Songwriting Legend Todd Snider Has Died

The world has lost a light, and of the most unique, interesting, compelling, challenging, mercurial, iconoclastic, and influential songwriters to ever ply the craft. Todd Snider wasn’t just a singer of songs and a storyteller. He was a dynamo of insight and entertainment, often unable to be contained in the conventional vessels of an upright society, or the human form. He was more than an “Alright Guy,” he was the voice and conscience for a generation of alt listeners and general misfits.
On Friday afternoon (11-14), a message went out Todd Snider’s fans saying that after he returned home from Salt Lake City where his most recent tour ended in disaster, he began having trouble breathing and was admitted to the hospital in Hendersonville, TN, near Nashville. “We learned from his doctors that he had been quietly suffering from an undiagnosed case of walking pneumonia,” the statement said.
When the statement continued on to say that his situation had become more complicated and that he’d been transferred for additional treatment, and “right now we’re asking everyone who loves Todd to hold him in your thoughts in whatever way feels right to you. Say a prayer, Light a candle, roll one up, send strength, or just keep him close to your heart,” you had a sense the situation was dire.
At about 8:30 am Central on Saturday morning, November 15th, Todd Snider’s official accounts posted, “Aimless, Inc. Headquarters is heartbroken to share that our Founder, our Folk Hero, our Poet of the World, our Vice President of the Abrupt Change Dept., the Storyteller, our beloved Todd Daniel Snider has departed this world … He relayed so much tenderness and sensitivity through his songs, and showed many of us how to look at the world through a different lens.“
Todd Snider was 59 years old.
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Todd Daniel Snider was born in Portland, Oregon and was raised in nearby Beaverton. After attending junior college in Santa Rosa, California briefly and dropping out, Snider ended up in San Marcos, TX, just 30 minutes down the road from Austin. While living there in the late ’80s, Snider saw Jerry Jeff Walker perform—just himself and a guitar—at the legendary Gruene Hall in nearby New Braunfels.
With little or no music experience beyond some harmonica, Todd Snider decided right then and there to become a songwriter. Todd bought a guitar, and started writing songs the very next day.
When you think of Todd Snider, you might not think of Texas or the Texas Music Scene, but Texas played a major role in his musical maturation. This is where he met Kent Finlay, the legendary proprietor of the Cheatham Street Warehouse. It was Finlay who introduced Todd to the music of songwriters like Guy Clark and John Prine. Soon Snider was drawing his own crowds in San Marcos songwriting rooms, as well as in Austin.
But it’s not San Marcos or Austin that would become synonymous with Todd Snider when his career took off. Snider’s debut album from 1994 called Songs for the Daily Planet was named after a club in Memphis that became Todd Snider’s home base after he moved there around 1990 to work with songwriter Keith Sykes. Snider’s father had moved to Memphis in 1989, and had passed Sykes a demo of his son’s stuff.
Keith Sykes introduced Todd Snider to two very significant people. The first was John Prine, who Todd would remain a close friend of and consider a mentor all the way up to Prine’s death in 2020. Sykes had also once been a member of Jimmy Buffett’s Coral Reefer Band. Sykes got Snider on a show in California opening for Buffett, who personally witnessed Snider’s set, and offered him a deal on his Margaritaville Records label, distributed by MCA.
Songs for the Daily Planet might have been written for audiences in a club in Memphis, but it would take Todd Snider nationwide. It was co-produced by Country Hall of Fame songwriter Tony Brown. It wasn’t really a country album though, and it wasn’t meant to be. It was more of an alt-country, singer/songwriter album with a full band. Among other notables, the album featured Eddy Shaver, the hot shot guitar player and son of Billy Joe Shaver who also was part of Snider’s touring band at times, along with guitarist Will Kimbrough.
The song whose importance seems to be forgotten from Snider’s first album was the hidden track at the very end, “Talkin’ Seattle Grunge Rock Blues.” It was a commentary on grunge music, told through a band that refused to play, but became successful anyway. It really was the song that introduced Snider to the world after it was picked up on college radio and even some mainstream rock stations. As a hidden track parody, it was the perfect anti-hit to launch Todd Snider’s unlikely career.
But “Alright Guy” was the song that would become Snider’s signature tune. Country artist Gary Allan even made it the title track to his 2001 album. Jerry Jeff Walker covered the song in 2001 too in a full circle moment for Todd Snider. Mark Chesnutt covered Snider’s song “Trouble” on his 1995 album Wings. No different than his songwriting heroes, Todd Snider was influencing mainstream country and landing cuts while still distinctly remaining himself.
Snider would release two more albums for Margaritaville/MCA, Step Right Up (1996) and Viva Satellite (1998). Neither was as successful as Songs for the Daily Planet, though some still consider Step Right Up one of Snider’s best. It was during the recording of Viva Satellite that things started to turn complicated for Snider. There were rumors of drug use, then tell-tale signs of it seen publicly.
