Tiffany Woys shares brand new EP, I’m Your Woman, out now, May 31st, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the brand new project below.
When we first introduced you to Tiffany Woys, she was a powerhouse singer who believed in championing the songwriter by only releasing outside cuts. While she is still a huge champion for songwriters, Woys is now embarking on her own songwriting journey in hopes that people may find songs that they relate to. Woys’ new project, I’m Your Woman may have been out of heartbreak, but each of the eight songs are truly her best work to date.
The project takes the listener through a journey of pain and healing. The first song, “The Only One I’ve Got” sets the tone for the record, reminding suitors to be gentle with her heart because she only has one. Woys’ voice continues to shine through on “Fool Me Once” and “You and Country Music.” On the former, the songstress showcases her vulnerability, while on “You and Country Music,” Woys brings the heat. The song displays the anger behind heartbreak in a way that feels strong and in your face in the best way.
Woys’ vulnerability shines through, yet again, on possibly the best song on the project called, “Took Back.” Written by the singer with Cameron Newby and Tammi Kidd Hutton, the songstress provides an anthem for women who were promised the world, but did not quite make it to the altar. While obviously heartbreaking, the song is both clever and honest – two qualities every great country song has. The songstress continues that same energy on “Chasing Storms,” drawing fans deeper into her heartbreak. On “Last Time I”ll Cry” and “Only Thing It Does,” fans start to feel the resilience part of Woys’ personal story.
If the previous seven songs depict the journey, “I’m Your Woman” is the battle cry that embodies resilience. On the title, and final, track, Woys lays it all out on the line, giving listeners an absolute anthem for hope. Overall, I’m Your Woman is a beautiful and cohesive project that truly takes the listener through a gut-wrenching story that ends in hope. Woys is at her best on this EP.
I’m Your Woman Track List:
THE ONLY ONE I’VE GOT (Hannah Ellis, Riley Roth, Cameron Jaymes)
FOOL ME ONCE (Tiffany Woys, Lynn Hutton, Tammi Kidd Hutton)
YOU AND COUNTRY MUSIC (Josh Jenkins, Sarah Turner)
TOOK BACK (Tiffany Woys, Cameron Newby, Tammi Kidd Hutton)
I’m Your Woman is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/tiffany-woys-ep.jpg6301200Erica Zismanhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngErica Zisman2024-05-31 00:13:492024-05-31 00:13:49Tiffany Woys: ‘I’m Your Woman – EP Review
Shaboozey shares brand new album, Where I’ve Been, isn’t Where I’m Going, out now, May 31st, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the brand new project below.
There is nothing quite like unique talent in the music industry. Viral hitmaker, Shaboozey, whose song “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” is one of the most biggest songs in music right now, is a unique talent. Today, the singer-songwriter releases a brand new album. The 12-song project, Where I’ve Been, isn’t Where I”m Going features the hit song, as well as, many other tracks that are sure to resonate with fans across music genres.
“I put together this body of work over the past 2 years, and even as I’m writing this post, I struggle to put into words how much these collections of songs mean to me. In them is heartbreak, in them is truth, in them are happy memories, and painful ones, in them is strength, but also my biggest fears,” shared the singer via Instagram. “Those that know me know how much I’ve lost and sacrificed to continue to do what I love and that’s to pour every last bit of what I have into everything and anything I create to make sure it’s the best possible thing I can make, and its taken me a long time to realize it, but I’ve done that with these songs…”
Listen to the new album ASAP!
Where I’ve Been, isn’t Where I’m Going Track List:
Horses & Hellcats
A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Last Of My Kind ft. Paul Cauthen
Anabelle
East Of The Massanutten
Highway
Let it Burn
My fault ft. Noah Cyrus
Vegas
Don’t Need No Mix ft. BigXthaPlug
Steal Her From Me
Finally Over
Shaboozey shares brand new album, ‘Where I’ve Been, isn’t Where I’m Going,’ out now on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future Shaboozey releases.
Where I’ve Been, isn’t Where I’m Going is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/shaboozy-album.jpg6301200Team Country Swaghttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngTeam Country Swag2024-05-31 00:13:032024-05-31 00:13:03Here Is Shaboozey’s Album ‘Where I’ve Been, isn’t Where I’m Going’
Kolby Cooper shares brand new song “Mama,” out now, May 31st, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the new track below.
