Don’t Call It a Comeback: Country Music Dads Returns!

The Dads are so back! After an extended season break — due to some expansions in the family size — the guys are back at it, planning out a new season of great guests, interesting topics and general silliness. We hope you are ready for Season Three of the Country Music Dads podcast.

Show Notes:

  • 00:47 – Highlights of Season Two. Dave and Donnie discuss three things: our best episode, favorite interview and the most memorable moment. From Mustaches to Beefing Bros, with great guests and social media shares, the guys get to do what all podcasters love: talk about themselves.
  • 16:29 – Looking forward, the Dads talk about their delay into season three, prioritizing time and the changes outside the pod that drove some of these issue. (Hint: Dave is the father of FOUR kids under the age of 10).
  • 21:30 – The Dads discuss our listener feedback and how we will incorporate that into the podcast moving forward. Buckle in — you’re gonna get more dad stuff and more country stuff, which is shocking.
  • 24:44 – The Dad Life Sound Check

Mentioned in this Episode:

References/Songs:

Transcript

This week on Country Music Dads, we kick off our long-awaited third season with a look back and two looks forward.

Donnie and I share our favorite moments from season two, our highlights from the artist interviews, cultural deep dives, and of course, dad life nonsense that epitomized the pod in 2025.

We also share our vision for season three. The reasons you should like, subscribe, and click on all the links we send your way. We are the only parenting podcast with a twang.

So whether you’re a dad, a Country Music fan, just a little bit of both, we’re here to help. Where the red dirt road of Country Music meets the long white line of modern fatherhood, that’s where we live and we’ll see you there.

0:47

Highlights from Season 2

For our highlights from season two, I thought that we would each share three things.

Number one, what do you think was our best episode from season two? What was your favorite interview in season two? And what moment from season two, like a quote, a clip, a little nugget of insight, do you think was most memorable?

So we’ll start with you, the mustache-yode one.

For very obvious reasons. The mustache rides again was my favorite episode. It empowered me to wear this ridiculous mustache and have my wife tolerate it.

I have been told that she does not like it. However, everyone else seems to really think it’s great. My mother says, oh, but you’re such a beautiful, you’re so beautiful without it.

I’m like, okay, thanks, mom. I appreciate that very much. However, I like the mustache.

It’s fun. It does have a shelf life. It does have a shelf life.

Okay, yeah, I was gonna say, you’ve gone through several stints, so it shows up.

It comes and goes.

It’s gone away.

It comes back.

This particular one is for the AAA Phillies of the Little League, of which I am a part of, and I support greatly.

I’m a coach on the team, and we were having a rough go, and I said, guys, I’m going to shave a mustache because the mustache wins, and we won the next three games. So that worked out.

However, as it has become more and more pronounced, let’s say, the mustache has not done its job.

We are in fifth place out of six teams, but we’re going into playoffs because everybody goes into playoffs, and it’s a double elimination, so we have just as good a chance to win as we have to lose because any given day in Little League.

But you never know, man. So that was my favorite. What was your favorite?

I really thought that the Beefing Bros episode near the end of season two was my favorite, because for one, we’d gotten some reps under our belt, I think, for tackling these topics where we tried to tie in something that is culturally happening

around the country music space into some topic in parenting that is actually meaningful and might be helpful. And it seemed like a kind of an open-ended topic, too, like something that doesn’t have a clear answer, like, should you advocate fighting

for your kids as a leader in your household, as a man? It’s all these questions about modern masculinity and how we’re teaching our kids and showing up for them, all starting from Gavin Adcock, of all people.

To inspire our discussion about BeeFing fighting bros.

I have to be honest. I need to thank Gavin Adcock. He did some real good things for my social media profile.

It’s about time you appreciate him.

Yeah, something like that.

Show him some love.

He’s like a heel in traditional wrestling, right?

Yeah, you love to hate him because he’s just such a buffoon. That being said, I actually think he is a buffoon. He put out that album recently, Country Never Dies, which was about as pretentious as you can get.

It really missed. It missed the mark on every level. I posted about it.

I wrote a pretty thorough review of it. I went down the rabbit hole and tried to listen to it all. There’s some good stuff on it.

There’s no doubt there’s some good stuff on it. But I posted on Instagram, as I do with all of my things, it gets a few thousand views if I’m lucky. Then I go on to the next thing.

