Parker McCollum at RiverStage in San Angelo, TX on Jul 7, 2022

image for event Parker McCollum
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The writing on the wall just wasn't enough
You were falling in love and I was falling apart…

Parker McCollum wants it both ways. Restless soul who can slam dunk a major venue. Texas spirit who can exist on mainstream country radio. Songwriter with a sense of turpentine and truth singing for people whose life isn't quite the truckbed/field party revel much of country music would have you believe.

Coming up in Texas, selling out Stubbs, Billy Bobs and Nutty Browns, the brash young man with a taste for Rodney Crowell, Todd Snider and James McMurtry had just enough Houston gangster rap in the water to develop a swagger that's miles from the good ole boy patina so many of his peers embody. But don't let that bravado fool you, his passion for songwriting runs deep.

"I want to have Luke Bryan success, singing Chris Knight-caliber songs," he declares. "To have longevity, you can't sacrifice integrity to get on the radio. People know the difference, look at Willie, look at Strait. I knew I could do Texas and never leave, or come to Nashville and do the pop-country thing. My goal is to ride the middle."

He exhales as he says this, takes in the landscape. He's already notched a platinum-certified #1 with the banged-up declaration of love and betrayal "Pretty Heart." He's gone against the grain enlisting songwriter/musician/vocalist/producer Jon Randall; he's known for his work as part of Emmylou Harris' Grammy-winning Nash Ramblers, producer of Dierks Bentley's Up To The Ridge and co-writer of the 2005 CMA Song of the Year "Whiskey Lullabye" and 2018 ACM Song of the Year "The Tin Man."

"I was super burned out from co-writes," he says of their initial meeting. "He saw it, took one look, and said, ‘Hey,

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