November 2025

Brooks & Dunn - maverick-country.com

Brooks & Dunn – The Long Game

They didn’t arrive as revolutionaries. But Brooks & Dunn redrew the borderlines of country music just the same — blending honky tonk, arena rock, and emotional clarity into a sound that still echoes through the genre’s bloodstream. When Brooks & Dunn reunited in 2015 after a five-year hiatus, it wasn’t out of necessity. They had nothing left to prove. Already Country Music Hall of Famers, with more CMA Awards than any other duo in history, they could’ve stayed gone — proud, platinum, and preserved. But Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn were never interested in legacy as museum piece. Their return wasn’t nostalgic. It was purposeful. A reminder that the sharpest tools in country’s box were far from relics, they still had an edge. Three decades after their 1991 debut, Brooks & Dunn remain a blueprint: for duos, for crossover acts, for anyone trying to make traditional country sound contemporary without losing its roots. And for all the numbers — the chart-toppers, the tour grosses, the awards — their real achievement might be that no one’s ever done it quite like them since. Their origin story is tidy on paper, but jagged in reality. Both men had solo ambitions. Dunn was a powerhouse vocalist from Texas with a gospel background. Brooks was a sharper-edged songwriter from Louisiana with industry connections and an ear for momentum. Arista Records head Tim DuBois suggested they try working together, and they did, somewhat reluctantly. The pairing didn’t immediately make sense. Their writing styles clashed. Their personalities diverged. But the tension became fuel. In interviews, Brooks has often said the act only worked because they were so different. Dunn, more reserved and vocally dominant, brought the ache. Brooks, gregarious and guitar-forward, brought the grit. That tension gave them range. It let them pivot between floor-fillers like “Boot Scootin’ Boogie” and ballads like “Believe.” They weren’t trying to split the difference, they were doubling the spectrum. By the time their debut album Brand New Man dropped in 1991, the balance had clicked. Four No.1 hits later, Brooks & Dunn weren’t a gamble. They were the new standard. Throughout the 1990s, Brooks & Dunn became country’s most bankable act, not by chasing trends, but by setting them. Albums like Hard Workin’ Man and Waitin’ on Sundown fused dancehall energy with emotional storytelling. Their music lived on jukeboxes and in stadiums. It worked as well in boots as it did in headphones. They built an aesthetic as much as a catalogue. Cowboy hats and designer jeans, Telecasters and pyrotechnics. They didn’t play small, they scaled country up. And they did it without sacrificing the fundamentals: story, heart, and voice. Radio embraced them, but so did fans outside the usual orbit. Their sound, stitched with blues, rock, honky tonk, and even gospel, made them accessible without sanding off their roots. Dunn’s vocals soared; Brooks kept the rhythm grounded. And they just kept winning. By the end of the decade, they’d earned Entertainer of the Year, dozens of chart-toppers, and a place on the Mount Rushmore of modern country. To read the full article, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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Photo by HuneyFire - Maverick-Country.com

HuneyFire Release Festive Christmas Single

Afro/Latina country duo HuneyFire are embracing the holiday season with the release of their new single, “My Christmas Wish”, a warm and romantic track celebrating love in December. The song is described as a light-hearted tribute to spending the festive period with someone special, wrapped in harmonies and seasonal glow. “My Christmas Wish is a sweet and playful holiday single about the joy of being in love at Christmas and wanting nothing more than to spend the season with the one you love,” the duo said. HuneyFire added that the track captures “the simple and tender desire to make memories together under the glow of Christmas lights.” Written and produced by Cheaza Figueroa, the song features Figueroa and daughter Marri Nevarez-Barlow sharing lead vocals and harmonies, bringing a soft, familial touch to the arrangement. The recording also features Caitlin Evanson on fiddle, Eddie Dunlap on dobro, and Hugo Castillo contributing drums, bass guitar, organ, piano and synth. The single was recorded at Mir Records USA. “My Christmas Wish” adds a festive chapter to the duo’s catalogue, blending country instrumentation with soulful, honey-toned delivery, and positions HuneyFire as emerging seasonal voices within the genre. HuneyFire continue to build momentum as a mother-daughter pairing distinctly placed within country music – blending cultural heritage, harmony-led songwriting and a modern Americana sensibility. Their work has drawn attention for its warmth, sincerity and genre-spanning influences, marking them as artists to watch as they move into the new year.