Country-rock rising star, Kolby Cooper continues to deliver high-energy and vulnerable music. The singer-songwriter is building a name for himself in the country music genre with his growing catalog of music, one song at a time. Today, Cooper is sharing his newest anthemic song to date. His brand new track, “Mama” is officially out now.
According to the singer, this track pays homage to the people that keep you upright. “To me, ‘Mama’ is about always having people in your corner fighting for you and wanting what’s best for you even when you don’t deserve it,” shared Cooper in a recent press release.
“I could blame it on a memory // I could blame it on my blood // But as soon as that poison hits me, I can’t ever get enough // I know I need some saving // Been driving with one headlight // I’ll get around to changing // But I ain’t gonna change tonight // So don’t put that on me Mama // I talked to God before // It feels like he don’t wanna hear from me no more // This devil in the bottle don’t wanna let me go // There ain’t no holy water gonna save my soul // Those prayers you sent through the ceiling // No they ain’t worth a heart like mine // God knows my shoulders don’t need the weight of the world tonight // Don’t put that on me Mama”
“Mama” is the perfect blend of catchy lyrics an a fiery sound full of guitar riffs and a killer beat. It is quite possibly his best song to date. Throughout the song, Cooper grapples with the desire to be saved or to continue his reckless ways. The story encapsulates a true crossroads moment, while remaining enticing and fun to listen to. “Mama” is a song the listener must listen to again and again!
2024 is looking to be a huge year for Cooper. Fans can catch him singing songs like “Mama” on tour this summer, as well as, at various shows and festivals all season long.
Kolby Cooper shares new song, “Mama,” out now on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future Kolby Cooper releases.
“Mama” is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/kolby-cooper-mama-song.jpg6301200Erica Zismanhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngErica Zisman2024-05-31 00:12:122024-05-31 00:12:12Kolby Cooper Shares New Song “Mama” Out Now
Kelsey Hart shares debut album, Life With You, out now, May 31st, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the brand new project below.
With fifteen new tracks, Kelsey Hart’s debut album, Life With You, is a glimpse into the country newcomer’s life and upbringing. For the Kentucky native, the collection takes listeners on a journey through love and loss and everything in-between.
Signed to Curb Records, the singer-songwriter will make his Opry debut on June 28, and it’s only a matter of time before his songs are blaring from every radio station in the U.S. From the opening notes of the earwormy “Burn My Summer” to the closing notes of the anthemic “Country in Business,” Hart is ready to make a name for himself.
“Burn My Summer” is an immediate standout, a catchy mid-tempo ode to summer love, which finds him realizing that his relationship is fleeting, but accepting of that fate. It’s an earwormy summer anthem, as he sings “Baby, burn my summer // Take my time // Put a match to it // Set it on fire // Kiss by kiss // Night by night // ‘Til we kiss the whole thing goodbye // Baby, burn my summer.”
The album’s title track is another clear favorite, as evidenced by its huge viral streaming success. On his breakout track, which is dedicated to his wife, he proclaims his love for now and forever, making it a perfect wedding song. In fact, we think it’s about to give “Yours” by Russell Dickerson a run for its title of top country wedding song.
Hart shines on love songs, as evidenced by the “You Look Good in My Shirt”-esque “Flannel” and “Without You In It.” The latter is a gorgeous ballad that finds him wondering what life would be like without someone special in it.
While the singer-songwriter may be happily married, heartbreak is a theme on tunes like “4×4,” “Man Down,” and “Zebco.” Each of these is a clever up-tempo, finding him dealing with a broken heart. “Man Down” is lyrically one of the album’s best moments, as he drinks his sorrows away, admitting “that girl knows how to take a man down.”
“Better By the Beer” may be a breakup song, but it’s a fun up-tempo that has him feeling better with each cold one that passes his way. Likewise, “6-Pack Gone” is more of a ballad, with each beer in his 6-pack dedicated to a memory or moment with someone who got away. “Zebco” also provides a moment of levity, Hart’s vocals on full display as he spends some time on the lake, fishing away an ex.
“Put It On the Map” is a celebration of his hometown and the fact that it still remains just that, while “My Daddy’s Fault” is a poignant ballad about the way he was raised that made him the man he is today. “It ain’t my fault I don’t own a 3-piece suit,” He sings. “‘Cause I’m a little more Carhartt and boots.”
