
Recording artist and country singer-songwriter who released an album last August that premiered at #10 on Apple iTunes Top 40 Country Albums Chart and was hailed by FOX News, Billboard, People Magazine, Forbes, Men’s Journal, and more. He is doing a nationwide tour this year with dates every month through and including November. He is also working on new music with some very notable names in songwriting. He has over a million streams on his top five songs on Spotify, where he has approximately 21 thousand monthly listeners, and his official YouTube channel has a combined total of eight-and-a-half million video views.
“It’s not so much where you write the songs, it’s who you write them with… It's whether you have charisma with the person you’re writing with or not.”
“I've had my daughter in a few of my music videos, my youngest daughter, and I've had my manager
in a few videos. But at this point in my career, I was trying to do as much professional actresses as I possibly could, professional sets.”
“The hardest part about that video was leaving the footage out that we had to leave out… It could have been a whole movie. It was great, man. I was like, man, this is just a big pile of great is what this is.”
“I'm a musician, I'm a performer, and I have a vision of what I want… I always have the final say on things. It's been a few times we've had to go back and do a few things over.”
“I've really gotten great relationships with the people that I work with now. And it's really more enjoyable now than it’s ever been, it’s kind of crazy. The less you try to party, the more you end up having fun. It's just, it's been amazing to me.”
“I used to be pretty wild. And I’ve been sober now, five years.”
“My manager had asked me to learn how to sing Hallelujah. And I wasn't really sure why she had done it at the time, but I'm glad she did, because I learned it while I was in rehab. And when I got out of rehab, I incorporated it into my show. And I call my kids up on stage to sing that song. So, it's really become an amazing experience for me. Every night I have at least one of my kids up there with me singing it.”
“A lot of people wonder why I don't play guitar. And the reason is because I never planned on being a musician. And then I learned how to sing before I learned how to play guitar.”
“I would recommend to any young person who wants to do music for living to learn an instrument, then learn songs and then go on about it.”
“My first introduction to music was I went to one of my grandfather's shows and I looked up on the stage and I seen this giant drum kit with lights just beaming down on it. And I told my grandfather, I want to do that. So, he got me a drum kit. And I just crawled inside the bass drum and rolled down the stairs in it. And it hit the wall, and it shattered. And that was the extent of my drum career.”
“My influence has been probably like Jamie Johnson, Travis Tritt, my grandfather (Waylon Jennings) mostly, of course Hank (Williams), Jr… There's only two kinds of music out there. There's good music and bad music. I'm influenced by the good music.”
“If you look at a lot of artists, they pretty much stay in a lane, but I'm all over the damn highway. Whatever I'm feeling at that moment, that's what I'm writing about.”
“Me being Waylon Jennings' grandson puts me in a genre right there. But you know, the thing about it is I get to grow in that genre and change that genre into whatever I want it to be.”
“I record music that means a lot to me. I'm not going to record a cheesy song that I don't believe in. But I will record a really deep song that maybe only I believe in.”
“Caught Up”
“One Folded”