Album Review – Gavin Adcock’s “Own Worst Enemy”

Country pop (#530.2) on the Country DDS.
He’s country music’s wrestling heel. He’s an incessant internet troll, a living meme, and an embarrassment to himself and everyone around him. If he was a hockey player, he’d be a goon. But as we found out recently, he isn’t even willing to fight anyone. He’s a failed football player who was kicked off his college team for chugging a beer on camera before a game. He’s Gavin Adcock, and on a seemingly weekly basis, country fans have to ask what sin they committed to have this reprobate in their information feed.
Gavin Adcock immediate garners a strong visceral reaction from many in country music, bad or good. Like many of the other failed athletes that eventually made their way into country (Sam Hunt, Jason Aldean, et al), Adcock’s not here to make any sort of bold artistic statement. Music was just the next option on the list to get rich and famous, and not have to work a real job. Even to his most devout fans, the music is decidedly secondary to the “lifestyle” Adcock emits—the excuse to get people to pay attention. The stage antics and online persona is what he’s really selling.
This is all a good thing for Gavin Adcock, because his voice is incredibly thin and indistinct. Whatever his country music “style” might be, it’s mostly forgettable and nondescript. And yet somehow, Gavin Adcock’s music might be one of the least offensive things about him. Sure, this might say more about his personality than it does his songs. But his new album Own Worst Enemy isn’t the worst thing you can hear coming off of Music Row.
Don’t take this gracious musical assessment as a ringing endorsement by any means. But nonetheless, there is some latency between Gavin Adcock’s wild personality, what you expect from his music, and what it actually is. This is not Bro-Country, even though if Adcock had come of age 8 years ago, you can be rest assured he’d be braying about backroads, tailgates, and ice cold beer. There are no trap beats, synth pulses, or rapping in his songs either. Generally speaking, the music is organic, even if not really country in instrumentation.
But of all the offensive things a detractor of Gavin Adcock could enumerate, the entirely inaccurate assessment that he’s some kind of “Outlaw” would perhaps be the worst. Early on it was pretty obvious to Warner Music Nashville that Gavin would never garner attention as a star for the masses, competing for top CMA Awards, or even notable radio play, or that he would ever be able to keep his alcohol consumption in check. So they paraded him out as some sort modern version of Waylon Jennings, even though Waylon would publicly distance from many of the idiotic histrionics that are Gavin Adcock’s calling cards.
Gavin Adcock is simply a vessel to attempt to recapture some of the music revenue lost to the independent/underground swell in country music. The more certain segments of the country public clutch their pearls at the mere mention of his name, the more Adcock and his advertising cronies lean into the bad boy persona. But this is not the 1970s any more. We now know much more about mental health, addiction, and things like the “27 club.” We all know where this 26 year old is headed. But hey, he’s making a lot of folks a lot of money along the way. So at the moment, there’s no incentive to get in the way of it. They’re leaning into it.

Own Worst Enemy is a mild effort, but is just inoffensive enough to blend into the background of a morning commute or a weekend cookout for passive music listeners. It’s part Morgan Wallen, part Koe Wetzel, with just a little bit of the Zach Bryan influence baked into the lyricism at times to make it feel heady and meaningful to an audience that doesn’t know of better alternatives. The recurring themes of making mistakes and not leaning from them color this work throughout, and marry it to the real life Gavin Adcock experience.
That is not to say that the album isn’t without its good moments, especially when it has 24 tracks to find them. The totally acoustic “Heard Headed Heart” shows a level of maturity early on that’s unexpected. “Need To” finds an infectious groove to compliment a clever lyrical hook. These are also two of the three songs on the record not co-written by Adcock, and are the responsibility of Tucker Beathard and others. But they’re decent songs nonetheless.
By calling on a wide cadre of professional songwriters who can help give voice to Adcock’s drunken next day regrets, Own Worst Enemy isn’t entirely terrible. Though the majority of the producer work is handled by Jay Rogers, Brent Cobb and Cobb collaborator Oran Thornton actually handle a track, and Will Bundy who is known for working with more traditional country performers in the mainstream also co-produces some songs.
But make no mistake about it, Own Worst Enemy is a mainstream, major label, Music Row work, with all the earmarks thereof, including rising choruses, sacharrine melodies and turns, and just enough PG-13 language to make it seems unique to the “edgy” Gavin Adcock persona, evoking that bad boy image that all his fans eat up. Other wayward souls love to look up to Adcock as a folk hero of sorts. And even at his best, Gavin Adcock’s voice feels exposed, while the songs come with a very non-live aspect to them, like Adcock’s performances are layered on top as opposed to captured within the instrumentation.