“Missin’ You” also provides another special moment, much in the vein of Lee Brice’s megahit, “I Drive Your Truck.” Here, Hart recalls all of the ways in which he remembers and keeps in contact with someone who’s passed away, and the result is a stirring and relatable moment.
On Life With You, Kelsey Hart introduces himself as a singer, a songwriter, and a rising country star that is sure to be a huge name in the genre.
Life With You Track List:
Burn My Summer
4×4
Without You In It
Flannel
Man Down
Drink About Me
Life With You
Zebco
Better By The Beer
My Daddy’s Fault
Like You Leaving
Put It On The Map
6-Pack Gone
Missin’ You
Country In Business
Country Swag Picks:
Burn My Summer
Without You In It
Missin’ You
Man Down
Life WIth You
Kelsey Hart shares debut album, ‘Life With You,’ out now on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future Kelsey Hart releases.
Life With You is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/kelsey-hart-debut-album.jpg6301200Nicole Pieringhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngNicole Piering2024-05-31 00:11:102024-05-31 00:11:10Kelsey Hart: ‘Life With You’ – Debut Album Review
Travis Denning shares debut album, Roads That Go Nowhere, out now, May 24th, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the brand new project below.
With songs like “After a Few” and “David Ashley Parker from Powder Springs,” Travis Denning has already made quite the name for himself, establishing himself as a rising country star. He continues that trajectory with the release of his debut full-length album, Roads That Go Nowhere, out now.
On the fifteen track collection, the Georgia native stretches himself lyrically, musically, and vocally. Denning wrote or co-wrote twelve of the album’s tracks, enlisting songwriters like Josh Kerr, Jon Nite, Jessi Alexander, Chase McGill, Paul DiGiovanni, and more.
A self-proclaimed “guitar player moonlighting as a metalhead in country music,” Denning favors rock-leaning guitars and driving percussion. However, he’s much more than a wannabe rockstar, leaning into acoustic guitars, 90’s influences, bluesy guitar riffs, and airy love songs.
“Roads That Go Nowhere is a culmination of songs and stories that I really believe reflect where I’ve come from, what I’ve been through, and the places I’ve yet to go and where I want to go,” shares Denning. “That’s with love, music, life, everything. I’m at that point in my life where I’m able to look back and reflect on the things that have gotten me here. A lot of them are positive and there are some negatives for sure. But I think that’s kind of everybody’s goal is to be able to look back and just be happy with the progress they’ve made and the potential they’ve still got.”
The album’s opening track “Why I’m Drinking” sets an immediate tone for what’s to come, Denning’s unique rasp gliding over a bluesy guitar riff for nearly 90 seconds before full instrumentation kicks in. It’s an immediate ear-catcher before bursting into a full heartbreak ballad, as he proclaims “I’d rather drown this hurt than let it sink in.”
Following in that vein is “I Know How It Sounds,” a stomping uptempo that kicks off with an intro that recalls Jason Aldean’s “Dirt Road Anthem.” It’s the perfect song to lace with pyro for an encore of an energetic show, as Denning is unusually self-aware of his country roots, fully embracing his raising with an unapologetic attitude.
The rock aficionado continues to show that side of his personality and his upbringing on the guitar-and-drum-heavy “Southern Rock,” which pairs him with HARDY. “It’s me. I was born and raised in middle Georgia. The Allman Brothers are a damn subject in school, and I just wanted this song to be an absolute fist-in-the-air anthem to where I come from and how I was raised,” Denning shares. “It’s just as much HARDY’s story, and you can only listen to it all the way up to 10.”
While Denning may consider himself a metalhead, he also shines at heartbreak. The regretful “Add Her to the List” and “Better at Leaving” are clear examples, clever lyrics atoning the fact that a girl left him alone to drown his sorrows at the bar. “She’s a whole lot better at leaving than me,” He sings.
“Someone That Isn’t Me” follows a similar theme, a twangy, waltzing ballad that finds him longing for the one who got away. “It’s heavy. I actually almost didn’t record this song because I’m like, ‘I’m married. How am I going to get up there and sing it?’ But there’s things we wonder about, whether it’s relationships with people we love, our career or just where we are in life. It’s just the reality we face as humans.”
Nostalgia is another theme on the album, weaving its way through the hometown ode, “Going Places” and the early-2000’s Keith Urban and Rascal Flatts-inspired, “Strawberry Wine and a Cheap Six Pack.”
