Album Review – Zach Bryan’s “With Heaven On Top”


Contemporary Folk (#57) with some Country Rock (#560) and Jazz-inspired Americana (570.8) on the Country DDS. AI = clean.

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Irrespective of what anyone thinks about the music at this point, it’s undeniable that Zach Bryan is one of the biggest phenomenons in music in the last quarter century. He’s not just a superstar who now holds record for the biggest single ticketed event in North American history. He’s his own genre. Even more so than bigger superstars like Taylor Swift or Morgan Wallen, the influence of Zach Bryan has launched dozens, maybe hundreds of full-time music careers, along with inspiring thousands of more hopefuls.

Earnest, heartfelt songwriting backed by often amateur music skills now resides at or near the pinnacle of popular music. And it’s all the fault of this former Navy enlistee from Oklahoma who simply wanted to release a tribute record to his mom DeAnn back in 2019. His obscene level of popularity is also the reason every spec of his personal life is scrutinized and reported on, every action is amplified, and every mole hill made into a mountain.

This can make it difficult to impossible to objectively evaluate the actual music of Zach Bryan. The name comes with such a triggering effect almost commensurate with political discussions as opposed to music ones—and now even veers into politics with Zach’s new song “Bad News.” Bryan doesn’t make objective observation any easier by dumping 25 tracks in your lap all at once, and then acoustic versions of the same songs a few days later.

Since the songwriting, vocal performances, musical performances, and overall production is wildly inconsistent, you really have to evaluate Bryan’s new album With Heaven On Top song by song. But overall, the album starts off very strong, perhaps even stronger than his last LP, 2024’s The Great American Bar Scene, though it begins to lose momentum with the 25 songs (Bar Scene had 17). The new album also probably doesn’t match or surpass what will likely go down as Zach’s his magnum opus, 2022’s American Heartbreak (34 songs).


The conventional rules of music criticism still don’t apply to Zach Bryan. They never have, and never will. Rumblings about needing outside producers or pass-thru edits on his songs, or more skilled musicianship behind him are superfulous. Zach Bryan got here without all this stuff, while others who obsessed over it are still struggling to fill clubs. But can Zach Bryan sustain the same level? That is the relevant question listening through With Heaven On Top.

Incidentally, he’s extra cussy on this record, and in a way that feels like it could hold certain songs back. He also makes genre even harder to define, really carving out his own contemporary folk niche, but with glimmers of country, rock, and even jazz, facilitated by the regular use of horns on this record, though sometimes to clumsy and inconsistent results.

But Zach Bryan has arrived here by defying odds, proving the critics wrong, and sometimes, outright failing upwards. In the attention economy, Zach Bryan reigns. Sharing unfettered and unfiltered emotion with poetic notions is what allowed him to burst through to the zeitgeist, drilling to the very heart of what connects people to music. The question is if the new album will sustain the momentum, or be the last hurrah for this songwriter era in music that Zach Bryan instigated and inspired.

7.6/10


Song Reviews:


1. Down, Down, Stream

Once again Zach Bryan starts an album off with spoken word. This one isn’t a poem, but a recitation of a moment in a Manhattan building he purchased where he’s sleeping on the floor and wakes up being doused by water hydrants after making a fire. This is all just to bookend the idea of experiences flowing to you, through and over you, and then past you like water, perhaps accumulating in a reservoir where they reside like a biography. It’s a good example of mixing the cerebral and the emotional that makes Zach Bryan’s words so compelling, even when his music sometimes isn’t.

2. Runny Eggs

This is a classic Zach Bryan song when he takes an understated approach, and his almost whispered vocals find a more pleasing tone to his singing. Like many Zach Bryan songs, the references jump around, but it all conspires to present a cohesive feeling. The song starts with the running of the bulls in Pamplona, Spain that Bryan experienced in July of 2025, then jumps to his snowy Red Rocks show in 2022. The runny eggs come from a diner on the California/Nevada border.