But when the assessments and accounts of Gavin Adcock’s career are registered in the annals of country music, it won’t be the music that garners the first or even secondary mention. It will be the drunken antics on stage, the beefs and call outs of other performers, the arrests, and the narcissistic shitposts disguised as tough guy altruism pandering for applause at other people’s expense.
Gavin Adcock is still a young man. And if he ever wants to rise above his status of a wrestling heel, it will have to be from a redemption story, and an authentic one as opposed to the kayfabe reality he presents in the present tense. And for all those who say, “But hey, this is country music. Drunken antics have been going on forever,” it’s not 1982, and Gavin Adcock is not George Jones. It’s 2025, and Gavin is no more than a country music gadfly until he grows up and proves himself as something different.
6/10
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September 17, 2025 @ 8:17 am
If he’s a heel, he’s a chickenshit heel. One that runs away from fights he provokes. One that knows he doesn’t have the talent to hang with the big boys, so he has to cut corners to get attention. In the wrestling world, this would end with him being squashed in less than two minutes by someone far more popular and everyone moving on, like when the Ultimate Warrior beat Honky Tonk Man for the Intercontinental Title at the first Summerslam. Hopefully his 15 minutes of fame will end soon and cosplay Waylon can go away
September 17, 2025 @ 9:41 am
He’s a failed football player who was kicked off his college team for chugging a beer on camera before a game. If this is wrong, I don’t want to be right
September 17, 2025 @ 12:00 pm
He played at Georgia Southern. Hardly an accomplishment.
September 17, 2025 @ 12:30 pm
well they beat my Gators damn it
September 17, 2025 @ 9:42 am
Who are the big boys?
September 17, 2025 @ 8:21 am
I think his popularity portends the end of our golden age of country music. It would be less worrying if his music was rap-infused bro-country, because that would look more like a flash-in-the-pan relic from days happily gone by. But I think he’s the future. While the internet democratized music and social media initially created an arena for up and coming artists to win a fan base, Gavin Adcock has pioneered a formula of TikTok antics and forgettable, palatable music. He and those that follow will swing the pendulum of mainstream country back toward pop. But I take heart that it always swings back again.
September 17, 2025 @ 9:07 am
I don’t want to predict the end of our current Golden age in country, but otherwise your assessment is very spot on. That is one of the reasons I felt it was imperative I publish this review. If you write this guy off simply as Bro-Country or meaningless pop, you fail to understand the connection he’s making with fans, and how pernicious it can become if used as the mainstream stand-in for “real country music.”
September 17, 2025 @ 10:36 am
Spot on
September 17, 2025 @ 1:15 pm
Nirvana begat Pearl Jam begat Candlebox begat Seven fucking Mary Three. We are nearing the Seven Mary Three phase of the country music revival.
September 17, 2025 @ 8:26 am
Music row: “What if we had a dude who does what Elle King does?”
September 17, 2025 @ 10:07 am
Would otherwise agree, but Elle King is more talented.
Loved your comment when first read it.
Right on target.
September 17, 2025 @ 8:29 am
“Like many of the other failed athletes that eventually made their way into country (Sam Hunt, Jason Aldean, et al), Adcock’s not here to make any sort of bold artistic statement. Music was just the next option on the list to get rich and famous, and not have to work a real job.”
Bingo.
September 17, 2025 @ 10:01 am
I think this is the weakest argument against Adcock. So what if he was an athelete prior to doing music full time. Many succesful artists share that background. How is that a disqualifier more than having rich parents? (Charley Crockett, Parker Mccollum, just to name 2 out of many)
September 17, 2025 @ 10:41 am
Being an athlete doesn’t recuse you from being a musician later in life. Charley Pride is a good example. However, there is definitely an archetype of person who wants to be rich and famous first and foremost, and then tries to do everything they can to achieve this until something sticks. Gavin Adcock feels like that archetype.
September 17, 2025 @ 10:52 am
I believe he truly loves music and being a performer however he’s making unfavorable choices in pursuit of that success. He’s using social media like a whore for fame. He’s the Bert Kreischer of Country music. All these other aspiring artists willing to do whatever it takes for sucess are just more respectable whores.
September 17, 2025 @ 8:30 am
its nice bc anyone who’s into gavin adcock is not really into music and won’t be frequenting this site. Also nice bc if they were here, they wouldn’t be able to read the article
This shit sucks ass. Jeremy pinnell rips
September 17, 2025 @ 8:48 am
The Sean Avery of country music.
September 17, 2025 @ 9:00 am
I’m sure a lot of people can’t differentiate Adock from the musical sewer run-off of Hank Jr, but I like Hank Jr and think he was brilliant. I’m not into whatever this is.
