What is Going On with These New Brad Paisley Songs?

Fans of country music artist Brad Paisley have been celebrating recently as new songs from the performer have been populating on streaming services a few at a time, and have been reminding them of his early career output in the best of ways. The songs come very anticipated from Paisley fans since it’s officially been over nine years—since April 2017’s Love and War—that we’ve heard a proper new original album from the singer and guitar slinger.
The six songs released so far are full of strong traditional country word play, double entendres, and catchy puns in hooky, easy-to-love country songs, while the instrumentation and production is indicative of ’90s country. This doesn’t just feel like old Brad Paisley. It feels like Brad Paisley at his best when he’s able to work his cleverness into country songs.
The first of now six new singles called “Fallin'” was released on May 11th, and came the same day it was announced as part of a greater project titled Tacklebox. But Tacklebox wouldn’t exactly be an “album” per se, and it wouldn’t exactly include new material.
“I see this ‘project’ as never-ending. It’s almost like the fans have a direct link to my Dropbox or to a playlist that never ends,” says Paisley. “We are calling it Tacklebox because it’s a box full of hooks, country lyric hooks. In this digital age, I have every song I’ve ever written at my fingertips. This project gave us a license to dig back into the catalog of songs that were never released, that feel like a time period, a style of writing, a sound, and nostalgia.”
In other words, these are not “new” songs, even if they might be new to the public. Paisley goes on to further explain,
“We went back into the studio to record or re-record at The Castle in Franklin, TN, the same place where several of my first few albums were recorded. When I first started writing and recording music, I couldn’t have dreamed of the ability to put something out instantly for the fans.”

Don’t get it wrong. Even though these songs are older, they are still cool, and dare we say even cooler since their coming from an earlier era in the Brad Paisley legacy.
But despite the positivity around the recently released songs, there’s still something that feels weird about how all of this is transpiring. Instead of the song releases perhaps being an indication that the dam is finally starting to break that’s held back Brad’s creative output, it might be the latest sign yet that something is inherently wrong in his career, either with a publishing deal, his record label deal, or both, or something else.
Brad Paisley has released other new music in between whatever Tacklebox turns out to be, and his 2017 album Love and War. Just last year, Paisley released a really excellent Christmas record called Snow Globe Town. It feels like one of those seasonal albums that you’ll be returning to each season for years to come. But this is different from a serious, proper studio album.
That’s what we were supposed to receive from Brad Paisley in 2023, or shortly thereafter. On September 29th of that year, Paisley announced a new album called Son of the Mountains. As a native of West Virginia, the album was going to be Paisley’s return to his original roots through a very forward-thinking project where he sang about the beauty of Appalachia, while also confronting the crises plaguing the region.
Coinciding with the announcement was the release of the album’s first four tracks, which were said to be sequenced very intentionally to tell a deeper story. The opening song featuring Dan Tyminski and Jerry Douglas and was called “Son of the Mountains,” written by Paisley with Lee Thomas Miller. So was the second song “The Medicine Will,” which addressed West Virginia’s opioid crisis.

Anticipation was high for the album. It felt like Paisley was trying to put together a project similar to the insurgent Appalachian artists that were reshaping country music at the time—artists like Tyler Childers and Sierra Ferrell. But those first four songs are all we ever received from Son of the Mountains. After that and further promises of details forthcoming about the upcoming project, the entire thing appeared to be mothballed, if not scrapped altogether. By the time Paisley’s Christmas album came out in November of 2025, Son of the Mountains seemed to have been completely memory holed.
So the next question is, what exactly is going on with Brad Paisley’s career? Sure, it’s great to get these older Paisley Tacklebox songs that are new to us. But why can’t the guy release new music and a new album per normal?
Just like Gary Allan, Josh Turner, Joe Nichols, and other artists, Brad Paisley likely signed a record deal back in the day that might not reflect the realities on the modern music industry. Their deals and the label heads managing them often don’t know how to move forward without a dedicated radio strategy, putting these artists’ careers in limbo. Ultimately, if a label can’t see a profitable outcome for releasing new music, they’re more likely just to sit on their hands and not release anything new at all.
For Brad Paisley’s entire career starting with his debut album in 1999 Who Needs Pictures, he’d recorded for Arista Nashville, which was a division of Sony Music Nashville. In the spring of 2023—so right as Son of the Mountains was likely being finalized for release—Artista Nashville was shuttered, with the artists on the label being shuffled to other Sony Nashville imprints. But Paisley ended up on Mercury Nashville, which is part of the Universal Music Group, not Sony.
