On Colter Wall’s Tour Cancellation and “Indefinite Hiatus”

It has become increasingly frustrating as a music consumer that especially after the pandemic, performers seem to be more quick and at ease with canceling performances or tours, and all as ticketing prices rise, as do travel costs and accommodations that sometimes come with venturing to see your favorite artists perform. Where previously the mantra was “the show must go on,” these days it seems the tendency is to cancel first, and figure out the rest later.
But “the show must go on” is often what predicated dangerous and sometimes fatal outcomes for our favorite artists as drugs fueled endless touring, and sidelined mental health issues until the spilled over into catastrophic outcomes. The recent death of Todd Snider after he went on tour and ended up wondering the streets of Salt Lake City looking for help underscores the risks on not taking these matters seriously, as does the recent biography of Justin Townes Earle, or the cautionary tale of Luke Bell.
Colter Wall has constructed an incredible and improbable career out of revitalizing the Western style of country music. With his most recently album—the critically-acclaimed Memories and Empties—he revitalized the traditional side of country too.
But Colter Wall’s tour schedule has always been thin compared to peers, and less than the potential he has to be a major draw and bread winner in live music. It seems he’d rather be hanging out on the ranch in Saskatchewan than singing for folks in stately theaters or at festivals. It’s this authenticity that people appreciate about Colter, even if it’s been frustrating trying to catch him live over the years, including cancelling tours and appearances.
On Wednesday (3-11), Colter Wall cancelled numerous appearances again, ending his current tour before performing two dates in Indianapolis, as well as shows in Cincinnati and Detroit. He also announced that he will be going on hiatus from touring indefinitely.
This comes after Colter has been on one of the more extended tours of his career starting in Texas in January. He performed nearly 20 dates, though had to cancel shows in Fort Worth on January 23rd and 24th due to the winter storm.
In a statement, Colter Wall said,
Myself and the band and the crew are very grateful for the privilege to play music together for you. We thank you for it. The truth is that I am mentally unwell. Despite this, I have pushed myself to continue with touring. As a result my mental health has only further declined.
After discussions with my team, we have decided to cancel the remaining shows and take an indefinite hiatus from live music. Thank you for your understanding and support. Tickets will be refunded automatically from original point of purchase.
These types of cancellations will never cease to be a frustration to consumers. Performers and promoters should try to be as responsible as possible in trying to not set unrealistic expectations, and understanding the major inconvenience cancellations can create.
But it’s better to read statements and stories about cancellations and postponements instead of deaths and funerals. Colter Wall should be given the grace to find whatever equilibrium is necessary for him to continue in music in whatever capacity he so chooses, even if that means only making one-off select appearances in the future, or not performing in public at all. His career has been too imperative to the renewed rise of Western music to put that in peril in any capacity.
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March 11, 2026 @ 10:33 am
Hope he gets well and finds the support he needs.
Remember, Felker and Turnpike took a hiatus so Evan could get well, and he seems to be doing great.
Get well, soon, Colter.
March 12, 2026 @ 10:40 am
Yeah Felker and the Troubadours are the poster boy for people needing to take a break and having it all work out fantastic.
But if someone decides they just don’t want to continue in this career, we should give them the grace to do what they think is best for their mental health and just enjoy their fantastic past output and old live clips and the like.
I’m a big fan of some of the less famous Bakersfield sound artists from the ’60s and there’s a really great movie called Billy Mize And The Bakersfield Sound, about a pioneering artist who should have been a massive national star but decided to stick close to home to be around for his family, because the Country Music live touring industry was so brutal at the time. We all still remember his name and enjoy his old music even though he didn’t blow up to be George Jones or Merle Haggard.
Good article.
March 11, 2026 @ 10:40 am
I was queued up to see him in Indianapolis tonight!
The few opportunities I have had to see him live just have not panned out. Bummed about the announcement but definitely legit reasoning instead of some big name cancelling a show to watch his College team in the Basketball Tournment.
Between Colter and Ian Noe just can never get the timing right to catch either of these two talents!
March 11, 2026 @ 11:00 am
Hopefully Colter gets the support he needs and can continue to make wonderful music, we list Justin Townes Earle and Luke Bell incredibly young and if he never tours again……so be it!