September 17, 2025 @ 9:13 am
Six out of ten.
Better than a sore foot.
September 17, 2025 @ 9:39 am
You knew I’d read this so you threw in the wrestling lingo. Right? 🙂
September 17, 2025 @ 9:51 am
🙂
September 17, 2025 @ 10:30 am
Gavin is Dino Bravo in the sense I don’t give a damn about either of them and never will
September 17, 2025 @ 9:42 am
To me his music doesnt match the antics. A lot of it is slow and mellow. Neither traditonal or bro country. I was expecting a more fast paced rock country vibe but it’s not that. Even though he blocked me on IG for commenting on his fued with Charley Crockett, I still cant help but like the guy. Something enduring about him. I bet he’s fun to hang out with.
September 17, 2025 @ 9:44 am
The album is surprisingly good. He has a sound. Yes its Brent Cobb derivative. That’s a good thing. More country than Zach Bryan and Charlie Crockett, some sonic space with cool brushed snare and steel guitar, honestly, he’d be a favorite of this site if not for the antics.
September 17, 2025 @ 10:08 am
Gavin possesses a great singing vibrato, comparative, I’d say, to Eddie Vedder or Tracy Chapman. I’d even say he is up there with Elvis Presley. Good vibrato ain’t easy.
On his next album when Gavin adds steel, fiddle and a “Roy Buchanan” style picker, he will go number one and dominate the country charts for at least a decade.
That is unless Navy boy, Zach Bryan gets a hold of him.
September 17, 2025 @ 10:53 am
I think your blood sugar is low.
September 17, 2025 @ 11:11 am
Generally curious, who are your favorite modern artists? (Post 2010 atleast)
September 17, 2025 @ 1:20 pm
My favorite modern artists are, in no particular order, Gavin Adcock, Sierra Farrell, Shannon Jae Ridout, Nicholas Ridout, Benjamin Tod and Ashley.of Lost Dog Street Band, Hank III, Colter Wall, Arlo McKinley, Chris Acker, Wayne Hancock.
September 17, 2025 @ 10:28 am
I went from this article to an interview with him and his southern accent is much stronger on the songs than when he talks. That seems affected to me and really makes me feel embarrassed even when I am watching it alone.
September 17, 2025 @ 10:49 am
What stands out to me when I listen to this stuff, as well as to Morgan Wallen’s most recent album, is that they took the wrong lesson from Zach Bryan. Yes, acoustic guitar and sad lyrics are different than what came before, but Zach Bryan is massively successful because he was perceived as authentic (whether he is or not is beside the point). Younger audiences were hungry for something that didn’t seem contrived or produced. But Nashville has predictably done what the industry almost always does and taken the trappings without the substance. The pendulum has swung from weightless lyrics and punchy synthetic rhythms to half-sung half-mumbled declarations of total depravity and same-y midtempo melodies. It’s dull and doesn’t say much, but it “sounds” meaningful. Kind of reminds me of how early grunge brought just a bit of credibility back to rock-and-roll before Candlebox and, later, Creed and Nickelback made bank on a pale imitation.
So maybe Gavin Adcock is Candlebox. And yeah, I guess in that case it could be worse: I don’t wanna know what post-ZB-country Nickelback sounds like.
September 17, 2025 @ 1:15 pm
This is an interesting comment. There is a whole generation of artists who connect to music I can’t relate to at all. Nickleback is an easy punching bag because they put out a lot of crap, but personally I couldn’t stand the Strokes, Modest Mouse, and anything else that you’d catch playing on the Hollister and Abercrombie and Fitch store radios. I hate Mumford and Sons and The Lumineers even more. I think it’s that an entire musical pulse shifted and I cannot relate to how this younger generation connects with music. I didn’t grow up hearing Luke Bryan on the radio. I grew up hearing 90’s Country and older.
September 17, 2025 @ 1:39 pm
Candlebox? I think you meant Puddle of Mudd and Creed. Candlebox actually had some really good musicians and decent songwriting. Not my favorite band, but you gotta look at the character of the characters too. Scott Stapp, Wes Scantlin, and Gavin should start a band called the Knuckleheads.
September 17, 2025 @ 11:15 am
Will make fun of any of my friends that play this guy. You can’t call anyone cosplay or be anymore tryhard than this guy is currently. Everything is forced.
September 17, 2025 @ 11:22 am
Is Hank 33 Gavin’s mom?
September 17, 2025 @ 12:01 pm
It’s music for young people in their 20s still finding maturity and making poor life choices. Much like the music of Wyatt Flores, Hudson Westbrook, and Ty Meyers.