The closing of Arista Nashville at the time was said to be a “strategic consolidation implemented by Sony Music Nashville to better align with the needs of country radio.” That “country radio” part very well might be the key to understanding what’s happening with Brad Paisley’s career.
At the beginning of 2023, Paisley released the song “Same Here” that featured the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky. If Paisley had released the single a year previous when the Ukraine War was still experiencing more universal sentiment, the single might have skyrocketed. But at the time, support for American aid to Ukraine was beginning to become very polarizing. The single failed to chart.
The same fate befell Paisley’s “So Many Summers,” as well as “The Medicine Will.” In fact, Paisley hasn’t had a Top 5 country hit since 2016’s “Today” (#3), or a #1 since 2014’s “Perfect Storm.” To put it bluntly, Brad Paisley had become cold product to country radio. And now having been shifted to a different label, he might not have the same long-term relationships to fall back on.
But why and how was Brad Paisley able to release a Christmas album, or singles either recorded or re-recorded from earlier in his career? That’s a good question. Interesting to note, those four songs released as part of the Son of the Mountains project were released through EMI Nashville. The new Christmas album and Tacklebox tracks were released by Mercury Nashville. So Brad Paisley hasn’t moved labels once, but twice in the Universal tree of imprints.
All of this is to say that Brad Paisley very well could be suffering under some sort of weird label/contract regime that is forbidding him from releasing actual new music. Many of these Music Row-based labels, if they don’t see a radio strategy for you, they just don’t know what to do, and ultimately, do nothing.
Releasing a Christmas album that’s not going to interface with radio anyway, or some previously-written/recorded tracks where most of the investment capital had already been spent in the past, well that makes sense. That’s why celebrating the release of these Tacklebox tracks should come with a bit of caution. Brad Paisley fans should be demanding the release of the entirety of the Son of the Mountains project, and whatever other new music Paisley might have sitting in the can. Or if the label is unwilling to play ball, Sony should let Paisley out of his contract.
Brad Paisley is now 53 years old. He’s made quite a few weird steps, and outright missteps in his later career (“Accidental Racist,” anyone?). It’s unlikely he has another hit album or a hit single just waiting to be released. But that doesn’t mean he doesn’t deserve the creative freedom to release the music that he wishes. Clearly he was feeling passionate about Son of the Mountains at one point.
There’s a good chance Brad Paisley ultimately ends up on the Country Music Hall of Fame. But as we’ve seen time and time again, when an artist ages out or loses radio support, their careers gets fumbled. It’s a lonely place where you’re no longer mainstream relevant, but are still too young to be considered legendary.
The Tacklebox project is definitely a cool thing, and some of the best music Brad Paisley has released in years. It’s also fits well with the resurgence of interest in ’90s country. But Brad Paisley deserves to release whatever music he wishes, not just what Sony Nashville has the stomach for that’s already sitting on the shelf.
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Editor’s note: This story has been updated to reflect that Brad Paisley is no longer on a Songy Nashville imprint, but a Universal Records Nashville imprint.
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June 9, 2026 @ 7:32 am
100% the best music he’s released in a long time. I wish he was done with radio and trying to have a hit. He’s an older statesman and has a massive opportunity with this resurgence in 90s/neotraditional style music that he was very good at at the start of his career. His label would be dumb not to try to capitalize on this but his label seems to have no idea what to do with him. I was as excited for Son of the Mountain as I had been for a long time. Singles were solid, I could do without the Ukraine song just didn’t think it was a great one. But going back to his roots and having more acoustic/bluegrass influences in his music was a welcome sight.
Regardless of what happens with this tacklebox project I’m happy to have new brad songs that are fantastic and old school. Songs that could’ve easily been on his first 3 or so albums. The releases are weird just randomly dropping them at no real consistent days but either way keep em coming.
June 9, 2026 @ 7:59 am
Brad Paisley’s most successful period came in the black hole that was from 2000- until the start of bro- country on the genre.. Unless you were Brad, Toby Keith, Keith Urban or Kenny Chesney, a lot of male artists had a hard time finding continued success and have fallen into a black hole.