In May of 1998 while Todd Snider was performing at a private party for MCA brass, he ended up insulting those in attendance early in the performance and then walked off stage. This was the first sign that the peace-loving, whimsical, storytelling Snider had a dark streak. He was ultimately dropped from the label.
However, Todd Snider found a soft landing with his friend John Prine’s Oh Boy Records, releasing three albums through the label, most notably 2004’s East Nashville Skyline. Similar to the early moments of his career, geography played a major role in the Todd Snider universe. The title was a play off of Bob Dylan’s Nashville Skyline, but it really was Todd Snider helping to define the emerging influence of Nashville’s east side where creative types flocked to in order to get away from mainstream country’s power base, and to find affordable housing.
In the modern era, there really was East Nashville before Todd Snider’s 2004 album, and East Nashville afterwards. In many ways, the album helped spark the current independent country revolutionary era as so many performers from throwback hipster country types to indie rock-inspired Americana songwriters congregated in one geographical area. It wasn’t the title of East Nashville Skyline though, but songs like “Play a Train Song” and “The Ballad of the Kingsman” that made Snider like a guru to many up-and-coming musicians.
This was also the period that Todd Snider’s music became much more political. In 2008, he released an 8-song EP called Peace Queer. The title was borrowed from a line from a song by the ’60s band The Fugs about “killing peace queers.” Sinder later signed to Yep Rock Records to release the 2009 album The Excitement Plan produced by Don Was. But only on the label for one album, Todd moved on to Aimless Records that released numerous albums, including fan favorite Agnostic Hymns & Stoner Fables from 2012.
Something else that elevated Todd Snider to cult hero status is that he’d written the first version of the song “Beer Run” that appeared on his 2002 album New Connection, though he’d been performing it live well before that. When Garth Brooks released a song of the same name on his Scarecrow album, controversy and lawsuits ensued. Snider ended up writing a song called “If Tomorrow Never Comes” as sort of a kiss-off to the situation and songwriter Kent Blazy.
But Snider’s notorious battle with Garth Brooks also became one of Snider’s finest moments of wisdom after he met Brooks personally, and when Garth was exploring his alter ego, Chris Gaines. Writing about the situation in his book I Never Met A Story I Didn’t Like, Todd Snider revealed,
I loved Garth Brooks. I was, and am, a very big fan. I think Garth Brooks f–ked up country music for a while, through no fault of his own: he made music so good and so successful that tons of people came along after him trying to imitate what he did. Garth f–ked up country music like Kurt Cobain f–ked up rock.
Because of Garth’s massive success, there’s a bit of a push and pull in Nashville about him. When you sell more records than anyone has ever sold, you tend to make more people jealous than have ever been jealous of a singer.
It’s a crock that I think prevails in this country: we bully the people who entertain us. We get on the computer and bully them. We buy magazines with pictures of them where they look fat or drunk or imperfect. And we suppose that those people’s success excuses our meanness.
This lesson would come to the forefront when news came down that Todd Snider had been arrested in Salt Lake City on November 2nd when he was seeking treatment at a hospital. Staff at the hospital said that Snider was harassing and refused to leave, but Snider insisted he needed further treatment, and had been the victim of an assault on Halloween, October 31st.
The details of exactly what happened remain shady, but local press and tabloid media that otherwise would have never written about Todd Snider had a field day with the details of the arrest, and splayed photos and video of the situation across the internet.
But that’s not how Todd Snider’s actual friends, fans, family, and fellow songwriters will remember him. They will remember him as a man, a songwriter, and a storyteller like no other, not inhibited by the fears of what others might think, or how the world might judge him, but confident that it was his duty to share his thoughts, opinions, and experiences unfettered, uncensored, and often, unabridged with the rest of the universe.
Todd Snider is gone, but those songs, stories, and memories will live on through the countless fans he touched, and the songs and songwriters he inspired as his legacy ripples well into the unknown future.
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If you found this article valuable, consider leaving Saving Country Music A TIP.
Editor’s Note: Elements of this story originally appeared in the article “The Ballad of Todd Snider.”

November 15, 2025 @ 8:40 am
Awful News – RIP.
November 15, 2025 @ 8:56 am
A few things:
1. The death of Todd Snider after his claims of needing further treatment in Salt Lake City and not receiving it, and instead being ARRESTED, they MUST be investigated further and taken seriously. If he truly died of walking pneumonia, and had the pneumonia when he was turned away and arrested, this is an extremely serious matter, irrespective of anything else that might or might not have occurred in Salt Lake.
2. Was Todd Snider assaulted in Salt Lake? We still don’t have that definitive answer. If he was, is there video footage or photos? Who were the perpetrators? What effort has been made to locate them? If Snider claims he was stabbed multiple times, did this play into the pneumonia? What role did walking the Salt Lake streets aimlessly looking for help play?
