Johnny Blue Skies (Sturgill Simpson) Reveals New “Disco-Hedonism” Album

When the new Johnny Blue Skies & the Dark Clouds album Mutiny After Midnight comes out on March 13th, I will do whatever I can to commandeer a copy, and be as excited to listen to it as any album from any artist who releases highly anticipated records because they’ve earned that distinction and grace over the years. Sturgill Simpson has most certainly ensconced himself in that “highly anticipated” field with his output, even when he’s veered well off the country path.
And it doesn’t even matter if the album is country or not. Every indication we have about Mutiny After Midnight so far is that it probably won’t be country at all. But a lot of people believed that about 2024’s Passage Du Desir when it actually had a handful of country moments, and the very country “Mint Tea” has emerged as the album’s most popular track.
And even though it wasn’t exclusively a country record, Passage Du Desir was still a great work of music, and was even nominated for Album of the Year here. An open heart and mind will be brought to whatever Sturgill Simpson … or Johnny Blue Skies releases. And it’s a shame when others recuse themselves from music that might resonate with them due to preconceived biases.
But man, if Sturgill Simpson hasn’t given into the most insufferable aspects of his persona with the rollout of Mutiny After Midnight so far, cementing negative sentiment with multiple cohorts, and acting like he is so above us all and beyond reproach as a “true artist” that us peons should be happy to vacuum up whatever refuse is left in his wake because his iconoclastic brilliance is so beyond our even wildest comprehension.
If you’re reading this right now, you’ve probably already seen the letter Johnny Blue Skies posted on Thursday (2/12) ahead of formally announcing the new album’s release date on Friday. You can see full letter below if you haven’t. The upshot is that the album was recorded with his touring band, was all self-produced and written on the spot, and that Sturgill considers it a, “a dance record,” a “protest,” and “pure, unfiltered, unapologetic, relentless disco-hedonism.”
More specifically he states, “…we decided to make an album centered firmly on groove. We started every day from scratch with a basic groove, I wrote the songs and lyrics in the moment on-the-spot, and everyone established their individual parts servicing the songs and not the individual ego.”
Joining Johnny Blue Skies on the album will be drummer and backing vocalist Miles Miller, lead guitarist Laur Joamets, bassist Kevin Black, and keyboard/saxophone player Robbie Crowell. “Each is a star in his own right. And together, we reflect each other’s shine,” Simpson says.
Mr. Blue Skies seems patently aware that where this album goes, not everyone will follow. “Everything won’t be for everyone, but everything tends to eventually find everyone it was meant for. You win some, you lose some, but in the end you’re left with the real ones. And the real ones are for life…”
Sure, that goes for any artist or work of music. But let’s please not imply you’re an inauthentic human if you’re not willing to follow Johnny Blue Skies on his journey of “relentless disco-hedonism.” Let’s just wait and hear the music before we make such proclamations.

Music is supposed to be for everyone. It’s supposed it create a bridge, and open hearts and minds. You want to protest? You want to move the needle of public sentiment? You want to make a difference in the world? You do that by making music that casts a wide net of appeal across ideological, geographical, and genre barriers, not by creating speed humps so you can siphon down a message until you’re only preaching to your preferred flock.
Sturgill says that he’s taking his cues for protest from the French. After spending time in the country, he says he admires, “their unmatched ability to threaten injustice with a good time. If they feel infringed upon by overreach in even the slightest form, French people will simply go on a country wide labor strike, shut down the subways and the economy, and completely fill the streets with music and people from all walks of life dancing together, sometimes butt ass naked on top of bus stops.”
Boy that all sounds like a big party. But Sturgill forgot to mention the destruction and violence that has permeated French protests, including back in 2023 when “3,880 fires were started, 2,000 vehicles were burned and 492 buildings were damaged” during only one such protest according to ABC. More recently, this summer a 17-year-old and 23-year-old were killed, and 192 were injured in riots after a soccer game.
Perhaps the most controversial move by Sturgill is choosing not to release the music digitally whatsoever. Mutiny After Midnight will only be available via vinyl, cassette, and CD … at least to start. Johnny Blue Skies has decided to take a page from the Garth Brooks school of making your music irrelevant by making it inaccessible to the vast majority of people where they are and how they listen—meaning in their cars, at or during work, or working out.
Yes, we’re all extremely, extremely aware that Spotify only plays out 0.0003 per stream, or whatever it is on average. This model has also made a millionaire of Sturgill Simpson and many others. It’s really the little guy who can’t go physical only and expect their music to reach a sustainable level that is getting squeezed in the system. And sure, the fact that nobody just puts on a record and listens anymore as a primary activity is a shame. That still doesn’t feel like a good reason to limit an album’s reach.
Also, Sturgill Simpson has decided to partner back up with Atlantic Music Group’s Atlantic Outpost to release Mutiny After Midnight. Remember the whole kerfuffle in 2019 when Sturgill swore that Atlantic and the entire music industry had screwed him over so royally that he made an entire protest noise rock album called Sound & Fury complete with an anime video?
If this is all about the music and the little guy, why wouldn’t Sturgill stick with Thirty Tigers? Why funnel any money to a major? And by the way, shout out to Jason Isbell, the Turnpike Troubadours, and others for staying independent even when their careers exploded.
Sturgill says in the Atlantic press release, “This is a new and very different Atlantic Records than my last go-around. Mostly, I’m very excited and honored to be working with my dear friend Ian Cripps, and to finally bring to fruition a vision we initially shared together over ten years ago.”
Though we don’t have any music or a single from the album just let, they have released some of the lyrics to the opening song “Make American Fuk Again.”
Been learning lessons and getting bubbles busted
Learning how to turn ADHD into hyper-focus
Getting my heart broke by people I trusted
Weaponizing my autism to shit out an opus
Been coming to terms with my obsolescence
Taking ketamine to kill my depression
It beats being fogged out on anti-depressants
Wait, that reminds me, time to book another session…
Maybe things have been worse but I can’t remember when
Wanna start a revolution and watch it begin
As Simpson also mentioned in his lengthy letter, he seems to have either been diagnosed, or come to terms with an autism prognosis. Perhaps that explains, or maybe even excuses some of his mercurial and curious tendencies, including with this album rollout.
There’s just a lot to unpack here. And if Sturgill Simpson ultimately wanted the music to speak for itself, he kind of failed in that endeavor. But if you write off Sturgill Simpson/Johnny Blue Skies summarily, you run the risk of failing yourself as a music fan. Not Simpson’s words, but the music is what will matter here.
To pre-order physical copies of Mutiny After Midnight, click here.
– – – – – – –
TRACKLIST:
01 “Make America Fuk Again”
02 “Excited Delirium”
03 “Don’t Let Go”
04 “Stay On That”
05 “Viridescent”
06 “Situation”
07 “Venus”
08 “Everyone Is Welcome”
09 “Ain’t That A Bitch”
WHAT’S BEHIND THE “MUTINY AFTER MIDNIGHT?
In a word, kinship…
The majority of this band has been on the road together on and off and on again for over thirteen years. We have all grown sometimes together and sometimes apart. But we’ve never felt more “together” than right now. I couldn’t be happier. This is the band I’ve dreamed about being in since middle school. Last year we did two complete laps around the U.S. and a tour of Western Europe. Between gigs this past September, we went into a brand new gorgeous studio in Nashville, Tennessee. Inspired heavily from endless hours on the bus watching old clips of the great fusion-funk band ‘Stuff, and revisiting off-the-beaten-track concept records like Marvin Gaye’s “In Our Lifetime”, where, in what looks like the end of the world, the artist’s response is, “Let’s dance and make love.”…we decided to make an album centered firmly on groove.
We started every day from scratch with a basic groove, I wrote the songs and lyrics in the moment on-the-spot, and everyone established their individual parts servicing the songs and not the individual ego.You can break down the songs on this album into two categories-the dark state of the world and the bright state of love. Light lives in darkness just as darkness lives in light. I have come to find over time that it’s far easier to just embrace contradictions rather than attempting to resolve them.
Hence “Johnny Blue Skies & the Dark Clouds…The enjoyment we experienced in making this album of songs will be quite evident for the listener. But it’s a lot more than joy. You can call it a mutiny,… an open rebellion.
In any case, despite the motivations behind it the mutiny in the studio turned into a party. To categorize Mutiny is tricky, but many will no doubt come with their glass ceilings to try. We believe the term American Music pretty much says it all. And for all the big ideas behind the ‘Mutiny,’ there’s a simple goal we as a band set out to achieve: to make a dance record.So this protest, this mutiny is really more about the primary dance. The dance of all creation. To be clear it is a protest against oppression and suppression, and the only tried & tested true antidote to that is pure, unfiltered, unapologetic, relentless disco-hedonism
My voice is just one element in this band and at all times this band is far too good to ever be overshadowed by a vocalist. So I just want to say how grateful I am to be a part of this band of brilliant musicians-drunner and backing vocalist Miles Miller, lead guitarist Laur Joanets, bassist Kevin Black and keyboardist/saxist Robbie Crowell. Each is a star in his own right. And together, we reflect each other’s shine.