Every talks about their love of 1990s country, and there are still tons of bro country fans, but no one seems to want to reminisce of the days of Taylor Swift, Carrie Underwood, and Sugarland dominating the genre
June 9, 2026 @ 8:49 am
Because that era was sugary hell.
June 9, 2026 @ 8:03 am
One thing to note and correct.
Brad is no longer on Sony. EMI and Merucry are under the Universal/MCA umbrella. He left Sony completely when Arista shuttered.
June 9, 2026 @ 8:13 am
“At the beginning of 2023, Paisley released the song “Same Here” that featured the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky.”
Gee, I wonder why this was a flop. 🤔🙄
June 9, 2026 @ 8:53 am
Paisley and Garth produce their worst music when they try to play country music’s liberal savior.
But hey, we got Eric Church’s audition rendition of “We Shall Be Free” out of it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5f_1VUnIK8o
June 9, 2026 @ 9:00 am
True, and that’s because they are just so cringey while doing it.
I read an article a few months back with one of the songwriters of “I’m Still a Guy” saying he doesn’t think Brad would record that song today.
Not sure if he still does it live or not
June 9, 2026 @ 10:43 am
According to Setlist Fm., “I’m Still a Guy” remains in heavy rotation.
Glad to see that. The song is hilarious.
June 12, 2026 @ 7:59 am
I was at the Coca Cola 600 where he performed it in his hour set
June 10, 2026 @ 8:49 am
I can always count on CK to make the dumbest comment on the article.
June 10, 2026 @ 12:31 pm
Your dislike is actually a compliment.
“Accidental Racist,” “People Loving People,” “Same Here,” and “We Shall Be Free” are the worst songs in their impressive discographies.
June 9, 2026 @ 9:18 am
…he’s been wrong indeed since january 2025, jimmy. but that wasn’t his fault, nor was it president selenskyj’s, who’s been putting another commander-in-chief (with “the strongest and most beautiful military” and “the finest ballroom ever built anywhere in the world”) to shame constantly and even more so lately.
June 9, 2026 @ 10:52 am
What is cynical creeps like you for $1000?
June 9, 2026 @ 8:16 am
lol I had forgotten Accidental Racist.
Glad to see this article. I hope somehow Brad can be released from his deal and allowed to enter a period where he just makes good music and doesn’t have the pressures of chasing radio singles. Unlike some who have gone through that process I feel like he would actually release some of the best music of his career
June 9, 2026 @ 8:51 am
“Accidental Racist” lit up the Country Universe comment section.
Fun times.
I couldn’t imagine the outrage if he dropped it today. It is not even that controversial except for the clickbait title.
June 9, 2026 @ 9:04 am
“Accidental Racist” was when the nutjobs
really came out of the crevices of social media.
June 9, 2026 @ 9:23 am
These singles prompted me to go listen to his earlier albums again. His songs are just fun. He became a bit of a slave to the radio in the 2010s, but 5th Gear and Mud On the Tires strike the perfect balance between Bro Country’s chart pandering excess and a legitimate appreciation for the simple life.
I also noticed that he and Zach Top are a lot more similar than I ever realized. Both stay mostly safe lyrically and favor entertainment versus lyrical depth. Despite that, they pull off their heavier songs with the same ease as the lighthearted ones. It helps that they can both really pick a guitar and are tastefully produced.
June 9, 2026 @ 12:46 pm
I wouldn’t compare the two. Zach is a competent guitar player but Brad Paisley took that John Jorgenson-style guitar playing to a whole other level and made it commercially viable all while singing and writing his own songs. His first album is my favorite and is packed with great songs. His being ‘clean’ in his songs certainly isn’t boring or “safe”. Listen to ‘It Never Would Have Worked Out Anyway’…the song is hilarious and references how he told this woman’s potential suitors that she used to work at a strip club, and another that she used to be a man. Brad’s first 3 albums had writing that seemed to mirror his personal life. After his fifth album he started writing more songs about drinking and sports (I’ve heard from multiple people that he isn’t a drinker but likes the imagery).
His greatness is often overlooked because he didn’t have the commercial staying power. A few of my reccomended listens:
It Never Would Have Worked Out Anyway
Me Neither
Long Sermon
You Need A Man Around Here
Wrapped Around
Come On Over Tonight
June 9, 2026 @ 1:51 pm
There’s a YouTube video of Brad shredding that guitar of his on “Country Nation,” his list song celebrating college football, at the Grand Ole Opry that I keep coming back to despite my conscience telling me I shouldn’t listen to list songs.
