A few of the outlaws you’ll hear on Outlaw Country Radio.
Meet the Outlaws of Outlaw Country
Black River Whiskey
Black River Whiskey pour outlaw country straight from the backroads and barrooms of the Midwest. Their songs ride on gritty guitars, smoke‑stained vocals, and stories about long shifts, bad decisions, and the folks who keep going anyway. Every track feels like a late‑night drive past neon signs and empty fields, chasing something you can’t quite name. It’s a modern outlaw sound with one boot in the honky‑tonk, one in the dive bar, and both planted firmly in real life.
David Allan Coe
“David Allan Coe is one of the original outlaws—rough‑edged, unfiltered, and never quite welcome in polite Nashville rooms. His songs roll through prison yards, barstools, and busted love stories, sung in a voice that sounds like it’s lived every line. When you hear Coe on Outlaw Country, you know you’re not in safe territory anymore
Kevin Thomas
Kevin Thomas builds anthems for the graveyard shift and the neon-lit hours after closing time. This is outlaw country for the blue-collar soul, spinning tales of low pay, dusty miles, and the grit it takes to clock back in. His steel guitars mirror the weight of real life, capturing the unpolished truth of the working man. Raw and honest, his music is a late-night shot of reality for those who stay standing long after the sun goes down.
Dark Outlaw
Dark Outlaw rides the shadow side of outlaw country—low lights, slow burns, and songs that feel like the last hour before closing time. Guitars stay rough, drums stay heavy, and the stories lean into bad choices, long nights, and the ghosts that follow you home. If you like your country with more grit than shine, Dark Outlaw belongs in your late‑night rotation.”
Jawga Boys
The Jawga Boys bring a hard-hitting blend of backroad tradition and heavy-weight rhythm. This is the soundtrack to tailgate nights and mud-bog runs, where deep southern roots meet a modern, street-wise beat. It’s unpolished music for people who live for wide-open spaces and loud trucks. Rough, ready, and real, they represent the new heartbeat of the rural underground.
Willie Nelson
Willie Nelson is the quiet heartbeat of outlaw country—easygoing on the surface, sharp as barbed wire underneath. His songs drift through highways, heartbreak, and half‑lit bars, sung in a voice that sounds like it’s been everywhere you’ve ever wanted to run. When Willie shows up on Outlaw Country, it’s a reminder that this whole thing started with a guitar, a story, and someone stubborn enough to play it their own way.