April 24th is a Busy Day for New Country Albums

Every once in a while, the releases on a given Friday get so hectic, it becomes imperative to offer an addendum to the regular Release Radar. Friday, April 24th is one of those days. Though there might not be many big, buzzy arena-level names in the mix here, take it from someone who gets to peek ahead: there are some really great country album that you don’t want to miss.
Dale Watson – Unwanted

Itâs hard to to find a more real deal performer than Dale Watson. Catch him at the Continental Club or The Broken Spoke in Austin, or perhaps jumping up on the stage at Hernandoâs Hide-A-Way in Memphis, or hundreds of places in-between and beyond, and youâll see the true embodiment of country. In fact Daleâs so country and committed to the roots of the genre, he doesnât feel comfortable calling himself âcountryâ anymore. He prefers the name âAmeripolitan.â
Whatever you want to call it, you can be assured that Dale Watsonâs new album called Unwanted will be twangy, hard-charging, and true to itself when itâs released via Forty Below Records. The twelve tracks all self-produced and written by Dale comes as his first new music since 2023âs Starvation Box. (read more)
Rachel Brooke â This Oneâs For You

Few women in country music have racked up as much street cred as Rachel Brooke. And few bring as much pain and real-world weariness behind their words and voices as Rachel. She wonât be selling out arenas coast to coast anytime soon. Thatâs because sheâs always put her integrity and songcraft first. But to those that know her, Rachel Brookeâs music and legacy loom very large.
Rachel Brookeâs new album The Oneâs For You out April 24th promises to be her most bona fide country album yet. In fact, itâs super country, classic country, self-produced by Rachel herself, and engineered by the Grammy nominated/Emmy Award-winning Jake Shives. Though in the past sheâs often tapped into dark side of lifeâincluding on her 2025 acoustic album Sings Sad Songsâshe often turns to humor to get her point across on the new album, even if thereâs darkness behind it. (read more)
Kevin Carducci â Easy Does It

You might’ve never heard of Kevin Carducci before, but you definitely will be wanting to have the music of his new album Easy Does It hitting your ears if you have any taste in traditional/classic country music. The former member and bass player for the West Coast country band The Easy Leaves is back with his debut solo album, and it cooks. It’s being released on the new Fossil Records, founded by Margo Cilker and Ismay.
Easy Does It is unabashedly a work inspired by the classic Bakersfield sound, hoping to build upon what he started with The Easy Leaves, who ended up opening for folks like Billy Joe Shaver, Dwight Yoakam, and Willie Nelson during their height in the California Country scene.
Ben Jarrell â Tennessee Turnaround

Ben Jarrell got the attention of the folks who like to dig for the best in country music with his wild country tune âBlack Helicopterâ from 2019, and his crazy diorama album covers on his early releases. Heâs always been country, but Ben was also just a little bit off-center in a cool way that made him unique and grabbed your attention.
On his new album Tennessee Turnaround, Ben finds a really fetching, sweaty and grooving ’70s half-time Outlaw sound that is sure is sure to sit right with the crowd in black vests and beyond. Co-writers include Hal ODell, Zach Henard, Ryan Hartman, Preston McCabe, and others, while Anna Westcoat contributes harmony vocals.
Bobby Dove â Fortune Teller

Canadian songwriter Bobby Dove blew us away with the album Hopeless Romantic in 2021, and now is back with what promises to be another stellar selection of songs assembled under the name Fortune Teller. Produced by Aaron Goldstein, known for working with the Cowboy Junkies and Kathleen Edwards, the new album includes some of Canada’s best players such as guitarist Nichol Robertson, drummer Dani Nash and pedal steel guitarist Burke Carroll.
Fortune Teller also includes a co-write/duet with Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter Jim Lauderdale, and a cover of Blaze Foleyâs âIf I Could Only Fly.â While the sound is reminiscent of Golden Era country, Bobby Dove always puts the song and the songwriting first.
Jim Lauderdale and the Poâ Ramblinâ Boys â The Birds Know (bluegrass)