June 9, 2026 @ 6:02 pm
I get that people like stuff that I don’t like, but that is his worst song.
June 9, 2026 @ 7:30 pm
Yeah, I know. That’s just me, straddling the genre’s good and bad as I have since the mid-’70s. You should hear the schizoid playlists YouTube generates for me based on my past listening.
If Brad had found a way to work “Orangemen” into that song, I’d listen to it without regret.
June 9, 2026 @ 10:09 am
Sons of the Mountain sounded like a really interesting project. I was looking forward to the album. I wonder whether we will ever know what happened to that project. It is good music being released but it would be good to have an album.
June 9, 2026 @ 10:55 am
Can somebody who understands the music business better than me explain the record label limbo that Paisley and other artists wind up in? 50 years ago it cost a ton of money to produce and promote a record, so I could see a label saying “nah” to somebody in their stable if they didn’t think it was going to be a hit. But it’s never been cheaper to produce *or* promote a record–or just throw it on streaming and tell the artist “We’ll pay for the record but you’re gonna have to promote this one yourself. You can call our social media person at 4:30 pm on Fridays if you want some tips or advice.”
I can see why a record label wouldn’t do that for a total unknown. But why wouldn’t they do it for someone like Paisley who has a strong enough personal brand that he’d get thousands and thousands of streams just for releasing something with his name on it?
June 9, 2026 @ 12:25 pm
The short answer is that it still costs a ton of money to produce and promote an album in the mainstream, in part because they don’t know how to make an album without having to spend half a million dollars because that’s what they’ve always done. There is an avenue to release a Christmas album. There’s an avenue for doing archive releases incrementally. You want to release a proper studio album? You need a radio single. You need a promotional tie-in with college football, or a network television show. You need a branded tour. All of this takes money and time, which these labels would rather spend on someone who’s future is brighter than their past.
June 9, 2026 @ 5:32 pm
Interesting. Thanks, Trigger. I don’t think Zach Bryan done it that way.
June 9, 2026 @ 7:16 pm
In the mainstream world a lot of most artists lose money. From the beginning anyways. It’s roughly 3 million to break an artist. That includes radio tour, album/ep, bus/crew, and promotion of singles. For the most part it’s an advance and until that money is recouped you’re not making money other than original signing bonus. Have to tour a lot and sell a lot to be able to be net positive.
It’s obviously a little different with sort of a legacy artist. Even a single with professional level production can run 25-50k and having A list players. Then to radio to promote it may cost half a million to a million or more depending how far you want it to go or length of time promoting it. Then touring in front and behind it. He may not have the appetite personally to do all that.
June 9, 2026 @ 11:36 am
Brilliant piece, with some interesting theories. I had never considered label politics as a reason for the SOTM project stuttering. He’s still a hot ticket in the UK, and the Tacklebox seems like his version of the Prince vault. But I’d love someone to ask him what’s the deal with the lack of a new album, aside from the above average Xmas set.
He also has his philanthropy to keep him busy, with The Store.
June 9, 2026 @ 12:09 pm
You’ve completely forgotten 2024’s Truck Still Works, which was a very obvious paen to his 2003-2007 heyday.
June 9, 2026 @ 12:22 pm
This article already swelled to 1,600 words, so I was not going to cover every blow-by-blow development in Brad’s career over the last decade. But it is interesting that “Truck Still Works” was also released by EMI Nashville who was the label for Son of the Mountains. It seemed like by that time, they had already scrapped the idea for that album, and were trying another single to try and curry favor with radio in a way that didn’t work.
June 10, 2026 @ 12:01 pm
There was also “City Of Music”: which had a very similar issue as “Truck Still Works” in that although it had some genuinely solid lyricism and wordplay, it was nonetheless held back by awfully synthetic production and mixing.
It was from then on that “Son Of The Mountains” was announced and the four songs previewing the possibly-shelved album had much better production. It definitely felt like sonic whiplash, and I suspect label shenanigans are why that happened.
June 9, 2026 @ 12:29 pm
Call me old school, but I don’t like the idea of endless singles being released, and never will. I really hope it’s consolidated into a proper album to enjoy.
