Album Review – Jon Pardi’s “Honkytonk Hollywood”

#530.2 (Country Pop) and #510 (Traditional Country) on the Country DDS.
When the histories are written about this neotraditionalist era in country music, fair credit will be given to Jon Pardi for being one of the fearless performers to insist on his country music sounding country at a time when this was counter to most everything coming out of major label Nashville. That doesn’t mean he didn’t have some pop-leaning radio songs. But he was one of the first to push against the grain, and to find success doing so. Jon Pardi walked so Zach Top and others could run.
But as the rest of country music seems to be following Jon Pardi’s lead, Jon Pardi himself seems to be staying static, if not heading in the other direction ever so slightly. Though this moment in time could be the opportunity for Pardi to lay on the honky tonk pedal and double down on his more traditional sound and songwriting, he’s just released perhaps his most anodyne and pop album yet.
When Pardi released the lead single called “Friday Night Heartbreaker,” he had us all worried about a significant change in direction. Honkytonk Hollywood isn’t exactly that. As is not uncommon from a Music Row release, the lead single is often the worst. This album does have some straight Jon Pardi honky tonk songs. But at 17 tracks, there’s also plenty of opportunities for Pardi to tun in pretty forgettable songs that radio still won’t probably play.
Let’s start off with the positive though, because Pardi probably records some of the most country-sounding songs of his entire career on this album. This includes the well-written “Nice Place To Visit” with it’s distinct twin fiddle start off, and story about being good for a one night stand but not much else. “Bar Room Blue” is another good one, a classic country heartbreaker Pardi co-wrote with Josh Thompson and Luke Laird.
There’s also a few tracks that give you a Midland vibe like “Gamblin’ Man,” and some very personal feeling tracks like “She Drives Away” about fatherhood, and “He Went To Work” also about fathers, just from a different perspective. Though the sound is a bit more contemporary, you love the attitude of “Hard Knocks” with the lyrical hook “You answer the door any time hard knocks,” making you want to pump your fist. This is the kind of meat-and-potatoes country that’s hard to hate on, however it sounds.

But then “Hard Knocks” is followed up with the terrible “Don’t You Wanna Know” with synth-like hand claps and terrible production. “Hey California” also has a sound that can spoil the whole album experience. Still, it’s not that swaths of this album are bad as much as they’re just not very stimulating, and end up forgettable. Pardi doesn’t really take any chances here like his did on his last album with the hilarious song “Reverse Cowgirl.”
It’s not that Honkytonk Hollywood is horrible. It’s just that it sounds similar to every single other major label country album out there. Pardi does pepper references to California in numerous songs, which does give the album a very slightly distinctness to the Dixon, CA native. Then when you look at who was the producer and you see the name “Jay Joyce,” it all starts to make sense. Pardi co-produced his last few albums, and worked with multiple folks in the business. Honkytonk Hollywood is all Jay Joyce, all the time.
Though it can be easy or even lazy to blame Jay Joyce for a lackluster feeling of this album, it’s probably fair. Do we really think Jay Joyce is out there with his ear the the ground, sensing this is the moment to really double down on the twang? Just like Morgan Wallen, he’s probably never even heard of Zach Top. Jay Joyce is just doing what Jay Joyce always does, which is push country artists in a more pop, rock, and stylized direction.
And how well has this worked for Jon Pardi? That big pop country lead single “Friday Night Heartbreaker” with its five songwriters currently sits at #24 on the Country Airplay charts when it should be inching toward #1 with the album release. There’s a very distinct chance the new Turnpike Troubadours album The Price of Admission will smoke Honkytonk Hollywood in the charts this upcoming week, and without any physical copies available, and with six less tracks.
Honkytonk Hollywood is not a bad album overall, and it has some good songs. But the fat need to be trimmed, and the emphasis needed to be on the twang. This could have been the moment Pardi finally found the prestige he’s deserved. Country is becoming more country, so much that even pop stars are making country albums. But Jon Pardi has been here. He should act like that. This is his turf.
But instead, we get the idea that pandering to pop radio is the path to popularity here in 2025. The good news is there are still some good songs to take away from this effort.