March 11, 2026 @ 11:06 am
I saw him last week and something seemed just a little off – I assumed he had the beginnings of a cold or something like that. Show was still great.
I saw Wyatt Flores a couple of years ago right before he blew up his tour. It was obvious he was not doing well – nearly in tears for part of the show. It seems like he’s doing much better now.
If someone needs to take time away to feel like themselves again – do it. Work will never look out for your best interests, be it in music or any other job. Get help when you need it.
March 11, 2026 @ 11:33 am
Its the music thats important , some of the best music the beatles made was after they finished touring. ive only seen colter twice way back on the songs of Plainsmen tour here in the UK and weve had three great albums since then so I was dying to see him again over here.#
But the music and his health is more important if he never toured again , he could still make us some great music especially if sadly not touring found him in a happier place.
March 11, 2026 @ 11:39 am
I saw him back in October in Milwaukee with Red Shahan, and even then my wife mentioned he looked very sad at the show. Get the help needed brother!
March 11, 2026 @ 11:44 am
Mental health is important. I’m glad he is trying to take care of himself, even if that means I’m missing a chance to enjoy his songs live. Personally, if he keeps releasing gems like Memories and Empties and never tours again, I’m fine with it. It’s the music I care about, and him as a person. He could release an album every few years, and I’ll buy it, without a tour. No need to perform, tour, or feel the pressure of the entertainment industry.
March 11, 2026 @ 11:49 am
He’s fantastic. Hope he is okay!
March 11, 2026 @ 1:09 pm
I hope Colters doing better soon. I think for most people in 2026 they recognize mental health as being as important as physical health and a mental health condition being as legitimate as a physical health condition as a reason to take time off. Even before Todd Snider, id say Tom Pettys frustratingly preventable death as a result of him touring over taking care of his health really changed the conversation here.
March 11, 2026 @ 11:54 am
Saw him monday in bowling green ,thought it was a great show …thank you colter and we understand life on tour can be rough
March 11, 2026 @ 12:43 pm
This is just speculation from afar, but a lot of times the farmer/ranch hand types, those that prefer that lifestyle, often find that the solitude is their favorite part. If you can’t have that regular re-charge, it’s hard not to yearn for it. Now imagine a mental health struggle on top of that, an individual being unwell in a largely populated, ceaselessly noisy, never-truly-pitch-black dark urban area. Ick.
Now, this individual wasn’t a rural solitude type by any means, but this reminds me of Isaac Slade, former lead singer and pianist of the Fray. Read up on his story and decision to step away from music if you want to see something similar to this.
March 11, 2026 @ 4:42 pm
Or Andy Partridge of XTC, who had a nervous breakdown on stage and the band never toured again. They made 7 more albums after that plus he did side projects, but he just could not get back on stage. I can’t imagine being so into music that you can make it a career but getting so wrung out by it that you can’t ever perform live again.
March 12, 2026 @ 10:29 am
Guess it was much less stressful to make plans for Nigel
March 11, 2026 @ 12:57 pm
Hope he gets well. Had tickets to tonight in Indy.
March 11, 2026 @ 1:11 pm
I’m disappointed. Not because I won’t get to see Colter live again any time soon, but because I thought Colter was different. Not some pantywaist limp-wristed artist type; a real man making music for real men. Finally. And now he’s backing out because of “mental health.” Jesus. Listen, the only people that get to take a pause for mental health are combat veterans and first responders. Everybody else needs to man the f*#^@ up.
March 11, 2026 @ 1:24 pm
What a dumb sentiment. What job is worth sacrificing your own well-being for?
March 11, 2026 @ 7:45 pm
You’ll never be a real man.
March 11, 2026 @ 9:08 pm
Oh no, that’s bad news.
March 11, 2026 @ 1:29 pm
You sound like you could use a little help yourself.
March 11, 2026 @ 3:03 pm
Said my someone who clearly has himself or anybody close to him never battled mental illness and/or depression.
But it’s cool, you got to shoot off your mouth via your keyboard on the internet today and make yourself out to be some “Alpha Male” incapable of suffering from said illness. Good job.
