The Best New Country and Roots Albums of 2026 So Far

As we near the halfway pole of the musical year, it’s time to reflect back on the best albums that have been released so far. The top ten albums listed below should be considered early Album of the Year contenders. If we’re being honest, 2026 feels like a slightly down year for top albums so far. But that doesn’t mean there’s still not some great stuff you don’t want to miss.
PLEASE NOTE: This only includes albums that have been reviewed by Saving Country Music so far. Just because an album is not included here doesn’t mean it’s not good, or won’t be reviewed in the future.
Recommendations and opinions on albums is encouraged, including leaving your own list of favorite albums in the comments section below. But nothing has been “forgotten,” and no list is illegitimate just because one particular album is left off, or a certain album is included. So be constructive with your comments.
Aside from the first ten albums being the top recommendations, the albums are presented in no particular order.
Emily Scott Robinson – Appalachia

It’s hard to not slip into hyperbole when listening to Emily Scott Robinson. Her new album Appalachia doesn’t make it any easier on you. Despite previous Song of the Year accolades and Best Album contention, it’s this one that makes it difficult to impossible to resist believing in the awesome power of music, and of this particular artist. It’s a test of mettle and fortitude to not have to choke back tears, to not be transfixed and metamorphosized by the experience. Simply put, it’s difficult to impossible to argue life isn’t better on Earth due to this music.
Some albums we measure against their peers of a given year. For others, it’s necessary to venture to the catalogs of other years to find comparable works. Emily Scott Robinson’s Appalachia is one of those albums, with the only question left to resolve being what its impact might be. But for those who venture to listen, the impact will be alleviation, gratefulness, and a renewed fortitude to face life’s challenges and the fears we have of what’s happening in the world to the point of feeling nothing short of transformational. (read review)
Low Gap – Geneva

Straddling the border between Kentucky and Ohio, youth and maturity, divinity and sin, sobriety and drunkenness, two brothers going by the names Gus and Phin deftly explore the duality of life and man in songs that carry wisdom well beyond their years, while not overlooking the importance of a song to entertain.
They’re called Low Gap, and even though a single of theirs might’ve slid onto your radar as far back as 2021, Geneva is their very intentional debut album. It’s also a doozy, and the kind of debut every band wants to forward, but only do when they’re patient, persistent, bring forth songs that are battle tested and road worn, and the players are inherently talented and true to themselves like the Johnson brothers. (read review)
Rachel Brooke – This One’s For You

Rachel Brooke already has a stacked catalog of badass country and Gothic roots albums that have made her outright revered by a fervent assembly of fans. But she has never been more country, her voice has never been showcased so exquisitely, her songwriting has never been so sharp and clever, and the music has never been so complimentary as it is on her new album This One’s For You. That’s not to sell any other title from her past short. That’s to compliment on how she career’d out on this one.
The genius of This One’s For You is how Rachel Brooke starts with a foundation very traditional country musical tones, and verses hewn from entertaining rural parlance, including delivered in talk singing just like the oldtimers. Then in certain songs, she throws down these exquisitely insightful and brutally true observations about the dystopian technological abyss we’re all staring into. On their face, these bouts of modern perspective are stridently anachronistic set against the classic country background. But this is what gives these moments a sharpness and power. (read review)
Trey Hensley – Can’t Outrun The Blues

It turns out this Trey Hensley guy is pretty good at music. He does things on the guitar you’re not exactly sure if they’re even humanly possible—at least they seemed impossible until he makes the leap and sticks the landing right in front of you, defying belief and logic. There’s no trickery here though. This is human fingers moving across wood and wire to tickle the eternally relevant sounds of the universe for your audio edification. A.I., eat your heart out.
There might be guitar players out there that just like Hensley, have achieved the very pinnacle of skill and capability on the guitar dictated by the laws of physics. But nobody is able to pull off the kinds of bursts and runs Hensley perfects like rolling out of bed in the morning, making it all look so effortless that it’s almost maddening to understudies. (read review)
Coleman Jennings – Lead You Home