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Tim Brink & The Rising promo shot - Maverick-Country.com

Tim Brink & The Rising Release ‘Dark City’

Tim Brink & The Rising have unveiled their debut album Dark City, a cinematic blend of Southern gothic storytelling, Americana grit and brooding blues. The release marks a defining moment for frontman Tim Brink, the Quebec-born vocalist and multi-instrumentalist whose career to date has included international touring with Pete Möss, a finalist position on La Voix IV, and even consideration as lead singer for Stone Temple Pilots. Dark City leans into the mythology of desolate highways, ghost-town silence and hard-earned redemption. While fans of Colter Wall, Chris Stapleton and Orville Peck may find familiar textures, Brink carves his own territory – darker, more atmospheric and rooted in the tone of series such as Yellowstone, True Detective and Justified. The album, co-written by Brink and guitarist Samuel Busque, unfolds like a film. Songs move with tension and release, borrowing the grit of Johnny Cash, the intensity of Rage Against the Machine and the dramatic flair of Tarantino. Produced by Busque alongside Michel Francoeur and mixed and mastered at Red Tubes Studio, the record explores themes of vengeance, forgiveness and the moral grey spaces that sit between. Brink’s vocal performance anchors the work – raw, soulful and weathered like a road map creased at the edges. The music shifts between thunderous instrumentation and quiet reflection, offering a listening experience that feels both widescreen and intimate. Dark City is now officially released, signalling a bold entry onto the North American roots-rock stage and marking the beginning of a chapter that is wholly Brink’s own – storm-charged, cinematic, and unafraid to stare directly into the dark.

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Julian Taylor - maverick-country.com

Julian Taylor Announces Return to the UK for 2026 Tour

Acclaimed 5x JUNO-Award and Polaris Music Prize–nominated singer-songwriter Julian Taylor is set to return to the UK in April 2026, bringing his soulful blend of folk, roots, and Americana back to UK audiences. Following widespread praise for his recent releases and a growing international fanbase, Taylor’s upcoming tour marks a highly anticipated moment for listeners eager to experience his storytelling and musicianship in an intimate live setting. Tickets are available to purchase now here. Joining him as a very special guest is celebrated artist Michele Stodart, known for her emotive songwriting and captivating stage presence. Together, the pair will deliver an unforgettable run of performances across England, showcasing their artistry in some of the country’s most beloved venues. Commenting on his return, Taylor shared, “Some of my greatest friends will be joining me on the road. My phenomenal band of soul sisters – the one and only Michele Stodart (The Magic Numbers) on bass and vocals. The brilliant Raevennan Husbandes on guitar and vocals. The powerhouse Siân Monaghan on drums. These women bring that organic, powerful groove to my Soulful Americana, Folk Rock, and Alt-Country sound, and there is nothing like playing this music live with them. And as a beautiful bonus, the incredibly talented Michele Stodart will open each night with a solo set of her own magnificent, critically acclaimed tunes before joining the headline show.” Taylor recently released ‘Don’t Let ’Em (Get Inside of Your Head)‘, a soulful new single that brings together alt-country grit and blues rock urgency with one of modern music’s most distinctive voices: Jim James of My Morning Jacket. The new track will appear on Taylor’s forthcoming album, Anthology II, which is set for release on January 23, 2026.

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Jese Lynn - maverick-country.com