What’s better than master songwriter Jim Lauderdale, or bluegrass revivalists the Po’ Ramblin’ Boys? The two of them together of course, which resulted in magic on 2023’s The Long and Lonesome Letting Go, and now that magic is looking to be rekindled on their new collaborative album The Birds Know.
“Since I first saw them at MerleFest several years ago, and after we did our first album together, I really wanted us to do a follow-up,â says Lauderdale. âThese songs were all written just for this album. The Po’ Ramblin’ Boys keep the sound of traditional bluegrass alive, but they really bring it into the present day. I’m so happy with the way this record turned out, and Iâm looking forward to performing with them in the coming years.”
Noah Kahan â The Great Divide (Contemporary folk)

Similar to Zach Bryan, Noah Kahan has taken singer/songwriter music loosely adjacent to country, but more the domain of contemporary folk all the way to the stadium level. Similar to Zach Bryan, Kahan has stipulated he doesn’t want to be considered country. But both his popularity and styling have greatly influenced the country and Americana realm, especially on the singer/songwriter side of things.
On a busy release week, The Great Divide will definitely be the biggest seller, and likely result in a Billboard 200 No. 1. It might not be for country fans. But it does illustrate the incredible resurgence roots music continues to enjoy, even four years after Kahan’s Stick Season became one of the biggest songs and albums in all of music.
Other Releases:
D Boone Pittman â Rust
Yarn â Saturday Night Sermon
Krislyn Arthurs â Honky Tonk PhD
Colebrook Road â Too Far To Let Go
Wilson Fairchild â American Songbook: Country Classics and Gospel Favorites
The Milk Carton Kids â Lost Cause Lover Fool (folk)
Thin Lear â Many Disappeared (folk, Americana)
Taylor Dallas Vidic â Cat & Mouse (Americana)
Elaine Palmer âSome Seek Silver, Some Seek Gold (Americana)
Jackson Dean â Magnolia Sage (Contemporary country)
(4-27) The Massacoustics â Water Keeps Rising
â â â â â â â â â â â
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April 23, 2026 @ 11:06 am
That new Ben Jarrell is gonna kick ass.
April 28, 2026 @ 8:22 pm
HOLY SHIT it is good. I am not surprised . I’ve been really looking forward to this one.
April 23, 2026 @ 1:29 pm
Ringo Starr’s second country album, Long Long Road, produced by T-Bone Burnett, is out tomorrow, too.
April 23, 2026 @ 1:39 pm
Yeah, the first one wasn’t country at all, and I’m not even sure they’re trying to call this second one country.
April 23, 2026 @ 2:17 pm
It’s got Molly Tuttle and Billy Strings on it, and the already released preview track is a Gary Burr co-write (although not very country-sounding). We’ll see what this turns out to be. You mentioned Noah Kahan as a “country adjacent,” so why not this?
April 23, 2026 @ 4:35 pm
His last country album also had Molly Tuttle and Billy Strings on it. You could barely tell they were there. T Bone Burnett propped Ringo in front of a camera with a cowboy hat on and pulled a marketing ploy. Fool me twice, shame on me. And again, I’m not even seeing them calling the new one a country album, because a lot of people complained about the bait and switch the last time.
It’s not a country album, and barely Americana.
April 23, 2026 @ 2:21 pm
I just listened to two songs from it. It’s pretty americana or roots rock or whatever. But you’re right, not particularly country.
April 23, 2026 @ 5:58 pm
I’ve only heard “It’s Been Too Long,” but if anything, he sounded kinda Nick Lowe-ish to me! đ
April 23, 2026 @ 10:40 pm
Just listened to the whole thing on Spotify. The pre-release songs didn’t give a true picture of what Long Long Road would wind up being. It’s a lot more country than Look Up and features some mighty fine steel from Paul Franklin.
April 23, 2026 @ 1:42 pm
I like the sound of Kevin Carducci on the one or two tracks i heard, and Im also interested in every thing the Milk Carton Kids release too. Ben Jarrell is also pretty cool too,
April 23, 2026 @ 1:54 pm
Mikaela Davis out also
April 23, 2026 @ 1:55 pm
Info on the new Red Clay Strays album seems sparse, but one of the AIs says June 5th. Is that what you have in your notes, Trigger?
April 23, 2026 @ 4:36 pm
