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Arkansas Traveler Dylan Earl Takes Us for a Ride » PopMatters
Music

Arkansas Traveler Dylan Earl Takes Us for a Ride » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Dylan Earl is that friend your parents never wanted you to hang out with. They knew he had a healthy disrespect for authority and would rather drive around smoking than do anything constructive. His love of nature trumped his desire to do chores. He wasn’t lazy; he just didn’t understand what was better than hanging out in the woods or cruising the byways. At least, that’s how he comes across on his latest album, the complacently titled Level-Headed Even Smile. He’s sitting on top of the world on his “Lawn Chair” and invites you to accompany him in the backyard. You can hear him pop a top as he invites one to join him.

The Arkansas traveler wants you to “Get in the Truck”, where the radio and the road take one wherever one’s going. He gets high just being in the Ouachita National Forest in the Natural State. The simple pleasures of mountain life in the “White River Valley” (a Jimmy Driftwood cover) can be found in bird songs and the sighing of pine trees. Earl can be corny and old-fashioned, but his smooth voice bleeds sincerity. There are traces of classic country in his purposeful Merle Haggard-style delivery. Earl never seems to strain to reach a note.

That doesn’t mean the singer-songwriter’s content. Earl sings about hitting rock bottom in Little Rock and clearly enjoys hitting the bottle too much to deal with the pain of heartbreak. “I guess I’ll sober up when I’m dead,” he sings with a smirk. That contrasts with the satisfied persona who finds solace in nature. He needs a dose of wildlife to insulate him from the hurt of daily life. This push and pull keeps the album from sounding too similar from one track to the next.

Something is missing here, and that’s other people. Earl may have friends and family, but they scarcely make an appearance in his lyrics. He claims to be “Two Kinds of Loner”, but we really don’t know why. Sure, hell can be other people, but so can heaven.    

Earl’s sense of humor keeps things from getting too heavy. His take on outlaw country inverts the Charlie Kirk perspective on empathy. He notes “White privilege is real” and rails against the hypocrisy of those with authority and sings with an affected drawl to show his Southern roots. Why, he’s just a good ol’ boy, NOT! He’s funny, but he is serious.

As the title song says, the singer-songwriter aspires to be on even keel. That mostly means being alone while complaining about or celebrating being alone. He can find that mental state somewhere in the Arkansas woods, in the bottom of the bottle, or just taking a drive through the country, but it does seem that he can’t stay levelheaded for long. There is always something to disrupt his inner peace. Dylan Earl needs a friend or more friends or even a lover, but he seems like the character one’s parents warned about. He may waste your time, but he would be a good pal.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Earl Sweatshirt Announces 2025 and 2026 Tour Dates
Music

Earl Sweatshirt Announces 2025 and 2026 Tour Dates

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Earl Sweatshirt has announced the official tour in support of the new album Live Laugh Love. The rapper kicks off his 3LWorldTour on Halloween, with a special show at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheatre that also features Denzel Curry, Freddie Gibbs, 2Dead Boyz, and Lexa Gates. The tour continues across North America in 2025, and the European leg takes place in 2026. See Earl Sweatshirt’s tour dates below.

Since dropping Live Laugh Love, in August, Earl Sweatshirt has shared music videos for “Tourmaline” and “Crisco.” The album is Sweatshirt’s first solo effort since Sick!

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Earl Sweatshirt: 3LWorldTour

Earl Sweatshirt:

10-31 Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre ^¢£¡
11-05 Salt Lake City, UT – Rockwell at the Complex *¶§
11-07 San Francisco, CA – The Warfield *¶§
11-08 Santa Cruz, CA – The Catalyst *¶§
11-09 Sacramento, CA – Ace of Spades *¶§
11-11 Las Vegas, NV – House of Blues Las Vegas *¶§
11-13 Tempe, AZ – Marquee Theatre *¶§
11-14 San Diego, CA – SOMA San Diego *¶§
11-16 Los Angeles, CA – Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival
11-19 Houston, TX – Warehouse Live Midtown *¶§
11-20 Dallas, TX – House of Blues Dallas *¶§
11-21 Austin, TX – Stubb’s Waller Creek Amphitheater *¶§
11-23 New Orleans, LA – House of Blues New Orleans *¶§
11-25 Miami Beach, FL – Miami Beach Bandshell *¶§
11-26 Orlando, FL – The Plaza Live *¶§
11-28 Atlanta, GA – Heaven at The Masquerade *¶§
11-29 Silver Spring, MD – The Fillmore Silver Spring *¶§
12-02 New York, NY – Terminal 5 @
12-03 Philadelphia, PA – Union Transfer *¶§
12-04 New Haven, CT – Toad’s Place #
12-06 Montreal, Quebec – Théâtre Beanfield %
12-08 Toronto, Ontario – Danforth Music Hall *¶§
12-10 Detroit, MI – Majestic Theatre *¶§
12-11 Chicago, IL – Ramova Theatre *¶§
12-12 Minneapolis, MN – Uptown Theater *¶§
12-15 Portland, OR – Crystal Ballroom *¶§
12-16 Seattle, WA – Showbox SoDo *¶§
01-20 Helsinki, Finland – Ääniwalli $
01-22 Oslo, Norway – Rockefeller $
01-23 Stockholm, Sweden – Slaktkyrkan $
01-24 Copenhagen, Denmark – Amager Bio $
01-26 Hamburg, Germany – Uebel & Gefährlich $
01-27 Berlin, Germany – Metropol $
01-29 Prague, Czechia – Roxy $
01-31 Vienna, Austria – Flex $
02-02 Rome, Italy – Hacienda $
02-03 Milan, Italy – Farbique $
02-04 Munich, Germany – Backstage $
02-06 Zurich, Switzerland – Rote Fabrik !
02-07 Frankfurt, Germany – Batschkapp !
02-08 Cologne, Germany – Essigfabrik !
02-10 Utrecht, Netherlands – TivoliVredenburg !
02-12 Antwerp, Belgium – De Roma !
02-13 London, England – Exhibition !
02-14 Manchester, England – Albert Hall !
02-15 Dublin, Ireland – The Academy !
02-17 Paris, France – Trabendo !
02-19 Barcelona, Spain – Sala Apolo !
02-20 Lisbon, Portugal – Lisboa ao Vivo !

^ with Denzel Curry
¢ with Freddie Gibbs
£ with 2Dead Boyz
¡ with Lexa Gates
* with Liv.e
¶ with Zelooperz
§ with Cletus Strap
@ with Pig the Gemini
# with Akai Solo
% with Mike Shabb
$ with Sideshow
! with Jadasea

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Robert Earl Keen, Tyler Childers Sing for Texas Flood Relief
Music

Robert Earl Keen, Tyler Childers Sing for Texas Flood Relief

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Robert Earl Keen was three songs into his headlining set at his Applause for the Cause benefit last Thursday night, as a crowd of 5,600 exhausted, sweaty, and fulfilled fans hung on his every word. They had been brought here through tragedy, but this was a night of healing at Whitewater Amphitheater, set along the Guadalupe River outside of New Braunfels, Texas.

The event was Keen’s brainchild — a coming together of artists and fans in the same area where flooding on July 4 killed at least 138 people and saw devastation stretching for nearly 30 miles, with all proceeds going to flood relief via the Community Foundation for the Texas Hill Country — and he set up the musical payoff he wanted.

“This has been a day full of surprises,” Keen said from center stage. “But sometimes, there’s a great big surprise!”

Keen and his backing band then launched into “White House Road,” the 2017 Tyler Childers staple that Keen covers frequently.

Keen sang one verse and then gestured to his right, where Childers calmly walked on stage to a microphone. The Texas songwriting icon then stood up, waved to the crowd, and yielded to Childers for the next half hour.

From the wings, Keen smiled and applauded while Childers blistered through a set of signature songs like “Country Squire,” Rustin’ in the Rain,” and “Percheron Mules” before ending with an acoustic version of “Lady May” and ceding the spotlight back to Keen for the grand finale.

The appearance by one of the most in-demand artists in music, with his latest LP Snipe Hunter basking in attention from fans and critics alike, let Keen see his goal of a major benefit show to a successful conclusion. Keen filled out the bill with names like Miranda Lambert, Cross Canadian Ragweed, Ryan Bingham, and Cody Jinks, in large part by texting artists directly and calling in favors in the wake of the tragedy.

Jon Randall, Miranda Lambert, and JacK Ingram perform at Robert Earl Keen’s Texas flood benefit. Photo: Erika Goldring*

“Mr. Keen reached out to me and asked if I’d be willing to come down here to Texas,” Childers told the crowd. “I said, ‘absolutely.’ I was honored that he asked me, and I wasn’t doing anything but hanging out at the house anyhow.”