I’ve spent the greater part of the last few years trying to escape what we shall refer to as “the static”. Mostly through intense travels. One thing I will say based on observations about the French is their unmatched ability to threaten injustice with a good time. If they feel infringed upon by overreach in even the slightest form, French people will simply go on a country wide labor strike, shut down the subways and the economy, and completely fill the streets with music and people from all walks of life dancing together, sometimes butt ass naked on top of bus stops. It’s refreshing and beyond inspiring to witness this type of manifested unity in humanity. You could say this is where the idea was born.
Touring behind ‘Mutiny’ is something we greatly look forward to. Something we will cherish. Just as I have come to see and harness my own neurodivergence and the weaponized autism of our collective members as a superpower in the studio—the same is true live. We’re going out to play arenas and theaters with a vengeance. No opening act. We’re going to take every minute the venue gives us. We’re gonna rock this Mutiny as hard as humanly possible. It is our privilege and our honor because our fans deserve it.
Beyond the static, the only things that truly matter are the sounds we make and the ears that absorb them. Everything won’t be for everyone, but everything tends to eventually find everyone it was meant for. You win some, you lose some, but in the end you’re left with the real ones.
And the real ones are for life…For over a decade of navigating and charting the depressions of this industry’s cold and salty trenches, I have found my true North. I now wake up every day with the sole intention of doing my best at what I’m best at simply being a pirate. And by now everybody knows our crew runs the tightest and deadliest ship on the water. This band has less than zero interest in accolade’s, trophy’s, or being the definitive this or that of our generation. We’re in search of something far more meaningful and rewarding…and we’re collecting heads for the journey.
So with that all said, to any and all who see our flag flying off your stern, know this… There will be no quarter nor mercy offered nor given.


February 13, 2026 @ 12:30 pm
Speaking of disco, Ella Langley just dropped a new song from her upcoming album Dandelion, “Be Her,” this morning, and it’s definitely in the disco/’70s mode of Miranda Lambert and Chris Stapleton’s “A Song to Sing.” Is this a trend in the making? It certainly wasn’t what I was expecting from Langley, just as disco is not what anyone was expecting of Sturgill Simpson, regardless of his motivation for making a disco record.
February 13, 2026 @ 1:07 pm
Is disco what that was?! Not trying to be snarky, I swear, I just genuinely didn’t know what the hell Ella’s Be Her was supposed to be. I personally thought it was absolutely terrible and a strange departure from everything Ella’s done well on her more recent and more clearly country songs, but it’s interesting to read your comment and see that there’s some precedent for country artists going in that direction, so thanks!
February 13, 2026 @ 1:21 pm
It seems to be an attempt to solidify crossover airplay and sales now that “Choosin’ Texas” has broken through on pop radio. I’ve actually warmed up to the Miranda and Chris song. It’s pleasant in its odd “Kenny and Dolly meet the Bee Gees” way, and the video with Stapleton lumbering around on roller skates is funny, It’s not only Ella who’s drawing on disco influence. I hear that beat in Megan Moroney’s newest one, too. As a trend, it’s less offensive than bro or hip-hop, but that’s a very low bar to climb, and it poses a threat to the resurgence of traditional-ish country on mainstream radio.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:23 pm
I don’t know if anyone else will draw this comparison but the Eagles hit the pinnacle of the Country Rock Disco sound with ‘One of These Nights’, and I can draw a comparison between that song and ‘I Can’t Tell You Why’ to the pseudo Disco Rock Country sound here. Morgan Wallen had a song on his last album (I can’t remember the name) where the music had this sound despite his vocals being annoyingly the same. I like the sound that the Dandolien track has. Not sure how I feel about her vocal styling on it yet though.
February 13, 2026 @ 4:00 pm
The commenters on the Pulse Country board are likening the sound of “Be Her” to Shania Twain. I’m not hearing that at all, though. Anyway, this thread is supposed to be about Sturgill so I’ll just sit on the sidelines until (or unless) Trigger writes an article on Langley.
February 13, 2026 @ 8:04 pm
I was nowhere near that but as soon as I read it, yeah, that’s exactly where that is. Maybe with some other stuff mixed in also, but it really has that feel.
February 13, 2026 @ 10:12 pm
I’m not familiar with any of the songs you mentioned but I was just listening to Summer Dean’s 70’s- inflected Somebody’s Knockin (SMOKIN hot song) and thinking that it had a country disco influence. I remember somebody calls one of Waylon’s albums country disco so it’s definitely not a new thing
February 14, 2026 @ 9:08 am
Bill Anderson went all-in on country disco at the height of the disco fad with two songs, “I Can’t Wait Any Longer” and “Double S.”
February 14, 2026 @ 3:02 pm
Good comment. Double S is unbelievably bad. Don’t tease Bill about it either he will not take it nicely 😄
February 13, 2026 @ 12:34 pm
Paragraph four 🤌🏽
February 13, 2026 @ 12:39 pm
I bet it will pop up on a digital a couple weeks after release. Excited though, his last record was great.
February 13, 2026 @ 12:42 pm
I received an email about this new Johnny Blue Skies album from info@sturgillsimpson.com this morning. I’ve been waiting to see if you would post more information about it. Thanks for providing a little more insight to Sturgill’s latest product. I know I will be buying the CD and looking forward to hearing these tunes. ‘Til then… I’ll be looking for tour dates.
February 13, 2026 @ 4:37 pm
Mr Simpson will forever have a place in my heart. The first time that I saw him, I was system teachin a monitor rig for him and his band. Basically hanging out and getting paid very well to listen. It was also the night of the 2016 Presidential election. I remember nothing but pacing around with my iPad dissecting the returns. I have seen him many times since and am looking forward to this little adventure.
February 15, 2026 @ 8:17 pm
Really looking forward to this tour, hoping to see dates soon. Really figured they’d have listed them with this announcement.
February 13, 2026 @ 12:43 pm
It’s a no from me, strictly on principle. This whole tortured artist shtick is so worn out.
February 13, 2026 @ 4:15 pm
Yeah, it’s exhausting and it’s stupid but whatever. He can sit around and smell his own farts all he wants for all I care…I’m a fan, he hasn’t missed with me. There are some albums I definitely prefer over others when it comes to his catalog but I’m not gonna be upset if I have to listen to the Ballad of Dood and Juanita.
So I’ll drop 30 bucks on a gamble for this album. That said, I agree with your take on the tortured artist schtick…it’s annoying and if it were coming from someone I can’t stand (Bono, Springsteen, Mellencamp) I’d be mocking them too.
February 14, 2026 @ 10:01 pm
Its like, OMG so edgy.
February 16, 2026 @ 11:06 am
Well at least he finally admitted to being retarded instead of making us all continue to wonder.
February 13, 2026 @ 12:44 pm
What a wack job
February 13, 2026 @ 12:45 pm
Let the boy do what he wants..accepting or rejecting the content on your own musical taste..He’s so far been a astounding live performer and self satisfying recording artist..A visit to any mid America honky-tonk will find rap and EDM on the jukebox or sound system betwern live sets of hard-core country..The Hopi Native Americans chant ” Witchi Ti To ” Everything is Everything. He has plenty of time to pump out another bluegrass/country project.
February 13, 2026 @ 12:46 pm
Awesome, can’t wait! Like Snipe Hunter this new JBS joint is sure to cause some heads to explode. Especially here among the hyper-arrogant “independent” country gentry. And it appears that it will be protest tinged. That is sure to bring out the best in the maga crowd. Thank you Sturdill!
February 13, 2026 @ 12:51 pm
Trigger getting pre-triggered by an album not even out yet is hilarious. I dont think theres a protest singer in the world that thinks that their goal is to “make music that casts a wide net of appeal across ideological barriers”.
Somewhere Frank Zappa and the Plastic People are rolling in their Graves over this pre-review screed.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:14 pm
???
Don’t understand this take at all. As it says in the article, QUOTE:
“When the new Johnny Blue Skies & the Dark Clouds album Mutiny After Midnight comes out on March 13th, I will do whatever I can to commandeer a copy, and be as excited to listen to it as any album from any artist who releases highly anticipated records because they’ve earned that distinction and grace over the years. Sturgill Simpson has most certainly ensconced himself in that “highly anticipated” field with his output, even when he’s veered well off the country path.”
It also states, QUOTE:
” An open heart and mind will be brought to whatever Sturgill Simpson … or Johnny Blue Skies releases. And it’s a shame when others recuse themselves from music that might resonate with them due to preconceived biases.”
It goes on to further conclude at the end, QUOTE:
” if you write off Sturgill Simpson/Johnny Blue Skies summarily, you run the risk of failing yourself as a music fan. Not Simpson’s words, but the music is what will matter here. “
Anyone concluding anytime less than this entire article being written with the express purpose of telling people they should approach this album with an open mind is delusional. Basically, you have imposed a preconceived opinion upon me, based I guess off the fact that I also acknowledged the self-absorbed nature of some of his letter, and the unusual way he’s chosen to release it, including through a label he previously believed screwed him over so demonstrably, he wrote and recorded an entire protest album about it.
DO NOT MISREPRESENT MY OPINION HERE
As I have said many, many times over many years, you ALWAYS have to listen to music before coming to any conclusions. This point was the entire arc of this article. and to say I am “pre-triggered by an album not even out yet” is hilarious. It’s also categorically false.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:04 pm
Cmon trig… like 15 comments in here had the same reaction that I did. I dont think we’re misreading what you wrote at all. Its almost as if the second the word “protest” showed up we knew you’d have gripes.