Jesse Lynn Madera’s Speed of the Sound of Loneliness

Jesse Lynn Madera honours John Prine with this sweet, captivating cover for hit October Birthday.  “To celebrate the late John Prine’s October 10th birthday, I wanted to honor him by recording one of my favorite songs, “Speed of the Sound of Loneliness”.  I have always loved John’s “kitchen table” lyricism and delivery, and this one is a wonderful example of a Prine song that casually breaks a heart.  It’s not dramatic; it’s not even really melancholy.  He perfectly captured a slow motion disconnect.  I love how well this song does that. “I’m drawn to songs that capture the quiet ache of human connection, and John Prine was a master at putting that into words with a relatable picnic table poet, family reunion philosopher type of delivery. Covering ‘Speed of the Sound of Loneliness’ is a way of honoring John’s brilliance. His writing has a timeless honesty, and I wanted to share that spirit with listeners. We all know what it feels like to be worlds apart from a loved one while in the same room, and this song captures that desperate urgent longing well.” said Jesse Lynn Madera. In its 2024 and 2022 wrap-ups, Music Connection featured her in its annual Hot 100 list of the Best Unsigned Artists.  Jesse’s touring history includes sold out shows at New York’s Bitter End and The Cutting Room as well as notable appearances at festivals such as Mile 0, 30A, Annapolis Songwriters and Mile of Music.  She has been a supporting act for acclaimed artists like The Zombies, Dan Navarro, Maddie Poppe, and Mary Fahl. Tour Dates: 11/5 – 118 North Main Stage – Wayne, PA 19087 (Support for Dan Navarro) 11/6 – Ramshead – Annapolis – (Support for Dan Navarro) 11/8 – Caffe Lena – Saratoga Springs, NY (Double bill w Dan Navarro) 1/16-18/26 – 30A Songwriter Festival – South Walton, FL 1/28-29/26 – Mile 0 Fest – Key West, FL 4/16/26 – McGonigel’s Mucky Duck – Houston, TX 4/18/26 – Opening Bell Coffeehouse – Dallas, TX 4/29/26 – Jammin Java – Vienna, VA 5/01/26 – The Cutting Room – New York, NY 5/06.26 – Gibson Community Music Hall – Appleton, WI 5/07/26 – Hey Nonny – Arlington Heights, IL Listen here .

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CMA - maverick-country.com

CMA Country Christmas

The Country Music Association and ABC have revealed this year’s hosts and performers for the 16th annual holiday television special, “CMA Country Christmas.” Hosted by Lauren Daigle and Jordan Davis, “CMA Country Christmas” features performances by Daigle, Davis, Riley Green, Lady A, Little Big Town, Parker McCollum, Megan Moroney, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Susan Tedeschi, Derek Trucks and BeBe Winans. Filmed in front of a live audience in Nashville, first-time co-hosts Daigle and Davis bring warmth, charm, and cheer to the stage as they guide viewers through a night of heartfelt music and holiday spirit. “CMA Country Christmas” airs Tuesday, Dec. 2 at 9/8c on ABC, with streaming available the next day on Hulu and Disney+. “CMA Country Christmas” is a production of the Country Music Association. Robert Deaton is the Executive Producer, Milton Sneed is the Director and Jon Macks is the Writer. About “CMA Country Christmas” Starting in 2010, “CMA Country Christmas” rings in the holiday season annually with a show full of festive classics and one-of-a-kind musical performances. The event is filmed in Nashville and airs each holiday season on ABC. ABC is the network home to the CMA Awards and CMA’s summer concert TV special “CMA Fest.”

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Molly tuttle - maverick-country.com

