Death Threats and Defections: 2026’s Rock The Country Fest

In late 2023, Kid Rock and Jason Aldean announced they were co-headlining what became known as the 2024 Rock The Country festival. It was part festival, part tour, with multiple dates in multiple locations throughout the South and Midwest, and a different lineup in each location depending on the city. It’s a similar model to the original Lollapalooza or Lilith Fair festivals from the ’90s.
Miranda Lambert, Hank Williams Jr., Lynyrd Skynyrd, Koe Wetzel, Brantley Gilbert, Travis Tritt, Lee Brice, Big & Rich, and Gretchen Wilson were some of the other big names involved in the tour, with an even deeper undercard of developing talent.
The big, unspoken theme behind the festival seemed to be that it was basically a big traveling political rally promoted during a Presidential election year, and coded toward the American right. This was never expressly stated on the posters or in any of the promotional copy for the traveling festival. But watching a documentary on the 2024 Rock The Country confirms the political tie-in, with Tucker Carlson and Donald Trump leading invocations, and fans touting their MAGA bonafides.
The Rock The Country festival/tour also took place in 2025, with Kid Rock and Nickelback being the two big names leading lineups in eleven different cities. By all indications, Rock The Country has turned into a strong and successful touring franchise that can be expected to happen each year.
Announced on January 12th, the 2026 Rock The Country Festival would travel to eight different locations, and feature the reunification of Kid Rock and Jason Aldean, along with top names like Blake Shelton, Jelly Roll, Creed, Brooks & Dunn, Miranda Lambert, Riley Green, Hank Williams Jr., Lynyrd Skynyrd, Shinedown, Jon Pardi, Ella Langley, Brantley Gilbert, Treaty Oak Revival, Gavin Adcock, Ludacris, Nelly, and a large undercard depending on the city.

But where in previous years the Rock The Country announcements came with excitement by many, and eye rolls and grumbles from folks that were unlikely to attend anyway, the January 12th announcement was proceeded by widespread rebuke and condemnation of the performers whose names were associated with the event.
It seemed that the “vibe shift” that preceded the last Presidential election had started to shift back, and a passive resignation by some music fans to the politicization of the music turned into active pressure campaigns to shame artists to drop out of the events, or face supposed “cancellation” like it was 2020 all over again.
The first to capitulate was rapper Ludacris, who just like Nelly, has appeared on multiple “country” festival billings before. As opposed to owning up though, the Ludacris camp played dumb, saying appearing on the lineup was “a mix-up. Lines got crossed, and he wasn’t supposed to be on there.” Maybe that’s the case. But artists must confirm poster placements for events like this, and Ludacris has made a concerted effort to open the country market to his music. It’s more likely public pressure was the culprit.
Shortly after the Ludacris departure, two openers from the country world in Morgan Wade and Carter Faith also dropped off the lineup. In the face of public pressure being put on all the performers, the drummer for rock band Shinedown, Barry Kerch, called out Ludacris for being a coward for dropping out, though also acknowledged the band didn’t know about the political notions of the festival. He said in late January,
I had no idea this was Kid Rock’s thing. It was just, ‘Hey, here’s an offer. It looks like a cool lineup, and it’s a mix of country and rock. Okay, we’ll play it.’ We took the offer and played it, and then all of a sudden we find out, ‘Oh, this has got some political leaning to it.’
I don’t care. I’m just gonna go play a show. I really, really don’t care. You can keep your politics to yourself. I have no opinion one way or the other on Kid Rock. I love his music. This is about music. Ludacris wasn’t tough… I mean, it’s not like he needs the money, Jeez. If he’s not tough enough to stick it out, that’s just silly. That’s him being a coward, in my opinion.
But where the pressure really began to mount is after Kid Rock’s involvement was revealed in TPUSA’s alternative halftime to the Super Bowl. Two days before the Super Bowl (Feb. 6th) Shinedown decided to pull out, saying in a statement,
Shinedown is everyone’s band. We feel that we have been given a platform to bring all people together through the power of music and song. We have one BOSS, and it is everyone in the audience. Our band’s purpose is to unite, not divide. With that in mind, we have made the decision that we will not be playing the Rock The Country Festival.”
We know this decision will create differences of opinion. But we do not want to participate in something we believe will create further division. And to our fans, thank you for supporting and believing in us. We love and appreciate you always.
The defections from the festival ultimately doomed two of the dates scheduled for Anderson, South Carolina, on July 25th and 26th, which were canceled.

But as the Super Bowl Halftime performance became the culture war du jour, people seemed to move on from the Rock The Country outrage, and public pressure died down on the performers, even if high-profile performers like Blake Shelton and Jelly Roll who previously were not considered through a political lens are now considered “MAGA.”
But it wasn’t just public pressure and backlash some Rock The Country performers have been facing. A 46-year-old man named Baptiste W. Brafford from Sheridan, Wyoming allegedly sent Rock The Country performer Tanner Usrey from Texas numerous death threats directly tied to a show he was scheduled to play in Rapid City, South Dakota on February 6th.