February 13, 2026 @ 6:06 pm
15? I’m seeing six so far.
“Its almost as if the second the word “protest” showed up we knew you’d have gripes.”
Exactly my point.
February 13, 2026 @ 8:24 pm
There’s a tone shift that gave me whiplash. It was excited and happy and cautious and then not.
February 13, 2026 @ 7:48 pm
I think it’s the supposed to where I noped out. There’s an awful lot of music that tries hard to be difficult, tries to push you away. Check out Kronos Quartet’s record about war and brutality, which opens with a 3 part piece about the Vietnam War. Or The Boiler, a single put out by Rhoda in a session with The Specials. I listened to each of those once and have not listened twice. Music *can* cross ideological lines (Dolly Parton), but I’m not sure there’s anything it’s supposed to do beyond make you feel. Those two records are so upsetting. And The Boiler is such a great tune, I would love that melody in any other context, it sounds like a jazzy version of the music you might hear in the background of some B movie action film with a scene in a souk somewhere in the Middle East and they are crossing through a bustling market neighborhood.
February 13, 2026 @ 12:51 pm
Somebody woke up on the wrong side of the bed today.
February 13, 2026 @ 12:52 pm
I’ve always liked the Sturg, but this hard of a pivot might give a us a case of pemanent whiplash. Think Chris Gaines (Garth) doing a collaboration with the Dixie Chicks. Guess we’ll find out.
February 13, 2026 @ 12:58 pm
This is something I would listen to at least once and do it with an open mind with no expectations (knowing most likely it won’t be for me). Too bad I no longer have a CD player, turntable or cassette player, so might not have a chance.
February 13, 2026 @ 1:08 pm
“Light lives in darkness just as darkness lives in light”
This is one of the dumbest things ever said or written or even thought. He sniffs his own farts much more and South Park will have him on.
“the depressions of this industry’s cold and salty trenches”
yeahhh mannn, being a music artist is so much like being in a war, dude. Come to think of it, I feel like some guy in France in 1917 bro.
” to any and all who see our flag flying off your stern, know this… There will be no quarter nor mercy offered nor given.”
so Sturge has gone back to jr high or had someone in 7th grade write that.
He is 100% nincompoop now.
February 13, 2026 @ 1:26 pm
Fuck it I’m in. I’m down for a little bit of nostalgia you used to get on buying an album and cant wait to pop it in (I realize lot of people still do that). Between live shows and albums Sturgill has enough goodwill built up for me to see how this goes.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:37 pm
That’s where I am on this. The biggest sin he committed was shitting on his first album – “That’s how people got into you in the first place dood! WTF”. He dropped that first album when Country music was in a complete Bro Country wasteland. His ramblings remind me of reading Kerouac and Bukowski – at times I don’t know if certain passages are brilliant or just verbose douchebag nonsense…but it sounds good.
February 13, 2026 @ 4:17 pm
That sums it up for me. It’s annoying not to have that instant gratification of being able to pull it up on my phone but the days of having to get something physical, put it on…sit down, listen to it. That’s actually kinda cool.
Not a lot of artists out there I’d do this for, but Sturgill is on the list.
February 13, 2026 @ 7:25 pm
Totally. I agree with Trigger on his assessment of Sturgill’s letter, but I’m gunna buy me the shit out of that record regardless.
February 13, 2026 @ 1:38 pm
Man, I don’t care about Sturgill loving on the French and I don’t care about the genre (at least until I hear it), but not releasing digitally is beyond stupid.
Sorry, if you don’t want to make it streaming I can understand that. But most new cars don’t even have a CD (much less cassette) player and Vinyl may not be practical for people living in big households or apartments (noise).
Like – at least let me buy a digital copy off Bandcamp or something…
Dumb, dumb, dumb.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:53 pm
While I’m still very much a CD person, I just think it’s absurd not to offer at least a try-before-you-buy option in this day and age (such as putting the tracks on YouTube, plus I like your Bandcamp suggestion).
February 13, 2026 @ 9:37 pm
oh, French protestors are pretty great. Farmer protests where the have a tractor convoy, fill the streets of Paris with manure, and making hay bale street blockades? Young folks protesting over raising the retirement age? A populist movement to reduce taxes on the middle class and pay more attention to poorer areas, rural or urban, and all they do is stand around in hi-vis yellow vests?
And don’t forget that whole bailing out the American Revolution thing, that was cool of them.
Napoleon, who takes over the country not once, not twice, but 3 times, appoints himself emperor, conquers Western Europe including destroying the Holy Roman Empire, gives his brother Spain so he can have a kingdom to play with, invades Russia, finally gets beaten when all of the rest of Europe unite against him, sent into exile, comes back in less than a year to just take back his title of Emperor, so it’s France vs the rest of Europe AGAIN?
Or Louis XIV, who was king of France for 72 years and at war for 33 of those?
Or the bikini?
The croissant?
February 17, 2026 @ 12:35 pm
The French almost blew the Revolution. They missed golden opportunities at Newport and Savannah and almost left the British escape at Yorktown. Washington warned them about a crossing, they ignored it, and if not for a providential storm, the British would have escaped.
As for Napoleon, the French Revolution and his wars directly killed millions of people and threw down established and stable situations for quicksand governments.
February 15, 2026 @ 7:50 am
My biggest gripe is that the CD costs 25$ after shipping.
I dig a return to physical media and owning things rather than streaming though.
February 15, 2026 @ 9:22 pm
I mean.. CDs in the early aughts were anywhere from $15-$20.
February 13, 2026 @ 1:55 pm
Oh, it’s a PROTEST album?! So I can *finally* hear CNN’s and MSNBC’s and internet randos’ various derangements set to *music*?! That’s amazing! How groundbreaking!
/A Sailor’s Guide to Earth/ and /Sound and Fury/ are desert island albums for me, and I love disco and funk. If he were streaming it, I’d probably give it at least one shot but there is a 0% chance that I’m going to go out of my way for this thing with that kind of promotion.
I doubt either of us will lose any sleep over the whole thing.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:06 pm
Have you actually listened to the lyrics of “Call to Arms”? Seems like it may have flown over your head…
February 13, 2026 @ 2:52 pm
Do you assume I’m pro-war for some reason?
February 13, 2026 @ 3:15 pm
He probably never saw the music video to All Around You either…
February 13, 2026 @ 3:37 pm
My man, Sturgill has been on Joe Rogan numerous times – I would hardly call him the CNN/MSNBC crowd. And has written pretty pointed “political songs” before.
Maybe I end up being proven totally wrong, but I doubt we are gonna get “use my preferred pronouns” songs from Sturgill f’n Simpson. The fact you are seemingly so triggered by the thought of an artist with a track record like Simpson even touching “political content” indicates to me you have more in common with Laura Ingraham than you would like to admit.
Just say “shut up and sing” and be done with it.
February 13, 2026 @ 4:00 pm
Yawn.
February 13, 2026 @ 1:57 pm
Hey Trigger,
Man, oh man, where do I even start with this hit piece? You’ve got your panties in a bunch over Sturgill Simpson, sorry, Johnny Blue Skies, daring to evolve as an artist and drop a disco infused protest album that’s basically a middle finger to the status quo. But let’s call it what it is: you’re pretriggered (pun very much intended) because this record threatens your narrow, gatekeeping vision of “real” country music, which apparently can’t handle a little funk, hedonism, or, God forbid, actual political bite. You’ve built your whole schtick on championing “independent” country, but here you are clutching your pearls over an artist who’s been indie as hell, calling out the corporate machine, and now flipping the script on oppression with grooves that make you squirm.
First off, your gripe about the physical-only release? That’s rich coming from someone who romanticizes the good ol’ days of country. Sturgill’s not gatekeeping; he’s forcing fans to engage with music like we used to—tangible, intentional, away from the algorithm overlords at Spotify and Apple that chew up artists and spit out pennies. But no, you’d rather whine about convenience because it doesn’t fit your narrative. And reuniting with Atlantic? After he torched the majors? Come on, that’s called strategy in a rigged industry dominated by billionaire-backed labels that prop up bro-country hacks while real innovators starve. Sturgill’s playing 4D chess, using their platform to subvert from within, but you’re too busy defending the establishment to see it.
Now, let’s get political, since that’s where your bias really shines through. This album’s got “Make America Fuk Again” a blatant roast of the MAGA cult that’s turned patriotism into a grift for fascists and frauds. Sturgill’s out here protesting “oppression” through relentless disco hedonism, channeling Marvin Gaye and fusion funk to fight back against the darkness of late stage capitalism, white supremacy, and the authoritarian creep we’ve seen since 2016. But you? You’re out here acting like that’s a bad thing, pooh-poohing it as pretentious or divisive. Newsflash: Art has always been political, from Woody Guthrie to Johnny Cash calling out Vietnam. Sturgill’s just updating it for the era of Trumpism, climate denial, and billionaire bootlickers.