3. Saving Country Music learned of the death of Todd Snider at about 5:00 pm Central yesterday (11-14), though couldn’t confirm it. According to people who attended a private event where Robert Earl Keen performed Friday night, Keen said that Snider was dead. When did Todd Snider die is a fair question to ask as the music community reels from this news.
We owe it to Todd Snider to try and answer all of these questions, and more.
This is an incredible, titanic loss for music, and in a way that once again feels way too soon and preventable for someone who contributed so much to this world. As a member of this music community, I blame myself just as much as I blame anyone else.
November 15, 2025 @ 9:02 am
Your number 1 point was the first thing I though on reading the headline. There’s very likely something wrong there. RIP Todd.
November 15, 2025 @ 9:57 am
I hope that Salt Lake City hospital gets served with the mother of all wrongful death lawsuits.
November 15, 2025 @ 2:46 pm
@marv–That’s fine, but the plaintiffs–Snider’s heirs and estate–would have to prove that the Salt Lake City hospital was responsible for Todd Snider’s death.
That’s not exactly the slam-dunk that you seem to think it is.
November 15, 2025 @ 6:18 pm
That’s nonsense. That’s why everything is so expensive and bureaucratic.. an entitled and unserious society making ridiculous accusations without any evidence and filing frivolous lawsuits.
The truth is he was a junkie that got beat up during a bad drug deal and he was probably harassing the hospital to get a fix. Wishing for someone to get their pants sued off, or whatever you said, ain’t gonna bring Snider back.
Maybe you should blame all the people close to him that undoubtedly enabled him for years. The hospital was doing their job.
If anything can be gleaned from this human tragedy, it is that if your friend or loved one is afflicted with this “disease” as so many claim.. the best and only treatment is to intervene quickly and boldly (Amanda Shires and Ryan Adams style) and get them the help they need and don’t take no for an answer.
Looking for a scapegoat is a low IQ, leftist impulse. Live in reality. Tell the truth. It doesn’t take anything away from him. It just makes him a cautionary tale about the inevitable endpoint of a hedonic, degenerate ideology.
November 15, 2025 @ 7:37 pm
What a cold heartless wall of text. Todd had his issues, but the hospital could have diagnosed pneumonia in minutes and instead threw him out to the streets and called the cops. Sad state of affairs this country is in with this lack of empathy.
November 16, 2025 @ 9:12 am
If Snider was behaving erratically and threatening, then the hospital has an obligation to protect its other patients.
November 15, 2025 @ 8:18 pm
Healthcare isn’t expensive because of lawsuits. It’s expensive due to greed from insurance companies, big pharma, etc.
But that likely doesn’t fit with your overly ideological and black and white worldview….
November 16, 2025 @ 9:03 am
Obamacare and government interference are why healthcare is expensive.
November 15, 2025 @ 8:25 pm
“Disease” What an ignorant, callous and hurtful post. With 6 likes as of 7:19 PDT. Disgusting. Are you a licensed medical professional? I seriously doubt it, but if so, you should lose your license. You’re just one of many who think their “logic” and “feeling” trump science. Very Christ-like to demean and discard the least among us.
November 16, 2025 @ 9:08 am
Yes, most people prefer candy lies over broccoli truths.
November 16, 2025 @ 9:35 am
I agree. Science can sometimes be a “broccoli truth” to tbe “candy lies” of ignorance and faith.
November 16, 2025 @ 10:51 am
Not true at all. He and the band for hire got in an argument and one of them was the perpetrator. That’s why he was alone. They left while he was in the hospital. Todd diidnt own a cell phone, had no way to contact anyone and was discharged from the hospital against his wishes. He told them he was cold and having trouble breathing. Todd was on prescribed muscle relaxers because of muscle spasms and those went with the band so he was asking for a scrip.
Todd was gone before the pneumonia text. It was put out to prepare his friends who all got individual calls. He died of double walking pneumonia that had turned into sepsis. I do have first hand knowledge, knew TS for 19 years. Stop spreading this shit you made up
November 16, 2025 @ 1:29 pm
Thank you for sharing. Heartbreaking. No wonder we had such vagueness in Todd’s final 2 weeks. Sounds like he was all alone in his suffering in SLC.
November 16, 2025 @ 3:31 pm
So, where exactly were you, from the time Todd entered the hospital, until his death.
You seem to be intimately acquainted with what happened the last few days before he died.
Where were you, when Todd needed a friend?
November 16, 2025 @ 5:08 pm
Todd and I weren’t friends. We knew each other, some of his very close friends are friends of mine from a different scene. I said I’ve known him for nineteen years and in this 19 years I was in his presence probably 25 times. He was always kind to me, very warm and welcoming, but I didn’t hang out with him.