Saving Country Music has been able to confirm that the threats Usrey received were directly tied to his involvement in Rock The Country.
On January 12th—Rock The Country lineup was originally released—Tanner Usrey posted on X/Twitter, “Getting death threats for being on a festival lineup is f-cking CRAZY…”

Baptiste W. Brafford allegedly sent in Facebook messages, “Don’t come to Rapid City, you could end up ‘Charlie Kirk’ spreading that same hate. It be an arrow though … Hey a 30-06 (thirty-ought-six) would blow your head off. That’s what killed Charlie Queen yet didn’t blow his head off. You think it was a 06 (ought-six) but any good ole boy knows that was a .223 at best.”
Rapid City police were contacted about the threats, who then reached out to Sheridan, Wyoming police who arrested Brafford. The man told officers that he remembered sending Facebook messages to Usrey approximately one month previous and stated that he was drunk when he sent them. Brafford said he later deleted the conversation.
Brafford was taken into custody Feb. 4 for telephonic threats for communicating with Usrey electronically and threatening to inflict death. He pleaded not guilty to the misdemeanor charge during arraignment Feb. 5, and later posted a $5,000 bond.
What the narratives, news stories, and now criminal charges stemming from the 2026 Rock The Country festival underscore is how political acrimony has now officially permeated every crevice of American culture, to the curation of many music events, to how those events are received by the public. Where you perform, who you perform with, what tour you choose to join, what music you perform or listen to is all being whittled down to a political decision, not one of personal taste.
Despite the proclamations of Rock The Country in their statement after the cancellations, they are dividing America, as are the fans an activists shaming the performers for participating in Rock The Country.
Now that negative rhetoric has even rose to the level of death threats, it’s not hard to imagine how it could manifest into physical violence. It did for Charlie Kirk like the alleged death threat author mentioned. It also did for the 60 people killed, and over 400 wounded in 2017 at the Route 91 country music festival in Las Vegas—the deadliest mass shooting in modern history, and one where a motive has never been concluded upon.
All of this is a catastrophic prognosis for the music community, and the ability of music to unite people. It’s all a symptom of the societal decay in a crumbling empire and late-stage Capitalist era that it now feels somewhat fruitless to rage against, and impossible to game a solution to, especially since so many are poised to personally benefit from this rabid polarization, at least in the short-term, feeding off of it for attention, social clout—and for those in the political class themselves, power.
But if for no other reason than for personal safety, everyone should work to turn the temperature down, show more grace and understanding than judgement, and work to restore music’s unique ability to unite people beyond the political binary, even if such a statement in itself seems blind and innocent to the realities of American society today.
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February 18, 2026 @ 9:06 am
“Late-stage capitalist”. C’mon, man, you can do better. The division is sown by the violent and feeble-minded, not the artists or promoters.
February 18, 2026 @ 9:11 am
I think even if you’re a dyed-in-the-wool Kid Rock fan, you have to be aware that he’s divisive. I think that’s why many people like him, because he’s outspoken and divisive, and expresses their values. To not recognize the divisivness of Kid Rock—and to a perhaps smaller extent, Jason Aldean—is to feign feeble mindedness.
February 18, 2026 @ 9:28 am
So are we gonna call Jason Isbell, Kacey Musgraves and others who speak from the other side divisive.
February 18, 2026 @ 9:32 am
Have you read anything trigger has ever written lol
February 18, 2026 @ 9:43 am
Forgiveness For Me But Not For Thee: On Jason Isbell & George Jones
https://savingcountrymusic.com/forgiveness-for-me-but-not-for-thee-on-jason-isbell-george-jones/
The Confounding Dichotomy of Jason Isbell
https://savingcountrymusic.com/the-confounding-dichotomy-of-jason-isbell/
Jason Isbell Says There Aren’t Great Conservative Songwriters
https://savingcountrymusic.com/jason-isbell-says-there-are-no-great-conservative-songwriters/
Houston Venue Refutes Jason Isbell’s Claim It Refused Covid Policy
https://savingcountrymusic.com/houston-venue-refutes-jason-isbells-claim-it-refused-covid-policy/
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Someday, people will finally come to the conclusion that what I’ve been saying for many, many years is true: I don’t not bring a political alignment to my reporting. My allegiance is to trying to keep political acrimony and irrationality out of the music space so it can do its job of unifying people across the ideological strata.
February 18, 2026 @ 9:25 am
Once again- well stated, we’ll balanced, we’ll said. I dont know how you do it. Thanks for doing it anyway. Much appreciated.