None of these specific events or places are what the song is about. They’re illustrative of how time, place, moving, and travel tend to forge our most cherished and unforgettable memories.

He delivers one of those definitive Zach Bryan lines when he says he wants to have a conversation with God and “Tell him I’m sorry for the way that I am, and using his name before saying ‘damn,'” while a wistful steel guitar helps set the earthen, reflective mood.


3. Appetite

“Appetite” represents one of the better executions of the horn section on this record, giving the songs a sort of Rocky theme feel, lending to what feels like an underdog story of the protagonist. Autobiographical or otherwise, Bryan uses the song to express anxieties, including not wanting to raise kids with the same insatiable appetites as his own. This song has a good heartbeat to it, and you shouldn’t be surprised if it becomes one of the album’s more favored tracks.

4. DeAnn’s Denim

This is Zach Bryan songwriting at its finest, even if that inherently means another pass or two of editing could have made it even better. Exploiting the jeans = genes wordplay to weave in physical references with thoughts on familial failings passed down through generations is pretty genius. And whispering Zach Bryan works so much better than trying to shout over horns and sloppy production like in some other songs. For the unaware, DeAnn was Zach Bryan’s mother whose early passing inspired his music career.


5. Say Why

This song features clever wordplay and a compelling story that utilizes the way the number “40” works its way recurrently into a lumbering lifestyle that can feel like a revolving door of breakup and reconciliation, and sobriety and relapse. “Say Why” is a good song, but not a great one, if only because the horns feel somewhat excessive, and their melody line a bit lackluster. This song is where the production of the album starts to become a bit inconsistent.

6. Drowning

Zach Bryan does a decent job making a song out of the idea of falling in love being like succumbing to deep water, and maybe there is a loose tie back to the opening track “Down. Down, Stream.” But the music of this song really fails it, with the strummed guitar offering little more than an uninteresting tone, the horns feeling inebriated and lost, and the high female harmony strained and out-of-place like it was added last minute.

The general lack of a second, distinguishing ear in the process to either arrange certain tracks better or cut them outright makes itself obvious through a song like “Drowning.” But hey, being sloppy has never held Zach Bryan back before.

7. Santa Fe

This is one of the more fun songs on the album, and you can tell this thing will bounce live and be a big one on tour. Bryan shared a scratch track version of this song previously that had a more emotional, minor chord feel, but this version feels good too. You hate to keep harping on the horns, but they take what wants to be a rock song, and make it feel hokey. It would have been better to just let the electric guitar steer this ship. Just because you’ve got a horn section rented and in the studio doesn’t mean you should put it on every song.

8. Skin

Believed to be about the high-profile breakup with Brianna “Chickenfry” Lapaglia, Zach Bryan really instills his emotion in this track to positive results, and it’s also one of the better arranged and recorded songs on the album. From capturing Zach’s finger movements on the fretboard to give the early moments an intimate feeling, to Bryan shouting in other stanza’s with the moaning steel guitar setting the mood, this is the Zach Bryan sound captured at its best.


9. Dry Deserts

Despite the glaring issues with the mix, “Dry Deserts” might be one of the big hits of the record. Bryan finds a big melody and chorus, and leans into it with all his guts and mite. For a 2 1/2-minute song, it feels epic, and takes you places. Zach isn’t a great singer in a conventional sense. But when he finds his sweets spots like he does on this song, he can sell you hard on his virtues.

The part of “Dry Deserts” that’s dissatisfying is the mix. In a song like this, you want the horns blasting out and present, especially since they’re arranged smartly here. The guitar deserves to be out front too like it is, but since the horns and everything else is so far behind and fey, it comes across as too loud, and the tone is distracting, even though it fits the song otherwise. It’s just too sloppy of a mix to maximize the song’s potential. But again, it’s Zach Bryan, so expectations are low, and this song will exceed them for core fans.

10. Bad News

The news cycle is so frenetic these days, some might forget that a simple snippet of this song stirred a national controversy in October 2025. The song was portrayed by both sides of the political divide as “anti-ICE” with The White House eventually responding to it. The fact that it comes out in the wake of the shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis makes it that much more prescient and poignant, almost hauntingly so.