March 11, 2026 @ 3:08 pm
Are you kidding? You know nothing about his daily life and likely nothing about working/living on a ranch. From experience the ranch has always been a double edged sword the isolation either kills you or you miss it to the point of illness when you are away from it, and we would all hate for him to end up a statistic. If anything by getting the help he needs and not pushing himself further onto sickness he IS manning the F up. A real man knows his limits. Have you no compassion? Am i frustrated ill probablynnever get to see him? Mildly. Does that mean i should attack him? This is also his side gig… so theres that.
March 11, 2026 @ 3:44 pm
This has to be a bit. No one, even first name only/anonymously, can be that much of a douchebag. Can they?
March 11, 2026 @ 3:51 pm
If Coltor Wall was in fact only making music for “real men” then its pretty clear based on your comment he wasnt making music for you anyways so why even concern yourself with it?
March 11, 2026 @ 11:22 pm
I’m sure Chris berates postal employees and neighborhood pets.
March 12, 2026 @ 6:47 am
He’s content living off Dad’s money.
Not that I blame him, I would love to do that too.
March 13, 2026 @ 7:19 am
Wrong friend. He paid his own way. Still is.
March 12, 2026 @ 8:24 am
This 74 yr old cowgirl (not a real man) who can’t afford to go galavanting all over the country trying to see his show, wholeheartedly disagrees with you. Absolutely love his latest album. .Get well Colter.
March 12, 2026 @ 10:42 am
Jesus Christ chris, go fuck yourself
March 12, 2026 @ 3:10 pm
As a combat veteran, I really think it’s important to make sure your head is in the right space, and everyone has a right to that. The world doesn’t owe anyone anything so I think it’s great that Colter is looking out for himself so we can continue to enjoy his music, there’s nothing to be proved by needless suffering
March 11, 2026 @ 1:38 pm
AI-generated music would solve these problems.
March 11, 2026 @ 3:32 pm
I wasn’t aware that such stupidity continues to exist in 2026. I would say you may be the one who really needs help. I hope you never have to face any serious health problems and if you do, I hope you find the support you need and don’t have knuckle draggers telling you to man up. Sad.
March 12, 2026 @ 6:53 pm
Chris is probably the kind of idiot who doesn’t wash his butthole because touching an ass makes you gay or something. Also will probably die alone.
March 11, 2026 @ 3:55 pm
Colter Wall needs to cowboy up.
March 11, 2026 @ 4:07 pm
Why? So he can have the “manliness” of an anonymous online commenter hiding behind a screen and a keyboard to make fun of other peoples health conditions?
March 11, 2026 @ 6:04 pm
It is either cowboy up or go make an album with Rick Rubin.
March 17, 2026 @ 9:27 am
Was that a shot at Johnny Cash?
March 11, 2026 @ 8:14 pm
I dont think he owes anyone anything. Im in the middle on stuff like this. I understand mental health is an issue and if he can afford to not tour and such then great for him. I hope he gets better. But for most common people, the only way the rent gets paid and food is in the refrigerator is if you just do what you have to do to make that happen. Sure a day off here or there is ok if it helps but generally you just continue on doing what you do. But regardless i hope he gets better.
March 11, 2026 @ 8:24 pm
The difference here is Colter Wall’s full-time job is helping to tend a ranch in Canada. The music thing is a side hustle. It’s also a side hustle that probably makes him way more than ranching whether he tours or not. But if he and the people around him are worried the stress of touring and performing is significant, he doesn’t have to, not so he can go home and get on the Xbox and pull food stamps. So he can go and do what he wants to do, which is be on the back of a horse.
March 12, 2026 @ 11:22 am
I totally agree with you. I dont personally know what he does whem he isnt singing. If he has an everday life he loves that he can do to pay the bills, giving up what makes him stressed is a no brainer. In the future should he decide to go back out, maybe less shows would be better.
March 12, 2026 @ 6:12 am
Duke David, I get what you’re saying. Many people, especially lower income folks, “do what they have to do…” The problem is that doesn’t solve their mental health issues. It often exacerbates them. That is why mental health should be de-stigmatized, free (like all health care), and easily available. When everyone is able to prioritize their health, we’re on the road to America being truly great.
March 12, 2026 @ 11:25 am
I dont see your point. One thing there is no cure for everyones mental health issues. So you still have to be responsible and carry on.