Molly Tuttle: A Sun-Kissed Reinvention

Six Grammy wins and a reputation as one of bluegrass’s most formidable guitarists couldn’t contain Molly Tuttle, as she steps into a brighter, freer realm   Molly Tuttle has long stood alongside bluegrass’s finest-an award‑winning flatpicker, songwriter, and singer who shattered glass ceilings as IBMA’s first female Guitar Player of the Year and a two‑time Grammy winner.    Rooted in California, raised on the guitar by her multi‑instrumentalist father, she moved to Nashville to carve her own legacy.   Her latest album, So Long Little Miss Sunshine, released in August 2025, marks a clear pivot-into folk‑pop, country, and rock, while still honouring her roots.  Produced by Jay Joyce, it blends soaring acoustic guitar with bold production choices, and includes a captivating banjo‑topped rendition of “I Love It.”    The album also reflects Tuttle’s growing willingness to incorporate humour, irony, and storytelling with looser boundaries, something she has cited as a personal goal since her earlier albums. Critics have noted that Sunshine moves with a cinematic quality, each track styled with a tone or colour that plays into her evolving self-image.   An emotional shift   Tuttle has spoken candidly about the emotional shift in this album, saying it was about bidding farewell to a version of herself that had long tried to blend in. That declaration captures the record’s heart, a reckoning with identity, memory, and creative direction.   The title track, “So Long Little Miss Sunshine,” plays like a farewell letter to a former persona. Tuttle’s vocal delivery is restrained but purposeful, using gentle lyrical subversion and folk-rooted cadence to guide the listener through grief and growth. It’s a track that lingers, more epilogue than anthem.   Beyond Golden Highway   Before Sunshine, Tuttle fronted Golden Highway, her band with whom she released two consecutive Grammy‑winning albums (Crooked Tree and City of Gold). But in May 2025, she announced that Golden Highway would step back, freeing space for a new ensemble designed to suit this album’s evolving sound.   That shift wasn’t easy: Golden Highway had been more than a band-it was a family, musical collaborators, and the backbone of her sound. The transformation speaks to Tuttle’s resolve to grow, even when that means relinquishing comfort zones.   On the creative front, Molly describes experiencing a spark between her roots and newer influences, writing songs that straddled two worlds.  She began with tracks that felt more contemporary and personal, then found her bluegrass senses reawakening mid‑project. She chose to record with Jay Joyce in Nashville, drawn to his ability to blend textures across genres.   The album cover, designed by Tuttle herself, captures that tension visually, featuring multiple versions of Molly wearing different wigs. It’s a playful emblem of shedding expectations and embracing the many shades of identity. In a recent media profile, she explained feeling grateful for where she is now, even if the path wasn’t always straightforward… Read the full article here. 

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Warren Zeiders - maverick-country.com

Warren Zeiders: Edge of Anthem