Your “wide net of appeal across ideological barriers” nonsense? That’s code for “don’t rock the boat, don’t alienate the red-hat crowd.” Independent country ain’t supposed to be safe or bipartisan, it’s supposed to challenge power, speak truth, and make the comfortable uncomfortable. But you’ve got a site full of commenters frothing about “hyper-arrogant independent country gentry” while you subtly pander to the ones who’d rather blast jingoistic anthems than face real issues like inequality or corporate greed. Sturgill’s letter about light in darkness, industry trenches, and no quarter? That’s poetry for the resistance, man. It’s a battle cry against the very system that lets labels exploit artists while folks like you play hall monitor.
Look, I’ve been following SCM for years because you do spotlight some gems, but this? This is you exposing your conservative underbelly, scared of an artist who’s pro-union, anti-war, and unapologetically left-of-center. Sturgill’s not a “tortured artist” he’s a truthteller in a sea of sellouts. If this album explodes heads among the MAGA types, good. We need more of that, not less.
Trigger, maybe try listening with an open mind instead of a closed fist. Or keep writing these screeds It’s just proving Sturgill’s point about the salty trenches.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:09 pm
Preach.
It’s clearly personally for Trigger when it comes to Sturgill these days.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:09 pm
And Isbell
February 13, 2026 @ 2:27 pm
I review about 120 albums a year. Out of those 120, Jason Isbell’s “Weathervanes” was nominated for Album of the Year in 2023:
https://savingcountrymusic.com/saving-country-musics-2023-album-of-the-year-nominees/
Also in 2023, Jason Isbell’s “King of Oklahoma” WON for Song of the Year:
https://savingcountrymusic.com/the-saving-country-music-2023-song-of-the-year/
Sturgill Simpson’s last album “Passage Du Desire” was also nominated for Album of the Year.
https://savingcountrymusic.com/saving-country-musics-2024-album-of-the-year-nominees/
So why is a country music website selecting out albums and songs that aren’t even really country for very top distinction when there is some “bias” at work? This is a completely ridiculous assertion.
And to the accusation about this being all about undergirding right-leaning politics, why would I then be highlighting left-leaning artists? Why would Jesse Welles and James McMurtry be the 2024 and 2025 Songwriters of the Year?
February 13, 2026 @ 2:34 pm
Well Jesse Welles is right wing
February 13, 2026 @ 3:02 pm
See Harris, You just gave away the whole game right here. Jesse Welles puts out a series of anti-ICE, anti-Trump, anti-fascist, pro Greenland songs, but then goes on Joe Rogan, and gets labeled right wing. Why? Because he’s willing to engage in cross-ideological dialog, because Jesse Wells knows that the way you change the world is by creating a consensus, and that music has a unique power to do so. That’s also why he probably has a bigger culture footprint than Jason Isbell and Sturgill Simpson combined at the moment. That also why he gets attacked by left-leaning journalists and musicians, in part because of jealousy for the platform he’s built for himself. That’s also why I get label as right wing and left wing over the same exact articles and over the same exact lines. If you’re disrupting the political binary, you’re probably doing your job right.
And just like the portions that AdamAmericana and Mike Annoys Trigger selected out of this article to make their unfounded claims, you just selectively glossed over my Jason Isbell, James McMurtry, and Sturgill Simpson coverage. Are they right wing? Sturgill went on Rogan, THREE times! He had Rogan appear on “Metamodern Sounds.” Guess where the “reptile aliens made of light” line came from. There’s a lot of people who are not comfortable with what that answer is.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:06 pm
Hey trigger I’m not glossing over anything. My thought on Jesse Welles are based on his music. I haven’t accused you of anything. We just disagree about that one guy.
February 14, 2026 @ 9:57 pm
You’re dealing with someone who says things like “That’s poetry for the resistance, man.” 😂 And “Independent country ain’t supposed to be safe or bipartisan, it’s supposed to challenge power, speak truth, and make the comfortable uncomfortable” as if he’s has the only authority on what “independent” country is supposed to be. 🫡
His self-righteousness knows no bounds… he’s only ever going to speak down to you arrogantly, set you straight, and be a hero in his own mind for doing so.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:38 pm
Extremely well written response. I agree with every point made. It is also disappointing that the author of the article seems to think a few throw away lines in support of Simpson can hide his obvious negative view of a work of art not even released yet. I have learned that this site has very little room for innovation in country music and certainly despises any political thought. Here, independent country has become an oxymoron.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:48 pm
QUOTE:
“When the new Johnny Blue Skies & the Dark Clouds album Mutiny After Midnight comes out on March 13th, I will do whatever I can to commandeer a copy, and be as excited to listen to it as any album from any artist who releases highly anticipated records because they’ve earned that distinction and grace over the years. Sturgill Simpson has most certainly ensconced himself in that “highly anticipated” field with his output, even when he’s veered well off the country path.”
QUOTE:
“An open heart and mind will be brought to whatever Sturgill Simpson … or Johnny Blue Skies releases. And it’s a shame when others recuse themselves from music that might resonate with them due to preconceived biases.”
QUOTE:
“if you write off Sturgill Simpson/Johnny Blue Skies summarily, you run the risk of failing yourself as a music fan. Not Simpson’s words, but the music is what will matter here.“
The only way anyone could every conclude that this article is asserting “negative view of a work of art not even released yet” is if they followed some sort of social media node that mischaracterized this article as such, or they simply didn’t read it. It is an empirically false statement to say this article is telling people to judge the album before it’s released. Literally the exact opposite is the truth.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:11 pm
Nope. No outside influence. I read the whole thing. Sorry, but sometimes perception is reality. More than a few people seem to share my perception.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:41 pm
AdamAmericana,
Just like Mike Annoys Trigger up above, you can here with preconceived notions of how I would handle the information on the new Johnny Blue Skies album, and twisted off on that, as opposed to actually reading and understanding what was written, which was a purposeful and concerted effort to attempt to compel the public to keep their mind’s open when listening to this album. This was presented to country music fans, on a country music website.
That’s what this article is. Characterizing as anything other than that is irresponsible. It’s hard enough for me to defend myself when I take minority opinions that challenge public sentiment or my own readership. I really don’t appreciate when people assign opinions or motivations to me that I don’t hold, like the ones you assert in your comment.
As for the physical product thing, I have been on record from artists as far ranging as Garth Brooks and Petunia and the Vipers strongly discouraging physical-only releases, and for a host of reasons. That said, I acknowledged in this very article how it’s unfortunate that singular listening of music almost no longer every takes place, and why this was probably at the heart of Sturgill’s decision.
As for the Atlantic Records thing, it would have been irresponsible of me as a journalist to not point out the guy released an entire protest album against Atlantic, with accompanying interviews/press, while reporting that he’s now back working with that same company. As part of that reporting, I also included a quote from Sturgill Simpson himself expressing why he’d chosen to work with Atlantic again from an Atlantic press release.
4D Chess? Please. Sturgill took the payday.
As far as all this political shit you keep bringing up, you always talk about one side of Saving Country Music’s coverage, but you never acknowledge the other. Every single day I am accused of being an extreme right-winger, and a pinko commie fag. And as far as I’m concerned, that’s the way it probably should be if you’re actually doing your job as a journalist. That means you’re on the right track.
But please don’t lump me into your political binary, and then impose beliefs/opinions upon me that I never shared. I’m a writer. I choose my words carefully.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:02 pm
I didn’t say anything about your politics… I think i rarely do unless I think its coloring your impressions of a particular song in a review.
I would like credit for the term “pretriggered” tho…
February 13, 2026 @ 6:13 pm
AdamAmericana is constantly badgering me about politics and how I only promote a certain White, conservative, old school country archetype, which is not the case at all. Just today I reviewed an album from a guy named Muchacho Sanchez. Basically he wants this traditional country site to be a progressive Americana site. I cover a ton of Americana and artists that have left-leaning politics all the time. But the website is called SAVING COUNTRY MUSIC, and that’s the compass point I’m always going to follow.
February 14, 2026 @ 9:25 am
The Hook is not diverse enough.
February 14, 2026 @ 10:01 am
Dude, what is your weird obsession with The Hook? We did a couple pilot episodes and now are looking for funding. Maybe the idea pans out. Maybe it doesn’t. We’ll see. Wouldn’t be the first idea I had to try and help musicians that failed if it doesn’t work out, and probably won’t be the last. But if it takes off, it could be really useful, and specifically because there is no curation point. It’s an open sign up. It’s as diverse (or not) as the people that come to perform. I appreciate the interest, though.
February 13, 2026 @ 4:22 pm
I just wish there was a laugh emoji option on this site.
That’s all.
February 14, 2026 @ 11:01 am
I just want to remind everyone of a few things regarding AdamAmericana and those like him. These things are important for normies to understand.
Adam is 100% okay with oppression, so long as it’s his “friends” oppressing his enemies for reasons he approves of.
Adam is 100% okay with authoritarianism, so long as it’s his “friends” exercising authority over his enemies for reasons that align with his worldview.
Adam is 100% okay with war, as long it’s waged by his “friends” on behalf of his “friends” for reasons he approves of.
Adam is 100% okay with “capitalism”, as long as the capitalists are his “friends”.
Adam is only okay with unions, so long as the workers trying to unionize are his “friends”.