March 12, 2026 @ 12:26 pm
“Solve” was a poor choice of words. I regretted it after posting. Managed should have been my choice. You are correct that there is no “cure”. Fortunately, most diagnosed mental health problems can be managed with psychotherapy and/or psychotropic medication. Those with serious diagnoses where treatment is unsuccessful certainly cannot simply “be responsible and carry on.” Good grief!
March 12, 2026 @ 4:20 pm
Yea there are people that have severe mental health issues that have to be medically managed. However like lots of things in the online era, i feel most peoples issues arent that severe and just use a popular issue as a crutch. In fact the medication you talk about prob does more harm than good i think all the meducation we have for everything is prob worse than when we had very little medication for anything. .
March 12, 2026 @ 4:58 pm
Duke David, your opinion about psychotropic medication is just that, an opinion based on how you “think.” Actual science, unlike opinions, feelings and thoughts, is real.
March 11, 2026 @ 9:44 pm
Like Johnny Cash?
March 12, 2026 @ 1:16 am
Hey Trigger,
Just wondering, would you think this run of mental health problems for musicians is related to people who get famous from viral recordings BEFORE they ‘pay their dues’ in touring?
Not saying there is anything wrong with this, just wondering if that was a factor and maybe something that needs helping for artists who are famous but not cut out for touring.
Previously, artists had to have an aptitude for performing BEFORE they got famous and we still had issues (including tragic ones), so it must be a lot more difficult than it looks.
March 12, 2026 @ 7:23 am
This is definitely a good hypothesis, and we’ve seen this play out with Colter, with Sierra Ferrell, with Wyatt Flores and others. These are not artists who seem to have been born wanting to be “stars.” It just sort of happened, and their ego is not exactly fit to be on stage being adulated by audiences. It gives them imposter syndrome, and strangely makes them feel inferior. We appreciate them because they’re real, not because they’re larger than life. Then this gets in their head because they don’t feel like they deserve it. And yes, when you go from zero to theater/arena shows, you never learned the life skills of how to live on the road, and create boundaries. It’s really easy to sit back and think these performers have a cushy life. The downtime is when the demons emerge. When they get off stage and come down from the rush of the audience, they look for other things to fill it. It’s not a life for everyone, and this is why we see mental health and addiction as such a recurring theme, highlighted by the fact that their live their personal lives in public.
March 12, 2026 @ 3:54 am
Way to go Evansville Indiana. You were such a shithole you broke him.
/S
(For reference, I live an hour from Evansville, and it is our duty to give a Evansville a hard time)
All joking aside, I hope he can rest and recuperate as much as he needs. I’ll buy albums whether he tours or not.
March 12, 2026 @ 10:31 am
Isnt Evansville the supposed inspiration for Pawnee, Indiana?
March 12, 2026 @ 6:01 am
I don’t know if anybody’s been to a concert lately but I think this whole situation has much more to do with people’s concert behaviors, which for some reason seems to be a plague at his shows in particular, than it does anything else. The guy simply cannot get across what he’s trying to do with woo girls, drunks starting fights, unending talking, the behavior is so bad that he’s had to stop his shows in order to watch security removing people. If I were him I wouldn’t be happy about it either, but what else can he do besides say “the hell with it“. His music and demeanor is simply incongruent with the way people behave at country shows these days.
March 12, 2026 @ 9:14 am
I won’t begrudge a guy for prioritizing his own sanity and doing what he thinks is best for himself, but this isn’t the opera. Any live concert, in any genre of music, where the audience is encouraged to drink to excess by the venue itself is going to get rowdy sometimes.
I’ve been to Whitey Morgan shows were multiple scuffles broke out mid-song and Whitey just kept going – didn’t even acknowledge it. I think that might just be the kind of crowd Whitey attracts, but I can’t imagine that happening at a Colter Wall show. When I saw him live years back, you could hear a pin drop during the entire performance. Nobody moving, nobody speaking, just people staring with mouths agape – it was actually unsettling to the point where the vibes seemed off, bordering on boring.
