The speed and momentum Teddy and the Rough Riders are gathering throughout Nashville’s underground Country music scene is embodied in their latest single, “Bullet.’’’ Music City natives, Jack Quiggins and Ryan Jennings, have been going non-stop since the late 2010s, collaborating with everyone from Margo Price to Emily Nenni to Sean Thompson’s Weird Ears, quickly becoming your favorite country band’s favorite country band. With “Bullet,’”

Dual album release celebrations in Austin and Nashville. Tour dates can be found below.

(Ryan Jennings) | wrote this song so that I could play my Farfisa organ, and because I love Doug Sahm. I had also been single for a number of years so I was looking for someone special and wrote this imagining someone making a “bullet outta me”. You know, Love and War type things except way less evil war bullets. More just listing all the bullet activities, like the turkey shoot that they host down at The American Legion post 82. Singing through your window, at the starting line, supersonic speed, etc. Sean had a great solo and we had fun working on some 3D Fuzz guitar tones.

More About Down Home: Down Home was mixed and overdubbed throughout their previous album’s release, wrapping in 2023. As is often the case with back-to-back productions, this follow-up takes all the strengths of the previous and builds on them, leaning further into the otherworldly fuzz guitar sounds of Sean Thompson on tracks like “Bullet” and “Hippies”—songs with lyrics that turn country and western conventions on their head—where a bullet is a romance imbued beau rather than a weapon (with Doug Sahm inspired organ) and “hippies make the best country music”—a refrain poking the purist traditionalists in the ribs. Elsewhere, modern melodic progressions and the layered backing vocals of Erin Rae and Emily Nenni service the beautiful and upbeat, “Golden Light,” a song inspired by the social and personal paralysis of the Covid pandemic, finding hope in the eventual return to traveling, playing music and sharing stages with friends. 

But as the album title suggests, styles never stray far from the Rough Riders’ traditional country wheelhouse. Childhood imagination goes from bummer to core memories in the back-to-nature reflections of “Catfish Summer” and “Mountain Girl” is a rollicking bluegrass-inflected tune with fiddle (Eli Bishop) accenting the super up-tempo stomp, conjuring an essence akin to alt-trad rockers, The Pogues. There’s classic country territory like the grooving but sober “Bird Has Flown” and “Fast Livin’” is an absolute barn burner, invoking Hank Snow’s “I’ve Been Everywhere” with an extra coat of red paint for every town.  

More About Teddy and the Rough Riders: On their new album Down Home, the songwriting duo of Jack Quiggins and Ryan Jennings double down on all the elements that garnered praise for their previous, eponymous album produced by Margo Price. Holler Country succinctly sums them up: “Teddy and the Rough Riders are pulling apart the lost threads of country rock and weaving them back together with their own alternative take on the form.” As native Nashvillians, the pair came up through Music City’s DIY rock scene explosion of the late 00s into 2010s, eventually embracing the traditional country roots of their home city. At just 33 minutes, Down Home moves at a fast clip, with a variety of blazing rippers, traditional sounds, and alt-country styles inviting repeat listens. The band has recently been named “Best Honky Tonk Group” by Austin TX’s Ameripolitan Awards for 2024. They tour North America, the EU, and the UK through the summer backing and opening for Emily Nenni, then embarking on their own North American tour in October after making an official appearance at Americanafest in September. Down Home is releasing on October 11th on Appalachia Record Co.  

Catch Teddy and the Rough Riders On Tour:

October 10 – Abilene, TX – Lone Star Dry Goods

October 11 – San Antonio, TX – Lonesome Rose

October 12 – Austin, TX – White Horse

October 13 – Austin, TX – ACL Fest

October 17 – Birmingham, AL – Woodlawn Theatre

October 18 – Nashville, TN – Soft Junk

October 19 – Thomaston, GA – Mule Days