Adam is 100% okay with racial supremacy, so long as it’s exercised by any race other than his own against his own.
Adam is 100% okay with art being political, so long as it’s an artist who aligns with Adam’s politics.
You see, when leftists don’t have power, they speak and pose as libertarians, because freedom is the normal American’s operating principle. But when leftists have power, they wield it against their enemies, because wielding political power is the left’s operating principle.
February 14, 2026 @ 1:37 pm
100% spot on
February 14, 2026 @ 10:00 pm
Can confirm.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:07 pm
Knew you’d have a bunch of negative commentary about this lol
Long live Johnny Blue Skies & the Dark Clouds!
February 13, 2026 @ 2:52 pm
Why?
February 13, 2026 @ 2:08 pm
oh boy, he done riled you all up again. hoping he has a ‘make america fuk again’ hat so it’s not all you red caps having all the fun.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:58 pm
Indeed, it’s the red caps who are having more sex, happier lives, and babies. But let’s see if that attractive sex pot pied piper of a Johnny Blue Skies can turn the cultural tide.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:12 pm
yeah, the hats will make everyone have sex. that’s definitely what i said.
every right wing person i know is miserable and none of them can figure out why. they terrified of everything they don’t know why. they have less money and they can’t figure out why.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:23 pm
If we get into straight political discussions here, this comments section is getting shut down, and comments are getting deleted. This is an article about the new Johnny Blue Skies album. Have your comments be relevant to that, or go to a political website to leave your political comments there.
February 13, 2026 @ 5:57 pm
That is literally one of the dumbest comments I’ve ever seen, on any site, about any topic.
February 14, 2026 @ 3:51 pm
Maybe the left and the right can unite on the fact that Sturgill currently sucks?
It’s a beginning, at least.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:13 pm
Can’t wait for this one
February 13, 2026 @ 2:15 pm
Thing is I don’t mind him being a weirdo cause well I like a weirdo with my art. But also if it’s not on streaming I’m probably not gonna listen to it. My car doesn’t have a cd player and my apartment isn’t big enough for vinyl (one day I hope).
I do think sound and fury has with the passage of time proven to be a record that stands up and is great. We all had that fight then and I think the people who liked it have proven more correct than not. Not that anyone’s taste is wrong I just mean I’m still listening to sound and fury and the songs are still mainstays of his setlist. So I don’t think he has any misses in his catalogue. I bet this will be good. I hope I get to hear it one day.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:29 pm
Pumped for it, but I’m definitely with you of not understanding why he would go back with Atlantic….
Such an odd move given his latest trajectory. Only thing I can think of is that he negotiated a marketing budget to light on fire.
February 13, 2026 @ 4:02 pm
Yeah….. talked all that shit about Atlantic, then jumped back in bed with them.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:36 pm
I already bought the local record store red. I’ll put my MP3’s onto my Spotify. Whoot
February 13, 2026 @ 2:51 pm
I might be in the minority here but I don’t mind that it’s only released on physical copies; especially on cassette since I’m one of the few people with a cassette player in their car. This really is the only reasonable action artists can take if they want to “stick it to the man” in regards to streaming royalties. Everyone who doesn’t have a CD or cassette player in their car at least has an aux input. Get a $20 CD player off Ebay and purposefully put the smartphone aside for once.
February 13, 2026 @ 2:53 pm
It’s a pretentious and embarrassing manifesto, on an equal low footing with the tiresome and joyless hectoring of AdamAmericana.
I’m looking forward to hearing this album. It sounds like the work of musicians who like each other and want to record, live, whatever they want. Cool, let’s hear it. There’s a mini-boom of audience interest in the 70s, for whatever reason, and this catches that small wave. I hope they do a good job. Turn it up and let’s see what you’ve got.
But does everything now have to come served with a steaming pile of positional horsesh*t?
February 13, 2026 @ 3:05 pm
I have a fascination with 70’s and 80’s New York culture so I am interested.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:16 pm
You didn’t just miss the point: you proved it, line by line, paragraph by paragraph, while insisting you were above it.
What’s striking isn’t that you disagree with Sturgill Simpson’s rollout or his choices; disagreement would be healthy. What’s striking is how personally affronted you seem by the fact that he is not particularly interested in accommodating you, your expectations, or your preferred consumer habits, and how quickly that affront turns into moralizing.
You begin by bending over backward to establish your good faith. You’ll listen. You’re open-minded. You’ve given grace before. You’ll bring an “open heart.” Fine. But then the essay becomes a prolonged argument that Sturgill has somehow failed an obligation to be legible, accessible, conciliatory, and broadly appealing while you insist you’re not asking him to do exactly that.
You accuse him of acting “above us all,” yet the entire piece is written from the assumption that artists owe audiences a particular posture: humility, transparency, convenience, and ideological crowd-pleasing. When he declines that posture, you read arrogance where there is simply indifference to your approval. That’s not him posturing as a “true artist.” That’s you bristling at the loss of leverage.
The “music is supposed to be for everyone” argument sounds noble until you interrogate it for more than ten seconds. Music has never been for everyone. Not historically, not culturally, not politically, not emotionally. Every meaningful artistic movement excludes far more people than it includes: by taste, by temperament, by timing. To pretend otherwise is to confuse art with product design. Wide appeal is a commercial goal, not a moral one.
Your criticism of the “real ones” line is particularly revealing. You read it as a loyalty test, a purity oath, an implication of inauthenticity. But that interpretation only works if you already feel accused. The line doesn’t exile anyone; it simply acknowledges a truth every artist eventually learns: some people stay, some people don’t, and neither outcome requires permission or apology. The fact that you hear condemnation says more about your own anxiety about opting out than about his intent.
Then there’s the protest argument, which is where the piece really collapses under its own certainty. You insist that protest must cast a “wide net,” must appeal across ideological and geographic divides, must avoid “speed humps.” That’s not protest, that’s marketing. Historically, protest works precisely because it disrupts, irritates, polarizes, and refuses to be easily absorbed. You don’t have to like his chosen metaphor or influences, but reducing French protest culture to a body-count rebuttal is a spectacularly shallow dodge of the actual point he was making: joy as defiance, pleasure as refusal, celebration as resistance. You didn’t rebut that idea, you sidestepped it.
The physical-only release criticism is where your frustration becomes naked. You frame it as concern for accessibility, but what you’re really upset about is inconvenience. You invoke “the little guy” while discussing a man who has already exited the hamster wheel and is explicitly rejecting the model you’re defending. That model didn’t accidentally make him wealthy; he used it and then decided he no longer wanted to participate in it. You don’t have to applaud that choice, but calling it hypocritical ignores the obvious distinction between benefiting from a system and choosing when to disengage from it.
Your Atlantic-versus-independence argument fares no better. You treat label affiliation as a moral purity test, selectively applied. Independence is admirable. So is choosing collaborators you trust to execute a vision. Neither choice automatically validates or invalidates the work. Invoking other artists as counterexamples doesn’t strengthen your case; it just reveals your desire for consistency in a world where artists are under no obligation to be consistent on your terms.
Even your handling of his lyrics and neurodivergence feels less like analysis and more like unease. You hover between critique and excuse, never quite comfortable with the idea that some of his abrasiveness may be intentional, some unfiltered, some simply none of your business. You want context, but only insofar as it makes him more digestible.
And that’s the throughline here: digestibility.
You say he failed to let the music speak for itself, but you’re the one shouting over it: projecting motives, litigating logistics, adjudicating tone, and constructing a case against an album you haven’t heard. You’re not reacting to the music; you’re reacting to the loss of control over how, when, and why you get to experience it.
Sturgill didn’t alienate you. He got under your nails. He reminded you that art doesn’t need consensus, access optimization, or your comfort to justify its existence. And instead of sitting with that discomfort, you dressed it up as concern for community, protest efficacy, and the soul of music itself.
You’ll probably still listen. You’ll probably have something thoughtful to say once you do. But let’s not pretend this essay is about accountability or principle. It’s about an artist refusing to meet you where you are and you being far more bothered by that than you want to admit.
Like he said: Make Art, Not Friends.
PS – Jeremy Pinnell rips.
February 13, 2026 @ 3:44 pm
So I’ve already addressed some of this in other comments, so I’m not interest in re-treading the same ground. But what I will say is that an article that emphasizes, re-empahsizes, underscores, and then ultimately concludes that consumers should keep an open mind about the new album getting attacked for closed-mindedness really illustrates the point I made that Sturgill and many of his fans believe that he is above reproach. ANY criticism or even commentary that can be construed as such is seized upon and must be quashed with long-winded character assassination and accusation of ulterior purposes. Sturgill’s word is EVERYTHING. And we must just adhere and obsequiously cow to his genius.
I do want to address this physical copy issue though. If nothing else, people need to recognize how unusual it is. As multiple people have said in this comments section alone, it’s a no go for them, irrespective of anything else. I have written articles upon articles about this subject, including about Garth Brooks and GhostTunes, the time in 2014 when Taylor Swift and Jason Aldean pulled their music from Spotify—only to re-upload it later.