1 1/4 Guns Up (6.8/10)
April 14, 2025 @ 9:32 am
I am a mild Jon Pardi fan and have only did a quick skim of the album. Though my take after the quick skim matched this review. What makes me nervous is that I’m a big Whiskey Myers fan and the rumor is they are using Jay Joyce as their producer on their upcoming album. This makes no sense to me and i can’t fathom how he can help them in anyway.
April 14, 2025 @ 9:49 am
Jay Joyce is a rock guy that works in the country market due to proximity and convenience like a lot of the professionals in the mainstream country music industry. When he’s worked with more rock-oriented country artists like Eric Church and Ashley McBryde, it hasn’t always been bad. So I wouldn’t be optimistic with Whiskey Myers necessarily, but I wouldn’t be as worried. The other concern is that he just overproduces everything. He can’t just let the music be itself. He feels like he has to earn his pay. That’s definitely present on this album, with layers and layers of stuff bogging down songs.
April 14, 2025 @ 9:54 am
Thanks, that helps!
April 14, 2025 @ 12:19 pm
Jay Joyce is a cancer to the country music community. The thought of him veering into independent Texas country is a scary thought especially with a band as revered as Whiskey Meyers
April 14, 2025 @ 9:57 am
I have listened to this album a few times and I think your review sums it up well. His choice of producer surprised me, not that I have anything against Joyce. I just do not see Pardi and Joyce as a natural fit. There are a few lesser songs where I do not like the production or the song much. However, it is mostly honky tonk country as per usual. His career has not really progressed as much as he perhaps deserves so I suppose he has to try something different to get the hits. Its not his best album but it isn’t bad and there are some very good tracks. He is at his best and most assured on the more country songs. Definitely still a country album by a real country singer. Its a pretty good listen with a few tracks not so good.
April 14, 2025 @ 10:15 am
This album is so bland. The good songs are pretty good but there are so many filler tracks and a handful of atrocities like the lead single, which is just a bad Jason Aldean song with Pardi as vocalist. Aldean could have added that song to anything after Night Train and it would have blended right in.
She Drives Away is the lone, definitive highlight for me. I didn’t love Mr. Saturday Night but it was still no doubt a country album. I’m not sure about this one.
April 14, 2025 @ 10:21 am
I could tell this record was produced by Jay Joyce without even knowing. It just all sounds over produced to me. The best song on the album “Nice place to visit” would be much better without the over production. Probably my least favorite Jon Pardi album by far.
April 14, 2025 @ 1:24 pm
Joyce made Carly Pearce’s latest album practically unlistenable for me, and his overwrought production isn’t winning the first single from it much in the way of airplay — although the big Nashville labels have a way of pushing songs to airplay heights even if they’re stiffing in streaming and/or sales. I need to listen to the entire Pardi album again to see if I can give it even the lukewarm endorsement Trig has, but at first listen, it’s not nearly as good as Mr. Saturday Night or even his Christmas album.
April 14, 2025 @ 11:05 am
It’s by no means a bad album, but it sure is a weird one, especially from someone who at one time seemed to be proud to have been given the ‘neotraditional’ tag.
I’m fairly confident that there’ll be no worse album artwork released this year though.
April 14, 2025 @ 2:24 pm
2003 called, it wants it’s airbrushed license plate artwork back.
April 14, 2025 @ 11:10 am
Definitely doesn’t beat the country twang and poetry that Pug Johsnon and the hounds lay down on their newest album.
April 14, 2025 @ 12:20 pm
Nice to see Pug Johnson getting some love here. I’m just starting to get into the guy with songs like “pipeliner” and “El cabron” but really like what I hear
April 14, 2025 @ 5:11 pm
I just discovered Pug a week or two ago and am very impressed. Good voice, good writing and some Cajun and Tex-Mex flavors to keep it interesting. I know it’s been a wild release calendar lately but I would love to see an album review. He’s the type of artist that was meant to be discovered through SCM.
April 15, 2025 @ 4:11 am
same here, and i love the horns on the album. Definitely a fresh take on tradition
April 14, 2025 @ 12:21 pm
Jon Pardi ranks equally with Gary Levox (Rascall Flatts) for having the most annoying voice. As someone with functioning ear drums this is just my opinion but – seriously how do people not find it annoying?