Maybe things changed at Colter’s shows since then but, man, hard working people paid to see you sing and play and if you can’t do that for 90 minutes once a day, I don’t know what to say. This genre of music was made by and for working class people to let loose, let off steam, feel some emotion. That’s what this is about. If 90% of the crowd are being idiots but 10% are locked in to the performance, isn’t that enough?
I watched Charles Wesley Godwin tour as an opener many times years ago, solo and acoustic, singing heart-crushing, personal songs like “Seneca Creek” to crowds that weren’t paying attention, wouldn’t shut the f* up, being absolutely disrespectful – but he’d power through like it was nothing. He wouldn’t be where he’s at today, headlining to 4,000 person crowds, if he hadn’t played hundreds of solo acoustic shows with shitty, disrespectful crowds like that first.
March 12, 2026 @ 11:20 am
Nah man, this ain’t Pantera or Five Finger Death Punch. People throwing things at the Colter, fights breaking out repeatedly, drunks passing out feet from the stage and having to be removed by security, him having to interrupt songs and stop them for several minutes so security can attend to whatever is going on,and the nonstop talking- God it’s endless, why are you even there if you’re just going to act like an ass. I’m off for “cutting loose“ whatever the hell that means but I’m not going to sit there and waste 50 bucks at a concert patronized by people who want to appropriate the Treaty Oak Revival experience everywhere they go. There are ways to get into the music without being an annoying disruptive presence to everyone.
March 12, 2026 @ 7:44 pm
Whitey Morgan shows, Hank Jr shows you never know what could happen. DAC shows, Waylon back in the old days…bikers, blue collar hell- raisers for sure. Colter? I’ve only seen him once live and it was like a listening room experience..you could hear a pin drop. Hes not a rowdy act.
Nah.. this isn’t about rowdy crowds bumming him out. .and it aint about ” calfing season” as a commentor below surmised. I dont know what Colter Walls issue is..but yall do know how common bi- polar depression and things like that are…right? I’ve had people very close to me who live with it and it wrecks lives, careers, marriages etc. It aint a thing you can handle forever without help. Meds tend to be rejected by the person suffering as they dont like how they feel under those drugs. A lot of folks self medicate with alcohol and other things. If Wall says he’s mentally unwell it’s best to believe him. Some of the comments on here are laughably ignorant. Colter owes you nothing. Hes a part time entertainer..if he calls it a day that’s no skin off your nose. Enjoy his music, at least we have that. My guess is sooner or later he’ll be back on top of this for awhile and likely do some shows. For reference see Evan Felker.
March 12, 2026 @ 6:33 am
Trigger, Smart piece and wise closing.
March 12, 2026 @ 7:29 am
Thanks for reading Joel.
March 12, 2026 @ 7:23 am
Are e living in a time of chronic “Mental Fatigue” ?
Are people less equipped to handle the crazy demands of the music business (rigors of the road, missing family life, multiple sacrifices, etc.)??
Not dissing these folks. I did this for nearly 52 years as a side musician (folk, bluegrass, country). It’s no picnic. However the growing ‘weaknesses’ of so many musicians is alarming. I question the state of mental well being, or lack of such, in all these folks prior to ever entering the business.
To blame it on the “pressures” and “relentless traveling” just doesn’t make sense to me. Today’s relative comforts while on tour is far and above the truly hard life of our predecessors. Perhaps in this modern age of ease of travel and bountiful venues some artists are becoming too soft, too demanding, incapable of dealing with the physical and mental aspects?
The Pioneers of our respective genres (1940’s thru 70’s) suffered all sorts of hell; including racism, little or no income, dirt roads, damaged asphalt roads while packed 5 or more in automobiles, many miles between service stations and diners or stores, lack of communication with family, 4:00am radio shows, possibility of being stiffed by bad promoters…. it was all for The Love of their music.
Hence my argument that this trend of mental “unwellness” has little to do with the touring life as it does with predisposed issues. Again, not demeaning these people — but am not comfortable with media accounts making it seem like the entertainment business is at fault. It is not. For every person who falls into drugs, alcohol, or whatever… there are hundreds of accomplished artists whm do not become ‘victims’.
BTW: Please avoid the “star” titles of anyone who comes out of Nashville or LA.
March 13, 2026 @ 10:58 am
Mental health has also been used an an untouchable excuse.