“A hand me down Tacoma, with a dent in the side // Ten miles over that county line speed limit sign // Black and mild smoke out on the wind // Hot July moon, I swear that I can hear you singin’ again // First taste of love // No, I couldn’t get enough // Girl, that’s where I go, when I go back // Strawberry wine and a cheap six pack”
Denning tries his hand at universal love on “Her and Here” and “Love You Past That,” an acoustic, wedding-ready song perfect for a first dance. “I wrote it thinking of my wife, and it’s very special to me. It’s just a vow essentially – that no matter where we go, I will love you past the challenges. I will love you past the good. I will love you past forever,” He reveals. “And I just love this song. It came out beautiful.”
Both “Thing I’m Going Through” and “Roads That Go Nowhere” are reflective and introspective, the first recalling a conversation with his father, while the title track is an autobiographical ballad about Denning’s own bumpy path to Nashville and success. “I think anybody who pursues their dreams, they always run into the ‘We can’t wait to say we told you so’s’ – and I had a couple of those. But I turned 31 this past December and while I’m still going strong, I can look over the shoulder now and say ‘Damn, some cool things have happened.’ I guess it does feel good to say ‘I told you so’ after all.”
“That’s a road that goes nowhere // But one got me to Music City // One got me a kiss from a pretty smile, shotgun ridin’ // Now she’s wearing a left-hand diamond // Some dead-ended and turned out wrong // Hell, there’s some that I’m still on // But lookin’ back at that rearview, man, I swear // I’ve gone pretty damn far on them roads that go nowhere”
Both “Can’t Find One” and “The Sound of a Beer Getting Cracked” offer moments of levity, the latter a perfect summer anthem. On it, he enlists country newcomer Josh Ross to throw back a cold one, while “Can’t Find One” is a 90’s-tinted kiss-off that he describes as a cross between the Eagles and Shenandoah.
The album ends with the poignant and sparse “Ocmulgee River,” Denning’s light vocals coasting over a lone acoustic guitar as he proclaims his love to the land and river that raised him. Of the song, which he penned alone, he says “It’s the river that runs through my hometown. This was the last song we recorded for the project and I knew it would be the last song on the record. I wrote it by myself and it’s just my conversation with where I come from. I have a lot of memories on Westlake Road, which gets name dropped in there, and that’s where I took the album cover. That has just always been a refuge for my soul, and I think everybody gets inspired by the ground they know and they come from. It doesn’t really take explaining, which is good because you really can’t.”
For Travis Denning, Roads That Go Nowhere is truly a debut that will take him somewhere big. “I still feel like I’ve just barely scraped the surface, but with the love and passion that has gone into this record, I do feel like I’ve taken a next step from a creative standpoint,” he says. “This was a big cohesive group of songs, and I’m just at a point in my life where it made sense to finally do it. I hope people hear it and say, that’s a Travis Denning record – and nobody else could have made it.”
Roads That Go Nowhere Track List:
Why I’m Drinking (Josh Kerr, Jon Nite, Cole Taylor)
I Know How It Sounds (Travis Denning, Will Bundy, Chase McGill)
Better At Leaving (Travis Denning, Jared Hampton, Tripp Howell)
Strawberry Wine And A Cheap Six Pack (Travis Denning, Thomas Archer, Paul DiGiovanni, Jerry Flowers)
Going Places (Travis Denning, Paul DiGiovanni, Matt Mulhare, Jeremy Stover)
Someone That Isn’t Me (Travis Denning, Paul DiGiovanni, Blake Pendergrass, Bobby Pinson)
Southern Rock (Featuring Hardy) (Travis Denning, Jessi Alexander, Chase McGill)
Love You Past That (Travis Denning, Bobby Pinson, Chris Stevens, Jeremy Stover)
Things I’m Going Through (Jordan Dozzi, Matt Mulhare)
Add Her To The List (Paul DiGiovanni, Bobby Pinson, Jeremy Stover)
Roads That Go Nowhere (Travis Denning, Ben Foster, James McNair)
The Sound Of A Beer Getting Cracked (Featuring Josh Ross) (Travis Denning, Will Bundy, Chase McGill)
Can’t Find One (Travis Denning, Chase McGill, Chris Stevens, Jeremy Stover)
Here And Her (Travis Denning, Ben Johnson, Cole Taylor)
Ocmulgee River (Travis Denning)
Country Swag Picks:
Strawberry Wine And A Cheap Six Pack
Why I’m Drinking
Love You Past That
Roads That Go Nowhere
Travis Denning shares debut album, ‘Roads That Go Nowhere,’ out now on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future Travis Denning releases.