Todd did what Todd wanted to do and he didn’t do what he didn’t want to do. Todd’s friends were shocked to see how he looked in those videos, one had spent an entire day with him a month before and said he was hard drug free, energetic and upbeat. Tommy Womack has said basically the same. What happened I’m not sure, I could speculate, but that wouldn’t do anyone any good. He was obviously not well in the video, someone got him back to Nashville and within a couple of days the symptoms started and here we are
November 16, 2025 @ 6:13 pm
“He was always kind to me, very warm and welcoming, but I didn’t hang out with him.”
Glad you had that experience with him. And have those memories to fall back on.
November 20, 2025 @ 11:25 am
“Addiction” is a “diseae” and before you make blanket statements, consult your doctor, psychiatrist and DSM-V.
Interesting how people make callous statements, even when addiction has touched their lives (or not), not realing whatever the start of addiction may be, it requires medical (psychological and medical) moderation to be effectively treated.
Same for the “moral failing” bit. Addiction happens, saying no isn’t enough abd it has nothing to do with wheter you have G-d in your life or not. Like it or not, it happens. Yo the high and mighty and your own family members. Stimatizing is appalling (but not surprising in this current society).
And if you want yo take such a black and white approach to addiction, don’t moralize if your holding a cigarette or drink of coffee while writing here.
I know nothing of this situation, but certainly won’t judge it either.
November 15, 2025 @ 10:29 am
It really depends on what the complaint was. If you go to the ER for a broken hand, they aren’t expected to find that you have lung cancer.
November 15, 2025 @ 11:04 am
Multiple things can be true at the same time. Todd Snider could have been confrontational and insulting to hospital staff. He might have been suffering from mental health issues, and or substance abuse issues/withdrawals at the time. He also could have been seriously ill, maybe running a fever to the point where he was delirious and disoriented, and needed medical treatment irrespective of his behavior. He could have not even had pneumonia when he was in Salt Lake.
I don’t have any of the answers right now. But Todd Snider is DEAD. We all knew this outcome was a very real possibility when we saw what happened in Salt Lake, and still couldn’t prevent it. And so we have to ask questions to prevent this from happening the next time.
November 15, 2025 @ 5:50 pm
Otis Gibbs has a video about taking his sick wife to a hospital in a redneck town and being turned away because the hospital staff assumed that they were addicts seeking pain meds.
November 17, 2025 @ 6:15 pm
@ Trigger, Walking pneumonia can be present in the body for 3-4 weeks incubating long before symptoms even present. My guess was he was already feeling run down upon arriving to Salt Lake, and maybe enough to bail on performing, and a fall out ensued with his band? Either way, why would they ditch him? Even if there were arguments over the tour, and the event scheduled that evening, you’d think someone would still be looking out for him. Some things just don’t add up, and we may never know.
The hospitals had obligation to check his basic vitals and health functions, he was released from one, and apparently went back to get help. From all the local news media reports and police footage published, it seems they turned him away after they asked him to leave. Then he got upset went back in and yelled at them that he ought to “kick their asses”. That is what media quoted and is also what media was inflating as an assault on hospital staff? I’ll call BS, as I’ve seen worse behaviors and words thrown in ER. Even if patients get upset/belligerent, staff will generally try to diffuse situations, and help people, not throw them out and call the police. Something is amiss at that hospital. If the band had his things including his prescription for back pain meds, he was doomed to go through withdrawals, which is worse for someone on long term prescription pain medications. Throw in walking pneumonia on top of severe back pain, and prescription drug withdrawals, and it’s a recipe for disaster. He was probably asking for meds, and they most likely just dismissed him as they do any other homeless addict that wanders in wanting medications. Other threads speak to the lack of level of care of this particular hospital. This unfortunate incident, that Todd needlessly endured, should serve as a medical facility wake-up call to hospitals everywhere to be diligent in offering medical care.
I was admitted to an ER some years ago, with numerous inexplicable symptoms, and the attending ER doc was overly thorough, to the point that a senior staff member intervened and snarled at him to not stop doing testing – right outside the door and still within ear shot. The younger doc spoke back and reminded him how the hospital had been sued in past for not doing enough. So, I am grateful to that doc for going above and beyond with my case, but presume that was a rare occasion.
Heartbreaking to read Todd’s plight, and the news of his passing was absolutely crushing. Wish we could have been able to intervene and help in some capacity, but no one in Salt Lake seemed to have any idea of his status or whereabouts. We only learned of the show cancellation as other did without much notice, an hour before, and then what little filtered media details came emerged slowing. Thanks to all who cared for him in Salt Lake, and got him back home for medical treatment and care.
He will be missed in the music industry, by friends, fans and family; his songs, and stories will live on in our hearts for a lifetime. RIP, Todd Snider.