Herein lies what might be one of the greatest Western-inspired albums released in this year, or frankly, in many other years. With his debut album produced by Dave Cobb, the young-in-age, but old-in-soul Austin-based musician Coleman Jennings puts on a clinic of originally-composed and perfectly-produced songs that call to mind the white-capped rocky peaks, painted deserts, wide prairies, and the playground of imagination alive in the American West.
What’s for sure is that Coleman, Dave Cobb, and Big Loud are all reading the moment correctly. What audiences crave is a rugged authenticity roughly-hewn into songs that come with the bark still on and the moments thick with emotion and feeling. Citing Townes and Blaze isn’t simply lip service for Coleman. This music is delightfully uninterested in striking a sensibility for radio audiences or trend chasers. (read review)
Joshua Ray Walker – Ain’t Dead Yet

Even before Joshua Ray Walker stared into the abyss of his own mortality, he possessed an uncommon connection to the emotional rivers that ebb and flow through our lives, and how to render those experiences into song. Then he sings those songs with a deftness nearing the angelic, allowing the stories and messages to stir the inner soul of his captive audience, resulting in an experience difficult to impossible to achieve through any other conventional means.
Walker might remain independent, if not outright underground in the music universe. But his talent, his voice, his writing, and his his spirit soar so far beyond the corporeal plane. As he sings in the full band version of his song “Thank You For Listening,” “If this were my final curtain call, I’d have no regrets at all.” But we’re all beyond elated he remains with us, and be able to extend his catalog well into the future. (read review)
49 Winchester – Change of Plans

49 Winchester can do what many other artists and bands can. They prove this on their new album Change of Plans, sliding across many roots disciplines with authority. But few artists and bands can turn around and do what 49 Winchester does. That’s because they don’t have Isaac Gibson leading them into battle with an ascendant voice forged with Appalachian soul that perhaps only Chris Stapleton can best.
Change of Plans is like many of 49 Winchester’s previous albums, mixing straight country songs with more Southern rock sounds and bursts of the Muscle Shoals influence, but all seamlessly integrated. The difference here is in the more intentional texturing on certain songs, playing with rhythm dynamics and different tones, and trying to makes those influences and sounds more distinct track to track as opposed to just barreling ahead where it all blends together. (read review)
Charley Crockett – Clovis

Now this is the kind of Charley Crockett you want emanating out of your speakers: Greasy, rootsy, country more than anything else, but also seamlessly sliding between a myriad of classic American influences like only Crockett can do until you’re bathed in sepia-toned goodness, and are re-racking it again for a second swim through. His surprise album Clovis isn’t just a career-defining record. It’s an act of rebellion.
Only time will determine if Clovis is a career-defining record for Crockett. Surprise albums also tend to be better received since their best songs aren’t spoiled by early single releases. But what Clovis clearly is already is a turning point in Crockett’s career where he’s re-asserting who’s in control, taking grip of his own destiny, and proving to be not just one of the most prolific, but one of the most unpredictable and iconoclastic artists in country music. (read review)
JD Graham – Uppers & Downers

Sharing dispatches from the seedy and downtrodden side of life that ultimately blossoms into inspiring stories of redemption and renewal, JD Graham fearlessly mines the very depths of emotion as he explores the most involved contours of the songwriting discipline. This is an artist who only knows how to write the most brutally honest, the most touching and unburdening songs each time pen meets paper, knowing he might fail at finding an audience for it, but is never willing to settle for anything that feels even remotely empty or inferior.
How ironic is it that to took almost dying for places like Fox News, People Magazine, and Taste of Country to finally pay attention to JD Graham. It was for tragic reasons, but maybe the divinity was in the right place. Uppers & Downers is a career effort from JD Graham, revealing him as a world-class songwriter worthy of wide attention beyond any personal tragedy. (read review)
Kacey Musgraves – Middle of Nowhere

Exploring the in-between moments in life, and the in-between spaces on the American continent that often go forgotten is what the new Kacey Musgraves album Middle of Nowhere ventures to accomplish—along with exploring a more country sound that wasn’t just promised, but was delivered via the album’s 13 tracks.
Breaking through all the noise to the signal, Middle of Nowhere is a very strong offering, especially from the mainstream of country. It finds Musgraves understanding the moment country music is in, leaning into her traditional country influences, while also including some of the “Spacey Kacey” fairy dust magic that makes her so unique, and delivering an album that deserves to be a retrenching of her as one of the top women in popular country music. (read review)
Other Highly Recommended Albums