Gavin Adcock commented on it. His profile, I don’t know if he did it, but somebody who runs his socials or he himself commented on my post. It has tens of thousands of views, which is not a lot in the social media game.

I’m not going to pretend anything besides that. For me, it’s 4,000 times more than I usually get. I was like, what are you doing, dude?

Anyway, that’s my appreciation post. It’s a little side compliment, no doubt. But shout out.

He came down from his pedestal.

If you ever become a dad, man, come on the show.

We welcome you here.

Oh, man, I’d love that.

Even if you’re not a dad, Gavin, you’re welcome.

Both of those episodes, the mustache one, the beefing bros, I think we struck a good balance. It was fun to talk about. To the interviews, so we had a lot of great guests last year, guests from the country music space.

It’s really fun talking to all those people. What was your favorite interview?

Shooter Jennings. I make no bones about this. Shooter was always my goal for this podcast, especially after we learned that he was putting out Songbird.

It was his dad’s country music that he found, and he’s a dad himself, and how that experience made him feel close to his dad, and how it made him feel close to his kids, and how the music came together. All of it was such a…

It was really quite awesome to be able to talk to him and get that story. And I, you know, it was my goal, man. I was like, that’s the reach goal for the podcast, and we got it, and I was very proud of that.

But also the actual content of the interview was really lovely. And I also don’t think we pulled punches, which is, I think, something that I’m particularly proud about.

Is that we asked him questions that, you know, I don’t think that he wanted to answer about his production approach and his relationships with his artists. And like, it was a little uncomfortable.

And I’m OK with that because we should be asking tough questions of ourselves and of our guests. And I think it’s a I think it was cool. I had a good time doing it.

I would like to give an honorable mention to the guest of James Sullivan. He was the author of the Blue Jeans book.

And I think that he added an incredibly interesting element to our Blue Jeans episode, which I think that one was possibly before we dialed it all the way in to nailing the dad and country music content.

Though it was funny because we definitely talked about dad pants and dad shorts and the whole jeans and white sneakers approach. But I thought that was really cool. It elevated it all.

So thanks for reaching out to him and getting him on the show.

Maybe we weren’t totally dialed in on it. But the intent was there. I did lots of research for that one.

I read books for that one. Hopefully, it came across.

I thought the episode was fabulous. Honestly, it was one of my top three episodes of the season. Because there was so much research done.

There was cool Americana. There was expert witnesses. The whole thing was fabulous.

It was just an absolute win. I love that episode. But it’s a little hard to say like, we nailed the dad and country music content on that one.

We were talking about jeans.

I guess you’re right.

It was a good episode, though. We should win an award for that episode.

If we have to submit one for the dad podcasting Grammys or whatever’s out there. That’ll be the one.

The daddies, I think is what they’re called. That might be a whole other thing.

Don’t Google that.

Don’t Google that. We will not put that in the show notes.

Hard to beat the Shooter Jennings conversation because that was just very cool. Someone who’s that prolific and high profile and active in everything it seems. It was awesome.

He took the time to talk with us and you’re right, he told some great stories and really revealed a lot about his own feelings about his Waylon Jennings project. My favorite interview was the Doohickeys.

They’re not dads, but we talked about dad jokes with the Doohickeys and there’s a reason that comedians have podcasts. They were very good as people in comedy. They were fabulous.

They were just, yeah, they were really funny and I think they came across really well.

There was lots of laughing on that one.

It was great.

If you don’t know them, you got to follow them. They have a new web series going where they’re meeting up with songwriters and pitching them song ideas on YouTube. And it is mind-blowingly hilarious.

Like a DUI, my SUV, that was a good one. And then you steal my heart spelled like steal, like a steal player, like steal guitar. These are some very snarky and fun songs.

I highly recommend it.

I have an honorable mention. Oh, please. Also, Jeremy Pinnell, I thought was really fun to talk to.

Because he seems so serious and so intense, you know, it was a little nerve wracking to interview somebody like that.

But, you know, I felt myself getting more used to being okay with some the awkward pauses in an interview and pushing to ask a question that might not land the right way.

And sometimes you get some gems, you get somebody to act a little more casual than usual. And I think we had a few moments like that with Jeremy that really kind of get the sense of what he’s actually like. And I thought that was cool.

His music comes across as wildly intense.

But he’s in the interview, I mean, he’s also an intimidating looking dude. He’s a big, strong guy, got a lot of tattoos. He knows jujitsu, which we talked about.

