Think What They Call “Country” is Off? Check Out Rock


We spend a lot of time (arguably too much) kvetching about the doings on Billboard’s country music charts. Their permissive approach to basically anything that wants to be called “country” in fear of being labeled as gatekeepers has made these once industry-leading charts feel pretty obsolete to the average country consumer.

Compounding the problem was the decision by Billboard a few years ago to put their weekly charts behind paywalls, removing the fan from the experience, and basically relegating their charts to a mechanism of the music industry itself. Where conversations and interest in Billboard’s charts used to be a weekly occurrence for many fans, now there’s barely any conversation at all until the year-end charts are published publicly.

But as bad of an assessment as one might come to about what’s unfolding on the country charts, nothing compares to the monstrosity that is transpiring over in rock. Recently Billboard revealed the top 10 “rock” albums for 2025, and if you’re incensed about what’s labeled “country,” you’ll go bonkers over what is qualifying as rock.

Billboard’s Top 10 Rock Albums for 2025:

10. Olivia Rodrigo – Guts
9. Hozier – Hozier
8. Zach Bryan – The Great American Bar Scene
7. Zach Bryan – Zach Bryan
6. Taylor Swift – folklore
5. Elton John – Diamonds
4. Zach Bryan – American Heartbreak
3. Fleetwood Mac – Rumours
2. Noah Kahan – Stick Season
1. Billie Eilish – Hit Me Hard and Soft

Is there anyone in any universe that believes that the Billie Eilish and Olivia Rodrigo albums are rock? Does anyone except for Billboard consider Zach Bryan a rock artist? Similar to Noah Kahan and Hozier, Zach Bryan is a mostly acoustic-based singer/songwriter, even if he’s reached the arena level. This should be considered what it is: Contemporary folk, which is an increasingly commercially dominant genre that needs to be recognized as such by music institutions. Taylor Swift’s folklore could also fit in that category.

Another shocking realization is that not a single one of these titles was even released in 2025. Hozier’s self-titled album is from 2014—over a decade ago. Fleetwood Mac’s Rumors was released in 1977.

This chart says so much about the implosion of rock music, the permissive nature of Billboard with their charts, and the failing of the industry to be able to break new artists irrespective of genre—something that plagued music in 2025. But you can’t legitimately assert that there aren’t actual rock bands out there releasing relevant music. They’re just being overshadowed by the inclusion of megastars with non-rock albums on the rock charts.

Even with the paywalling of charts, being able to brag about your album placing high on Billboard might be the momentum a band or artist needs to break through. But how can they when the same superstar names are dominating multiple different genre charts? Just as troubling, when generations look back at the rock charts for 2025 to find who released the greatest albums of the year and don’t even find titles from the same decade, or from artists nobody considers rock, it defeats the purpose.

Saving Country Music isn’t especially qualified to commentate on what’s going on in rock music in 2025. But looking at the nominees for the Grammy’s Best Rock Album from this year and listening through, there’s some great actual rock being made. Turnstile, The Deftones, YungBlud, this all sounds like good, relevant rock music. The new Linkin Park album has massive numbers behind it. Haim might be just as much pop as rock, but it still probably qualifies, and much better than Olivia Rodrigo.

After looking at what a monstrosity the Billboard rock charts are, somehow country doesn’t look as terrible. And like it or not, the year end country charts look pretty accurate to what’s happening in the genre considering the consumption habits of “country” fans, even if you legitimately question how country the music of Morgan Wallen, Jelly Roll, or Shaboozey is, and point out that Post Malone wasn’t originally a country artist. At least these are albums from 2025 or the previous few years.

Billboard’s Top 10 Country Albums for 2025:

10. Zach Top – Cold Beer & Country Music
9. Zach Bryan – The Great American Bar Scene
8. Zach Bryan – Zach Bryan
7. Zach Bryan – American Heartbreak
6. Saboozey – Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going
5. Jelly Roll – Beautifully Broken
4. Post Malone – F-1 Trillion
3. Morgan Wallen – Dangerous: The Double Album
2. Morgan Wallen – One Thing at a Time
1. Morgan Wallen – I’m The Problem

Why do the doings of the Billboard Rock Albums chart affect us over in country? First, as country fans and advocates, we should want to be good neighbors. We don’t want country or country-adjacent artists charting in rock any more than we want rock and hip-hop artists charting in country. And when you have megastars like Zach Bryan dominating both charts, it lends to worries that all popular music is just becoming one big monogenre. Let rock performers have those slots on rock charts.

This then leads us to the issue of Treaty Oak Revival, who just released their latest record West Texas Degenerate. Any slightly knowledgeable music consumer would easily conclude that Treaty Oak’s music is straight up rock. There’s noting country about it; they just happen to be from Texas. In fact, amid criticism of the band being included in country, fans and the band themselves have said they don’t really consider themselves country. It’s their inclusion in country that creates the conflict around the band.

So why do Treaty Oak Revival continue to be lumped in with country? It’s because there is no market for rock music to be pushed towards, especially when you have Zach Bryan, Billie Eilish, Taylor Swift, and Olivia Rodrigo presented as the biggest names in the rock world. Perhaps if the end-of-year rock chart only presented rock albums, Treaty Oak Revival’s No Vacancy would have appeared since it continued to be a very strong title from the band through 2025.

Treaty Oak Revival’s West Texas Degenerate debuted at #3 on Billboard’s Country Albums chart this week with 26,624 albums and streaming equivalents sold. It was only 160 albums away from coming in at #2 in country behind Morgan Wallen records. The Treaty Oak album also came in at #1 on the Billboard Rock Albums chart, where it obviously belongs. At least Billboard got this particular decision right.

But by getting so many other decisions wrong, Billboard is forcing actual rock artists more and more into the country space because rock has so few festivals, barely any radio support, and few playlists and podcasts to support it. Why? Because the genre can’t launch any stars because the genre is being dominated by names outside of it. It’s a doom cycle with country having to pick up the slack.

Many people’s conclusion here might be “That is why genre’s don’t matter.” But in the current environment with so much new music flooding onto the streaming services every day, with AI promising to exacerbate this dilemma, and consumers finding it harder by the day to find music that resonates with them, genre and making the American musical catalog more navigable might never have been more important. Add on top of that how new artists can’t break through the noise to find the fans they need and deserve, and it’s an existential crisis for music.

Sure, with the onslaught of AI in the offing, we might just be re-arranging the deck chairs before the Titanic sinks. But it sure feels imperative in this moment to stop calling everything everything in music, and start deciding where albums from performers like Zach Bryan, Taylor Swift, and Treaty Oak Revival actually belong, and sticking with it, even if that means creating new charts and designations.

This doesn’t mean that in certain rare circumstances, you might have a song or album from a megastar that does deserve to be on two charts at the same time. But when the same big names dominate all the charts irrespective of genre, you have a big problem.

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