man From Waco. But Charley Crockett likes to claim a lot of things. Any concept tied to mentor James Hand was loose at best. Crockett’s last album Dollar A Day released in August 2025 definitely was conceptualized, however loosely, and resulted in a Grammy nomination in the new Best Traditional Album category, and deservedly so.
Age of the Ram is the third and final installment of what Crockett calls his “Sagebrush Trilogy” following the harrowing story of Billy McLane, and truly fulfills the promise of a conceptualized narrative tying many of the songs together, and revolving themes and characters, even if this doesn’t encompass all the songs. If nothing else, Crockett remains hungry and ambitious, always trying to outdo and challenge himself, and prove he’s uninteresting in coasting off any previous momentum.
Like any good concept album, Age of the Ram comes with some songs that work well autonomously from any greater story arc. “Kentucky Too Long” is quintessential Charley Crockett with that greasy, soul and vintage R&B influence brought to country in a way that makes the animation of the lower extremities almost impossible to resist. “Kentucky Too Long” is destined to become a standard in Charley’s concert arsenal.
“Me & Shooter” might have next to nothing to do with the album’s bigger story, but it’s still one hell of a track with tons of hot licks, reminding you of one of those old Willie Nelson and Family tracks paying tribute to their peers back in the ’70s. Age of the Ram is a Western album overall though, not a country one. Some of the songs that show off the of Charley’s Western side best are the second song, “Lonesome Dove,” and the song about his central character, “Billy McLane.”
Though Age of The Ram is fictional, there is a lot of Charley Crockett in Billy McLane. Singing about running from the past, and running from the law came in sharp focus for Crockett and his fans recently when he tried to cross the Canadian border on tour as he’d done multiple times before but was denied due to a previous felony charge for marijuana. Being pursued by a syndicate and judged by the rest of society is something Charley has experienced first-hand.

Along with recalling his personal escapades with producer Shooter Jennings, Age of the Ram has another sidebar in the song “I Shot Jesse James,” set in a time much earlier than the rest of the record, telling the story of Robert Ford who killed Jesse James in 1882 for a $10,000 reward. Incidentally, the killing happened on April 3rd—the same day Age of the Ram was released. Little Easter eggs like this can be found throughout the Charley Crockett catalog.
But in some respects, the Old West notions of Age of the Ram are what allows the album to meander a little bit, if not outright bog down and become boring in some stretches. To build out his narrative and primary character, Crockett does a lot of back filling, which doesn’t always result in the immersive, cinematic experience intended, and instead challenges your attentiveness. You’ve seen some share that the 15-song Dollar A Day is a tighter record, and that’s probably a fair assessment.
One of Crockett’s greatest strengths is fusing classic American genres seamlessly together, with country being the primary influence, but weaving blues and R&B into it. Aside from “Kentucky Too Long,” the Western aspect of Age of the Ram doesn’t allow for this type of sonic exploration. And as is very often the case with Charley Crockett records, the perspiration gets ahead of the inspiration of some songs, resulting in some weak writing as opposed taking the time to allow the lyrics to really marinate and be refined.
Charley Crockett has already been out there saying he’s done with his next album. Sources say he’s been in Clovis, New Mexico recording at the old Norman Petty place that Buddy Holly helped make famous, as well as Shooter’s place in La La Land. It remains a fair question if spending more time on less songs would end in better results for Crockett. His albums are never bad, but you crave more body and consistency from an album like Age of the Ram.
The saving grace is that Age of the Ram does comes with a good handful of very strong tracks that you sense Crockett will be playing for many years to come, even if you have to dig or be patient to find them. This also is one of those albums that turns more favorable with subsequent listens, and the second half feels stronger than the first, so patience is important with this one.
Charley Crockett has become even more polarizing than he was previously during the rollout of his Sagebrush Trilogy via strong political statements, mixing it up with Gavin Adcock, and being called to the mat by Paul Cauthen, who incidentally release his own new album on the same day (Book of Paul). The authenticity questions will continue linger, and now being joined in by knee-jerk reactionaries, running down whatever Charley Crockett does.
But Age of the Ram is an album about persevering from the ever-present burden and pursuit of judgement, and trying to holding on to yourself amid the noise you’re surrounded by. In the last year, Crockett’s words have sometimes gotten ahead of him, as has his ambition. But he’s never stopped putting in the work. He’s never taken anything for granted. He takes the doubts and criticisms he receives and uses them as fuel and motivation. And just like Billy McLane, he remains one step ahead of his adversaries.
7.9/10
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Stream/Purchase Age of the Ram

April 6, 2026 @ 7:50 am
Thought this album was Charley channeling his inner Willie. Agree that ‘Me and Shooter’ sounds as if it could have been pulled straight from a ’70s Willie album. And it goes without saying, but strong ‘Red-Headed Stranger’ vibes from this one, although the narrative is a little less cohesive.