Ryan Bingham – The Call Us The Lucky Ones (review)
Braxton Keith – Real Damn Deal (review)
Ella Langley – Dandelion (review)
Drayton Farley – A Heavy Duty Heart (review)
Benjamin Tod – Vengeance & Grace (review)

Brit Taylor – Land of The Forgotten (review)
Vincent Neil Emerson – Blue Stars (review)
Ward Davis – Here I Am (review)
Muchacho Sanchez – When I Get This Way (review)
Doug Armento – River of No Return (review)
The Kruse Brothers – Heartbreak & Honky-Tonk (review)
Whey Jennings – Baptized By Fire (review)

Don Williams – Epilogue: The Cellar Tapes (review)
Bobby Dove – Fortune Teller (review)
Dale Watson – Unwanted (review)
Kashus Culpepper – Act 1 (review)
Ashley McBryde – Wild (review)
William Alexander – Along The Boundary Line (review)
Johnny Blue Skies – Mutiny After Midnight (review)

The Droptines – Drought Flower (review)
Leah Blevins – All Dressed Up (review)
Paul Cauthen – Book of Paul (review)
Flatland Cavalry – Work of Heart (review)
Colton Bowlin – Grandpa’s Mill (review)
Charley Crockett – Age of the Ram (review)
Eric Lee Beddingfield – Resurrection (review)

