Cale Tyson s Sad Summer Song Baby You re Wrong : Listen rollingstone.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rollingstone.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
RS Country Music Picks for the Week of April 19th
Must-hear songs by Cale Tyson, Buick Audra, and Kenton Bryant
Jon Freeman, provided by
FacebookTwitterEmail
Whether it’s coming out of Nashville, New York, L.A., or points in between, there’s no shortage of fresh tunes, especially from artists who have yet to become household names.
Rolling Stone Country selects some of the best new music releases from country and Americana artists. (Check out last week’s best songs.)
Kenton Bryant, “Covered in Dirt”
Kenton Bryant moved to Nashville from Glasgow, Kentucky, just shy of a decade ago and if Music City’s reputation as a 10-year-town is true, the songwriter is poised for his breakout. It may come with this moody anthem about the soil that shapes us. Bryant, in an emotive tenor that calls to mind Eric Church, sings about living one’s whole life “covered in dirt.” Until, you know, you’re once again covered in dirt. It’s the circle of life, as seen from a sma
Best Country Songs This Week: Cale Tyson (April 19th) rollingstone.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rollingstone.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
When classic country music calls
Durango, Colorado Currently Tue
Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021 5:48 PM
Toggle font size Escuchar en Español: Bryant Liggett
Country music has come a long way. Some may say too long of a way, as the country music of modern country radio and country music awards shows doesn’t reflect the country music that began with Hank Williams and rolled through the late 1980s with Cash, Nelson, Jennings and Kristofferson. Some may say it’s more like bad pop music, scoring a square-john parking-lot party for people in cowboy hats and Daisy Dukes.
But don’t let anyone tell you there’s no good country music being made because for every new-country artist like Florida Georgia Line or Luke Combs there’s a Cale Tyson or Charlie Crockett, the latter two musicians written about in this column in the past and currently flying the flag of classic country music Williams first hoisted decades ago.