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Organizers estimated the concert, along with an auction the previous evening at nearby Gruene Hall — hosted by Keen and with Childers attending — had raised at least $3 million by the end of the night. A slew of sponsors pitched in to offset the cost of producing a high-end event. Arch “Beaver” Aplin, CEO of the Buc-ee’s chain and a presenting sponsor, tells Rolling Stone: “Robert Earl told me he was gonna have a big lineup of artists, and I said, ‘Are all the artists participating volunteering their time?’ He said yes, and I said, ‘Well, I’m all in.’ All these artists are doing it for the right reasons — to raise money after this unspeakable tragedy. That was the sell for me.”

It was neither the first benefit concert, nor the largest — that distinction went to the “Band Together Texas” flood relief concert, co-hosted by Lambert and Parker McCollum, at Austin’s Moody Center earlier in August, which raised at least $8.5 million. But the combination of the Hill Country setting, steps from the same Guadalupe River that flooded Kerrville on July 4, and Keen’s involvement made Applause for the Cause arguably the most significant. As the show played out over nearly 10 hours, artists backstage mingled and caught up with one another.

With the afternoon temperatures nearing 100 degrees, Vincent Neil Emerson opened the day playing on a side stage with a cover of the Rolling Stones’ “Dead Flowers” and his ode to his favorite dance hall, “White Horse Saloon.” By midnight, nearly 30 artists had taken turns serenading the Whitewater crowd.

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The first hour on the main stage, featuring artists like Kelsey Waldon, Jason Boland, Jamestown Revival, and Sarah Jarosz, ended with Keen’s first appearance. As Terry Allen played “Amarillo Highway,” Keen stepped out to sing a verse of the song he has covered for most of his career. After the song, Allen said, “That’s a song that Robert Earl Keen did not write.”

Keen then gave a welcome address, saying, “Music can relieve our grief, warm our hearts, and bring strangers together in a celebration of life,” before asking fans to join him in “Amazing Grace.”

The main stage sets began in earnest with Lambert, Jon Randall, and Jack Ingram swapping songs, backed by a group of Lone Star State musicians that Keen termed “the all-star house band.” Lambert sent “Tequila Does” out to fans whose judgment may have been compromised in the midsummer heat, while Ingram covered Charlie Robison’s “My Hometown” and dedicated it to the late Texas crooner. Hayes Carll, Radney Foster, and Ray Wylie Hubbard followed with a set of standards that Hubbard capped off with his own “Up Against the Wall Redneck Mother” as the sun set. When Randy Rogers joined the Panhandlers — Cleto Cordero, Josh Abbott, and William Clark Green — Cordero, the frontman of Flatland Cavalry, said, “It feels like I’m on stage with my heroes.”

The last song swap featured Bingham, Jamey Johnson, and Cody Jinks, who led off by telling the crowd, “I still find it as cool as you do that they put me with these two guys up here.” The high point was a series of extended ovations for Bingham’s “Bread and Water,” Johnson’s “In Color,” and Jinks’ “Hippies and Cowboys.”

Robert Earl Keen performs at his Applause for the Cause Texas flood benefit. Photo: Erika Goldring*

On the heels of a sold-out Boys From Oklahoma show in Waco, Texas, the weekend prior, and on the day the band announced an April date at Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater, Oklahoma, Cross Canadian Ragweed took the stage ahead of Keen and Childers. The eight-song set featured Boland sitting in on “17” and a pair of Todd Snider covers, “I Believe You” and “Late Last Night.” Frontman Cody Canada dedicated the song “Boys from Oklahoma,” their longtime homage to marijuana, to Texas governor Greg Abbott, and sang the line “Get your shit together, Texas, and legalize the weed.”

Canada was openly appreciative of the lineup that Keen put together, remarking from the stage that the backstage vibe was that of a family reunion. Several artists on the bill spent their dues-paying days in New Braunfels and the surrounding Hill Country before their careers took off.

“If you only knew the hell that Jason Boland and Ryan Bingham and I used to raise up the road at River Road Ice House,” Canada deadpanned, before making a slight correction. “If I only knew the hell we raised.”

After Ragweed cleared out, Keen walked to a chair at center stage. The “all-star house band” consisted largely of Keen’s touring outfit, though the legendary producer Lloyd Maines sat in on steel guitar. So, when they kicked off the final set with “Feelin’ Good Again,” it felt like a classic Keen performance.

Keen was acutely aware that Childers’ half-hour performance stood to drain the crowd, so he saved his biggest anthems for the end of the show. Before he left the stage, Childers made a point to embrace Keen, who then went directly into “Dreadful Selfish Crime.” That was followed by “The Road Goes on Forever,” which has yet to be upstaged by any artist — Childers, Ragweed, or otherwise.