Megan Moroney – Cloud 9 (review)
Nick Sizemore – Everything (review)
Zach Bryan – With Heaven On Top (review)
William Clark Green – Watterson Hall (review)
Alex Miller – More Country Than You (review)
Other Reviewed Albums:
Luke Combs – The Way I Am (review)
Various Artists – Country Never Dies (review)
Struggle Jennings – Last Name (review)
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June 2, 2026 @ 10:57 am
For me that Colman Jennings album or what ive heard of it so far, deserves to be on that list already. I like voices with character anyway.
June 4, 2026 @ 6:35 am
Lots of good albums named in this article and many more in the comments, but in my mind the hands down best country album of the year so far is easily — and it’s not particularly close — Tyler Nance’s Midwest Memoir.
June 2, 2026 @ 11:08 am
Great list. Will say for me Bobby Dove’s album has been my favorite of the year so far. Truly magical album that I have not stopped listening to. Not Much Of An Outlaw currently my favorite new song and top of my on repeat playlist.
June 2, 2026 @ 11:13 am
These are the albums I have liked/listened to the most so far this year:
Ward Davis – Here I Am
Zachary Baker – Dark Horse
JD Graham – Uppers & Downers
Tyler Halverson – In Defense Of Drinking
Arron Watson – Horse Named Texas
June 2, 2026 @ 12:19 pm
Ward Davis song “Nothing on You” would be a hit duet in era. Such a timeless song.
June 2, 2026 @ 11:16 am
Surprised that Emily Nenni’s Movin’ Shoes isn’t mentioned here anywhere…. I guess it wasn’t reviewed, so that makes sense. Throwing it out there as a listening suggestion!
June 2, 2026 @ 12:18 pm
I love “Livin in Shame” “Take My Money” and “Honky Tonkin” and “I’m Not a Winner” from that one.
June 2, 2026 @ 11:30 am
One not mentioned , The Delines ~ The Set Up.
Superb gloomy late night country soul dealing with the underbelly of American life.
They do very well in the UK
June 2, 2026 @ 11:48 am
The new Ben Chapman album is my favorite so far. Just saw him live. Killer show.
June 2, 2026 @ 2:08 pm
Ben really upped his game on this one. This has gotta be the album that breaks him!
June 2, 2026 @ 12:02 pm
Great list, as always. I’m much higher on the VNE album, but there’s a few highlighted that I’ve still yet to check out.
Grayson Jenkins’ Country Parables (2025), produced by THE Pony Bradshaw still clears 75% of these that I have listened to though.
New Jordan Lee King drop from Friday was solid. I’ve spun the piss out of Cole Chaney’s Live AF session that dropped this year. Other than that, it’s been kinda sparse on the country side this year for me. Got more indie in my Top 10 right now than I’d like to admit to.
That should change quickly with Strays, John R Miller, and CWG dropping this summer.
June 4, 2026 @ 6:12 am
I know a Kentucky Music fan when I see one… Grayson’s album rips.
June 4, 2026 @ 3:46 pm
Yessir! You got me.
Since “Turning Tides” came out, I’ve told anyone that would listen that Jenkins might be the most slept on songwriting talent in the Kentucky regional scene. “Country Parables” cemented it.
To anyone unfamiliar reading this, go fire up “From Now On” and “Good Times Go”. Come back and tell me I’m wrong!
June 2, 2026 @ 12:17 pm
Favorites of the year for me (Still so much to listen to and get caught up):
Ashley McBryde “Wild”
Benjamin Todd “Vengence and Grace”
Brit Taylor “Land of the Forgotten”
Emily Scott Robinson “Appalachia”
Sophie Gault “Unhinged” (Not reviewed but if you love Lucinda Williams check it out).
India Ramey “Villain Era”
Kacey Musgraves “Middle of Nowhere”
The Kruse Brothers “Heartbreak and Honky Tonk”
Meels “Out West” (Campy but I love It)
Rachel Brooke “This One’s for You”
Ward Davis “Here I Am”
William Clark Green “Watterson Hall”
June 2, 2026 @ 7:58 pm
Britt, Emmy, Meels, Rachel, & Ward!!! Good for you Tyler…lol A+
June 3, 2026 @ 8:43 am
Saw Kruse Brothers open for Shelby Stone acoustic set prior to BFO-2026.
Speaking of Shelby Stone………Trig? Review? Officially released in April. Top 10 on Ranch top 10.
June 3, 2026 @ 9:00 am
I’ve seen Shelby Stone multiple times live, covered her, and think she’s great. I listened to the album, and it’s a rock album no different than Treaty Oak Revival, Dexter and the Moonrocks, and other “Texas” acts that are being pushed through country channels. I’m not saying I won’t review it. But with so many country albums coming out right now that I’m trying to get to,it just feels like a distraction. I’m glad The Ranch and others feel like they can support it. But this is a country music website, and I really feel like these straight rock acts being pushed through “Texas country” are doing a disservice to both themselves, and Texas country music. They’re rock acts.
June 4, 2026 @ 7:28 am