And he just seems like a guy that you should be scared of, but he really isn’t. He’s got a kid, he cares about his kid, he does the work at his house, he likes to work hard, he plays music. He just, he’s like a good guy.

He just, that came across very clearly. And I think that one should win an award for editing, because there were pauses and changes in between. And you put together a beautiful podcast there, Dave, I must admit.

So, high praise on that. It came across incredibly smooth. And the conversation was smooth.

The conversation was smooth, and it was really, Jeremy was also one of those guys I really wanted to have on the show, because the song Night Eagle is one of my favorites. And there’s a line in it about missing your wife and kids.

And I was like, whoa, that’s cool. Let’s talk about that. And he’s like, I have nothing to say about that.

And he clearly had lots to say about that.

And when I reached out to him the first time, and I was like, this is a cool approach to this particular part of the industry and the kind of that balancing act that I think men don’t have to do as much, at least in the public eye.

But the reality is people who want to be part of a family and want to make that work, it’s a hard push and pull. And I think we had a cool conversation with him about that. We also had a cool conversation with Ted Russell Kamp about that one.

And I think everybody kind of touches on that. Throughout that whole season, all of the artists we had on Who Are Dads really talked about that. It was really quite nice.

So what was your favorite moment, if you could distill it down to one thing?

One of my favorite concepts for the show was kids books as country music songs.

Like the books you read 9,000 times and you kind of put to music anyway. And we did, I did a whole bit. That’s the only way to describe it.

A whole bit on Toe Truck Joe being essentially the bro country of kids books. It’s, I think I called it, I don’t remember what I-

The Redneck Yacht Club of children’s books.

Of children’s books.

It’s a great line, man. Great line.

It was. And hat tip to my lovely wife, we were talking about it. Abby came up with that.

She said, it’s the Redneck Yacht Club of kids books. I was like, that’s going to be used. I’m not going to credit you in the actual episode, but here I am giving her full credit for that particular one because that was funny.

I laughed right out loud when we were talking about it, but it really is. You’re drunk on a pontoon. That’s essentially what this book is.

It’s so funny. We posted about it, and I found June Sowell online, and I tagged her in the thing, and she accepted our collaboration on it. And she’s like, she’s a kids’ book author, and she has totally engaged in it.

And every time someone finds the clip and shares it, she comments something on it. It really, it warms my heart that like, kind of a silly approach to what is a silly book?

It’s intentionally silly and fun, and like an easy book to read to kids who like trucks. I love that. I love that episode.

I thought it was really fun. It required, hey, I read a lot of books for that episode.

That’s true. Me too. There’s a lot of research that went into it.

Quicker reads.

Quick reads.

But yeah, like I didn’t need the Cliffs notes.

So what was your most memorable moment of the whole thing?

So this was kind of a podcast adjacent moment, but we started the Substack newsletter last year also. And I wrote an article after Lucas Nelson’s album came out last year because he had a song that talked about staying home with the kids.

That was a line in the chorus. The song’s called The Lie. And so I wrote this article, because the first time I heard that song, he’s talking about staying home with the kids as in a negative way.

And as a stay-at-home dad, it got me kind of fired up, and I was like, no, Lukas, how could you do this to us, throwing us under the bus?

But then I listened to it more deeply, and that’s part of the lie that people are telling people that no one ever makes it stay-at-home with the kids. Instead of being enraged, I felt seen by Lukas Nelson.

So I wrote a newsletter about it and shared it on Instagram, and he also shared the article. He or his team or whoever looked at it. I was very validating to like, again, like kind of similar to the June Sobel thing.

Like I had a take on kind of an outside take on this piece of art, and the artist saw it and recognized it. So I thought that was cool.

Not to like, not to like name drop here, but I’m going to anyway. I went to a show where he was playing. He was like a special unannounced guest, and I introduced myself and said, you know, I really love your thing.

I’m actually a part of the Country Music Dads. My co-host Dave wrote this thing. He said, oh yeah, thanks man, that was right on.

I don’t know if he was just saying it, but he did. And so that was pretty cool. And he’s an incredibly nice dude, I must say.

Incredibly nice dude. And his voice is like butter. It is shockingly beautiful.

And both him and his brother Micah shockingly sound like their father when they sing his songs. In case anyone doesn’t know, that’s Willie Nelson’s kids.

As for on the podcast, I do have a favorite moment from the podcast also. And we’ll go back to the Shooter Jennings episode for that.