Warren Zeiders brings lacrosse determination and storytelling candour to country’s frontier—viral hits, relentless drive and emotional honesty assemble into a new paradigm of success  In the hush of a drop‑lit stage, Warren Zeiders embodies transition—not just of sound, but of identity.   Born in Hershey, Pennsylvania, the former college lacrosse player spent twelve years chasing a ball before a snapped dream became his greatest pivot.   Music swept in not as plan B, but as inevitability. In previous interviews he’s explained that if he cares about something and invests himself fully into it, nothing will stop him, reflecting that same athletic hunger now rechanneled into song.  He began building a following by sharing cover videos on TikTok while completing a business degree at Frostburg State University.   Zeiders recorded in his dorm room until “Ride the Lightning” exploded online, a rough‑hewn anthem of love and escape that racked up over 500 million views, earned platinum status in the U.S. and Canada, and marked the arrival of a raw, unfiltered new artist.  Romantic soul  His rise was meteoric yet grounded, leading to Acoustic Covers, a 2021 debut that merged Tyler Childers solemnity with Lynyrd Skynyrd swagger, all filtered through gritty vocals.   That path led to Warner Records, 717 Tapes the Album in 2022 and then to his breakthrough: Pretty Little Poison, released August 2023. The title track, a rush of heart‑ache disguised as a drug metaphor, went to No 1 on country radio, making Zeiders country music’s neatest breakout since Nate Smith.   His sound balances outsider rock—think Nickelback energy—with the ache of a slow‑burn ballad that refuses to let go.  Zeiders followed up with Relapse (2024), a lean, moody record produced by Mike Elizondo and Ross Copperman. Singles like “Addictions” and the brooding title track introduced a darker tone, confirmed in the double‑album Relapse, Lies & Betrayal in March.  Its tracklist is as confessional as it is ambitious, with Billboard capturing Zeiders at his most unguarded, shaking off a raw, living pain.  Tough Love  When Zeiders first toured Europe, he was amazed by fans knowing every lyric despite his being unknown years before—a humbling reminder of how far he’s come.   Critics describe his stage presence as athletic: each performance feels rehearsed yet urgent, like controlled chaos enhanced by grit.  Seeking to play stadiums, Zeiders himself has said he isn’t afraid to show the edge in his performances, nor to declare his ambition to one day fill arenas with roaring crowds  Discipline as devotion  In interviews, Zeiders has underscored how his athletic past shaped his professional ethos, likening his touring schedule to a training regimen: disciplined, strategic, and always forward-moving. He cites motivational figures like Tom Brady, David Goggins, and Kobe Bryant as technicolour influences on his commitment to relentless improvement.   Far from an opportunity for breaks and downtime, he uses time on the road as a purposeful rehearsal for the next set. Zeiders treats touring like prepping for a championship, leaning on structure even when away from home. His follow-up to a show isn’t partying; it’s watching Netflix or Dune Part Two with his team to distil visual ideas for upcoming videos and stage design.   His local success at the Morgan County Fair, headlining crowds after only a few releases, underscored that foundation. He described “Pretty Little Poison” as an anthem to destructive attraction, calling it “like a moth to a flame,” a preference for what hurts with magnetic pull…. Read the full article here. 