April 14, 2025 @ 1:13 pm
I dont find the voice of Rascall or Pardi annoying one bit.
April 14, 2025 @ 3:08 pm
Hey, not my favorite album, but not terrible. Pardo says in Esquire that “In all honesty, I don’t know what country music is anymore. We got Hardy heavy-metal country, we’ve got Beyoncé country, Morgan Wallen country, Jelly Roll. Everybody’s bringing in the stuff they grew up listening to, and it’s awesome. If it’s a good song and it’s moving the soul and it has some semblance of country, we’re stamping it country music.” He then goes on to say, “Maybe it’s time when I can step out a little.” I say, if he wants to experiment and try some different things, more power to him! Maybe it works, maybe it doesn’t, but it keeps things keeps things from stagnating into that static, cookie cutter sound that never seems to change. That’s a big part of the reason I love Eric Church; he’s always pushing his limits, growing and changing. And I’d expect nothing less from an artist.
April 15, 2025 @ 2:32 pm
Yes very excited for the new Church album, he seems to be the one that gets more creative luxury of pushing the boundries in new directions with Joyce, likely because he has earned it over the past 20 years.
April 14, 2025 @ 5:49 pm
I was disappointed with this album and Pardi in general for pandering to pop “country” radio. I mentioned several albums ago that Pardi was one of the few mainstream artists on Music Row now to have trap beats a s programmed drums and then along comes Honky Tonk Hollywood. I’m not a fan of pop country but this isn’t even good pop country. As for the commenter mentioning Jason Aldean, even this is a stretch for him. This is in the Thomas Rhett realm of “COUNTRY” music
April 14, 2025 @ 8:02 pm
Haven’t listened to much of this yet but have a few of his albums, most recently Mr. Saturday Night and I was rather disappointed with it for some reason. Will still check out this one, and it may end up in my library.
April 14, 2025 @ 8:57 pm
This is the first Jon Pardi album I’ve heard where I can’t pick out a single song that stands out as “good”. This album fails to establish any sort of identity. The heart and soul of what makes a Jon Pardi album is entirely missing. The fiddle and steel you’re used to hearing is either buried in the mix or not there at all. Even the more country sounding tracks have been given the Jay Joyce treatment which removes any remains of organic composition. The song writing is okay, but again nothing really stands out. Overall this is a pretty forgettable release. There is nothing that I would consider offensive as far as sound goes but also nothing that grabs your attention and makes you want more.
April 15, 2025 @ 4:46 am
Trigger, you expanded my vocabulary. Had to look up “anodyne”. Thanks!
April 15, 2025 @ 5:44 am
Very disappointed. Major step back to me. Nothing really trad country.
April 15, 2025 @ 6:21 am
John Pardi was at one time an example of ok in a mainstream of bad. But as this point as better examples are emerging such as the mentioned Zach Top, you have to wonder if covering Pardi’s every release is worth the space. Especially since he seems to be drifting from just ok to bad.
I know my opinion is just one among many, but would have liked to seen a Pug Johnson or Muscadine Bloodline review here. Both just released very good new albums worthy of end of year considerations.
April 15, 2025 @ 8:43 am
Hey Scott,
I appreciate the feedback, though it kind of misunderstands how I approach reviewing albums. There were three album reviews posted in the last four days, so it’s not like stuff isn’t getting reviewed. But I also never review one album in lieu of reviewing another. I review as many albums as I possibly can. The Turnpike Troubadours were the priority to review last Friday. Jon Pardi has a long history as an important neotraditionalist, so he was priority too. When I pull up the album and listen to it enough to form a strong conclusion, at that point, the time is committed, and I might as well review it. The time commitment is mostly in the listening, but I don’t know it’s going to be a disappointment until I listen to it. And even when it is, that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be reviewed. Maybe that’s even more of a reason to review it. Meanwhile, if I hadn’t reviewed it, there would be people complaining because hey, it’s Jon Pardi, and should be a priority.
