In today’s pop-friendly country music, it can be hard to tell one squeaky-clean artist from the next. That’s exactly why Tennessee Jet is such a breath of fresh air. His music achieves a paradoxical aesthetic: Carrying the outlaw-country torch of such artists as Merle Haggard, Waylon Jennings, and even Hank Williams Sr., while tastefully infusing elements of modern rock and grunge without pandering to tropes. His lyrical narratives are never contrived, sometimes political, and always riveting to the final line. As much of an audio perfectionist as he is a country iconoclast, Tennessee Jet provides an insight into his musical roots, creative influences, and recording process…
Long before Tennessee Jet began crisscrossing America as a one-man band, playing nightly shows full of fuzz guitar, primal percussion, and songs that split the difference between country and raw rock & roll, he traveled the interstates of Oklahoma with his bronc-riding father and barrel-racing mother.
Sitting on the bench seat of an old Ford pickup truck pulling a horse trailer while heading to the next rodeo, he'd watch the grasslands of his home state fly past the windshield at highway speed. Country music was always on the radio back then, and those songs — honest, heartfelt classics by icons like Willie Nelson and Dwight Yoakam, both of whom he'd eventually join on tour — left a permanent mark.