Twang Nation: Best of 2025 Americana and Country Music


Country music didn’t need saving in 2025—it needed listening.
The records that mattered this year didn’t chase radio, algorithms, or nostalgia. They showed up with songs that knew where they were from and didn’t flinch when they said it out loud.
This is Twang Nation’s Best of 2025: real voices, real twang, and records built to last longer than the hype cycle and the typical tik-tok users attention span.

1. Summer Dean — The Biggest Life
A honky-tonk record that stands on discipline and restraint. Summer Dean doesn’t modernize or sentimentalize—she commits. Clean melodies, clear-eyed songwriting, and twang that carries its weight without decoration. One of the year’s most honest country albums.

2. Joshua Hedley — Neon Blue
Pure country, no costume. Hedley’s baritone and Bakersfield-informed sound feel lived-in, not revived. These are songs built the old way because the old way still works. Continuity country at its finest.

3. Ellis Bullard — Honky Tonk Ain’t Noise Pollution
Loose, funny, and sharp without winking. Bullard brings barroom wisdom and lived humor back to country music, letting rough edges stay rough. Proof that honky-tonk still has a pulse—and a sense of humor.

4.Riddy Arman — Silver Line
Minimalist Western twang where space does as much work as sound. Arman’s songs move slowly and land quietly, built for long roads and late hours. A record that trusts silence and earns it.

5. Rachel Brooke — Sings Sad Songs
Dark honky-tonk realism with no interest in redemption arcs. Brooke sings about regret and bad decisions without smoothing them over. Cold, clean twang that leaves the door shut when the song ends.

6. Kaitlin Butts — Roadrunner
Red Dirt storytelling rooted in place and consequence. Butts writes with specificity and strength, keeping the focus on people rather than scale. Twang that stays personal instead of performative.

7. Melissa Carper — Borned In Ya
Country that remembers how to swing. Upright bass, jazz-inflected phrasing, and a loose communal feel give this record warmth without softness. A reminder that twang once danced—and still can.

8. Rattlesnake Milk — Into the Black
Desert-baked, amp-blown twang with a dangerous streak. This record leans outlaw blues but earns its country stripes through attitude and refusal to behave. Raw, loud, and unapologetic.

9. Will Banister — Living the Dream?
Classic country singing as a craft, not a gimmick. Banister delivers well-built songs with effortless phrasing and emotional clarity. No irony, no updates—just country done right.

10. Sterling Drake — The Shape I’m In
Haunted, lonesome, and stripped close to the bone. Drake blends Appalachian and Southern roots into songs that feel written to survive, not succeed. Twang with scars still showing.

In 2025, the best country records didn’t beg for attention.
They trusted the song. They trusted the twang.
And they let the rest sort itself out.
That’s the music we can all stand behind.