Visit his official website for tour dates and more.
Roads That Go Nowhere is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/SJuG4Cds-copy.jpg6301200Nicole Pieringhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngNicole Piering2024-05-24 00:12:252024-05-24 00:12:25Travis Denning: ‘Roads That Go Nowhere’ – Debut Album Review
Ryan and Rory share their brand new song, “Pour Decisions,” available now, May 24th, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the brand new track below.
There is nothing we love more than introducing fans to new, fresh, and exciting acts in country music! BBR Music Group’s new signees, Ryan and Rory are an act to pay attention to! The singer-songwriters are bursting on to the scene with a prime summer-ready song called, “Pour Decisions.”
The new single is the first of six songs off their self-titled debut project, slated for release on July 26th. “Pour Decisions” is the perfect combination of enticing production and fun, sing-along ready lyrics. The song pays homage to universal heartbreak, touching on the first night out and the feelings and sentiments we all have been through.
“We’ve both got broken hearts, tried to numb it with some sipping // So how’s about we let the liquor do the heavy lifting // Can only get so far getting over them with drinking // The only way to fix it, is to make some pour decisions // We ain’t about to get over them over night // I don’t need a crystal ball to see me a neon sign // We need a bandaid for the heartache that we can’t change // If we’re on the same page, ain’t breaking up a good thing, baby”
While it may be easy to compare Ryan and Rory to other duos like Dan + Shay and Brooks & Dunn, the singers have their own thing going on. “Pour Decisions” is the perfect introduction to that.
Ryan and Rory make their debut with their new song, “Pour Decisions,” out now on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future Ryan and Rory releases.
“Pour Decisions” is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/ryan-and-rory-pour-decisions.jpg6301200Erica Zismanhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngErica Zisman2024-05-24 00:10:062024-05-24 00:10:06Ryan and Rory Make Their Debut with New Song “Pour Decisions”
Vincent Mason shares his debut EP, Can’t Just Be Me, out now, May 24th, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the brand new project below.
Newly signed to Interscope Records/UMG Nashville/Music Soup, Vincent Mason is musically wise beyond his 23 years. While it would be easy to take a look at the young singer-songwriter and dismiss him as another young country wannabe, the music is so much more nuanced and impressive than one might expect.
With a unique vocal style and unspoken maturity, the Georgia native is ready to take the genre by storm. Listing one of his main musical inspirations as John Mayer, that prowess is immediately evident on his new EP, Can’t Just Be Me, out now.
“This EP is a great representation of everything that’s happened from when I first started writing songs up until now. I’m thankful to have the opportunity to co-produce for the first time alongside Brett Truitt,” Mason said in a statement. “The music sounds exactly how I envisioned and I’m excited to mark this moment in time and have it to look back on one day.” Mason added of his signing, “I’m so grateful to have Interscope, Universal Nashville, and Music Soup help bring our vision to life and keep building on what we’ve started. I couldn’t feel better about the team around me and I’m excited to get to work.”
Laced with acoustic guitars and harmonicas, Mason’s EP is a unique brand of singer-songwriter heartbreak country music. That theme permeates the collection, as he deals with the end of a relationship throughout the bulk of the six tracks.
With over 17 million streams already under his belt, “Hell is a Dance Floor,” is an immediate standout, a clever and moody take on watching the one you love move on before your eyes. His unique lyrical style and knack for storytelling is on full display here, as he laments, “Hell is a dance floor watching a red dress // Spin around with someone new // My hearts for damn sure breaking in my chest // Watching him fall for you // Part of me wants to leave this place but I can’t get the other half to look away // Every song’s reminding me // That I ain’t yours // Oh Hell is a dance floor.”
The EP’s opening track “May Be” finds Mason channeling his inner Jack Johnson, with a song that wouldn’t be out of place on country radio or at a local coffee shop. Here, he muses about where his life was before he met someone special. “Loving you may be the only thing I’m made for // Maybe these boots were made to get you on the dance floor // And that empty bench seat was always supposed to be yours,” He sings, voice laced with emotion. “If I called it fate would it be crazy // ‘Cause loving you may be.”
