Album Review – Hayden Baker’s “Alive & Well”

Traditional Country (#510) on the Country DDS.
It’s time you graduate from “never heard of him” or “sounds familiar” to “he’s my new favorite traditionalist” when it comes to fielding queries about Hayden Baker. His new album Alive & Well is as good of an entry point as any, and it doesn’t hurt that it’s super easy to warm up to from the very first twangy note.
Baker’s one of these multi-tool traditional country up-and-comers that you can’t get enough of once you’re initiated. He’s an incredible guitar player. Brad Paisley’s on record saying Hayden’s his “new favorite guitarist,” which is no faint praise. Brad might be a little bias though. Just like Paisley, Hayden Baker plays a custom G-Bender Telecaster, which allows Baker to bring that extra element of twang to tracks.
Hayden Baker won “Musician of the Year” for his guitar skills at the Texas Country Music Industry Awards back in his home state earlier this year. With his new album Alive & Well though, he’s out to prove that he can’t just pick ’em. He can write and sing ’em too. Those who’ve been following Hayden for a while don’t need convincing of this. His song “Is It Cold In Oklahoma” made waves on the SCM Top 25 Playlist previously, as did the opening single to this new album “Home Into a House.”
Along with a heavy dose of twang, Hayden Baker songs come with super heavy hooks that snag your lower lip and won’t let go. Co-writing all the songs on the new album, it really is a quality specimen of traditional country songwriting nearly cover to cover. And by not expending all of his focus on guitar playing, the singing on Alive & Well stands out as well.

You’re caught a bit off guard though when Hayden slips in a few more contemporary-styled moments on this album. The second song “What Part Of No” will become one of your next favorite songs right out of the box. But when he transitions into a little programmed portion in one of the final chorus runs, you think to yourself, “Did I just switch over to country radio?”
The electronic drums that begin and bisect “I Can’t Fix Everything” will also be off-putting to many of the traditional country fans this record might otherwise appeal to, while the album might be way too traditional to find favor with contemporary audiences.
But if anyone earns a hall pass to put a few radio-friendly elements in a song or two, or the latitude to try and broaden the appeal of traditional country, it’s Hayden Baker. Once you roll up on “I Had a Headache Once,” all other trespasses are forgiven. And for those looking to hear what happens when Hayden’s allowed to to go wild on the Telecaster, make sure to listen all the way to the end of the final song “Country Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere.”
The last song says it all. With so many young folks figuring out how to make a living off of traditional country music, and figuring out way to help broaden the audience and keep it cool, the country resurgence will continue on thanks to artists like Hayden Baker, and albums like Alive & Well.
8.1/10
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Stream/Purchase Alive & Well
October 17, 2025 @ 7:34 am
i’ll give this a listen, but Leon Majcen just dropped the album of the year today so it ain’t gonna be easy to turn that off.
October 17, 2025 @ 9:40 am
Just tried the first song and whoa, everything about it is Hayes Carll. Not a complaint.
October 17, 2025 @ 10:59 am
keep going it gets better and better
October 17, 2025 @ 12:48 pm
I am 3 songs into Leon’s album, never heard of him until your comment and yes, it is great, thanks for the mention! Solid.
October 18, 2025 @ 9:43 am
Never heard of him until I saw your comment and others. Been listening all morning. I love this guy! Thanks for posting!
October 17, 2025 @ 7:56 am
I need to stay more current on the top 25 playlist cause just listened to the first song (home into a house) and it’s immediately a hit for me
October 17, 2025 @ 7:57 am
This dude is an incredible guitar player I was disappointed he didn’t open for Brad on tour this year would have been a great fit
October 17, 2025 @ 10:18 am
I made it 30 seconds into the album and have a hard time listening to a country album that mentions Pinterest. Great guitar and sound, just feels a bit too contemporary songwriting for me
October 17, 2025 @ 10:58 am
oof yea between that and the cover of this and his last this guy is a little too corny for me.
October 17, 2025 @ 11:12 am
Yeah, the Pinterest mention is done derogatorily. Your opinions on Pinterest is probably the very reason it’s mentioned. There are some reasons one could bail on this album as I explained in the review. The name drop of Pinterest is most certainly not one of them.
October 17, 2025 @ 11:42 am
I’m not sure if I read about it here or came across it somewhere else, but the other new neo-traditionalist I really really like is Trace Nixon. Holy shit. That is some good stuff.
October 17, 2025 @ 11:53 am
Kenny Feidler’s new album is a great one.
October 17, 2025 @ 1:13 pm
It seems that we are incredibly heavily waited towards traditionalists and 90s country in our reviews and such this year. Obviously that is not a dig towards trigger, but rather just an observation and it stinks for all of us that care more about the other stuff.
October 17, 2025 @ 1:42 pm
So I’ve been biting my tongue a little bit here because I don’t want to discourage folks from sharing what they’re listening to and what’s resonating with them in these comments sections so that people can discover other stuff. But when that’s what dominates the discussion I feel like it’s unfair to the performer being highlighted in a specific album review. My job is not to affirm what folks are already feeling about music, but to try and foster discovery of new artists, especially ones that are not being highlighted other places and are being overlooked like Hayden Baker at the moment. The new albums from Leon Majcen, Kenny Fiedler, etc. were featured on the release radar, and they’re certainly being considered for review as well. I would love for people to share their thoughts when those reviews get posted.
As for only featuring traditionalists and ’90s country this year, that’s what’s hot in country music right now. This is the sound that so many artist and albums are pushing. And this website is called “Saving Country Music,” so this is the heart of what I cover here, along with singer/songwriters, Americana stuff, bluegrass, etc.
Just looking back through some recent reviews, I’ve featured Carter Faith, Cole Chaney, Marcus King, Whiskey Myers, Nicholas Jamerson. None of those folks really fit the “traditionalist” mold.
I do appreciate the feedback and I was thinking something similar this morning. But I don’t set the trends, and in many cases, if I don’t cover these traditionalists, nobody will. So I’m going to stay in my lane. Possibly what I could have done is posted an article about today’s specific releases, and I probably would have if I’d had more time.
October 17, 2025 @ 5:21 pm
Very great thoughts and I appreciate the ability to have discussions even in the rare situation where we don’t agree. I FULLY understand your role in the saving of country and my comment was just about how as always my tastes don’t lead the popular vote.
October 18, 2025 @ 5:08 am
That’s my bad trigg I couldn’t shut up about the Leon lp but I get what you’re saying and look fwd to those potential reviews. My bad to Hayden even if I do not care for this album much.
October 18, 2025 @ 11:24 am
In most reviews i read , someone always mentjons an album they are listening to and its always great to hear new tips but Trigger ia right it does take the focus off the artist hes reviewing . Best place to mention it is probably in the section where he does playlists or does a round up on albims.we all want to hear of new artists that float our boat.
October 18, 2025 @ 1:17 pm
My opinion on that is mostly agreed however when a stellar five star album comes out such as the one I mentioned it should be reviewed day of or atleast take priority over a so so some will love it some will hate it lp such as Hayden’s. Essentially to delay reviewing a flawless album will only lead to getting scooped so to speak in the comments section. It can’t be stopped. Just like colter will likely be reviewed weekend of release and so on.