For discussion – I get the POV of your comment and agree except for the next to last sentence. I’m not sure these artists are doing any disservice by taking a Texas country or trying a more country route. What choice do they have? They are not going to get played or promoted within the Rock music industry. I would say it works, just look at Red Clay Strays and Whiskey Myers who are more rock than country but gained popularity through country channels.
June 17, 2026 @ 11:03 am
Dawg that Sophie Gault record is so good tysm for the heads-up 🍻
June 2, 2026 @ 12:20 pm
I miss when these posts would always get a comment from OlaR who would introduce a lot of really good and really obscure stuff from here and around the world. Random I know, but I felt obliged to say so.
June 4, 2026 @ 1:23 am
Literally thought about him today. I was googling an artist and it brought up an old comment section with one of his informative lists of favorite artists.
June 2, 2026 @ 12:21 pm
Equal parts sad/funny that 2 of the albums listed here (Clovis, Mutiny after Midnight) are completely unavailable to consume (legally) digitally. And in the case of Clovis, you can’t even seek out a physical version.
June 2, 2026 @ 12:25 pm
Mutiny is on iTunes for $9.99, brother.
It’s available digitally. He just Garth’d it.
June 2, 2026 @ 4:12 pm
Huh, good to know. Must have missed the news he put it up on iTunes and the like. I thought when he initially released it the plan was only for it to be physical (CD, Vinyl) releases, but glad they at least put out a digital option for folks.
June 3, 2026 @ 9:32 am
Honestly, I don’t know that Stu’s team ever pushed it. I think I found out about it like 3 weeks after the release after seeing a tweet where someone mentioned that it hit #1 on iTunes at some point.
I hadn’t bought it either, until then.
June 2, 2026 @ 12:33 pm
My 8 year old son and 3 year old daughter really like Elizabeth Nichols. specifically “I got a New One”, “Paul Revere”, and “the things men do”. I think they like the high key it’s in maybe, and the like the conversational aspects of it, at least with Paul revere, and to a lesser degree I got a new one. Anyone have recommendations that are similar.
Would like to see Emily Nenni on this list.
June 2, 2026 @ 1:21 pm
Up-vote from me on the Trey Hensley album. I concur that it feels like not a great year so far, release-wise, but my daughters and I have spun that album many times in the car, especially the title track.
June 2, 2026 @ 2:06 pm
According to the running list I keep in my Notes on my phone:
2. Colton Bowlin
3. Johnny BS
4. Ashley McB
5. Rob Baird – Smoke on the Breeze (If Tom Petty were from Texas this is that)
6. Ben Chapman – Feet on Fire (Goes from Southern-fried soul/funk/country to laid back Sunday morning pickin’ with unbelievable ease)
Number one is left off on purpose. It is being reserved for Presley Haile. I’m hoping she sees this and it gets an album out of her this year!
June 2, 2026 @ 2:49 pm
Surprised you haven’t reviewed Deep Blue by Ernest. One of my favorites this year
June 2, 2026 @ 2:58 pm
Ashley McBryde and Ella Langley are great albums, start to finish.
June 2, 2026 @ 3:04 pm
I loved Aaron Watson Horse Named Texas and 49 Winchesters new album as well. Brad Paisley has been releasing a bunch of songs from what he is calling Tacklebox that are very 90s feeling with another new song coming out tomorrow and so far they’ve all been really good
June 3, 2026 @ 6:06 am
Paisley is putting a spin on the Vince Gill monthly abbreviated themed album dump. I don’t get this strategy for legacy artists. It feels like the label releasing everything they have before parting ways with the artist.
June 3, 2026 @ 7:31 am
I think he would be relieved to be released by this label
June 4, 2026 @ 9:01 am
Yes, similar to the Brad Paisley releases, I can’t write a dozen album reviews for Vince Gill over the next year as he releases EPs once per month. The music is great. But it’s a lot to ask of the media, and especially fans to be able to keep up.
This Brad Paisley thing is just an effort to placate him and his fan base. He’s locked in label hell, and they need to release his new music.
June 4, 2026 @ 4:32 pm
I was enjoying the Vince Gill stuff, then I threw my hands up in the air and said it’s just too much all at once…lol even 6 songs at a time. Don’t they read the landscape and see the volume that’s released each week? Trig, what happened to Ty Myers’ 17 song whatever you wanna call it? Again, too much not Country, etc…IDK….I’m gettin’ old. I’ll play with the kids in the neighborhood. I’m on a fixed income here at the mansion.
June 2, 2026 @ 3:26 pm
For anyone interested in music closer to bluegrass, I recommend listening to the following ’26 releases:
-Big Richard “Pet” – they really outdid themselves with their sophomore album compared to their debut. This was recorded live to tape and captures the energy and emotion of their live shows well.
-Jesse Appelman “Where We Go” – lots of stellar musicians putting on a clinic on this album of mostly original tunes.
