![Koe Wetzel](/assets/artwork/1x1.gif)
![Koe Wetzel](/assets/artwork/1x1.gif)
Latest Release
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- DEC 6, 2024
- 7 Songs
- 9 Lives · 2024
- 9 Lives · 2024
- Noise Complaint · 2016
- Sellout · 2020
- Noise Complaint · 2016
- Hell Paso · 2022
- Sellout · 2020
- Harold Saul High · 2019
- Sellout · 2020
- Damn Near Normal - Single · 2024
Essential Albums
- An “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” mentality works well for some artists, but Koe Wetzel likes to take things apart. On his follow-up to 2022’s Hell Paso, the cult-favorite singer-songwriter finds fresh sounds with a new collaborator, tapping Gabe Simon (Noah Kahan) to produce a genre-bending album that’s also his most fun and freewheeling. “There’s different layers to who I am as a musician, as an artist, and I wanted people to see that from this record,” Wetzel says. “So, if they can come away from listening to the entire record, not just picking a couple songs apart and having their idea of it, [but] listening to the whole record and be like, ‘OK, now we get it a little bit more. Maybe he is a decent artist, a decent musician.’” “Decent” is an understatement, as Wetzel’s deep, rich voice and refreshingly cliché-averse songwriting make for some of the more interesting tunes coming out of the country genre. Highlights on 9 Lives include the title track, with its stomping beat and an irresistible chorus hook, as well as “Leigh,” a clever, humorous tip of the hat to a popular variation on women’s names. Up-and-comer Jessie Murph lends her swagger to “High Road.” Wetzel includes two covers on the album, both from late artists: the hip-hop wunderkind XXXTENTACION’s “Depression & Obsession,” and beloved country singer-songwriter Keith Gattis’ “Reconsider.” Below, Wetzel breaks down several key tracks. “Leigh” “We had a list of names, probably 30 names, and it was like, ‘This would be really cool to write this song.’ And I think we started off as a joke, and then, once we got kind of into it, we were like, ‘This kind of slaps.’ I was like, ‘People are going to take this the wrong way. These girls are going to take all this stuff the wrong way.’ It was a fun song for us to make. And yeah, it’s kind of a diverse song. It kind of has its ups and downs, but it’s a fun song.” “High Road” (feat. Jessie Murph) “We went back on a past relationship that I had had a while back. And we just deep-dove into every detail of what would happen whenever we’d fight. And I would go back on past experiences of a certain fight or how I would react to it. Sometimes, I would be there. I’d be like, ‘Hey, if we’re going to do it, we’re going to lay it out there. Let’s do it.’ And then other times, I’d be like, ‘You know what? I’m going to let you chill out, and then I’m out of here.’ So, I don’t know. We just went around and around and nailed out all the details. And then this was another song that pretty much wrote itself pretty quick.” “Reconsider” I hope that I did the song justice, but rest in peace to Keith [Gattis] and to Charlie [Robison]. I’m a little upset that I never got to see [Gattis] while he was around. The influence that he had on so many artists in Texas and in Nashville and just country music in general, it’s crazy and it’s beautiful. I sent the song to Wade Bowen, and [Gattis] and Wade were really good friends. He left me a voicemail, and he was like, ‘Dude, I’m happy and I’m sad and I’m crying.’ He was like, ‘Dude, the song, it’s phenomenal. You killed it.’ Hopefully I did the song justice, but I just wanted to throw a little ode to Keith Gattis and Charlie for the record.” “Last Outlaw Alive” “[An] outlaw, for me, is people who blaze their own trail and [are] not going by the norm, not confined into what people think they should be or what music thinks artists should be, just doing your own thing and not giving a shit what anybody thinks about it. So, if we’re going to use it like that, then there’s a shit ton of outlaws in this genre, and just music in general. But yeah, there’s a lot of them around. I think it’s only, with the way social media and everything’s going right now, I think we’re in for a lot more of them to pop up.”
- Straight out of East Texas, Koe Wetzel combines a raw, rootsy rock 'n' roll clangor with straight-from-the-heart country inclinations. One moment, Wetzel and his no-nonsense band are raging out of the gate with rough-edged, rocking stompers like "Fuss & Fight" and "Something to Talk About." The next, they’re seamlessly shifting into acoustic-ballad mode for tunes like the wrecked-romance waltz "Love" and the reflective lament "Tell It All Town."
Artist Playlists
- Grungy guitars meet Texas twang.
Singles & EPs
More To Hear
- The artist talks vulnerability and Jessie Murph on 9 Lives.
- Koe Wetzel on keeping his core intact with 'Hell Paso.'
- Koe Wetzel talks specific tracks from his new album 'Sellout.'
- Ward celebrates National Cat Day and plays rising artists.
- Country collaborations featuring P!nk.
- The Souther country rocker talks about his album 'Sellout.'
More To See
About Koe Wetzel
Texas-born country singer Koe Wetzel was a college football linebacker before he decided to leave school to follow in his country-singer mom’s footsteps and pursue music. ∙ His 2016 debut album, the gritty rocker Noise Complaint, got local radio airplay in Texas and helped Wetzel build a rabid fanbase. ∙ Harold Saul High, Wetzel’s self-released 2019 album, debuted at No. 10 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart while also crossing over to the Pop chart. ∙ He organized and headlined his own festival, 2019’s Koe Wetzel’s Incredible Music Festival, which drew a sold-out crowd of 7,000 people. ∙ In 2020, he dropped a surprise single, the ’90s rock-inspired “Kuntry & Wistern,” which reached No. 55 on Apple Music’s Top 100 Country Songs chart. ∙ After years spent building his career as an indie artist, he released Sellout in 2020, his first album on a major label.
- FROM
- US
- BORN
- July 14, 1992
- GENRE
- Country