As Zach Bryan warned at the time, the song is much more nuanced than it was portrayed originally from a partial clip. It’s still politically charged though. It’s about the fraying of the American ideal, which it seems both sides can agree is happening. It’s also quite a powerful song, and perhaps the most important on the album.

11. South and Pine

What an exquisitely-crafted track that proves that Zach Bryan isn’t just a songwriter and a performer, but can be a great producer when there is care and intentionality put behind the effort. The trumpet with the plunger on the horn, the fiddle, the walk down bass line, they all conspire to bring to life an excellent-sounding song. It’s way more adult contemporary, or even jazz pop compared to country or folk, but this fits the setting of New York City where the lyricism is set.

This is one of multiple songs where the cuss word comes across sideways in an otherwise mild-mannered mood. But the melody of this song is a monster. “South and Pine” is so good and well-rounded of a song, it just makes you frustrated that so many other Zach Bryan songs are not. You don’t always have to be refined. But you do want a song to be recorded with purpose, and in a way the represents it best.


12. Cannonball

This is clearly a personal track to Zach Bryan that seems to be about the passing of a friend or loved one who loved life and gambling. It’s perhaps one of the most emotional tracks of the album, though the ambiguity of the writing might make it a little difficult for that emotionality to be shared with the audience, except via empathy for Zach and the friend.

This song illustrates the worst of Zach’s low register, mumbling, emotionless vocals. There are some bursts of intriguing lyrical turns, but the writing overall feels a bit messy, and once again we get what feels like a misplaced F-bomb the song would benefit doing without.

13. Slicked Back


Consider this Zach Bryan’s stab at a Tom Petty track down to the Mike Campbell tone on the lead guitar part, or a Heartland rock anthem, and a good one at that. Though it might be more imitation than original, the writing and mood works, and this could be one of the hits from the record, if the magic isn’t lost on Zach Bryan’s more singer/songwriter audience. It’s likely this song is about Zach’s new wife Samantha Leonard Bryan.


14. Anyways

This feels like one of the early favorites and potential hits from the album, with a good energy to it that will render well live, and the horns finding a worthy place in the song. “Anyways” is about persevering through self-doubt. Though at first you might think this is Zach speaking to another performer, when a female character enters the chat to offer encouragement, it ups the odds it’s about Zach himself.

Zach does himself no favors by setting the song in a key where he quite literally can’t land a couple of the lowest notes. But a song like this is where Bryan illustrates why these conventional criticisms don’t really matter.

15. If They Come Lookin’

The setting for this song is the Red River that divides Texas and Oklahoma. Though Bryan portrays a lot of animosity between the two sides, it’s the cross cultural connection that has codified the Texas/Red Dirt scene. In certain rural areas though, perhaps the two sides aren’t as friendly. The song is perhaps more about hiding out from folks who don’t like you, or running from past mistakes.

Overall, it feels like a middling, forgettable track that doesn’t offer much redemption through the unimaginative music, and ambiguous story/message.

16. Rivers and Creeks

This is the kind of song that core Zach Bryan fans will eat up, and all the outsiders will hear and think, “Why the hell do people listen to this stuff?” Zach’s bad attempt at a yodel, and then his voice inflections as an angry shark make for a weird, inconsistent listen. It’s also fair to say “Rivers and Creeks” is very much a stereotypical Zach Bryan song. It might also loosely tie back to the opening track, just like “If They Come Lookin'” and “Drowning,” which also compare memories and experiences to water.

17. Plastic Cigarette

Probably one of the most anticipated tracks from the album after Bryan performed it live previously, it’s also the most-streamed song from the album early on. At this point in the album, the little vignettes from life that inspire Zach Bryan’s writing begin to feel more and more thin, while those incisive observations that used to color previous songs are vacant. You can tell why some might find the melody of this song pleasing, or latch onto certain lyrics, but it still feels like a pretty flat effort. If this is the “hit” from the album, Zach Bryan might be in trouble. A lack of a hit was the issue with his album The Great American Bar Scene.