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Blast from the Past - Maverick-country.com

Jerry Reed: The Guitar Man

From deep-fried licks to genre-bending stardom, Jerry Reed redefined the rules of country music—armed with a grin, a guitar, and a whole lot of groove   By the time Jerry Reed passed away in 2008 at the age of 71, he’d long since burned his silhouette into the side of country music. A guitarist, songwriter, singer, and scene-stealing actor, Reed defied easy categorisation. He could fingerpick with the best of them, pen hits for Elvis Presley, turn corny turns of phrase into gold, and still find time to become a pop culture fixture in his own right.   Born in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1937, Reed’s earliest years were shaped by more than music; they were forged by turmoil and displacement. After his parents separated when he was just four months old, Reed and his sister spent seven formative years in foster homes and orphanages before rejoining their mother and stepfather in 1944.    Even in those difficult circumstances, music offered Reed solace. He began playing guitar as a child in Atlanta, teaching himself chords and absorbing the sounds around him. By his mid‑teens, he was already writing songs and performing locally, eventually earning his first break at age 18 with a deal from publisher Bill Lowery.   High school at O’Keefe in Atlanta proved pivotal. Reed wasn’t merely consuming country or gospel records, he was experimenting. He sang, wrote, played, and dreamed aloud. Sometime around this period, he left high school in 1955 to pursue music full‑time, recording rockabilly and country singles for Capitol Records, songs like “When I Found You.” That early leap, leaving conventional security behind, would prefigure the rest of his career: bold, unfettered, genre‑defying.   A Pickin’ Phenomenon   It wasn’t until the mid-1960s, after a stint in the army and a move to Nashville, that Reed’s style fully bloomed. Working as a session guitarist, he quickly became known for his lightning-fast, syncopated fingerpicking, a style he dubbed “claw style,” inspired by banjo rolls but entirely his own.   The studio elite took notice. Reed became a go-to guitarist for producer Chet Atkins, who famously described him as “a genius,” and said there was no one else who could play quite like him.   That wasn’t just flattery. Reed’s guitar playing danced outside the lines—groovy, rubbery, almost funky in its phrasing. It helped usher in a freer approach to country instrumentation at a time when the Nashville Sound threatened to smooth everything into syrup.   In 1967, Reed’s instrumental “The Claw” turned heads in guitar circles. But it was the following year’s Nashville Underground that captured broader attention. With it, Reed essentially laid the groundwork for a more genre-bending brand of country—equal parts Southern soul, swamp funk, and rockabilly twang.   The album title itself was a winking nod to his outlier status—“underground” in attitude if not sales—and its blend of instrumentals and vocal tracks became a cult favourite among session players and young Nashville rebels alike.   He also became a bridge between two musical generations: a studio veteran who could sit in with the old guard, and a rhythmic innovator who attracted young players. His blend of precision and playfulness became a benchmark for what country guitar could aspire to, less twang and more twist, bending expectations as easily as strings.   His sessions during this period helped reshape the role of guitar in country music, from simple rhythm support to lead instrument with narrative presence. Artists who came after, like Ricky Skaggs and Marty Stuart, would credit this evolution to players like Reed, whose blend of rhythm and melody made the guitar speak as much as the lyrics.   The Elvis Connection   One of the most significant turning points in Reed’s career came when Elvis Presley recorded “Guitar Man,” (1967) a song Reed had written and released himself. Presley’s team wanted to recreate Reed’s distinct picking sound—and couldn’t. The King himself called Reed in to play on the session, and Reed delivered that unmistakable groove.   The success led to another Presley cut, “U.S. Male,” (1968) also penned by Reed, and opened the floodgates. Suddenly, Reed wasn’t just a sideman—he was a writer of hits, a player producers sought out, and a personality Nashville couldn’t ignore.   His songs for others and his own recordings both shared that quality: the ability to tell vivid stories (sometimes funny, sometimes mischievous, sometimes pointed) and to back those stories with a guitar style that made you feel the groove beneath the words.   Reed’s collaborations with Presley were also symbolic: they linked traditional country with rock and roll swagger. That crossover energy would later shape the sound of mainstream country itself, as more artists sought to straddle that same sonic border.   Funny, Fast, and Fearless   Reed’s solo career surged in the early 1970s with a string of hit singles that defied convention. “Amos Moses” (1970) was a rollicking, half-spoken swamp tale about a one-armed alligator hunter. “When You’re Hot, You’re Hot” (1971) was equal parts talking blues and funky country-fusion, complete with courtroom banter, and became Reed’s biggest country hit: spending five weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Country chart and crossing into the Top 10 of the Hot 100 at No. 9.   These weren’t just novelty songs. Reed’s humour masked an inventiveness that shaped modern country storytelling. His phrasing, his unpredictable structures, and his sense of rhythm all bucked the norm. Even “She Got the Goldmine (I Got the Shaft)” in 1982, a comedic divorce anthem, became a No. 1 hit, a rarity for material so tongue-in-cheek.   Even on light-hearted songs, Reed displayed impeccable timing and structural precision, each verse landing with the punch of a well-set joke, but backed by complex musical phrasing that rewarded repeat listens.   Other charting curiosities include “Ko‑Ko Joe,” which reached No. 11 on the U.S. Country chart, adding another layer to his reputation as a songwriter who could marry comedic edge with musical craftsmanship.   Reed had figured out a secret: you didn’t have to choose between being a virtuoso and being entertaining. He could play with absolute precision, sing with comic timing, and still hold a room in the palm of his hand.   He was also a master of voice modulation, using spoken-word sections, exaggerated accents, and narrative pacing that made his songs feel like campfire stories. Many of today’s country entertainers, from Blake Shelton to Hardy, owe a debt to Reed’s