People are softer nowadays.
“Hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times”
March 15, 2026 @ 6:23 pm
If you look at country music history, a very large number of people died young thanks to drugs and alcohol and mental health stress . We remember them as people who died tragically young or had short careers or whatever but often it was some underlying mental health issue that the brutal realities of touring exacerbated.
You do know about a thing called survivorship bias, right? You only remember the successes that survived, not the people who failed or died or whatever
March 12, 2026 @ 7:39 am
I’m glad he recognized he was having issues and made the choice to do something about it before it got worse but I also think there should be repercussions for backing out of contractual obligations. They should be on the hook for losses occurred from these cancellations. I think the loins share of the “They” that should be on the hook is probably the Ticketmaster but that will also bring accountability between the Ticketmaster and the artist as well. Hopefully these repercussions would also help artists take these breaks more seriously and actually get the professional help they need to get to the root cause of their issues rather than just taking a break and trying again in 6 months hoping that they don’t have those issues again. Not that Colter isn’t going to get the help he needs but we’ve all seen it with other artists that don’t and it’s not fair to the fans to be on the hook for non refundable flights, hotel rooms, and whatever else they may be out when things like this happen. Hope all the best for him though, love his music!
March 12, 2026 @ 8:01 am
There are huge financial repercussions for an artist like this and everyone involved when they cancel a tour. That’s they reason in the past, tours never got canceled. They just gave the band a bump of something and soldiered on. Recently when Charley Crockett canceled his Canadian tour after being rejected at the border, there were some claiming he did it for “marketing.” The amount of revenue lost on something like that is massive. There often are contractual obligations involved. These are the reasons artists are often pushed to the brink.
March 12, 2026 @ 3:52 pm
Exactly. They have to pay back deposits and other fees. This will likely cost Colter a fair bit of cash, but it’s better than the ultimate cost. Prayers going up for Colter.
March 12, 2026 @ 10:34 am
It’s calving season, and any rancher worth his ass is with his herd when the calves come. Dude is where he wants to be, and I have no problem with that. Hopefully, the mental health side of this story is no more serious than he couldn’t be in two places at once, and the ranching side of his heart pulls harder than the music side.
March 12, 2026 @ 3:56 pm
Yes, Colter wasn’t aware his tour was booked during calving season. Sigh. It takes a lot for a person to admit they are suffering from mental health issues and need help. Suggesting this is just an excuse is brutal.
March 12, 2026 @ 1:36 pm
With all due respect, he doesn’t seem to have anticipated his abilities particularly well when he planned this tour.
March 12, 2026 @ 3:58 pm
With all due respect, you can’t anticipate when mental health issues will arise.
March 14, 2026 @ 1:21 am
I think an adult should know what he can achieve, what he is capable of, what his limits are, what he can undertake. It is a typical phenomenon of the millenial generation (i.e. Colter Wall’s generation) to take on too much, only to realize later that they cannot achieve it. I’ve seen this happen countless times with millennials.
March 13, 2026 @ 8:25 am
I will work 8 hours a day 5 days a week for 40 years and these guys – who play music for a living – can’t do 90 minutes every other night for a couple of months.
I don’t particularly care, but let’s just be honest. I also would like to hang out on my farm and do nothing all day. These guys just have the luxury of options. Good for them I guess.
March 13, 2026 @ 10:07 am
There are a lot of reasons why touring musicians are much more predisposed to mental illness and drug abuse. There’s the fact that they have to keep an irregular schedule. There’s the incredible high they feel on stage that is then counterbalanced by coming down after a show. There’s the fact that every town they go to, everyone wants to party with them. But one of the biggest issues that musicians talk about all the time is the downtime. As the old saying goes, “Idle hands are the devil’s workshop.” It’s not the grueling schedule they must keep, it’s all the hurry up and wait that happens on a tour that causes trouble specifically.
Also, I’m not sure that Colter Wall does “nothing” on his farm.
March 13, 2026 @ 9:09 am
Maybe he slept at the same hotel as Morrissey (https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cp32kd13w34o).
March 13, 2026 @ 9:20 am
Not much of a sleuth myself, but mb look down in Preston…
Seriously tho – I hope his foot finds the stirrup again lickety split 🙏