There was a moment there where he was talking about Songbird and talking about what it means to him to hear his dad’s voice singing these songs again, after he’s been deceased for some time now.

He had a quote about how it almost brings him back into this moment right now for a little while. You could tell there was a little bit of emotion there, and I don’t think I’d heard him say something like that on an interview before.

So I thought that was just like real. You see like the person behind this kind of entity that Shooter Jennings is, this producer, his famous producer, like actually talking about, is just talking about his dad like anybody else.

He was given a platform that wasn’t there. I mean, we provided I think a really specific cross-section of concepts for him to discuss this work.

And you know, I don’t think anybody else, I mean, everybody’s talking about how his dad’s Waylon Jennings and like how this is a project of his.

But we’re talking about like parenting and fatherhood and experience and the love of a child and a parent. It was, that was powerful.

That was, I’m glad you brought that one up because I did not forget it, but it didn’t jump to me and like I remember that being like, I think we like exchanged glances or possibly text messages like, wow, that was special when he said it.

So looking forward into season three, we probably should talk a little bit about ourselves because this is a podcast and we’re middle-aged men, so that’s what we do.

16:29

Season 3: What Has Changed?

So there’s stuff that has changed over the last few months, five months, six months. The reality is we’re not going to lie, we’re a little bit late to season three, but there’s good reason to it. So, Dave, tell us the real reason.

What has changed in your life and clearly the reason why we are starting here in May for season three of Country Music Dads?

Donnie and I are really serious about coaching little league baseball. We just don’t have time. That’s definitely it.

Yeah. There’s that and I also leveled up to four kids last year. First time girl dad, my youngest is now nine months old.

And I think that my lesson as a dad of four kids is that I am now much more acutely aware of the value of my time and prioritizing what is most important.

I don’t know if I necessarily saw that coming because my wife and I were a little flipping about it like, three kids is a lot of kids, like four is just going to feel like a lot of kids still. We got this and we do. It’s going really well.

We have a lot of family support which is wonderful and beautiful.

It really manifested recently when the younger two, a toddler and a baby, they take a lot of time and attention and so we left it up to our two older ones to say you guys are buddies now, you guys are a little bit older, they’re eight and six.

You guys can entertain yourselves, you don’t really need us, you guys have your own stuff, we want to give you some independence. But they’re still little kids and so we’ve had these.

I had this moment with my oldest where he broke down and just said like, I never see you dad, you never hang out with me, you never spend time with me. It’s really heartbreaking thing to hear.

It made me really think about how I spent my time and prioritized it, and I just have to be more intentional about how I spend all my time.

I got to think about the older two kids and having just focused time to do what they want to do, like real quality time with them rather than just, hey, we’re all together and the family is spending time together.

Moving from place to place.

Yeah, exactly. Just moving through life, moving from meal to meal, to bath time, to bedtime. So anyway, that’s been my lesson that it stretches us thin and we knew that was going to happen, but you don’t really know until you’re in it, I think.

The main takeaway though is that I’m still here making the podcast because I really like doing it and I like doing it here with Donnie and really I want it to be good because it wouldn’t be worth the time and the priority to put out something that’s

not good. So we want to keep putting out a high quality podcast and maybe that’s why we took a little longer to kick it off. We want to make sure that we’re going to do it well researched, thoughtful, fun.

We need to do it right. We need to do it right. So I will come out and say I have not leveled up.

I have no intention of leveling up.

Nonsense. You’re always growing.

No. On your level up, you good. You got two extra, you got two extra for me.

I am so good with two children. I love them dearly and good God, they take up all of my time. For me over the past, I would say the same time period that we’ve been dealing with a little bit of a hiatus.

Life has gotten hectic, man. You look around the world is a little bit topsy turvy. The space in which we occupy is not feeling as safe as it once did.

That takes up a lot more time and mental energy for me. My wife and I are definitely not having any more kids. That is just not something we’re going to do.

I totally respect the fact that you guys did that. When you first told me that you and your lovely family were expecting to get bigger, you said, we don’t have a big deal. You literally said, what?

You said, we have three kids, that’s a lot of kids. We’ll have four kids, that’s a lot of kids. I was like, okay.

That’s cute. I have no idea how you all pull it off, that being said. I’ve been taking the writing part a little bit more seriously over the past six months and been working hard to kind of build the audience and doing things a little differently.