“This is overwhelming for me,” Keen told the crowd after the song. “But as far as a group of people, you’ve done it man. Thank you so much.”

Keen closed the evening by bringing Canada on stage to sing “My Hometown” as a duet — the second time the song was featured during the benefit — as an extended drone display lit up the sky above the stage.

Backstage moments later, with the crowd still filing out and workers firing up forklifts to clear equipment, Childers sought out Keen for a proper goodbye. It was Keen who got the first words in.

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“I’m gonna say it one time,” he said to Childers. “Thank you for coming.”

Headlining Setlist: Robert Earl Keen with Tyler Childers
“Feelin’ Good Again”
“Gringo Honeymoon”
“Whitehouse Road” (with Tyler Childers)
“Help Me Make It Through the Night” (Childers)
“Country Squire” (Childers)
“Rustin’ in the Rain” (Childers)
“Honky Tonk Road” (Childers)
“Percheron Mules” (Childers)
“Universal Sound” (Childers)
“Lady May” (Childers)
“Dreadful Selfish Crime”
“The Road Goes on Forever”
“I’m Coming Home”
“My Hometown” (with Cody Canada).

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Earl Sweatshirt: Live Laugh Love Album Review
Music

Earl Sweatshirt: Live Laugh Love Album Review

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

If IDLSIDGO became known as the Earl is sad album, there might be a tendency to label Live Laugh Love the Earl is happy now album, but it’s more complex than that. His excitement for marriage and fatherhood has the all too real fear of What if I fuck it all up? and yet, with the comic timing of a long-winded standup, he gets out of his own head with jokes. On “exhaust,” that comes in the form of taking a break from all of the personal meditations with a play on an old 2 Chainz hook: “Ya love stank bitches that’s your fuckin’ problem.” While on “Crisco,” Earl digs into the childhood anger that’s still affecting him to this day, but just before that, he declares, “Get these white girls out my home like Babyfather.” Dr. Umar would be proud.

The way his flow has become a lot more loose and unpredictable helps him draw out certain emotions, too. In the final few moments of “Static,” the disgusted pause he takes before he says “It didn’t shock me” turns some seemingly ordinary shit talk into a devastatingly funny lecture, in a DOOM kind of way. Speaking of DOOM, Earl still has a splash of the masked villain in his cadence, but mixed in with so many contemporary references done with his own flavor. When he spouts out, “Affogato cream and coffee, wally walker out the bottle drinkin’, I never got on LinkedIn” on “Heavy Metal aka ejecto seato!,” the sensible gibberish reminds me of California street rap, specifically the first few bars of WhoHeem’s “Dum Hands.” Also, “Live,” where over a Black Noi$e beat that is like haunted Backwoodz vibes meets sputtering StepTeam drums, Earl slurs his words almost as hard as Veeze. And not for no reason, that flow makes the song sound so deeply insular.

It’s a lot. Live Laugh Love is equal parts heart and style, and is as much about Earl the grown man as Earl the hip-hop head. Earl shouts out friends, blots the album with relationship details that maybe only a few other people in the world would fully comprehend, and brings up his emotional bond with his son. These are his touchpoints, so it makes sense that everything else—the word-association marathons, the flowery punchlines—seems like an inconsequential blur. There are a few moments that ground it all even further: the dream he mentions on “Heavy Metal aka ejecto seato!” that he had years before his son was born, in which the baby was walking on the ceiling; on “Tourmaline,” the best song on the album, when in a romantically woozy rap-sing he goes, “She found me on the streets, she vowin’ to keep my feet grounded for my sweet child” so earnestly. There’s so much musical and personal inspiration colliding at once, you can feel the passion even when you can’t quite crack it all.

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Earl Sweatshirt: Live Laugh Love

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Earl Sweatshirt Is Finally Ready to Live Laugh Love: Review
Music

Earl Sweatshirt Is Finally Ready to Live Laugh Love: Review

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

It can be difficult to tell when Earl Sweatshirt is happy on wax. In his defense, he’s been through a lot since EARL, his breakthrough mixtape in 2010. By 2015’s I Don’t Like Shit, I Don’t Go Outside, he had established himself as a stark, brooding lyricist who was consumed by the life brewing within him and around him. With each subsequent release, Earl has moved closer and closer to understanding, only to be yanked back by the circumstances of humanity. He’s lost his father, and become a father and partner; found his creative community and shed dead weight. On Live Laugh Love, titled after the overused suburban wall décor phrase, Earl finds contentment and comfort in his growth and faith — unironically.