There is one model and one model only to distribute music: Make it as readily available to as many humans as possible. Otherwise, you’re failing the music. The last project I can recall that when physical only was Robert Earl Keen’s “Western Chill” in 2023. It was a disaster. Nobody bought it. I expect Sturgill to fare much better. It will still fare much worse than if he releases it digitally. But my deeper point is it’s in no way out-of-bounds to discuss or even scrutinize that decision. I think it would be extremely strange if I didn’t. I also find it extremely strange that people find that discussion out of bounds, bias, or anything of the sort. It is an extremely rare decision that was worth remarking on.
February 13, 2026 @ 4:09 pm
I’m all for sticking it to the streaming sites. Artists are not paid what they should be. However…. You can still accomplish that by allowing us to purchase a download of it. Makes zero sense to not offer that. The profit would be great with no shipping and handling and tons of fans such as my self would do that in heartbeat. I feel he completely missed the mark on that and the self bloviating letter. From someone that saw him 3 times in 3 states last year, puts a bad taste in my mouth.
February 13, 2026 @ 10:40 pm
Give it a couple days and someone will have ripped it from the CD or vinyl and the mp3s will be out on Reddit to download. I’m assuming the vinyl will have a card inside with a code for an mp3 download.
He can cry about it if he wants to but he opened himself up for that by not releasing it digitally.
February 13, 2026 @ 10:59 pm
You can’t not release your music digitally in 2026. If you don’t, someone else will. Or in the case of someone as big as Sturgill Simpson, thousands of someone’s will. Immediately the tracks of this album will be uploaded to DSPs, and it will be a constant war for the streaming services and Atlantic Outpost to keep them off. This was constantly happening with the audio of all of the Jesse Welles videos. That’s why he’s had to release multiple albums with the video audio in them.
Another thing is that all the Sturgill Simpson/Johnny Blue Skies albums ever released have leaked online prior to the release. All of them. I’ve never covered an artist where that’s happened every single time. He’s got a mole somewhere in his system that picks his pocket.
I think it’s a bad idea to not release it digitally, and I think they will have no other choice but to release it digitally shortly after the release as an indemnity to illegal and fraudulent activity.
February 14, 2026 @ 8:46 am
Hmm.
I’d like him to release one song digitally, free on YouTube, to let physicals like me test the water before buying the physical copy.
This would be a little like radio back in the day: you heard a song for free, liked it, and then bought the record.
Instead, Sturg is going the porn magazine model: you only get to see the cover through a sealed bag, onto which has been taped a puff piece.
In that sense, Sturg is becoming the Madonna of outlaw country: he wants to strike a pose and then make everybody throw dollar bills.
I’m talking myself out of it.
February 14, 2026 @ 8:58 am
The other thing is that at the moment, they’re limiting the amount of physical copies. CDs are already sold out, as is the white vinyl variant. Maybe this is part of Sturgill’s schtick is to make it available only in very limited quantities. If this is the case there will absolutely most definitely be bootlegged copies strewn across the internet almost immediately, and then nobody will be able to benefit from the consumption of the media except pirates.
February 14, 2026 @ 11:32 am
That’s what this is how about. He has recorded 132 variations of the same album this time. Each one slightly different. He is going to smoke out that mole.
February 14, 2026 @ 11:56 am
Is that true, or are you just spitballing?
February 13, 2026 @ 4:48 pm
I’m jumping in here as very much a civilian Stu fan. I don’t know squat about his social media presence or really much about him as a person. I didn’t even know who the guy was or had heard any of his music until somewhere around 2019. Well after his first few albums. Metamodern quickly became one of my favorite albums of all time. Sound of Fury not so much. But there was enough there to make me a fan and I got to see him live for the first time in 2025. Best show I saw that year. The dude took Eddy Murphy’s ridiculous “My Girl wants to Party all the Time” and made it cool and groovy and funky. He killed “Purple Rain” in the good way, not “killed” in the way darn near everyone else that touches that song does. Passage was my album of the year in 2024, just edging out Red Clay Strays. Long story short, I’ll take a flyer on laying down the 30 or 35 bucks to get a vinyl and hope for the best. Because there’s always a chance with Mr. JBS that it could be epic and I’m willing to take the risk.
February 13, 2026 @ 6:13 pm
Dwight Yoakam’s “Purple Rain” is awesome though.
February 13, 2026 @ 5:27 pm
Sturgill Simpson’s songwriting is trite.
He needs to hire a good lyricist.
February 13, 2026 @ 7:15 pm
What a bunch of wild comments.
February 13, 2026 @ 8:18 pm
Look up “self-indulgent douchebag” in the dictionary and it’s just a photo of Sturgill. Dude, get over yourself.
February 13, 2026 @ 11:11 pm
Everyone falling for Sturgills crap is a chump. Keep clapping, seals.
February 13, 2026 @ 11:32 pm
What’s the worst cult fanbase? The Sturgill fanboys or the thinned-skinned Joe Stamm Band Boys?
Sturgill just hasn’t been worth the squeeze these days. It’s exhausting.
February 14, 2026 @ 11:35 am
I think the anti-stu cult is pretty bad. You all are getting so fired up by a guy you don’t like. It’s weird.
February 14, 2026 @ 11:58 am
Sturgill Simpson is a polarizing artist. If I hadn’t acknowledged the rather self-absorbed nature of his letter or his change of heart with Atlantic, I’d be getting hounded by his detractors.
February 16, 2026 @ 11:11 am
TIL that there was a cult fanbase for Joe Stamm. Interesting.
February 14, 2026 @ 12:46 am
At this stage, anyone who would take the story of Sturgil Simpson to a publisher as a novel would be rejected with “too laden with cliches”. Seriously, “retiring” then coming back under a faux-pseudonym, and now releasing a mock-dance album? I realise the name still carries merit among the Country sites, but I think it’s time to give up the ghost. It’s sad when someone as prolific and creative in your genre acts like he was there because he didn’t know better and now he’s free to persue his own fancies, but I guess that’s how things go, some stay faithful to their end, others don’t.
February 14, 2026 @ 3:16 am
I know he is an artist that is held in high regard by some, and some consider him important. I have never quite got him or understood why he is so highly rated. I have his albums and think there are a few good tracks on each but nothing great. I know it is all a matter of personal taste. I thought his last was a good listen. Overall, I consider him fairly average. I have seen him in concert and whilst I enjoyed it. His band is good. He did not engage with the audience. There was little or no break between songs and it was louder than some rock concerts I have been to. It was sometimes difficult to know when one song finished and another started. I thought it a pretty ordinary rock concert in which he worked hard but without any standout moments. I was lucky enough to see Tyler Childers in concert last year and it was so different. It was country and he really entertained in what was a superb show. Sturgill has not as yet won me over. I struggle to understand why he is so highly rated but I will give his next album a listen. Maybe it will be the one that wins me over.
February 14, 2026 @ 6:24 am
Trigger: works his guts out on almost every single controversial topic to be nuanced, balanced, old school journalist rather than sensationalist. Present the facts as objectively as possible for the consumer so the rest of us know what is going on and reach our own conclusions. Be a counterpoint to the super biased, click bait, extremist world out there.
Both sides: WHY ARE YOU SUCH AN EXTREMIST?!?!? I see what you are REALLY up to! You can’t fool us!!!!! You dont toe the line on my side so OBVIOUSLY you are REALLY working for THEM!!
It’s so bizarre. Apparently if you aren’t an extremist for *my* side then obviously you have to be an extremist for my enemy.
Thanks again for all you do, Trigger. Really appreciate it. Don’t see how you have the time or patience for it all.
February 14, 2026 @ 6:36 am
Thanks for all the information that you share with us Trigger. I find it incredible that a feature letting us know an album is on the way has descended into farce.
February 14, 2026 @ 7:08 am
Yeah, I’ve been a homer since pre-ordering HTM and then seeing a no cover show in DC. Like Hoptown, I’m finding this all to be a bit exhausting. For me, this feels a little like his attitude after MMSICM, but you know, he’s the artist and at least ASGTE was a solid album if not quite a great one. And Sound and Fury I can largely do without. For me, Passage du Desir was his Blood on the Tracks and made me look forward to what comes next. And now this. As a ’70s kid who switch from pop to rock radio in the mid 70’s , the term “disco hedonism” doesn’t get me excited, although maybe he’s being hyperbolic (I do like a lot of 70’s funk and soul). Of course, I’ll check out whatever I can about this album, but I’m not buying it blind.
February 14, 2026 @ 7:31 am
Sturgill wore out his welcome a while back.
Is he the most narcissistic self-righteous blowhard making music today? No. Is he a narcissistic self-righteous blowhard? Yep.
February 14, 2026 @ 8:57 am
The Detroit Lions once had a quarterback named Joey Harrington who was dubbed “Joey Blue Skies” because of his relentless optimism. “Disco-Hedonism” hits Mar.13,the day before my buddy Jamie Logsdon’s 70th birthday,so,Jamie,that may be your gift !
February 14, 2026 @ 9:01 am
Re “music is supposed to be for everyone”.
Na man, not at all. Sometimes music is for a someone, addressed to a single other, perhaps to a lover or an enemy or maybe to ones self.
At other times the music is for a group of people, the fans, the sub-culture, the village, town, city or country.
Most people who can play a musical instrument have probably had the experience of languidly playing a piece whilst somebody else is in the room, then upon ‘coming out of the zone’ noticing that they have an entranced audience. You ain’t playing the music for anybody but yourself and yet it seems to enchant other people.