Well, you shouldn’t be asking any of the AI’s anything. Yes, they have a new album called “Grateful” out June 5th. We don’t have any more info though, no track list or pre-order link. Maybe when we have those details and I can facilitate some economic activity to it, I will post a preview of it.
April 23, 2026 @ 5:09 pm
Well I wasn’t intending to, but Wikipedia has no info, their web site has no info, and when I type “Red Clay Strays album” into my search engine, it gives me a blurb about their last album, followed by a blurb about their upcoming album and a release date of June 5th. Which is more info than anybody else was willing to give me–present company excluded.
It looks like you can pre-order vinyl on their web site. Oh! And would you look at that? If you click all the way into “shipping” on the vinyl pre-order, they say it’ll ship the week of June 5th.
Mark me down as eagerly anticipating it.
Thanks.
April 24, 2026 @ 6:16 am
They just started the marketing of the album a few days ago. They officially gave the release date even though the date got out there from their interview with Rogan many months ago. They also released a video for the song “Demons in Your Choir” on Wednesday. Three songs from the album are available on Spotify but not the track listing.
April 24, 2026 @ 8:20 am
Just to peel back the curtain a little bit here, my job is to try to direct attention where I think it’s most deserved. I’m not going to post four different pre-release news items about the new Red Clay Strays album when they’re already an arena act, and there are other artists that deserve and need coverage. I am going to wait until all the information is in one place, and present it to the public. Dribbling out information is what a band’s social media is for. Today they just announced their tour. If yesterday I focused on their album announcement, and today focused on their tour announcement, and then posted another article on Monday when the track list comes out and the digital pre-orders are live, that means less time and attention for all the great albums being released today by artists who aren’t already getting as much attention as The Red Clay Strays. That’s why I posted THIS article.
April 24, 2026 @ 8:54 am
Mostly FYI, my reply was for John M. It was not intended to be critical in any way, my intention was quite the opposite and informational. Just wanted to point out the band itself just started the marketing of the album.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:41 pm
Hey BP,
Didn’t mean to jump down your throat. I often use replies to comments to address more global things I want to say, and in a situation like this, reply to the last comment so it’s at the end instead of the middle of the thread.
April 23, 2026 @ 3:01 pm
There is one significant omission which will become clear tomorrow. But well done for omitting it.
April 23, 2026 @ 6:17 pm
Ringo Starr’s 2nd “country” album? Yes, best forgotten.
April 24, 2026 @ 6:14 am
Ah no it’s the guy whom someone once said made a two-hour piece of music and ended up releasing it across several albums in three-minute chunks. I don’t think he a) needs the publicity and b) preaches to anyone beyond his core audience. Plenty of other records deserve more praise, and the guy isn’t even his label’s top priority, what with Jelly and Lainey and even Blake Shelton.
April 24, 2026 @ 8:15 am
No idea who you’re talking about JB. Help us out here buddy.
April 24, 2026 @ 10:00 am
Maybe Jason Aldean? He’s on Broken Bow along with the other three. Dustin Lynch is another possibility, but he’s an even lower priority than Aldean.
April 23, 2026 @ 3:36 pm
Somewhat in the vein of Kahan/Bryan branch of folk pop/Americana – Trigger, any plans to review the new Sam Barber album? It skews closer to Bryan than Kahan, but I’m curious your thoughts on the growing number of artists who seem to inhabit that folk pop/Americana genre.
April 23, 2026 @ 4:39 pm
I wrote an entire article on this in November:
https://savingcountrymusic.com/joshua-slone-and-the-emerging-world-of-contemporary-folk-pop/
I also signed on my support for a new Grammy category for Contemporary Folk where Noah Kahan, Zach Bryan, and Sam Barber should all reside. I might review the Sam Barber album at some point. This post should illustrate to every just how many top line albums are coming out every week. I can’t review them all. I review more of them than any other major publication.
April 23, 2026 @ 4:11 pm