-Sierra Hull “The Movements” – three instrumental songs that form a truly outstanding composition. Sierra and her band are among the best out there!
-Infamous Stringdusters “20/20” – a double album that serves up a lot to digest, the band is still in top form and writing excellent songs.
-Magoo “What A Life” – enjoyable debut from and up and coming band who put on an amazing live show.
-Clay Street Unit “Sin & Squalor” – closer to a country album with pedal steel & drums however they have some clear bluegrass influences and feature mandolin & banjo as well. Thank you Trigger for putting this one on a release radar.
June 2, 2026 @ 5:44 pm
Magoo will be at the Scruggs Festival this year. I hadn’t heard of them prior to seeing the lineup but have been listening to the live stuff they’ve put on Bandcamp over the last month or so and am excited to check them out live. I’ll have to check a couple others on your list that are new to me.
June 2, 2026 @ 3:45 pm
My faves so far:
Paul Cauthen – Book of Paul – Probably in the pole position for my AOTY so far.
Aaron Watson – Horse Named Texas – All good songs but could have used some trimming to just the best
Chicago Farmer – Homeaid
Taylor Campbell Band – Never Quite Enough
The Brook & the Bluff – Werewolf
The Delines – The Set Up
The Droptines – Drought Flower
Jackson Dean – Magnolia Sage – guilty pleasure
Yarn – Saturday Night Sermon
I think I like Low Gap’s Geneva a lot too, but it escaped me that it was a 2026 release. I’m going back through it now.
June 2, 2026 @ 4:59 pm
No shame in the Jackson Dean mention Brother. Solid release for summer. There’s no “Heaven’s to Betsy” on it but some good songs for sure. I say Jackson and Elvie Shane are two of the best doing it within the shackles of the Nashville machine.
June 3, 2026 @ 12:14 pm
Thanks, Rich. It sounds a lot like Radio Country, which I’m not a big fan of, but Dean is doing something right on the album.
June 2, 2026 @ 5:06 pm
Logan Ryan Band- Kamikaze
June 2, 2026 @ 5:40 pm
Love the Droptines album. Still waiting for a review of Logan Mac
June 2, 2026 @ 6:11 pm
It’s really all about Colby Acuff or you ain’t listening to hard country rt now.
June 2, 2026 @ 9:12 pm
I just have to mention Villain Era by India Ramey as another very good album to check out.
Also I have loved the Rachel Brooke, Brit Taylor, Kruse Bros and Ward Davis albums as well.
June 2, 2026 @ 11:42 pm
I think my most played album this year is the Kruse Brothers, who were new to me. Aaaron Watson’s double album a Horse Named Texas is vey good. Kelcey Musgraves album is a big improvement on her last 2. Charley Crockett’s 2 albums this year have been great, especially Clovis (I hope it will reappear). I have enjoyed many of the mentioned albums especially Flatland Cavalry, Braxton Keith,. The best for me so far is Emily Scott Robinson’s Appalachia. It is stunning. Having read your review, Coleman Jennings is next on my list for a listen. Some albums to look forward to include Red Clay Strays, Midland, War and Treaty, Cody Johnson…..
June 3, 2026 @ 2:48 am
…i have liked way more from the downers than from uppers on those two lists of preferences that are mostly hard to argue with. indeed, it kinda felt like a somewhat lesser year than last so far, then again, the long list of “highly recommended” albums tells a different story. lots of quality there in every aspect.
funny enough, braxton keith’s “real damn deal” hit me like a bus from behind. didn’t see that quality and sense of humor coming from that part of the camp. although, that stache… ashley mcbryde’s “wild” keeps me coming back time after time and getting even better each time. leah blevins’ “all dressed up” is one of those rare gem albums that only drop once or twice a year almost out of nothing. ms. moroney’s “cloud 9” is as perfectly executed as it gets in all departments. emily nenni’s “movin’ shoes” and drayton farley’s “a heavy duty heart” are among the best ones from staying criminally under the radar. …and ella langley’s “dandelion” – pure sophomore jump.
June 3, 2026 @ 4:37 am
Matt Shenk’s Half Life Me is an outstanding listen. It is great for an evening of quiet contemplation on my ragged back deck.
June 3, 2026 @ 5:26 am
Shootin’ Straight – Kurt Adams
June 3, 2026 @ 5:28 am
Couple of albums that really caught me by surprise-
Carson Jeffrey, Comancheria… Cartels, Indians, and UFOs, all the good stuff.
Natalie Prauser, Everything is Fine… not sure if I wanna take her to rehab or to the wedding chapel but imma head her way fs.
Oh, and one more plug for India Ramey, very nice.
June 3, 2026 @ 6:01 am
Last year, I struggled to get to 10 AOY’s. I didn’t even publish my list for the first time in 24 years. So far this year, I’m easliy over 10 AOY candidates at the 1/2 way mark …
Apparition – Nick Dittmeier & The Sawdusters
The Birds Know – Jim Lauderdale & The Po’ Ramblin’ Boys
Change of Plans – 49 Winchester
Dandelion – Ella Langley