I appreciate this effort and think this is a worthwhile addition to his discography, but eager to hear more of that Country/R&B/Soul blend that first propelled Charley to stardom.
April 6, 2026 @ 10:24 am
I kinda felt more of a “Tougher Than Leather” vibe from this one (an album I love, by the way.) I’d love to hear another Lil G.L. album next, maybe R&B/soul like you said.
April 6, 2026 @ 7:53 am
Paul Cauthen’s new album is better.
April 6, 2026 @ 8:04 am
Paul cauthens seems like a fraud, i mean the shaboozey collab ,not my cup of tea
April 6, 2026 @ 8:06 am
There will be a review of the Paul Cauthen album soon.
April 6, 2026 @ 8:02 am
Charley Crockett is the Jesse Welles of Sturgill Simpsons.
April 6, 2026 @ 8:15 am
Gavin Adcock should release a concept album about a early 20-something born into wealth who attends art college and travels abroad and who ultimately faces adversity while pretending to busk in New York and Austin.
April 6, 2026 @ 8:28 am
Charley Crockett should release a concept album about how chirpy online commenters bring up embellished details of his past to attempt to undermine his current music without even giving a passing notion to the music itself, constantly pursuing him for previous mistakes. Oh wait, that’s kind of what “Age of the Ram” is.
April 6, 2026 @ 8:59 am
He rode his own ass into the online drama. I just find it amusing.
April 6, 2026 @ 8:40 am
Is this meant to be a diss on Charley? Because that’s an insanely stupid statement if it’s implying what I think it is. Charley was absolutely not born into wealth, Branton Crockett (his father; still alive & working as a general contractor at his concrete company in Irving) & Charlie Crockett Sr. (his grandfather; passed in 2019 at the age of 94) were the only somewhat semblances of wealth in his family. Branton was gone by about the age of 4 at a minimum and Charlie Sr. was just his grandfather, he wasn’t involved in Charley’s life much at all. They owned a concrete company with Charlie Sr. later owning a ranch starting in the early 1960s in East Texas. Charley didn’t grow up around any of that, because he came up with mother Jan until he left when he was about 18. There’s pictures of the trailer Charley grew up in, & he never attended college on top of all of this. All of this stuff is very much on record, there’s photos of him busking on the streets in 2004-2008, & even more videos by the time 2009 rolls around all over the place if you know where to look on YouTube, Facebook, & the like. You’re telling me a so called “born into wealth” pretended to busk and just pretended to dress like he was homeless for an entire decade+ just so he could finally talk about it on record about 15+ years later? Get on somewhere dawg.
April 6, 2026 @ 9:06 am
You probably think his 1800’s Outlaw schtick is real too.
April 6, 2026 @ 9:17 am
Strait like George Strait? The guy who never wrote a single song in his entire career, and never actually was a rodeo star? You’re a fool. And CC is king.
April 6, 2026 @ 10:03 am
Common misconceptions from the Americana crowd. We get this take every now and then in SCM land. George Straits legacy is enormous in Country music. Over 50 number 1 hits, a recording career starting in the early 80s up to today. Strait is a legendary voice and a bandleader and a superstar. He didn’t need to write songs at all. He had the best writers writing them for him. His voice, charisma, presence, drive, musicianship, articulation, phrasing, sense of melody, album production, band talent, leadership and business acumen have put him where he is. Most Americana and Alt-country fans who are very late to the party with Country Music fail to understand the history of Country music and how the industry traditionally works. Songwriters thrive by writing great songs, not subpar ones as so many Americana and Alt-Country folks do. They make a living by having Entertainers with superior vocal and presentation talents sing the songs. In turn the entertainers make a career entertaining, people. Its been an entire eco-system. George Strait has had some of the biggest songs in Country Music history, and certainly his catalog is a treasure trove of great American music. His fan base is pretty vast and most country people consider him unofficially the King of Country Music.
Certainly, some of the greats wrote songs, that’s not in dispute. And we all admire them much, but we don’t see someone like Strait as inferior, any more than we think Sinatra, Elvis, and most of popular music stars of the last 70 years or more are inferior. What about all those great Soul and R&B and Doo-Wop bands of the past? 90% or more of their music was written by songwriters. It is what it is, if its not your thing, so be it. But you should at least understand the music industry history a bit and consider how many entertainment superstars didn’t pen their own material. And why do you de-value the power of the human voice as somehow lesser a talent than a guy or gal who write words down on a piece of paper? Where is that snobbery coming from? Some pretty great songwriters cant sing a note and on their own merits they could never be stars as they lack vocal chops and the ability to mesmerize an audience. Its different skillsets.
Charley Crockett is a decent entertainer, but his voice is extremely limited and nowhere near on par with the greats like George Strait, not even close. His songwriting is ok, he’s written some good ones, but zero hits of any kind and his legacy at this point wouldn’t begin to compare to George Strait in any way shape or form. Even mentioning him in the same sentence as Strait is laughable.