February 14, 2026 @ 9:44 am
That quote “music is for everyone” is something I take from Johnny Cash (he actually says “everybody”). He said it throughout his career, but specifically I first saw it in an interview on Letterman from back in the day when he’s talking about The Johnny Cash Show that he filmed at the Ryman.
https://youtu.be/IbWBQFEyOio?si=zVd3HPo12VpjhZ1-
It was a show at the Ryman in 2015 when Sturgill Simpson issued the line, “I can’t wait ’til all these flannel shirt/beard motherfuckers figure out I ain’t like them.”
https://savingcountrymusic.com/sturgill-simpson-goes-badass-breaks-up-fight-at-ryman-auditorium/
Sturgill Simpson, among others, believes it’s erudite and a sign of artistry to piss off his own fans, and to limit the audience of his music in a misguided notion of “activism” and/or “protest.” He doesn’t want people who don’t share his ideology to listen to his music. This very specifically usurps the power of his music to shape hearts and minds. It is the exact opposite of activism. It is enacting an echo chamber, or preaching to the choir, so to speak.
People are acting shocked here that a COUNTRY MUSIC website would have some concerns about a former Grammy country winner (and multi-time Artist of the Year here) has announced he’s releasing a hedonistic disco dance record. But that was the whole point: to throw a pipe bomb in the middle of a community such as this, sow division, and get people screaming at each other. Or as Sturgill says, “collect heads.”
Meanwhile, I took the tact of telling people we should all take an open mind and wait to listen to the music, because that’s what I say about every album. That’s what I said about Bad Bunny recently, and took the time to listen. And for that that stance, I got trounced by my own readers, and strangely, for allegedly saying the very exact opposite, as if my words have no meaning, and I have no credibility behind them.
Sturgill Simpson likes to destroy. Johnny Cash wanted to unite. I take the idea that sometimes artists might write a song for themselves, a loved one, or a limited audience. But a good song taps into the universal nature of our being.
Politics will never end bigotry, stop war, and unite people in peace. Only music will.
February 14, 2026 @ 11:23 am
: D If satan throws an album in front of me, especially while explaining why he’s doing it – doesn’t mean i’m going to take the time to pick it up.
Not talking about you, Trig.
Just an illustration.
February 14, 2026 @ 9:54 am
Well since its not digital and sturgill has of yet really made anything that i would consider great, i wont get to hear it. But thats ok. I dont think its great news when an artist feels like they have to explain about a new album. Hopefully his fans like it.
February 14, 2026 @ 10:44 am
Can i just habe some tips of what is great music if you havent liked much sturg has done, not for debate its your opinion just im always looking for new stuff
February 14, 2026 @ 12:18 pm
Its just my opinion far as his music goes. If you like him thats fine. What i like, you probably wouldnt like. Its how tastes go.
February 14, 2026 @ 2:00 pm
I think it may be something good for you to share. Maybe you can make fans of artists you like!
February 14, 2026 @ 2:04 pm
i like all sorts David. . If Sturgill isnt your thing its fine but what floats your boat instead?
February 14, 2026 @ 11:04 am
My preference would be for Sturgill to disappear and never perform again. His voice is garbage. His songwriting is garbage. It doesn’t help that he’s also a garbage person.
That being said, him releasing non-country music is the second-best option, because it prevents goofball country fans who think he’s talented from supporting him.
February 14, 2026 @ 2:37 pm
Its easy enough to just ignore any news on an artist you dont like though. I mean people who know they dont like his music would have realised hes not going anywhere by now anyways. But wed welome tips on who you think we should be listening too instead. Most of us are just fans of music and are always looking for new tips. Id welcome any suggestions.
February 15, 2026 @ 3:55 am
Kinda weak by your standards Honky, normally you would just call him a communist.
February 14, 2026 @ 12:22 pm
I think it’s time to realize that the Sturgil Simpson I knew and loved is long gone, and truly is never coming back.
February 14, 2026 @ 12:50 pm
Not available in 8 track? Hmph!
February 14, 2026 @ 1:23 pm
Never seen an ” artist” work as hard as Simpson to consistently shed fans. He has admitted as much in interviews, basically saying if people like his music, he’s running the other way entirely. Yes there is self admitted mental illness involved, he speaks about it openly. He also openly endorses drug use…ie psychedelics, of which Meta Modern was all about.
Personally, if any artist tells me the fan where to go, im more than happy to oblige. Why ANYONE still wishes to throw money at this dude is a headscratcher. Simply put, he aint right, he’s a train wreck. Hard pass. Life is short and there are truly great musicians and entertainers out there who welcome fan support. I will spend my resources supporting them.
February 14, 2026 @ 3:56 pm
Poor Merle heralded this guy…
February 17, 2026 @ 12:38 pm
Let’s face it, Merle near the end wasn’t firing on all cylinders.
February 18, 2026 @ 1:09 pm
Nope, his wi… uh, handler kept him on a short, short leash.
Moral; do not smoke your spouse’s homegrown weed. It weakens your brain.
See also; Willie Nelson, Snoop Dogg, Woody Harrelson et. al.
February 14, 2026 @ 4:08 pm
He’s a sjw artist. Plain and simple. Much like Childers his first few albums were great but then he leaned hard into the overtly political stuff, the busking was silly and was an obvious political stunt and he spends time on stage lambasting trump and republicans. Honestly he is no different than Jason Isbell. It’s kind of silly how much traction and love he gets from trigger on here.
A few songs here and there, or an Instagram story or something, I get it. We can deal . But Sturgill goes way beyond that, much like that weepy, wimpy interview Childers have to hype his new album.
I don’t want you in country music, and I frankly don’t need you in my country if that’s your deal.
Sturgill is a woke sjw dei singer. He’s no different than the menagerie of npr and NYT approved country artists that trigger adores. Sierra, Childers, Isbell, Crockett. It’s country music that moms who vote kamala can stan while also virtue signaling to their mom group chats that “I hate that red state country but have you heard Sturgill, he’s an ally! He’s anti fascist!”. It’s gross, and it’s a mockery of the genre. There’s nothing radical or controversial in the slightest about Crockett or Sturgill. When every major corporation supports your causes, you ain’t counter cultural. You are just the status quo.
Sturgill is an absolute disgrace.
February 14, 2026 @ 4:26 pm
So when did your mom discover you were eating the paint chips? Was it addressed, or did the parents just figure you were a lost cause anyway?
February 14, 2026 @ 5:14 pm
I wouldn’t mind a “Party All the Time” cover as part of the track list.
February 14, 2026 @ 5:33 pm
We were fortunate enough to get tickets to see Sturgill and band in a glorified bar last year. We were even luckier to be up against the center stage. What an incredible show. I’m looking forward to hearing this new one. I haven’t been disappointed by any of his music yet. When I don’t care for an artist’s music, I don’t listen, but I also try to live a simple life with less stress. I save ire and outrage for important things.
February 14, 2026 @ 5:47 pm
Who knows, maybe this Sturgill fella finally puts out an album that I’ll want to listen to twice.
February 14, 2026 @ 8:23 pm
Hey Trigger, I don’t know why you bother responding to all the critics here. You do a great job man. Plenty more albums to review and articles to write instead. If they don’t like what you say then they can always move on over to another site.
February 14, 2026 @ 10:58 pm
In this case, I felt obligated to respond since the commenters were basically calling into question my credibility and objectivity as a critic/journalist, and doing so in the face of multiple statements I made underscoring and reinforcing that ALL music releases should be approached with an open mind, and all judgement reserved until the music is heard.
February 15, 2026 @ 2:31 pm
Ahhh…a guy who makes his living critiquing artists gets butt hurt when he’s criticized, somehow feeling he is above it all. You play the social media game and you will on occasion get caught in the crossfire. But if you want avoid the flack, just write about the sad passing of some steel guitar player who made his bones 50 years ago. I’m sure all 3 people who respond will be positive.
February 15, 2026 @ 3:24 pm
Nobody’s butt hurt here due. I’ve got my big boy pants on. If I was butt hurt, I wouldn’t respond, and I wouldn’t host a comments section where I don’t just allow people to disagree with me, I encourage it. That’s a bit different than social media where folks sit back in their echo chambers and lob grenades at each other via ad hominem attacks.
And yes, I will continue to write about barely-known steel guitar players when they pass. Because they contributed to the music we love, and deserve to be honored and their contributions remembered.
February 18, 2026 @ 6:30 pm
I would rather applaud Kyle for letting us post our crap here, that is not a given at all in these times.
I may disagree with him now and then, and he wouldn’t waste nothing but a sigh of relief if he never again had to approve a Sofus post, but here we are, still, and I am grateful for what he gives us. It’s a heck of a job, and he’s a damn good one at that. For what it’s worth, I will defend him for what he contributes to and for our (shrinking, sadly) congregation who knows the difference between Webb Pierce and Wynn Stewart.
And Steve; I take the dead steel pickers over the (barely) living ExtraBig Buttplug anyday.
It’s ok, call me a pervert all you want, I don’t fucking care.
February 16, 2026 @ 11:14 am
Honestly, Trigger, I wonder if some of these critics read the same blog post I did. I thought you were pretty clear.