I’m starting to try to write more critically and trying to get into like real publications, pitching some stuff and trying to land it in some real places to see if it’s something I can do. Because I love doing this. It’s a lot of fun.

It does take up a lot of mental energy and it does take up a lot of time, but I’m down for it. I think it’s really cool.

I’m lucky I have a good job that gives me the flexibility to read a ton of stuff about country music and culture, and I’m able to still do a good job at doing that and at the actual day job.

It is challenging and interesting and I still have space for this in my head, so that part’s kind of fun. That kind of gets into the goals. I kind of would love to see us get to that next level, right?

I want to get more big name interviews.

21:30

Listener Feedback: Season 3 Preview

I want to work on interviewing people who challenge our perspective about parenting, about country music, and I think that that’s good, but you know, I also want to be cognizant of what people have said is important to them in how we approach this

podcast, because if it isn’t for you listeners out there, not to put on the condescending podcaster voice, but if it isn’t for people listening to it, what’s really the point of this whole thing, right? We’re having fun, but we could just pick up the

phone and call each other, which I think is probably one of the main criticisms of most podcasts done by middle-aged guys. I really want to make sure that we’re listening to what people want from us, because we’re creating a product that hopefully

We did put out a listener survey last year, and one theme coming back is that people appreciated when we grappled with tough parenting topics of the day.

The Beefing Bros episode was brought up as one example. The Jason Isbell News about canceling concerts for his kids’ events was brought up as another.

Just these cultural moments or topics that we all struggle with as parents that are also in the country music space.

That’s where we like to be, and so I’m glad that it’s been valuable to people to hear two parents debating things like that and trying to figure it out and sharing our thought process on everything.

Things like country music’s common tropes about masculinity, the kind of thing that came up in the Beefing Bros or even in the episode about the Mustaches.

Luke Combs too.

Yeah, the Luke Combs episode about the review of his album about the Fathers and Sons. I think that we’re in a place where we enjoy breaking down some of those topics from the Modern Dads perspective that are showing up in country music.

We’ll continue to do stuff like that because it’s fun. I think that’s our lane. Something else, we have listeners that are not, they’re not the Donnie C.

Cutlers of the country music world. They’re not the experts writing music criticism about it.

Oh, don’t put that on me, please.

But you are though, I think you’re putting out some great stuff, Donnie. I’ve learned a lot of things from you about the industry, the music industry in general, about country music in the last year. You really know your stuff.

I know some things, but I still consider myself a novice. Maybe one foot still in the bro country world as I refine my taste.

You definitely have. Look, man, I’m not judging you for your taste much, but you can like country music and bro country music even though they’re not the same thing.

Thank you for the permission.

You die, man.

We want to bring people like me that might be new to listening to country music and give you some education on what’s going on out there in the current country music world. Some things from the past that maybe you didn’t realize.

Also, more of that news from the independent scene that’s swinging back towards more traditional country music. That’s our plan, so we hope you continue to tune in. Thank you for tuning in as we kick off season three.

24:44

The Dad Life Sound Check

One more thing that people seem to like are our recurring segments.

And so we’re going to jump into our main recurring segment here, the Dad Life soundcheck, where we share a song that’s speaking to us as dads or fans or just people, because we’re just people just like you.

But we’re in charge of the microphone, so you have to listen to us a little bit. Dave, what’s been speaking to you this week?

My brother-in-law actually turned me on to this song. The Alcohol of Fame by our friend, Luke Combs. I know, it’s a really good line.

Good, good line.

It’s your traditional Luke Combsian drinking song.

I love Luke Combs’ dad trajectory, because he was a new dad. Man, he’s going to write this heartfelt album all about fathers and sons because he’s got a son or two. Now he has three, three sons.

I’ve been there and now he’s back to the drink it songs. Which I think is so appropriate and hilarious.

But even the new album that he just put out this year, it waffles back and forth just like we do or maybe we with many kids do, between being very heartfelt and reflective. And now I just got to drink and I got to go out and party.

I got to get out of here. And then back to heartfelt. And I’m like, I’m right there along for the ride with Mr.

Combs on this one.

And either he needs to drink or he needs to put all three kids through college. I think he’s fine. I’m going to say I think he’s fine.

Yeah, I think he’s.

Yeah, he’ll be doing this fine.

He doesn’t need that 529. We could talk about those later. But yeah, it’s super fun.