“Take Too Much” is a clever contradiction between uptempo music and downtrodden lyrics as he admits that it doesn’t “take too much” to get him to a place where he’s thinking about an ex. Likewise, “Livin’ Proof” finds him looking in on someone with a broken heart. “Make it in before closing time If you wanna know what a ghost looks like,” He sings poignantly. “You wanna save him don’t even try // He’s living proof of a lost goodbye.”
The EP’s final two songs, “Can’t Just Be Me” and “Really Don’t” are both strong contenders for the best of the bunch, with the title track a stirringly sparse heartbreak ballad that finds him longing for answers. Meanwhile, “Really Don’t” is arguably the most up-tempo and polished track on the item, harmonicas accompanying Laurel Canyon-inspired by guitars as he deals with the aftermath of a relationship that finds him admitting, “I guess you really don’t love me, I guess you really don’t.”
Vincent Mason’s Can’t Just Be Me EP finds the young singer-songwriter wise beyond his years with a perfect blend of acoustic-leaning country.
Can’t Just Be Me EP Track List:
May Be (Vincent Mason, Jared Scott, and Brett Truitt)
Hell is a Dance Floor (Vincent Mason and Chase McDaniel)
Livin’ Proof (Vincent Mason, Forest Finn, Joe Whelan, and Brett Truitt)
Take Too Much (Vincent Mason and Bobby Hambrick)
Can’t Just Be Me (Vincent Mason)
Really Don’t Love Me (Vincent Mason, Forest Finn, and Jack Hummel)
Country Swag Picks:
Really Don’t Love Me
Can’t Just Be Me
May Be
Vincent Mason shares debut EP, ‘Can’t Just Be Me,’ out now on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future Vincent Mason releases.
Can’t Just Be Me EP is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/vincent-mason-debut-ep.jpg6301200Nicole Pieringhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngNicole Piering2024-05-24 00:08:392024-05-24 00:08:39Vincent Mason: ‘Can’t Just Be Me’ – Debut EP Review
Tucker Wetmore shares brand new single, “What Would You Do,” out now, May 24th on all streaming platforms. Listen to the new song below.
From the minute Tucker Wetmore showed up on our radar, we knew he was something special. His two songs, “Wine Into Whiskey” and “Wind Up Missin’ You” already surpassed expectations, garnering 74 million streams and counting on Spotify alone. Today, the singer-songwriter is sharing another new song to add to his catalog. Wetmore’s new single, “What Would You Do” is officially out now.
Written by the singer with Jacob Hackworth, Jaxon Free, and Gabe Foust, the new single delves into a toxic relationship, where there is suspicion of cheating or unfaithfulness. The song feels haunting, yet eerily relatable. On the track, Wetmore forces the other person to look at their own actions and confront their own demons that have turned the relationship into dust.
“Would you love you // Would you leave you out to dry // Would you lie and say that // Runnin’ don’t cross your mind // Tell me baby // Would you drive you crazy // What would you do // What would you do to you // Knowin’ you, you’d set the whole damn house on fire // Known’ you, you wouldn’t let you make it out alive // Fore you blame me // And tell me that you hate me // What would you do // What would you do to you”
Wetmore is proving to be a talent to look out for. Each of his three releases showcase his staying power and songwriting grit, all while showing that he has the vocals to back it all up. “What Would You Do” is just another notch on his belt.
Tucker Wetmore shares brand new single, “What Would You Do,” out now on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future Tucker Wetmore releases.
“What Would You Do” is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/tucker-wetmore-what-would-you-do-single.jpg6301200Erica Zismanhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngErica Zisman2024-05-24 00:07:052024-05-24 00:07:05Tucker Wetmore Shares New Single “What Would You Do”
HunterGirl shares brand new song, “Bad Boy,” available now, May 17th, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the brand new track below.
With driving guitars remnant of some of Kelly Clarkson’s biggest hits, HunterGirl’s new single, “Bad Boy,” finds her unapologetically attracted to the type of guy who may not quite be good for her. On the roaring uptempo, she admits she likes guys “with issues,” tattoos, cigarettes, and who just might be a “guitar player in a band.”
Released in advance of the June 7 release of her debut EP, Tennessee Girl, “Bad Boy” is a pure piece of pop country ear candy. Now signed to BBR Music Group, the American Idol runner is ready to make a splash on her own and find herself a “bad boy.”
“Yeah I know my daddy’s gonna really hate this song // Yeah I got it bad for someone bad for me // You can really kiss // I can barely breathe // Only kind of crazy // I could ever need // And it’ll only be good, only be good to me… I really got it bad for a bad boy.”
