
Why Parker McCollum's new country album might be the best he'll ever make
'Probably the worst idea,' he says now, looking back at his unrelenting schedule. 'I was absolutely cooked when I got there.'
Yet the self-titled LP he ended up making over six days at New York's storied Power Station studio is almost certainly his best: a set of soulful, slightly scruffy roots-music tunes that hearkens back — after a few years in the polished Nashville hit machine — to McCollum's days as a Texas-born songwriter aspiring to the creative heights of greats such as Guy Clark, Rodney Crowell and Townes Van Zandt. Produced by Eric Masse and Frank Liddell — the latter known for his work with Miranda Lambert and his wife, Lee Ann Womack — 'Parker McCollum' complements moving originals like 'Big Sky' (about a lonely guy 'born to lose') and 'Sunny Days' (about the irretrievability of the past) with a tender cover of Danny O'Keefe's 'Good Time Charlie's Got The Blues' and a newly recorded rendition of McCollum's song 'Permanent Headphones,' which he wrote when he was all of 15.
'Parker's a marketing person's dream,' Liddell says, referring to the 33-year-old's rodeo-hero looks. 'And what happens in those situations is they usually become more of a marketed product. But I think underneath, he felt he had more to say — to basically confess, 'This is who I am.'' Liddell laughs. 'I tried to talk him out of it.'
McCollum, who grew up in privileged circumstances near Houston and who's now married with a 10-month-old son named Major, discussed the album on a recent swing through Los Angeles. He wore a fresh pair of jeans and a crisp denim shirt and fiddled with a ZYN canister as we spoke.
I was looking online at your —Nudes?
At your Instagram. The other day you posted a picture of a box of Uncrustables on a private jet.That photo was not supposed to make the internet. That was an accident — my fault. I don't ever post about my plane on the internet.
You're a grown man. Why Uncrustables?That's an adult meal that children are very, very fortunate to get to experience.
Did you know when you finished this record that you'd done something good?Yes. But I didn't know that until the last day we were in the studio and we listened to everything, top to bottom. The six days in the studio that we recorded this record, I was s—ing myself: 'What the f— have I done? Why did I come to New York and waste all this time and money? This is terrible.' Then on the last day we listened all the way through, and I was like, Finally.
Finally what?I just felt like I never was as focused and convicted and bought-in as I was on this record. I felt kind of desperate — like, 'Am I just gonna keep doing the same thing, or are we gonna go get uncomfortable?'
Why New York?One reason is that city makes me feel like a rock star. In my head when I was in high school dreaming about being a songwriter or a country singer, I was picturing huge budgets, making badass albums in New York City or L.A., staying in dope hotels — just this fairy tale that you believe in. The other reason is that when you're cutting records in Nashville, people are leaving at 5 to go pick up their kids, or the label's stopping by and all this s—. I just wanted to avoid all of that — I didn't want to record three songs on a Tuesday in June and then record three songs on a Tuesday in August. I wanted to go make a record.
Lot of history at Power Station: Chic, Bruce Springsteen, David Bowie.John Mayer wrote a song and recorded it in a day there — that song 'In Repair,' with him and Charlie Hunter and Steve Jordan. That's how I found out about the studio years ago. We actually ended up writing a song in the studio: 'New York Is On Fire.'
A very John Mayer title.I wanted to go in the late fall when the trees were changing colors and the air was cool.
Why was Frank Liddell the guy to produce?I knew if he understood Chris Knight and the songs he had written that he could probably understand me and the songs I had written. I'd made half a record with Jon Randall, who'd produced my last two albums. And I love Jon Randall — he's one of my closest friends in the world, four No. 1s together, multi-platinum this and multi-platinum that. But I just needed to dig deeper, and Frank was a guy who was down to let the songs do the work.
What do you think would've become of the record you were making with Randall?It would've sounded great, and it would've had some success. But I don't know if I would've been as emotionally involved as I was with Frank. Frank got a better version of me than Jon did.
What if nobody likes this record?It's like the first time I'm totally OK with that.
Country radio moves slowly, which means 'What Kinda Man' may end up being a big hit. But it's not a big hit yet.It probably won't be. The only reason that song went to radio is because 'Burn It Down' had gone No. 1, and the label wanted another one. I was like, 'Fine, go ahead.' I've never one time talked with them about what song should go to radio.