November 15, 2025 @ 2:34 pm
However if you go to a hospital following an assault and may have lost consciousness during that assault then the potential for “aspiration” pneumonia can be fatal. It may not be readily seen by chest radiograph early on, but can later create abscesses in the lung. Such infections or a brain bleed (subdural hematoma that may not initially show on brain imaging) can also occur following an assault. Both can also cause erratic behavior.
Only a careful forensic autopsy can determine what may have occurred. Unfortunately clinical diagnoses are often incorrect due to “bias” or lack of history (a patient may not remember the loss of consciousness that created an aspiration).
My education and experiences suggest Todd’s family deserve such insight even if it is too late for Todd (but if the hospital or clinician can learn of any error it can help the next patient.
November 16, 2025 @ 6:04 pm
Given this possible cause, is there a case to charge the band member that assaulted him with involuntary manslaughter? The whole thing is so convoluted.
November 15, 2025 @ 4:00 pm
The cop in the video pointed out to Todd that he had staples in his head, “so they didn’t turn you away”. It appears Todd got the staples at a previous hospital & was released from there, then made his way to the hospital where he was arrested.
November 15, 2025 @ 5:06 pm
Todd told police that his band had ditched him. Have we heard from anyone in the band?
November 16, 2025 @ 9:10 am
There is likely a good reason why his band fled.
November 15, 2025 @ 9:04 am
RIP Maestro. You will be missed. No matter what happened the music lives on forever.
November 15, 2025 @ 1:52 pm
I saw the live footage online when he was arrested at the hospital and he was begging for treatment and said he couldn’t breathe and was afraid he would die. I also recall the coverage of when he was previously assaulted/ attacked ! I feel like the hospital and the slpd are definitely responsible for the outcome here! The man was crying and begging and instead of getting help he was accused of being on drugs and being a menace of sorts.
November 15, 2025 @ 9:11 am
Todd at the Blue Note in Columbia, MO in the mid-90’s, playing all by himself, and the sold-out audience loving him. Best memory ever.
November 15, 2025 @ 3:16 pm
Same kind of memory from Portland at the rose theater! Exact same memories!!
November 15, 2025 @ 9:18 am
i’m just stunned. My first reaction is anger because he was sick and they missed it. That’s probably not fair under the circumstances but yes early signs of walking pneumonia can be disorientation, changes in mental state, and confusion such that it can seem like someone is having a mental episode. When my Grandpa had it they initially thought it was the onset of dementia. My understanding is that these symptoms are much more common in elderly people so to be fair it would be easy to miss in someone still middle aged. But it still makes me mad at all the hate and laugher certain sorts of people went right to. But I suppose they are still stinging from how well he parodied them so many years ago.
RIP Todd
November 15, 2025 @ 9:18 am
Grew up listening to Todd by way of my dad. This and John Prine hurt for how much I loved the music and the memories of car rides with my dad singing off-key. Still listened to both throughout teenage and now well into adulthood. Thanks for the tunes, Todd
November 15, 2025 @ 9:21 am
Todd was all stripped down beauty, talent, curiosity, kindness, contradictions, and delight. He gave us himself, unadulterated and complete, and we loved him for it.
He could play any country song ever written, from memory, in his own style, making it something different, and enhanced , and often better – through his lens.
He gave us stories about himself, his heroes, his friends – and they resonated with his reverence, compassion, and seemingly endless humor.
I’ve loved Todd for being so authentic, funny and generous. This is heartbreaking. Todd remains a force of nature. See you on the flip side.
November 15, 2025 @ 9:30 am
I hope Todd has found the peace that often alluded him in life. First time I heard him was on Bob and Tom in rhe late 90s and he’s been a favorite since. I met him years ago after a show and he was such a nice guy. RIP Todd
November 15, 2025 @ 9:33 am
What a sad ending of a fascinating life lived. Todd was a songwriting genius and so unique. He will be missed dearly but at least his songs live on.
November 15, 2025 @ 9:39 am
Sad news especially if it could have been prevented. I saw him several times. Very entertaining shows.
Aaron Lee Tasjan has a wonderful tribute posted to him. He talks about how much Snider helped him along the way. It is a little long to post here in the comments but it is worth reading.
https://www.facebook.com/100044254606651/posts/pfbid0iu3ZP7Urge9WSwqySEu2zgBVgzTc4AWmv2oAYeJXExe2XxDfuJDtS3BaYaMcGPaal/?
November 15, 2025 @ 9:58 am
This really helps emphasize how important Todd Snider was to all things East Nashville. To guys like Aaron Lee Tasjan, Todd was a god. It’s hard to emphasize the outsized influence Todd had beyond “Americana” songwriting. He influenced how the geography of Nashville developed over the last 15 years, and how the sound and music business developed around that.
November 15, 2025 @ 12:15 pm
I listened to Train Song this morning after hearing the news and it broke my heart. When I read what Aaron Lee Tasjan wrote it broke my heart all over again. That was absolutely beautiful.