February 18, 2026 @ 9:25 am
I am a bit unsure about the reference to the Las Vegas shooting which is presented like it’s intended to suggest a political motive to the shooting when as far as I’m aware there’s no reason to think that. I understand it’s all a bit murky but what I’ve read suggests the shooting was motivated by the shooters personal grudge against the casino he fired the shots from. Happy to be corrected
February 18, 2026 @ 9:36 am
This is what the article states about the Las Vegas shooting:
” It also did for the 60 people killed, and over 400 wounded in 2017 at the Route 91 country music festival in Las Vegas—the deadliest mass shooting in modern history, and one where a motive has never been concluded upon.”
There has been a lot of speculation about motive, but it appears the killer very intentionally covered his tracks in a way that would trip up investigators and leave them with more questions than answers, knowing motive would be something they would be focused on.
I don’t want to be hyperbolic here. I also don’t want to diminish the possibility of political violence becoming part of the equation here. The biggest mass shooting in modern history happened at a country music festival.
February 18, 2026 @ 9:46 am
That reference stuck out to me as well. Otherwise a good article
February 18, 2026 @ 9:44 am
Also not mentioned here Trigger but the death threats definitely take me back to when this exact thing happened with the Dixie Chicks, which weve all established was not country musics proudest moment
February 18, 2026 @ 9:56 am
When rabid politicization permeated country music in the early 2000s resulting in the expulsion of the Dixie Chicks from the genre, it wasn’t just the Dixie Chicks that were injured.The entire credibility of country music suffered, resulting in not just the loss of cultural cachet for the genre, but lowered economic activity as people didn’t want to be associated with it. This is the reason labels, managers, etc. all enacted a moratorium against artists taking strong political stances, which was a regime that lasted up until about 2024.
Now that moratorium is completely gone, and even labels and managers are actively using politics to attempt to leverage political demographics for popularity. Though this may result in a short-term goosing of popularity or a strengthening of a fan base, it also runs the risk of a massive backlash as the political winds shift like we are already seeing.
February 18, 2026 @ 9:48 am
Well said. I am really disappointed in Shinedown. If they truly want to be a uniter they could of just said they didn’t understand the political nature of the event but made a commitment and welcome all sides to listen to their music and did the show. Especially since they were a headliner and many got tickets just for them. It is a shame because many of their lyrics could be inspiring to anybody and would guess a good portion of their fanbase leans right (good portion leans left too). Who knows what the percentages are but no doubt they angered up to 50% of their fanbase with this decision. The drummer sure looks bad too.
February 18, 2026 @ 10:01 am
Give credit to the Rock The Country organizers for at least trying to put together lineups that cut across ideological lines. As much as it drives me nuts that these country festivals book rap acts like Nelly and Ludacris as opposed to supporting actual Black artists within country, they did that on purpose. They were trying to appeal and represent a wider audience. They also didn’t book an act like Morgan Wade on accident. And by people shaming these artists off the lineup, it does made these events more politically and socially concentrated and ideological.
February 18, 2026 @ 10:27 am
You dont think some of this is on kid rock? I mean hes the face of the festival, and has dived right into the current political and cultural wars head first for what (cynically) seems to be his own financial reasons.
February 18, 2026 @ 10:32 am
https://savingcountrymusic.com/death-threats-and-defections-2026s-rock-the-country-fest/comment-page-1/#comment-1740402
“I think even if you’re a dyed-in-the-wool Kid Rock fan, you have to be aware that he’s divisive. I think that’s why many people like him, because he’s outspoken and divisive, and expresses their values. To not recognize the divisivness of Kid Rock—and to a perhaps smaller extent, Jason Aldean—is to feign feeble mindedness.
February 18, 2026 @ 10:41 am
Maybe I wasnt paying attention but up until the last 18 months or so, I hardly thought about Kid Rock, and didnt see him as much divisive as I did a washed up 90s rocker who tried a poor mans Darius Rucker genre switch but to shrug results.
I guess that’s the point. In past years people kind of shrugged off Kid Rock, even if they knew he was political, not too many people thought of him all that much. Now hes plastered everywhere, presumably to his financial benefit but those tied to him are going to get questions from a generic public that wss previously uncaring
February 18, 2026 @ 10:48 am
It’s mostly about Kid Rock even though my post was about Shinedown and while Kid Rock is the organizer of the concept he wasn’t scheduled to perform at that one. The left can’t stand the fact they can’t make him go away. I will also say I don’t think Kid Rock makes any decision solely based on money. The one thing many people don’t understand about Kid Rock is that his fan base goes beyond music and MAGA, he is beloved by many in Detroit and in Michigan along with the large military community for the time, money and resources he has provided. Plus, there has always been an attraction for someone who really doesn’t care what anyone things about him. Fyi, I’m not necessarily a fan and no doubt he brings some of this on himself.
February 18, 2026 @ 10:15 am
Sad to see music artists get death threats.
February 18, 2026 @ 10:38 am
All that talk about “Love > Hate” from the left… yet CSIS and other stats show left-wing attacks and plots leading the charts lately. I agree it would be nice to calm things down, but so many celebrated when Kirk died that I don’t see how that could happen.