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Teddy Swims - maverick-country.com

Teddy Swims: The Soulful Shape‑Shifter

Teddy Swims blends soul, country, and pop with emotional candour—turning vulnerability into power as he writes himself anew through heartache, fame and unexpected clarity   Underneath the soft glow of a solo spotlight, Teddy Swims, whose real name is Jaten Collin Dimsdale, exists in joyously unsettled musical territory.    He was never content to sit still in genre lanes: gospel, R&B, country, rock and pop swirl together in his songs, shaped by a childhood steeped in soul traditions.    Born in Conyers, Georgia, the grandson of a Pentecostal minister, Swims discovered his voice in high‑school musical theatre and became a YouTube phenomenon in 2019, posting covers of Shania Twain, Amy Winehouse and more. The “S” in his name—Someone Who Isn’t Me Sometimes—alludes to that fluid identity and the restless searching at his core.   Roots and resolve   Long before he became a streaming-era soul powerhouse, Swims’s musical education came piecemeal and personal. Raised in a tight-knit community, he credits his father with introducing him to classic soul and rock records—Al Green, Stevie Wonder, Queen. Meanwhile, his grandfather’s church provided an early platform for vocal experimentation, blending gospel fervour with theatrical projection.    High school was where it all clicked: after joining musical theatre, Swims developed a stage presence that matched his increasingly raw vocal power. As he later recalled, he never imagined the fame would come from covers, but the process of interpreting others’ pain helped him discover his own voice. That voice, weathered, elastic, and unmistakably human, has since become his calling card across genres.   That restless energy crystallised with Lose Control in 2023, a raw confession that ballooned into international consciousness. Peaking in the US top ten and celebrated across continents, the track propelled him toward mainstream pop stardom while keeping that blue‑collar beat of genuine feeling.   Following the song’s release, charts confirmed its unusual longevity. “Lose Control” climbed not just to US number one but remains one of the longest-charting songs on the Billboard Hot 100, a record that underlines Swims’s rare blend of emotional gut-punch and mass-market staying power.   In recent interviews, Swims has described Lose Control not merely as a hit but as therapy. It captured a moment of reckoning: a breakup, addiction, sleepless nights haunted by past shadows.   Raw emotion, refined sound   Swims’ debut album, I’ve Tried Everything but Therapy (Part 1), came in 2023, weaving introspection and healing through layered production across Los Angeles, Nashville and London. By early 2025, its sequel arrived—Part 2—offering diptychs in pain and recovery. Between these volumes, both vulnerability and artistry evolved.   The sequel leaned into brighter emotional territory. Featuring songs like Bad Dreams, Guilty, and Funeral, it reflected his emerging peace, and achieved No. 1 in Australia and Croatia, while landing him multiple charting spots across Europe and the US. It also carries a silver BPI certification in the UK.   “I wasn’t numbing anymore,” he said of writing Part 2, acknowledging the transformation from self‑destruction to self‑reflection, a shift he credits in part to therapy, love and the anticipation of fatherhood.   That turn toward healing was deliberate. Swims admitted he finally embraced professional help while working on his debut, encouraged by his partner, and later entered couples counselling to build a strong foundation for their new family. He has spoken about therapy becoming an essential tool, no less necessary than physical treatment, and used it to challenge stigma around mental health.   Bridging communities   On stage, Swims is part soul preacher, part pop star, part small‑town troubadour. His tours have taken him from headline arenas to intense festival crowds.    Notably, he halted a Brisbane show mid‑song when a scuffle broke out, reaffirming his “golden rules” of audience care and community. He invited a young boy onstage and resumed the set with sweeping emotion, a moment of warmth in the spotlight.   Between 2022 and 2025, Swims toured the world in support of his therapy project, following an earlier EP, Tough Love (2022), and headline performances that saw him open for Greta Van Fleet and tour internationally.   During his 2025 world tour in support of Part 2, Swims expanded into sweeping production upgrades, featuring new stage design and backing vocalists that elevated the live experience into “a whole new elevation and wonderful time,” according to touring insiders. Reviews of his June 2025 Red Rocks Amphitheatre show captured the emotional charge: fans were moved close to tears, his voice wrapping the audience in a warm, near-spiritual embrace. Observers noted how live settings had become vessels for shared emotional release—not spectacle, but communion.   All the while, Swims avoided fame’s mirror. Even at major awards shows, he stayed grounded. In a recent reflected moment, he acknowledged the potential for fame to spiral if it had come at a younger, less mature age, heeded as a warning against chasing buzz instead of being ready for consequence.   This summer, he’s embarked on the “I’ve Tried Everything but Therapy” world tour, with dates across North America, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and the UAE. It includes landmark venues such as Red Rocks, Radio City Music Hall, Qudos Bank Arena, and a major set at the Isle of Wight Festival. Swim’s standing in the pantheon is assured, and growing.    Currents of influence   What sets Teddy Swims apart is his respectful disregard for category—one moment he channels Marvin Gaye or Otis Redding, the next he’s rooted in Americana sadness or pop clarity. He’s an artist who seems driven less by ambition than by necessity—to feel, to expose, to connect.   Reflecting on his rise, Swims acknowledged that early fame might have been his undoing. “If I’d had this success two years earlier”, he admitted, “I’d have put it straight to my liver.” Instead, he waited, enveloped in maturity, and arrived ready to hold himself accountable for his voice and his actions.   This wide dialogue across styles also extends to his artistry: Part 2 features collaborations with Giveon, Muni Long, Coco Jones, and GloRilla—voices from soul, R&B, and hip‑hop—affirming Swims’s willingness to share the space and blur genre borders.    He’s also been intentional about the sonic texture of his releases. Tracks like “The Door”—a 2024 single about escaping an abusive relationship—emerged as uplifts in airplay charts across Eastern Europe and the UK, extending his emotional reach while diversifying his stylistic palette….

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