November 15, 2025 @ 9:57 am
Todd checked into the Hendersonville Hospital on Saturday evening(11/8) at apx 9:30 pm. He was admitted to the ICU immediately and was in critical condition on Saturday night the 8th. Rip Mr.Snider, what a career, what a life!
November 15, 2025 @ 9:59 am
What sad news to wake up to. There truly will never be another like him.
November 15, 2025 @ 10:18 am
Crushed. Sounds schmaltzy, but I lost a hero. Grew up around him, close-by in both age and place. Jerry Jeff and Prine started it all for me in the 70’s, but Todd fit right in when he came along.
Never met him, but a couple of degrees of separation at a few points along the way (Oregon, Alaska) led me to know that he really was an alright guy.
Saw him live dozens of times; so many great memories of shows. Of course he stiffed me a few times too, but you always knew what you signed up for with Todd, so it never made me mad.
Have to say one show in particular really is maybe the best live music show I’ve ever witnessed (of hundreds): him fronting the Hard Working Americans at the Crystal Ballroom in Portland Oregon pretty much exactly (?) 11 years before the day he ended up dying. He never said a word that night (odd for that born storyteller), he just cranked out song after song of pure fire with Casal, Schools, Trucks, and Staehly. It was true magic. I think the musician in him would be happy to know that a long time fan loved that show the most.
Sail on, Todd – And thank you for having been here…
November 15, 2025 @ 10:18 am
Frustrated, angry and sad. The hospital kicked Todd out because he looks how he looks and he might’ve had something to say about being kicked out when he was very obviously sick, injured, and hurting. What’s one more night for a for profit hospital system? I hope there’s someone to hold them accountable.
I didn’t even want to turn my phone on today after last nights note on Instagram. I did and a text popped up that said “Todd died.” From a friend I met in 1998 when I traveled to another state to see Todd. My first time traveling to see him and not the last over 25 years. I just met up again with this friend two months ago for a different concert (after 16 years not seeing each other). Todd brings people together. I will smile for the times I got to hang with him because he’s cool like that. Glad for 2021 and 2022 return of the storyteller tour to be in the same room some last times.
When we feel like missing him today and other days, know The Nervous Wrecks era shows are the greatest rock ‘n’ roll shows of the last century. Crank it up.
November 15, 2025 @ 10:40 am
My heart is broken. I will keep Todd alive in my heart and through his music.
November 15, 2025 @ 11:17 am
God damn it.
November 15, 2025 @ 11:23 am
Man! Followed him from the beginning! No words can truly describe the loss we all feel…. Rumor has it that on his application for MCA records under the question of, employment desired(?) Todd filled in: ‘Steve Earle’s last position’.
Play a Train Song…
November 15, 2025 @ 11:38 am
Absolutely crushed. He was a legend in his own time. Like many of you on here, he spoke for me. He was a light in the darkness.
Rest in chaos my old friend.
November 15, 2025 @ 11:40 am
Damnit.
Songs for the Daily Planet got me through freshman year of college.
Seemed like a constant companion ever since, all through my adulthood. A Todd Snider song was never far away and a clearer head and heart were never far behind.
Just…damnit.
November 15, 2025 @ 11:41 am
You left out the obvious questions about his addiction level and how that co tributed to his neglected health. It is no secret he was in a deep hole. None of these questions matter though.it is just a sad day.
November 15, 2025 @ 1:32 pm
I definitely think it’s important that we ask what role mental health, and potential addiction issues played in this entire episode. That doesn’t mean that the pneumonia stuff is a smoke screen. That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t scrutinize why Holy Cross Hospital in Salt Lake City turned Todd Snider away. It simply means there might be layers of factors that led to Todd Snider dying.
And I respectfully disagree that none of these questions matter. We owe it to Todd to ask them. We owe it to other artists that don’t always find the resources they need for proper healthcare, mental health care, addiction services, and the profiling many musicians face.
November 16, 2025 @ 11:20 am
Aw shit. A bad way to wake up. He was truly Icarus.
Great summation of positive lessons from fucked up situation. Addiction, mental health, physical health. Throw one big personality into the mix. It’s too bad there wasn’t one Todd Snyder fan on the police force or at the hospital. Anyone who might have understood.
November 15, 2025 @ 12:27 pm
Damn. That sucks. Good write up though. Thanks for it.
November 15, 2025 @ 12:32 pm
I’m so freaking sad right now. Rest well Todd. Thank you for everything.
November 15, 2025 @ 12:34 pm
“Then one day the poet suddenly did die.”
November 15, 2025 @ 1:33 pm
Aww… :'( RIP Todd, and thank you for the music.