I remember interviewing somebody a long time ago. He ended up playing kind of one of those side stages at Stagecoach a million years ago. Probably not a million years ago, probably like five years ago, six years.

And Luke Combs was playing. He’s like, I never heard that guy before. And man, he was great.

I really liked his music. I was like, yeah, what’s not to like about that? Ice Cold Beer That Never Broke My Heart is the perfect drinking song.

And I’ve mentioned this before on the podcast, but my youngest used to like, when he was like first starting to walk and they’d do the butt dance, we’d put that song on and he’d put his hands on a low table or a low, we had storage units out for the

toys and whatever. And he would do it and he’d shimmy his butt to that song. And every time we put it on and it was great. He was just in his diaper and dancing to Luke Combs, shaking his butt.

It was great. It is one of those memories that will stay with me forever as a father and fan of Luke Combs. So Luke, if you’re out there, we’d love to have you on the show.

I know GQ just did a really great review of you. Shout out to Marissa R. Moss for that one.

But yeah, we’d love to have you on the pod.

Yeah, we’re next right after GQ, right?

GQ, Country Music Dads. Stranger things have happened.

Not really. You look like a gentleman with the mustache and the shirt.

Well, the whole opening of that thing was how Luke Combs is not the traditional GQ model. I too am not the traditional GQ model. I like to just put that up there.

Luke, we’re with you, brother. Okay. Moving to a slightly darker, sadder space because it is Country Music.

And those are our two options. The song that’s speaking to me right now is The Pieces, which just came out by Grey DeLisle, and it’s on an album that’s coming out in June. It’s June 5th.

It’s called Grey and Green. It has Grey DeLisle and Les Green, who are two of, I think, the most fabulous vocalists in the underground scene in Los Angeles and beyond. They create such a wonderful vibe together.

There’s only one song at the end of the album, which I got a preview of, where they come and sing together, and it’s so awesome. I can’t wait to share it with more people. But the pieces by Grey DeLisle is, it’s obviously a love song about a lover.

However, if you’re just listening to it softly and like so many other love songs, you could definitely make it about the relationship between a parent and a child. There are some parts that don’t work so well.

However, there’s one line that hit me today when I was listening to it again that says, I look up and saw the whole world in your eyes.

And the whole part of the lyrics blending together with the guitars, which are perfectly this cool rockabilly country sound, and then her raw vocals just come together to create this really beautiful sound.

And I spoke with Grey about it when it came out, and she said her voice was raw from doing takes.

She had done a whole bunch of work, she had sung some shows, and she came in to put this track down, and she almost told the producers and the team behind it, I don’t really like this, and they were like, no, this is perfect.

And it’s, I think it’s one of her most beautiful songs she’s ever written, ever sung on a record. And if you don’t know Grey DeLisle, you probably know her voice. She was Daphne on the Scooby-Doo show.

She was Azula from Avatar, The Last Airbender. She was Catwoman on the animated Batman series and has, I think somewhere between 900 and a thousand other voice credits. She’s in every cartoon you’ve heard.

She’s so kind and giving of her time and energy. Last year, she used her gravitas and her fame to put out this album about Cindy Walker, all of these Cindy Walker songs. She is one of the most prolific women songwriters in the Country Music space.

She just did this great stuff so that her home, Cindy Walker’s home, could be preserved as kind of a monument to this important figure in Country Music. Some of these songs, these huge names saying they were written by Cindy Walker.

She’s just this good person. She supports smaller artists. She just goes out there and she’s in the space.

I just love this song. It was shockingly beautiful to me. So not to go on and on, but I really like it.

Thanks for sharing.

Thank you.

That’s it.

That does it for our first episode back. Thank you as always for listening, for tuning in. The best way to support us is to also subscribe to the show on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or whatever podcast platform you use.

If you want to see new episodes and more content delivered straight to your email inbox, please subscribe to our newsletter, countrymusictads.substack.com.

You can find everything we do on our website, countrymusictads.com and we’d love to hear what you love best from Season 2 and what you think so far of Season 3.

So send us comments, suggestions, friendly banter on Instagram at countrymusictads or via email countrymusictads.gmail.com.

Stay tuned for our next episode where we speak with South Carolina native and country musician and dad, of course, Nathan Evans Fox about his upcoming album, Faith, The South, NASCAR and Progressive Leftist Politics. What a combo.

And until next time, whether you’re at the dance hall, the playground or just folding some laundry. Thanks for tuning in. We’ll talk to you soon.


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