For rising star HunterGirl, “Bad Boy” is a roaring uptempo that is sure to endear her to new and old fans alike.
HunterGirl’s new song, “Bad Boy” out now, May 17th, on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future HunterGirl releases.
“Bad Boy” is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/huntergirl.jpg6301200Nicole Pieringhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngNicole Piering2024-05-17 00:31:512024-05-17 00:31:51HunterGirl Shares Brand New Song “Bad Boy”
Reid Haughton shares debut album, Higher Than 9, out now, May 17th, on all streaming platforms. Listen to the brand new project below.
While River House artist Reid Haughton may not be a household name just yet, the Alabama native is poised to make a splash with his new album, Higher Than 9, out now. With a country-soul-meets-rock-and-roll sound that finds him channeling a mix of Eric Church and early Keith Urban, his trajectory can only be upwards.
“Higher Than 9 is everything that I love,” He shared on social media. “It’s the feeling that only music can give you. It’s rock songs, love songs, groove songs, and everything in between. I poured my heart and soul into this and I’m so thankful for everyone who’s a part of it.”
Haughton is an unpolished gem in the best way, not tainted by a need to bend to current trends or sounds, but instead appreciating swirling guitars, unapologetic lyrics, and raw vocals. The album is a mix of rock-laden blue-collared anthems, including a cover of the Charlie Daniels’ classic, “Long Haired Country Boy.”
The album’s title track sets the mood immediately, a driving celebration of love, seen through rock-tinted glasses as Haughton growls that he’s “on some cloud higher than 9.” Meanwhile, “Man Made Money” is a catchy and tongue-in-cheek ode to the expensive taste of a woman, with the Alabama native musing, “She loves to spend it and so I save…God made women, So man made money.”
With the confidence and swagger of a seasoned frontman, Haughton growls through heartbreak and drinking all day on the gritty and swampy stomper of “It Don’t Hurt.” “If it wasn’t for the weed, the wine, the whiskey // I’d be low down in the dirt // I feel a whole lot better, once the buzz gets to work // No drowning myself sure as hell don’t help, but it don’t hurt.”
“Mendoza Line” is ripe with harmonicas and slide guitars, while “Don’t Get Wet” finds him wise beyond his years, scatting that worrying will get you nowhere. “You could try hiding from the rain // Thinking that umbrella is going to keep you safe from the storm brewing up ahead… better jump in the water so you don’t get wet.”
Haughton deals with love and relationships on songs like “Flicker,” which finds him dealing with a dangerous woman, and her hold on him. Likewise, “Got to Give.” On the latter, he muses that a woman “don’t want nothing except all I’ve got to give,” while “Flicker” finds him standing “too close to the flame… I ain’t tryna say that I still miss her // But every now and then that flame still flickers.”
The album ends with “The Crow,” a more sparse and acoustic track than the others on the album that finds the singer-songwriter’s voice laced with remorse. “I bet you can tell, that it’s all gone to hell, that I look like somebody, who stayed in something, a little too long,” He sings on the blissfully moody track, voice laced with soul. “It’s a long way home, even if you got wings, I ain’t gonna get nowhere, sitting and wondering what the crow brings.”
From Higher Than 9, it’s clear why Reid Haughton already has a devoted following, but it’s only a matter of time before he’s a mega star.
Higher Than 9 Track List:
“Higher Than 9”
“It Don’t Hurt”
“Man Made Money”
“Don’t Get Wet”
“Got to Give”
“Flicker”
“Mendoza Line”
“Longed Haired Country Boy”
“The Crow”
Country Swag Picks:
“It Don’t Hurt”
“Don’t Get Wet”
“Man Made Money”
“Higher Than 9”
Reid Haughton shares debut album, ‘Higher Than 9,’ out now on all streaming platforms.
Fans can join our Weekly Round-Up e-newsletter here, for the latest in country music and more news about future Reid Haughton releases.
Higher Than 9 is now available everywhere you buy or stream music. Take a listen below and check out more new recently released music here on our ‘New Country Music’ playlist. Be sure to give the playlist a follow for your weekly new country music fix.
https://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/reid-haughton-album.jpg6301200Nicole Pieringhttps://countryswag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/logo-new-cs-white.pngNicole Piering2024-05-17 00:14:562024-05-17 00:14:56Reid Haughton: ‘Higher Than 9’ – Debut Album Review