With his latest album, Earl sounds like a man made anew. Through warbling, funk-fueled production provided by Queens rapper/producer Theravada on the album opener, “gsw vs sac,” you can hear the smile in Earl’s voice as he processes his place in life. “Every day, I lace my cleats and give Him praise, get your head in the game,” he raps, firmly establishing his beliefs. Earl cedes the last minute of the song to a character who stands in as a source of comical inspiration. “You wanna chase instead of find,” the voice says humorously. “What you running from, yourself?” Together, Earl and his accompanying guest encourage us to find our purpose in our own time and not a moment sooner.

Earl has long been on a path of self-discovery, and he’s using Live Laugh Love to catch us up on his hard-earned progress. On Theravada’s “INFATUATION,” pumped full of soul samples and chiming keys, Earl raps about the lessons he’s been taught by life itself. “Flirts with danger, we hastily learn how to dance,” he spits, before sharing that he’s “gleaning what I can from what I have amassed.” At the end, Earl recalls the less-fortunate circumstances he’s come from, before snapping back to his blessed present: “The low hum of hunger had my stomach singing a song of sadness, wishing that it wasn’t flat/ Tonight, we dining where?” He has the gravitas and willingness to revisit the depths of his most formative moments, while still appreciating and reveling in his current position.

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Any writing about Earl you come across will inevitably involve the word “dense.” From his lyrical delivery to the production he prefers to rap over, Earl’s approach is concentrated in its compacted intensity. He stretches and pulls syllables like a taffy machine, inventing his very own relationship with words over production that scatters your brain at max volume. In particular, the weighty beats crafted by Detroit DJ/producer Black Noi$e give Earl copious opportunities to parse through his own streams of thought. “Live” opens with echoing drums and tinging cymbal, sounding considerably brighter than the songs that preceded it. You can almost envision Earl gripping a mic as he spits closely to it, an intimate display of heightened concentration. The beat switches exactly halfway through to a reverberating video game-inspired soundscape, as Earl borderline mumbles under his breath: “My stronghold faith what’s keeping me whole.” The clash of sound over voice can be difficult to understand at times (a recurring issue throughout Live Laugh Love), but it gets at the heart of Earl’s present focus.

Earl has famously overcome boarding school and the trappings of teen fame, but depression has been lingering in his peripheral for years. The anthemic “Static,” also produced by Black Noi$e, feels triumphant compared to the rest of the album, and even the majority of Earl’s discography — he sounds vocally clear and inspired to talk his shit. Somehow, he manages to string together a film reference that doubles as a call-back to a historical prison performance, and tops that with a hat-tip to both Prince and Future: “Let it Sing Sing on you like a Voice from East Harlem/ Easy target, three-ball, game blouses/ Let the purple rain douse ’em/ I thought it was a drought?” Earl is having more fun with spinning bars out of his complex experiences, be they traumatic or joyful. Even his simplistic flexes ring out louder than the hardest lyrics from mainstream rappers.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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13 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Earl Sweatshirt, Mac DeMarco, and More
Music

13 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Earl Sweatshirt, Mac DeMarco, and More

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

With so much good music being released all the time, it can be hard to determine what to listen to first. Every week, Pitchfork offers a run-down of significant new releases available on streaming services. This week’s batch includes new albums from Earl Sweatshirt, Mac DeMarco, Nourished by Time, Deftones, Ghostface Killah, Water From Your Eyes, Wolf Alice, Kathleen Edwards, Ami Taf Ra, Superchunk, Hunx and His Punx, Scree, and Greg Freeman. Subscribe to Pitchfork’s New Music Friday newsletter to get our recommendations in your inbox every week. (All releases featured here are independently selected by our editors. When you buy something through our affiliate links, however, Pitchfork earns an affiliate commission.)


Earl Sweatshirt: Live Laugh Love [Tan Cressida/Warner]

Earl Sweatshirt trickled out Live Love Laugh with cheeky teasers and a Los Angeles listening party. The new album follows the 2023 Alchemist collaboration Voir Dire, and it’s the rapper’s first solo effort since 2022’s Sick!, but it really shares its DNA with 2018 opus Some Rap Songs. The 11-song album is similarly filled with off-kilter, sample-driven beats, and the Californian’s lyrics and deadpan delivery are as potent and affecting as ever. Producers on the album include Theravada, Navy Blue, Black Noi$e, and Child Actor, and Erykah Badu adds vocals to the closing “Exhaust.”

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Listen on Amazon Music


Mac DeMarco: Guitar [Mac’s Record Label]

Mac DeMarco Guitar

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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