November 15, 2025 @ 1:34 pm
Regarding unanswered questions. Most streets are under camera surveillance. There should be an arrest for his assault. The hospital discharging someone with a head injury and pneumonia, they should be held accountable. I’ve spent some time today, and I encourage others, to contact journalists, and investigative journalist in particular, so that Todd gets the justice he deserves. A situation where he has passed, and the complicit contributors hope to keep seeping this under the rug – let’s get him answers.
November 15, 2025 @ 2:10 pm
I saw things heading this way but I was praying he had enough time and help to pull out of it. So sad to hear this. God be with his family and friends. I’m listening to Hard Working Americans tonight in his honor.
Godspeed, Todd.
November 15, 2025 @ 2:13 pm
There is so much unknown (to the public anyway). Why was he alone? I totally can see how he may have put himself in a position to be alone but there’s just so many questions. What happened to Todd Snider in SLC? This all makes me so sad.
November 15, 2025 @ 2:30 pm
This is horrible.
It sure feels like Todd Snider should have been treated more sympathetically at the Salt Lake City hospital where he came in after reporting being mugged and assaulted last week–rather than being ejected and having the police called on him.
But we don’t know everything that went on there and precipitated the hospital’s action. And we don’t know if an how that can be connected as a cause of his death.
The only way we’re likely to get more information about what happened at the Utah hospital is if Snider’s heirs/estate believe that the hospital in Utah was somehow responsible for Todd’s death and brings a lawsuit against them. Then all the medical and other records would be part of the trial.
It may turn out an autopsy and other investigation will show that Snide harmed himself–with illegal or even legal substances–before the Salt Lake City hospital treatment….or between the time that he was sent out of the hospital and his death. If so, that would probably end the viability of any wrongful death lawsuit from the family
November 16, 2025 @ 7:34 pm
Yes. Snider tells the story of it on the aimless records: step right up (purple version) album.
November 15, 2025 @ 2:52 pm
Question: Was Moondawg’s Tavern in Frazier, Tenn. (actually Fayser, per on-line maps services) a real place? Is it still there? Is Moondawg still alive?
November 15, 2025 @ 3:25 pm
I can tell you that Frayser is a neighborhood in Memphis, and not a very good one. The Gilmore he refers to in the song is an old apartment building in midtown Memphis. As far as Moonfawg’s, I don’t know whether that actually existed or not.
November 15, 2025 @ 3:39 pm
He’s definitely not alive. There’s a song about that.
November 16, 2025 @ 8:53 pm
Well, the song came out 30 years ago and the character was a veteran drinker even then. He’d tell you about
“How they threw him outta so many bars, he finally built one in his own.”
So, he’d likely be long gone even if he was a real guy.
I wonder if assorted foreigners and other tourists ever show up in Frayser, Tenn., looking for Moondawg like they showed up in Luchenbach, Tex. looking for the basics of love.
November 16, 2025 @ 7:37 pm
Yes. Snider tells the story of it on the aimless records: step right up (purple version) album.
November 15, 2025 @ 4:22 pm
Awful, awful, awful.
November 15, 2025 @ 5:35 pm
Sad news indeed. This Canadian sure appreciated Todd’s great music, wit and authenticity. There are some real gems on all of his albums, including his band Hard Working Americans. Love the song “Purple Mountain Jamboree”; “where we all break out in handcuffs from overexposure to the heat.” So many great songs and albums; Todd had a unique way with words and music and captured some real humanity and beauty in his art, along with some great humor!
Listening to Todd’s music tonight in memory and appreciation. Thanks Todd.
Godspeed
November 15, 2025 @ 6:09 pm
“And though I tried with all of my sadness, somehow I just-a could not weep
For a man who looked to me like he died laughin’ in his sleep”
November 16, 2025 @ 6:36 pm
That’s a beautiful quote. I don’t recognize it–where is it from? Thanks.
November 16, 2025 @ 9:25 pm
“Play a Train Song” which is a great Snider song; REK has covered it and I believe Billy Strings did last night.
November 15, 2025 @ 6:50 pm
The fact that his manager, band, and anyone else associated with him left and he was just roaming around Salt Lake for a week should tell you everything you need to know about this situation. To blame the hospital or the police is just irresponsible. Obviously, he is a musician that many people like but yet he was left by everybody who knows him. Do you know how much asshole things you have to do to be in the situation that he was in by the time that body cam footage was taken? We have all known people like this. Everybody that knew and cared for him LEFT HIM. Don’t blame the hospital or the police that showed up at the very end of a tragic situation.
November 15, 2025 @ 7:02 pm
Exactly.
This is very, very, sad, because a human being felt such despair. I hate situations like this, where people can’t find their way to the surface.
Casting blame and hostilities, is incredibly counterproductive in this case.
My heart Absolutely Breaks for Mr. Snider.
November 17, 2025 @ 2:17 pm
Di said: “Casting blame and hostilities, is incredibly counterproductive in this case.”