18. You Can Still Come Home

This is one of the stronger tracks from the latter half of the album. At this point, the listener has probably grown tired of the specificity of recollections that Bryan uses to flesh out his verses. But this strong benefits from a bonafide lyrical hook and a strong message behind it. You also don’t mind the horns in this selection, and there’s isn’t a indiscriminate F-bomb to sour the mood. “You Can Still Come Home” feels like a classic Zach Bryan song.

19. Aeroplane

Though “Aeroplane” is perhaps the simplest song on the album, it’s also perhaps one of the best. For once, Zach Bryan sings in a key that’s easy for him. The unadorned guitar accompaniment sets a ruminative mood, and centers the listener’s attention on the lyrics. Once again, ambiguity keeps you at arm’s length from really falling deep for the story. But in this instance, you don’t mind. The incomplete nature is an asset. This is a song that you hear, and then it haunts you.

20. Always Willin’

Some of the most poetic lyricism is found within the passages of “Always Willin,” interspersed with the sands of Sedona that are also referenced, along with Hyde Park in London that comes up in the later song “Sundown Girls.” The string section give this song some strong body, as does the line, “God ain’t a man in a two-piece suit. He’s a miner deep down and He’s covered in soot. And He’ll come find you when it’s time.”

21. Miles

This feels like an old school Zach Bryan track. The guy has always been an indomitable road dog and a restless traveler. This is one of the most predominant themes that imprints itself throughout his music. “Miles” captures that restlessness, and doesn’t allow the music to get in the way. The radio fade at the end gives the perspective of Zach Bryan speeding away towards the sunset.


22. All Good Things Past

At this point, it’s just hard to find the capacity or patience to listen to another very personal track from Zach Bryan with messy production and try to glean any value from it. Taken autonomously, “All Good Things Past” is probably not especially offensive. But the volume of these tracks diminishes the value of all the songs on the album, including the good ones.

23. Camper

Zach does an admirable job evoking a setting and a character in this two-minute track. It puts you out on the side of the road somewhere out West on the way to California, in a desert setting with brilliant stars, and sleeping out in the elements beneath a truck camper. The point of the song remains a bit ambiguous. But like many Zach Bryan songs, it captures a moment of a life in transition.

24. Sundown Girls

This song recalls Zach Bryan’s two-night stand at BST Hyde Park in London in June of 2025. It was his first headliner dates at a major festival in the UK, and he appears to say that he snuck into the back of the crowd during the festival to carouse among the audience. “Sundown Girls” find a great fiddle melody leading into a big chorus. The emotion of the song is triggered by the finality of a tour, and the mixed emotions that comes with it. This could be a sleeper on the record, especially in the 24th spot.

25. With Heaven On Top

You have to wait until the 25th track to find the most country-sounding song of the set, and one of the album’s best. Here are the insightful and wisdom-filled lyrics that are missing from much of the middle and ending portions of the album. Here is some great steel guitar complimented by a string section. “With Heaven On Top” is about being unafraid to live life, even if it means getting arrested for a petty infraction, like Zach Bryan did.

“You won’t find no answers safe at home. You can’t learn heartbreak from a poem,” he sings. And that’s been the eternal theme of most all of Zach Bryan’s songs—squeezing the juice out of life on the edge of recklessness, appreciative of every moment, and every lesson. Because as Bryan learned from the passing of his mother, all of this is fleeting, and not to be taken for granted.

Zach Bryan has never been an appropriate vessel for stardom. Dumb luck and fortuitous timing had him falling face first into it, despite his own best efforts to get in its way. Even a $350 million deal can’t squeeze Bryan’s zeal for attacking life every day like it’s his last on the planet. And it’s that realness, and his present, intimate connection with moments and emotions that allow so many to connect with his music, and so many who can’t connect with it fill with surface spite, and underlying jealousness.


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