Coming Up: 13 Country Acts With Debut Albums or EPs Due by the End of June
Written by djfrosty on January 16, 2025
The class of new country artists with debut projects coming in the first six months of 2025 looks a little different. Thankfully.
Of 13 acts readying their first album or EP for a major label or indie of significance, three are projects by solo females and three belong to vocal duos. Those subsets include Kat Luna, a singer with Cuban-American roots; and two multi-racial duos: Neon Union and 2 Lane Summer.
That development comes at a time when country labels are recognizing the nation’s changing consumer base, which practically requires a universe of artists that better resembles those shifts.
That doesn’t mean that the genre’s history is being overlooked: John Morgan, Tucker Wetmore and Bryce Leatherwood continue to work the kind of musical vein that country listeners expect. Luna, Neon Union and 2 Lane fit within those historic boundaries, too, while owning their own sonic brand.
“The country market is a lot of male country singers,” says 2 Lane’s Chris Ray, “so we were like, ‘Let’s just come together. Let’s do something that’s bigger than our solo careers.’”
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Release schedules can change, but here’s a look at 13 acts expected to launch a first album or EP between Jan. 1 and June 30, and how they’re staking out unique territories:
• 2 Lane Summer (Quartz Hill) – Illinois-bred Joe Hanson and Mississippian Chris Ray were both chasing solo careers when they found harmony. Big harmony. Their combined voices are bold and beautiful, evident in their Jan. 10 release “Eyes That Ain’t Yours (Wedding Version).” An EP is in progress, possibly for spring.
• Bayker Blankenship (Lone Star/Santa Anna) – His 2024 indie breakout “Maxed Out” garnered 60 million streams on Spotify alone in 2024, and Blankenship’s label is teaming with Sony Music Nashville on a spring EP release, his first with major-label assistance. The Tennessean’s lonesome tone and somnolent phrasing make him easily relatable.
• Mackenzie Carpenter (Valory) – A co-writer on Lily Rose’s “Villain” and Megan Moroney’s “I’m Not Pretty,” Carpenter owns a cutting tone that allows her to sound country without seeming backwoods. The Georgian’s 13-track Hey Country Queen, due March 7, frames small-town scenarios with subtly engaging melodies, delivered with a fierce confidence.
• Carter Faith (Capitol Nashville) – Faith wears her heart on her breath, exuding fragility with a smoky resonance. She’s played the Grand Ole Opry a dozen times, collaborated with Alison Krauss, opened for Willie Nelson and issued a well-received 2024 EP, The Aftermath. A full album is currently in the works.
• Zach John King (Sony Music Nashville) – King might be the first artist to cite George Jones and Switchfoot among his influences, and those threads are both faintly evident in his just-released “Slow Down.” After issuing a series of singles and EPs independently, King’s first major-label EP likely arrives in March.
• Bryce Leatherwood (Mercury Nashville) – Leatherwood’s understanding of country music was formed first by a Conway Twitty compilation during his youth, and a tinge of that influence comes through in his adult approach to a song. A former Blake Shelton apprentice on The Voice, Leatherwood’s first album blooms in the spring.
• Kat Luna (Sony Music Nashville) – Her original Nashville recordings came as one-half of Latin country duo Kat & Alex, but Luna – to quote a subsequent solo outing – is not “That Girl” anymore. The Miami product owns powerful pipes, and she’s got a spring EP on the way to showcase them.
• Vincent Mason (Interscope/MCA Nashville) – Heartbreak and loneliness come in multiple gears, and the Roswell, Ga., native leans on ballads and midtempos with a languid vocal style that conveys emptiness without throwing in the towel. His first headlining tour is around the corner, as is more music – perhaps a debut album.
• John Morgan (Night Train/Broken Bow) – Currently in circulation with the Jason Aldean collaboration “Friends Like That,” Morgan likely unleashes his first album in the first quarter. Whether he’s crafting a country ballad or riding a ‘90s-rock pulse, Morgan’s work is consistently melodic, designed to hook a listener in a heartbeat.
• Ty Myers (RECORDS Nashville/Columbia) – Raised on a central Texas cattle ranch, Myers wraps a little blues-rock and a fair amount of red-dirt alternative texture around a commercial vocal tone and Black Crowes phrasing. His first album – The Select, featuring already-released “Ends of the Earth” – is set for Jan. 24 release.
• Neon Union (Red Street) – Miami native Leo Brooks and North Carolina-bred Andrew Millsaps met in Nashville and quickly discovered they shared an appreciation for edgy, spirited, party-time country. The duo’s first album, Good Years, arrives Jan. 31, with shades of Montgomery Gentry and Brooks & Dunn influencing its grinding, upbeat sound.
• Pitney Meyer (Curb) – Longtime Curb solo act Mo Pitney paired with bluegrass vet John Meyer for a concert at Nashville’s Station Inn, and the blend was so inspiring they started a duo. They cut their first album – Cherokee Pioneer, due April 18 – in three days, with rippling acoustic rhythms and aptly lonesome harmonies.
• Tucker Wetmore (Back Blocks/EMI Nashville) – With “Wind Up Missin’ You” in the Hot Country Songs top 10 and two RIAA-certified platinum singles in his favor, Wetmore’s first full-length album is due this spring. His ultra-country vocals are tempered by a mix of sharpened steel guitar and reverberant classic rock beats.