April 6, 2026 @ 9:28 am
Nice to see you couldn’t disprove a single point I made, because you know you’re wrong. Keep Gaggin Onacock. Or I mean Gavin Adcock. Something like that.
April 6, 2026 @ 9:32 am
The Charley Crockett backstory discussion happened on another article. I don’t feel like wasting my time. I’ve said multiple times on other posts that I’m not a Gavin Adcock fan. You’re way too big of a vagina to have the handle “Hoss”
April 6, 2026 @ 9:33 am
And many of the rock bands don’t actually worship Satan. Tupac went to an Arts school and studied ballet. What’s your point? At the end of the day they’re entertainers. You can dislike his music and art, but many others enjoy it. Why come here purposefully to just shit on him every time his name is mentioned? Where did Charley Crockett touch you?
April 6, 2026 @ 9:57 am
I made a comment about his fabricated backstory that is constantly used to back up his legitimacy as an artist. I like some of his music but when he started playing the drama queen and attacked other artists as inauthentic – I find calling it out fair game. Since we aren’t talking about rap artists – beefs between country singers won’t end with murders…even though I’m also supposed to believe Charlie is nearly as black as Tupac.
My main annoyance is that I am expected to get in line and just believe it because “he’s that good”….even though it’s all these outside fabrications that gave him the original elbow room to be a shit vocalist yet still have a career.
April 6, 2026 @ 9:31 am
I’ll be honest, I haven’t followed the “Charley Crocket online controversy” all that closely, but I have a hard time holding his background against him. At the end of the day, the content and quality of the song is what matters. A “cool” backstory can potentially enhance that, but not essential to me enjoying a song.
I have used this example before, but “King of Oklahoma” by Jason Isbell is a great song – even though Jason Isbell isn’t a pill addict former construction worker from rural Oklahoma.
April 6, 2026 @ 12:42 pm
Charley Crockett has been pretty open about portraying an image. Can’t say the same about Gavin and his fake outlaw, wannabe Waylon shtick. It’s interesting how the Jennings’ family legacy is so firmly backing the people Adcock sets himself against – Crockett and Benjamin Tod.
April 6, 2026 @ 8:52 am
I had kind of forgot about this one, being a little busy n all, i dont usually do that with charleys records. I will give it a listen tonight when i get off work. Trigger has usually been fair with his reviews of charleys so i dont doubt what hes sayinh here. Charleys last album is great so this one being just good doesnt surprise me, he tends to go like that from album to album. His album before that wasnt as strong as visions of dallas which itself was better than the one before,, all my opinion of course. So im sure i will find this at least fine. Far as his opinions i dont listen to him for that.
April 6, 2026 @ 9:10 am
I think this is Charleys best album or at least the better of the three in the trilogy. ts more western and less R&B. Tells a cinemtic story and just flat out rocks. “Crazy Woman Ridge” “Fastest Gun Alive” “Kentucky Too Long” are all absolute bangers live. Nothing on “Dollar a Day” comes close to those or “Lonesome Dove” IMO. His Stubbs show was the best concert I have seen in years.
April 6, 2026 @ 11:26 am
That Stubbs gig was indeed something else.
April 6, 2026 @ 10:08 am
A very accurate album review. For me, “Dollar A Day” remains the best album in the Sagebrush trilogy. And while Charlie Crockett doesn’t make a truly bad album, this album lacks the stylistic diversity and dazzling production brilliance that made “$10 Cowboy” such a standout. The moods, arrangements and compositions of the songs are a little too similar for such a meandering, expansive album. But the album definitely becomes more intriguing with repeated listens. Overall, I think Charley Crockett sounds a bit weak and weak on the Shooter Jennings productions.
April 6, 2026 @ 10:32 am
Having been a fan of Charley for awhile, this may be my least favorite album. It does blend together, I think it would be hard to name the majority of the songs because they are so similar. Shooter Jennings isn’t my favorite producer. He isn’t bad necessarily, Turnpikes album was amazing, but over its def hit or miss with him. I don’t know this Island record move from Charley I feel like has changed his sound and I liked his earlier tunes so much better.
April 6, 2026 @ 10:13 am
Unfortunately, you know the music is still good when the personal attacks come flying immediately .
As much flack as Shooter caught for “Cat in the Rain”, it’s only right to give him his flowers CC. The duo’s work on this trilogy has been awesome.
I’ve had “My Last Drink of Wine” and “Kentucky too Long” on repeat all weekend.
Don’t agree the 7.9, but I understand the reasoning. The album definitely drags in places with the half dozen interludes.
April 6, 2026 @ 12:47 pm
And I don’t think Shooter deserved that flack, Turnpike were clearly driving those creative choices and wouldn’t have released it as is if they weren’t happy with the direction. I think I read somewhere (maybe here?) that they were trying for a more commercial success and reach, which you can’t blame them for, they deserve it and had years of hiatus to make up for.