February 15, 2026 @ 5:19 am
The holocaust was nothing compared to the horror of jelly roll saying n*gga
February 15, 2026 @ 5:51 am
Sturgill remains one of the most fascinating artists working today. I read through the press release, laughed out loud, and promptly preordered the vinyl. I have no interest in parsing out the text and looking for negative angles. A world without Sturgill would bum the sh$t out of me.
February 15, 2026 @ 6:23 am
What bothers me most is that Sturgill does not service his fans, he sticks it to them. I don’t mean by making art- he can do whatever he wants, I mean selling out to the record labels again and not making his music available for purchase however his fans want to access it. When he was flirting with the idea of being a jam band I was hoping he finally “got it” – as jam bands are typically the most accessible bands out there. But alas, clearly he is simply selfish and flits from one self aggrandizing idea to the next. I love the communities that jam band artists have made for themselves. Sturgill loves ripping his apart.
February 15, 2026 @ 8:31 am
Comments sections like this are how I know Sturgill Simpson is the greatest and most important artist of his generation!
February 15, 2026 @ 10:38 am
Sturgill is a failed “artist.”
He is bitter the same way Billy Corgan is bitter.
Not all poetry is poetry.
No one can point to a single lyric of Sturgill’s and call it great.
That is why Hobo Cartoon is his only good song.
February 15, 2026 @ 1:24 pm
“No one can point to a single lyric of Sturgill’s and call it great.”
“The most Outlaw thing that a man can do is find a good woman and give her a ring” is a pretty legendary line.
February 15, 2026 @ 2:37 pm
Sturgill lifted the quote from Marty Stuart
“Today the most outlaw thing you can possibly do in Nashville, Tennessee, is play country music.”
Stuart’s quote at least has some meaningful irony.
Sturgill’s cut and paste doesn’t mean anything. So, no, it is not a legendary line.
February 17, 2026 @ 12:39 pm
It is also a really dumb line when 70% of divorces are started by women.
February 15, 2026 @ 4:17 pm
Calling Sturgill a “failed artist” and then likening him to Billy Corgan is absolutely hilarious.
February 15, 2026 @ 4:29 pm
failed artist = control freak
February 15, 2026 @ 5:17 pm
Both resumes stand on their own merit.
It’s fine to dislike them though.
February 15, 2026 @ 5:41 pm
Corgan can’t write a meaningful lyric.
Nor can Sturgill.
That is why these two put out “concept albums,” which is just a euphemism for bad songs packaged like “conceptual art,” which itself is most always a fraud.
February 15, 2026 @ 2:37 pm
Agreed. “Well the most outlaw thing that I’ve ever done was give a good woman a ring” is top drawer. Truly a great lyric.
February 15, 2026 @ 2:56 pm
That line is called a mixed metaphor, and it epitomizes bad songwriting.
February 15, 2026 @ 3:38 pm
What you said is that nobody can point to a single line from Sturgill Simpson and call it great. Two people just concurred the same line from Sturgill Simpson is great, double refuting your false claim. You might disagree that it is a great line. Taste is subjective. But your claim remains false.
February 15, 2026 @ 4:27 pm
Okay. So two people concur that a particular Sturgill line is great.
So how is it great?
How is getting married to a good woman the most outlaw thing he can do
when it is actually among the most conformist of acts?
Is it a Zen Koan or just bad songwriting?
I’ll go with bad songwriting.
February 15, 2026 @ 6:16 pm
You’re having a laugh, yes? You can’t be that dense. If doing “the most conformist of acts” is outlaw to someone, then it would be outlaw because they don’t see themselves as conformist. Bloody hell, man.
February 15, 2026 @ 7:11 pm
Nope.
Remember we are talking about a GREAT lyric here.
“Most outlaw” is a superlative.
Marty Stuart used the superlative correctly as a vehicle for irony regarding the state of country music in Nashville..
Sturgill used it like a buzz word to, seemingly, virtue signal about his own fidelity,,,or lack thereof.
February 15, 2026 @ 8:10 pm
“…to virtue signal…” I’m glad that living my life doesn’t involve seeing everything through a political lense. It has to be exhausting.
That being said, I see it no differently than how Marty Stuart used it. They are both saying that in the context of the situation, doing something “unoutlaw”, is outlaw. It’s simple, really.
Goodnight, Big Jizm.
February 16, 2026 @ 7:13 am
I was going to let this go, but the hell with it. You don’t seem to know what a metaphor is. In “The most outlaw thing that I’ve ever done was to buy a good woman a ring”, where is the metaphor, much less a mixed metaphor? Maybe, maybe?, you can stretch the definition of metaphor and say that calling a marriage proposal “outlaw” is a metaphor, but where is the mixed? There us no muxed metaphor. It is always wise to understand what you are saying before you say it. You post many words often in this comment section. Fortunately I haven’t read them all, but I’d wager that most are nonsense. Not nonsense in that I disagree, but nonsense in that they are nonsensical.
February 16, 2026 @ 12:47 pm
The term outlaw is used as a metaphor, unless Sturgill expected to be indicted for marrying his wife.
The definition of mixed metaphor applies to the failed use of a metaphor as in an incomplete metaphor, or of poorly paired metaphors creating, thusly, a meaningless metaphor.
In this case the metaphor outlaw is mixed with the idiom (figure of speech:a type of metaphor) of “put a ring on her finger,” meaning marriage.
This metaphor paired with idiom is a mixed metaphor because the pairing doesn’t relate, even quasi-paradoxically, since there is no inherent implication of marriage being an illegal act, or in inversion, a compulsory legal act. “Most outlaw” being superlative further cements this mixed metaphor failure.
February 16, 2026 @ 1:43 pm
You are wrong. It is not a mixed metaphor. Sturgill is obviously being deliberately ironic. A life that isn’t fair, and a world that is mean, are a life and world of disorder, so doing something orderly is rebellious. In this context, marrying, a legal and ordinary act, is outlaw. You can type all of the paragraphs you want, it won’t change a simple fact.
February 16, 2026 @ 2:38 pm
“That’s the way it goes in this day and age
You ain’t gotta read between the lines you just gotta turn the page
Well the most outlaw thing that I’ve ever done was give a good woman a ring
But that’s the way it goes, life ain’t fair and the world is mean”
Cliches, mixed metaphors, failed irony, mawkish sentiment, virtue signalling.
All in all, bad songwriting.
February 16, 2026 @ 3:53 pm
Well okay. I quit, I lose. You’re the winner, Big Jizm.
February 16, 2026 @ 3:56 pm
That’s the way it goes…
February 16, 2026 @ 7:36 pm
I can’t quit you, Big Jizm. I asked a colleague who is an AP Lit teacher and a friend who is an English professor. They both agree that the lyric is not a mixed metaphor. The AP Lit teacher even asked Google AI. It agrees with me, saying that it is “generally considered to be an ironic, paradoxical statement rather than a mixed metaphor.”
February 17, 2026 @ 8:08 am
It is a mixed metaphor.
1. A succession of incongruous metaphors, as in The negotiator played his cards to the hilt.
2. An overreaching or contradictory combination of two distinct metaphors, similes or idioms.
3 A combination of two or more metaphors that together produce a ridiculous effect.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition
February 17, 2026 @ 10:35 am
It seems as though we disagree on this issue. If we coincidentally find ourselves in the same place and oddly are aware of it, I’ll buy you the drink of your choice and share a laugh.
February 15, 2026 @ 6:37 pm
Hmmmm.Guess Sturgill realizes that,as Rick Nelson sang in “Garden Party,” you can’t please everyone,so you’ve gotta please yourself,and hopefully his talent wins over most folk who disagree with him politically so they’ll buy his “Johnny Blue Skies” album..
February 18, 2026 @ 6:34 pm
As long as Sturgill isn’t pleasing himself in public, it’s ok, I guess.
February 16, 2026 @ 7:35 am
This is the most elaborate early April Fools prank ever. Judging from the comments, he got us good!
February 16, 2026 @ 11:04 am
Absolutely insufferable.
February 17, 2026 @ 12:01 pm
Sunday Valley was a long time ago…My guess is after he did MMSCM (which I still listen to and think holy shit) he realizes it’s all down hill afterwards. All that’s left to do is a bunch of stupid shit to call attention to yourself because you cannot top yourself. Oh well, I’ll give it a listen and probably not much else. RIP Sturgill Simpson
February 17, 2026 @ 12:41 pm
He was the same guy during his stint as the site’s darling.
February 18, 2026 @ 10:40 am
My favourite part about Sturgill Simpson is that his music is not done to appease his audience, it’s done for him. The guy consistently makes songs like “Make Art Not Friends” and then people act like they are shocked that he doesn’t care about their opinion of such songs. If you like it, you like it. If you don’t, move on.
February 18, 2026 @ 6:42 pm
What’s the point in being a touring and recording artist if you’re not doing it for your audience?
Save those money and pick your guitar at home, if so. I do, my voice is so god-damned deep and dry by now (and by thousands of L&M’s) that it makes Leonard Cohen sound like a soprano. No need to punish my fellow innocent man.
February 21, 2026 @ 2:48 pm
I detect a note of hostility