June 9, 2026 @ 1:16 pm
This also makes it very difficult as a journalist/critic to know where to be. I can’t review or feature each individual single as it’s being released. If it turns into an album, then maybe I can review it. But if it goes on and on endlessly, when do you do that? It puts the press and fans in a weird place. Vince Gill is doing this same thing by releasing an EP a month.
June 9, 2026 @ 1:37 pm
I just looked this up on Apple Music and these new songs are all packaged and presented under the “Helen Back – EP”. Says it was released June 3rd, 2026.
June 9, 2026 @ 1:47 pm
As Paisley has been releasing these songs incrementally, they’ve been bundled under an EP with the name of the last song in. In a few days, one or two new songs will be released, then it will be a different EP until it turns into an “album.” But it’s all part of this “Tacklebox” project that is talked about in the article. I don’t know how many total tracks it will ultimately be, but it’s likely to be quite a few, well over a conventional album’s worth.
June 9, 2026 @ 1:53 pm
New artists release endless album platters; legacy artists choose their own adventure.
June 9, 2026 @ 1:54 pm
Thanks for clarifying. For what it’s worth, I’m into it!
June 9, 2026 @ 1:57 pm
Trigger, do you think Brad would be having an easier time getting airplay if he were already in the Hall of Fame? The past two inductees, Kenny Chesney and Tim McGraw, are still clicking with country radio programmers even though both are nearing 60. And if Brad should be the 2027 inductee, would that revive him at radio or would it be too late by then?
June 9, 2026 @ 4:10 pm
I don’t think the Hall of Fame and radio play have anything to do with each other. I think once you fall out of favor with country radio, it’s over. Kenny Chesney and Tim McGraw have had curiously long radio careers, in part because they were willing to sell out at times. I don’t think Brad Paisley will be the 2027 inductee. I do think he’s a candidate, but I wouldn’t expect him to go in for at least the next five years.
June 9, 2026 @ 6:01 pm
Do you consider his career fame worthy? I’m a massive fan so I’m biased and think so considering his numbers and accolades but from a journalist pov do you think he deserves it?
June 9, 2026 @ 8:57 pm
I definitely consider Brad Paisley to be a Hall of Famer, not just for his career, and the fact that he’s a CMA Entertainer of the Year which always helps, but his intangibles, like all the charity work he’s done, how he’s pretty beloved around town, and that he’s been a good steward and the Grand Ole Opry and other places.
The thing is I think some more big hitmakers have to go in first now that they opened the door with Kenny Chesney.
June 9, 2026 @ 2:32 pm
👍🏾👍🏾
June 9, 2026 @ 5:53 pm
Ill have to listen to some of these new songs. I was never a huge fan but i did like some songs. I dont have any problem at all with artist, particularly older stars, releasing songs here n there. I may listen to an album once or twice, but the songs i like i will listen to again and again.
June 9, 2026 @ 6:17 pm
Listened to them, i like this town aint small enough the most. For the most part i can see why they didnt make an album. On a sidenote about another radio hero, i saw where alan jackson was tasked with inviting his grandniece, carlisle wright, to her first opry performance on june 28th. It was a pretty cool thing to listen to. She calls him uncle hat.
June 9, 2026 @ 7:22 pm
His new song “Helen Back” is fantastic and song of the year quality. It gives Miami my Amy vibes.
June 10, 2026 @ 4:15 am
I don’t know; I always considered him a lightweight. Too jokey for me, I guess, although I liked “I’m Gonna Miss Her”.
June 10, 2026 @ 5:23 am
Those Son of The Mountains songs are absolute gold. Man oh man, Jerry Douglas peeling off those smoking dobro licks, Tyminski singing along and playing acoustic behind Paisley on telecaster, it doesn’t get much better. Record company is insane for not releasing that project. It would be a stellar album to add to Paisleys catalog. Possibly his best work ever.
June 10, 2026 @ 7:34 am
Thanks Trigger for the update. I really do wish that at some point the Son of the Mountains project is completed. Maybe one day he’ll also release some more work from his time at Jamboree USA? That’s another story indeed.
June 10, 2026 @ 9:40 am
I enjoyed going to the WWVA Wheeling Jamboree, held on Saturday nights at the Capitol Music Hall in downtown Wheeling. I saw Kathy Mattea, Patty Loveless, a legacy Bluegrass package show with Jim and Jesse, the Osbornes, etc. Good times!