Not, it isn’t. Asking questions is imperative. Stop being a retard.
November 18, 2025 @ 7:18 am
Casting blame and hostilities, is incredibly counterproductive in this case.
November 15, 2025 @ 7:04 pm
The sad part is that the first signs of mental illness is being a dick to people around you.
Then they leave you, you KNOW its your fault and you hate yourself even more and that leads you deeper down feeling everyone hates you and you are worthless and desperate and turn to drugs etc.
You’re possibly right, he probably wasn’t a model human, and maybe his band was justified to leave, BUT that is why we pay hospitals and cops and social workers to put up with people who need help even if they are currently being a dick.
If mental illness became obvious when you were being a nice person, then people will generally help you. The scary part is its a cycle.
If a friend of yours starts being a dick, especially if its out of character, PLEASE go out of your way to help, to find out why and maybe get them to help.
Otherwise you’ll end up around the coffin saying “if only we realised, then we would have done something”
November 15, 2025 @ 6:57 pm
Too many artists die young. The old thing about being too sensitive for this world comes to mind. And they’re the ones this world needs most. Peace, brother.
November 15, 2025 @ 8:59 pm
Another fact that’s relevant but is being glosse over is that the incident–the assault and possible mugging, the altercation at the Salt Lake City hospital, and the arrest of Todd Snider took place on November 1 and 2.
Snider was released following his arrest. He was not held in custody.
Snider dies on November 14–that’s twelve days later.
When did Snider first go to get checked by his own doctor or at another hospital after the Salt Lake City incident? Was he immiediately hospitalized or was he released again? If he was suffering from a mental health breakdown, did his friends/family/manager make sure he was getting help?
Did some OTHER intervening incident occur in the interim?
The passage of time is a factor that would make it even more difficult to prove liability for Snider’s death against doctors or others in Utah.
November 16, 2025 @ 12:34 am
Very good point.
Even with all the unknowns that happened in SLC, 10-12 days is an eternity, particularly for someone leading the life Snider was.
November 16, 2025 @ 5:43 pm
Yeah how did it take this long for someone to point this out?
Maybe there’s too many variables here and too many unanswered questions.
November 15, 2025 @ 10:58 pm
Trigger, will you post if you see funeral/celebration of life info. Thank you.
November 16, 2025 @ 1:15 am
Terrible that he is dead but we all of us can only dream to have spread as much joy to the masses as he did.
November 16, 2025 @ 5:32 am
I hope they put his boots on before they lay him into the ground
November 17, 2025 @ 9:05 pm
Since he often performed shoeless, I’m guessing that he may have requested that they take them off on the day they lay him down. Either way, I hope he gets his wish.
November 16, 2025 @ 9:07 am
A brutal reminder that the tortured artist lifestyle is best appreciated from a distance.
November 16, 2025 @ 10:11 am
Yep, the romantic idea about the tortured soul of the artist/veteran soldier/bright minded guy/serial killer never seem to loose the grip on the publics interest.
Truth is that every man or woman that cannot accept reality, and therefore turns to stimulants/sedatives/destructive behaviour, claims to be “tortured souls”.
No, not really, they bring it all upon themselves, feeling special and/or entitled, no matter their profession, be it a world-famous painter or a truck driver.
More often than not they are self-centered dicks or crushed by their low self-esteem, seldom somewhere in between.
November 16, 2025 @ 10:37 am
Trenton had the best comment on this topic.
A degenerate society produces these outcomes.
November 16, 2025 @ 3:07 pm
Thank you for this evidence-based analysis gained through rigorous scientific methodology. I appreciate the years you and your colleagues dedicated to your research. Many studies have replicated your’s and have come to the same conclusions. There is no debate. Everything you stated is accepted as fact. Science is real.
November 17, 2025 @ 6:39 am
Yeah, I love this crowd for whom “if it came from my head, it must be right – and it must be right because it came from my head!”
November 16, 2025 @ 3:08 pm
Thank you for this evidence-based analysis gained through rigorous scientific methodology. I appreciate the years you and your colleagues dedicated to your research. Many studies have replicated your’s and have come to the same conclusions. There is no debate. Everything you stated is accepted as fact. Science is real.
November 17, 2025 @ 9:09 pm
Any particular reason you posted the same weird comment twice?
November 16, 2025 @ 12:01 pm
Sure hope we hear from his band members that left him in SLC, it’d be good to know what happened.
November 25, 2025 @ 5:13 pm
We first heard Todd on KTHX “THE X” radio in Reno … Alright Guy and other songs. We saw Todd live a John Asquaga’s Nugget in Sparks (Reno). Todd walked out on stage, took the mic, and said “I’ve been playing this shit for fifteen years for anyone who would listen.” I knew right then that we were in for something special. So sad to hear about his passing. Like john Prine (We saw him in Reno) … genius struck down much too soon.