Still waiting for the Logan Mac review
April 23, 2026 @ 5:35 pm
I hear that if you snap your fingers and bark an order at Kyle, just like a genie he will drop the other 47 articles and reviews he’s already working on and immediately pivot to accommodate your requests. đ
April 24, 2026 @ 2:26 am
Im sort of intrigued on who Logan Mac is now, hes called for the review so many times, but demanding someone does someone only makes them not want to do it .
April 24, 2026 @ 8:24 am
I always appreciate suggestions of what people are listening to or what they might want reviewed. I’m glad people can used these comments sections to find new music beyond the articles themselves. But it really does make me angry when someone acts like I am ignoring an artists or am in dereliction of my duty just because I didn’t review so and so’s record. As this article should illustrate, there are many, many deserving albums coming out every single week. There’s 19 highlighted here, and that doesn’t even include them all. I’m not going to be able to review every single one of them. I review about 120 albums a year. I’ve posted album reviews each of the last three days. I review a ton of material, and it sucks when you’re judged on what you DON’T review instead.
And besides, my job is to try and expose the stuff everyone is missing. If you already know about the Logan Mac album and love it, what do you want from me?
April 24, 2026 @ 8:44 am
That kid’s voice is as common as a Dollar General in BFE, couldn’t pick him out from Colton Bowlin or Cole Phillips to save my life.
But some of the songwriting is slick as a tadpole and lotsa days that’ll blow my skirt up pretty high. It’s a pretty good album imo, ymmv.
April 24, 2026 @ 2:13 am
Ben Jarrell: slow, slower, slowest. I miss the fire.
April 24, 2026 @ 7:43 am
I like it best when Ben spurs it some too, but his voice always great by me and the production never dull.
Not gonna get to it until later, but I’ll have a hot jalapeĂąo at the pink palomino in Tucumcari tonight.
Maybe đ¤ˇââď¸
April 24, 2026 @ 2:44 pm
James, I have to say, you have a great way with words, enjoying your responces!
April 24, 2026 @ 3:12 am
Thereâs a new white fence album for those of us that like to rock n roll
April 24, 2026 @ 3:27 am
Always look forward to release days like this but it means Trigger having to review more albums when there are so many still to cover! Really thought you’d have reviewed Bruce Springsteens “Somewhere North of Nashville” and “Inyo” albums from Tracks II boxset last year. And potentially Luke Grimes new album that was out at the start of the month. But keep up the great work Trig, I’ll keep reading whatever you review.
April 24, 2026 @ 7:26 am
I havent found much to like this week. Black river sway by the The wet whistles is by far the best i listened to. You know where ill be by sara berki is pretty good as well. I cant love you anymore by ella langley and morgan wallen is horrible. Her vocals nauseate me so much i didnt even make it to his.
April 24, 2026 @ 7:44 am
Nothing like fresh material to give us Country fans hope for another star or stars.
April 24, 2026 @ 8:01 am
Kevin Carducci reminds me of the Bellamy Brothers. good stuff. Thanks for the heads up on Yarn. didn’t know they had a new one dropping today.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:33 pm
Del Watsonâs new record is an absolute winner! Pure Honky Tonk and outlaw country all the way through with some great songwriting.
April 24, 2026 @ 2:46 pm
I listened to most of Dales new album today and think it’s a winner, Don Don Pawlak’s steel playing is very good too, he never gets tired of listening to!
April 24, 2026 @ 5:36 pm
I thoroughly enjoyed the new Kiki Cavazos album (Goodbye Blues) that came out today. Some really great songs on there.
April 26, 2026 @ 8:59 am
That’s really good tysm!
If’n you missing some Summer Dean this scratches that itch… fine stuff.
April 24, 2026 @ 7:00 pm
For me, after listening to the Kevin Carduuci album, I’m reminded of Zephaniah O’Hara. Not that his voice is similar, but the production value/style of his sound. Really liking it!
Artist I’d love too get more music from.
Zephaniah
Tom Buller
Matt Carson
April 28, 2026 @ 6:44 am
Dale Watson and Jim Lauderdale, these two guys are legends what more can one expects from them?
I’m enjoying their new albums more than i should!!!