As for the Pug Johnson, I’ve seen quite a few folks chirping in the comments about it. It was on my release radar, so I am aware of the album and it will probably receive a review here soon. But I don’t really even see it as a country album. It’s an Americana album with a few country songs. That’s not a commentary on the music, it just means that it’s not something that I felt I need stop everything else down and review.
Hours upon hours upon hours are spent listening to music here for the purpose of album reviews. You can’t just decide you want to review an album, and then review it. You must feel like you have a deep understanding of the artist and the material, and then the words must come. Sometimes this takes days. Sometimes it takes weeks and months. It’s a process I take very seriously.
April 15, 2025 @ 9:02 am
I get it. I understand why Pardi has been a regular on SCM. But honestly this is his 2nd poor release in a row where he appears to have switched from the rare country sounding mainstream artist to chasing hits. His relevance here has kinda dwindled.
I don’t want to try and tell you what you should review, but I sometimes think some good albums and artists get overlooked not just as good music readers might discover and enjoy, but also as contenders in end of year recognition from SCM if they aren’t reviewed. Also, to your credit, albums and artists reviewed here usually get a bump from other music outlets and social media platforms. Artists like Pug Johnson for example could definitely benefit from that, where a Jon Pardi is likely already receiving media attention.
So I’m not trying to complain or criticize, just offering a preference to see more up and coming artists who could use the exposure. Thanks for the reviews you do put out.
April 15, 2025 @ 9:29 am
Does Capitol records have some exclusive deal with Jay Joyce or something? Eric is on Capitol records and I think several other artists on their label have used him too. It’s just such an awful sound that seems to run any album he touches.
April 15, 2025 @ 2:07 pm
I’d love to see an article on the rise of Jay Joyce in producing modern country records
April 15, 2025 @ 1:07 pm
From the artwork to the production to the overlong track list, the whole thing feels like Pardi ceded control to other people as is getting redefined in a way entirely unfavorable to him. Rather than a naked bid for the mainstream, this sounds more like he’s being handled by people who don’t know how to bring out the best in him.
April 16, 2025 @ 8:17 am
I can imagine someone at corporate pitching something like: “You’re about to turn 40 and you’ve been touring for 15 years. Your biggest chart success and award success was a few years ago. Now is the time to shake it up. Here’s Jay Joyce.”
April 15, 2025 @ 3:35 pm
…slightly weird album that overall gets in its own way. ironically, it’s the most country sounding songs like “nice place to visit” – which structurally reminds a lot of diffie’s “is it cold in here” – or “bar room blue” that counterdict the attempt to come up with something more californian/contemporary than tennesseean/retro. follwing one or the other intention consequently would have made it a more consistant work. because of the eventual lack of guts – or good taste – to go all the way, it ended up a mixed bag that falls short of what it could have been. still, mostly quite enjoyable in an average way.
April 16, 2025 @ 3:20 am
What’s with the wife beater he is wearing on the cover!
April 16, 2025 @ 8:07 am
Alright, after a couple of spins of this 56 minute monstrosity, we’re all in agreement that Jay Joyce is a huge problem in Country music that we’d certainly not wanna hear another album produced from especially for a Whiskey Myers. I’m praying that he doesn’t go near the next Lainey or Ashley McBryde album as well. As I’m sifting through these 17 all over the map songs, I’m thinking, although he ruins the Country feel of many of em he didn’t write em but he probably helped pick em, thinking “I can add this or that” to make them sound more _____ (to our ears shitty). At some point an artist has to take responsibility for their own output/career.
I’ve enjoyed much of what Jon Pardi has done up to this point, for the most part, and this would’ve been the perfect chance to lean in further/back to his California Sunrise sound instead of Joyce’s clangy bangy Rock thing. Don’t even get me started on the 17 song sequence. I dunno, ….. I might whittle it down to a 9 or 10 song playlist if it even warrants that.
April 16, 2025 @ 9:07 am
I’ve avoided radio country like the plague or my ex wife for over a decade. The only Nashville artist I’ve ever given a listen to during that time is Pardi and he always had a few songs that were pretty good. Disappointed to see this album is apparently lackluster