Dream Chaser – Willie Nelson
Geneva – Low Gap
Grandpa’s Mill – Colton Bowlin
King of Bluegrass – Jordan Lee King
Nighthawk – Jarrod Walker
Real Damn Deal – Braxton Keith
Vengeance and Grace – Benjamin Tod
I’ll revisit some of Trig’s Best of’s this week.
June 3, 2026 @ 7:00 am
I guess you can argue about how country it is — certainly country adjacent — but that Shelby Stone record is probably my fave of the year so far.
June 3, 2026 @ 7:27 am
Ben Jarrell, and it ain’t close.
June 3, 2026 @ 8:03 am
Don’t sleep on that Johnny Mullenax joint!
June 3, 2026 @ 8:34 am
Dream Chaser, by Willie Nelson, is Really good
June 3, 2026 @ 9:46 am
Larry Fleet – Another Year Older
June 3, 2026 @ 9:51 am
I need to get caught up on my country listening for 2026. There’s been so much good metal released this year that I’m getting caught up in albums by groups like ERRA, Draconian, As the Sun Falls, etc. that I am constantly listening to something heavy. Heck, on the more accessible side, Sevendust released a hell of a good album back on May 1st, too. It’s a great year for heavy music. I’m excited to see that it’s been just as good for country.
June 4, 2026 @ 3:02 am
…could be the times are calling for something harder and more urgent again than revisited (country) nostalgia, nice disco vibes and introspection from the sticks. the metal bands and heads may just be onto something ahead of the rest in music. who knows.
June 3, 2026 @ 12:57 pm
You’re gonna have to add Charlie Marie to this in a couple days 🙂
I love that ESR album. Need to spin it again. It feels so long ago it came out, I kind of forgot about it.
June 3, 2026 @ 1:21 pm
Hey Trig, I may have missed it but is there a review coming of the new Willie Nelson album? Curious if this would have made the recommended list.
June 3, 2026 @ 1:36 pm
It’s likely I will review the new Willie Nelson album. As I said in the preamble to the list, this only includes albums that have been reviewed so far. With so many albums coming out all the time, this is a moving target. I try to review at least one album on the day of release, and then spend the rest of the week catching out. Sometimes that takes days. Sometimes that takes weeks.
June 3, 2026 @ 1:37 pm
I know its not connected but I bought the new WIllie Nelson and the new Paul MCCartney album they came out the same day… and to my ears even though Pauls album is being highly praised by some , Willie trampled all over the beatle!
June 4, 2026 @ 8:56 am
Did I miss the resolution to the “Clovis” saga?
I love “Hallelujah Trail” how he made such a simple, pulled out of tune guitar lick the hook of that song is crazy to me and I love it.
June 4, 2026 @ 9:08 am
No resolution with “Clovis” at the moment. But it was released in 2026 and many people have digital copies, so I’m not going to ignore it. Lots of chatter that it will be returning “soon.” But I’ll wait until there’s fire to the smoke.
June 4, 2026 @ 1:03 pm
I was able to pull it up on YouTube Music. I just assumed it was released again but I didn’t check other platforms.
June 4, 2026 @ 1:09 pm
That looks like a bootleg. User is “GoatedCharleyCrockett.”
Funny how someone can illegally load an entire album up on that format, but if I include an 8-second clip of a song in a 2-hour video, it gets copyrighted.
June 5, 2026 @ 8:06 am
That’s because you do things the Cowboy Way.
June 4, 2026 @ 11:18 am
Great list as always. An album i just discovered that i really like is the latest Thomas Csorba “Tender Country”. Give it a spin.
June 5, 2026 @ 7:32 am
There are alot of really good 2026 albums in this spotify playlist from “Black Dirt” midwest artists here too released this year.
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4qqoVVniq3ETbr9AvmenWb?si=_EBkvsoMTYOes2mr6U4kWQ
Fans of this page would appreciate: Meg and the Wheelers, Nick Dittmeier and the Sawdusters, Chicago Farmer, Isaac Durst and the Midwest Charm, The Rangers, Nathan Coots and the Coyotes, Rye Davis, Horseshoes and Hand Grenades, Clay Clear Band, and many others.
June 5, 2026 @ 7:33 am
Starting Vol. 2 of the spotify playlist this week.
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1kd3Kl9ZffUMt6O62JthOj?si=gN44dyytSAa7RCfFB-bELw
June 5, 2026 @ 7:40 am
Also just to share here is Vol.1 and 2 of “Black Dirt” midwest artists singles released this year.
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/74FwNw9qsutIyUEET5sk3W?si=AxHU4RC5SM-AazV8kiDQ0g
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5CuSi7uxAoubjX0B0OoB3V?si=kSAh5P1xTLmBNYhfOXiN3Q
June 5, 2026 @ 8:47 pm
Saw Joshua Ray Walker with just him and his guitar tonight. Played a lot of stuff from new album. Great way to hear it. He was captivating.
June 10, 2026 @ 6:01 pm
My favorite album this year so far isn’t country, but it’s a work of genius nevertheless (and the title, in my estimation, makes it legit to post about it here):
Paul Bergmann – Connecticut Cowboy