On this project.Ever. I just don't care. The song that goes to radio is very rarely the best song on the record.
What was the best song on 'Never Enough'?Probably 'Too Tight This Time.' It's slow and sad, which is my specialty.
You recently told Texas Monthly, 'I don't write fun songs. I've never really liked them.'There's some I like. 'Always Be My Baby' by Mariah Carey f—ing slaps. I love feel-good songs. But in country music, feel-good songs are, like, beer-and-truck-and-Friday-night songs, and those have never done anything for me.
'What Kinda Man' is kind of fun.But I think it's still well-written. It's not all the clichés that every song on the radio has in it.
What's the best song on this album?'Hope That I'm Enough' or 'Solid Country Gold' or 'My Worst Enemy' or 'My Blue.'
Lot of choices. I love this record. I don't think I'll ever do any better.
Is that a sad thought?Eh. I don't know how much longer I'm gonna do it anyways.
Why would you hang it up?I don't know that I'm going to. But I don't think I'm gonna do this till I'm 70. We've been doing these stadium shows with George Strait — I think I'm out a lot sooner than him.
You watch Strait's set?Every night.
What have you learned from him?When it comes to George, what I really pay attention to is everything off the stage. No scandals, so unbelievably humble and consistent and under the radar. The way he's carried himself for 40 years — I don't think I've ever seen anybody else do it that well. I'd love to be the next George Strait off the stage.
I'm not sure his under-the-radar-ness is possible today.I fight with my team all the time. They're always trying to get my wife and kid in s—, and I'm like, 'They're not for sale.' I understand I have to be a little bit — it's just the nature of the business. But at home, that's the real deal — that ain't for show.
I'd imagine People magazine would love to do a spread with you and your beautiful wife and your beautiful child.They offered for the wedding. I was like, 'Abso-f—ing-lutely not.' I don't want anybody to know where I live or what I drive or what I do in my spare time. And nowadays that's currency — people filming their entire lives. Call me the old man, but I'm trying to go the complete opposite direction of that.
One could argue that your resistance isn't helpful for your career.I'm fine with that.
Fine because you're OK money-wise?I'm sure that plays into it. But, man, my childhood is in a box in my mom's attic. And nowadays everybody's childhood is on the internet for the whole world to see. I'm just not down with that. I don't want to make money off of showing everybody how great my life is. Because it is f—ing great. I feel like I could make $100 million a year if I was a YouTuber — it's movie s—. The way it started, the way I came up, the woman I married, the child I had — there's no holes.
Where does the pain in your music come from?I've thought about that for a long time. I don't think it's the entire answer, but I think if your parents divorced when you were little, for the rest of your life there's gonna be something inside you that's broken. My parents' divorce was pretty rowdy, and I remember a lot of it. And I don't think those things ever fully go away.
How do you think about the relationship between masculinity and stoicism?It never crosses my mind.
Is your dad a guy who talks about his feelings?F— no.
Was he scary?I think he could be. My dad's the s—. He's the baddest son of a bitch I've ever met in my life.
What image of masculinity do you want to project for your son?When I think about raising Major, I just want him to want to win. Can fully understand you're not always going to, but you should always want to, no matter what's going on. I hope he's a winner.
When's the last time you cried?Actually wasn't very long ago. A good friend of mine died — Ben Vaughn, who was the president of my publishing company in Nashville. I played 'L.A. Freeway,' the Guy Clark song, at his memorial service a couple weeks ago. That got me pretty good.
You said you're OK if fans don't like this record. I don't need anyone else to like it. I hope that they love it — I hope it hits them right in the f—ing gut and that these songs are the ones they go listen to in 10 years when they want to feel like they did 10 years ago. That's what music does for me. But I know not everybody feels music as intensely as I do.
Was that true for you as a kid?Even 6, 7, 8 years old, I'd listen to a song on repeat over and over and over again. I can't explain how deeply emotional songs make me — it controls my entire being. The right song in the right moment is everything to me. Where I live, there's a road called River Road, in the Hill Country in Texas. It's the most gorgeous place you've ever been in your life, and I'll go drive it. I know the exact minute that I should be there in the afternoons at this time of year to catch the light through the trees, and I'll have the songs I'm gonna play while I'm driving that road.
You know what song you want to hear at a certain bend in the road.Probably a little psychotic.
Are you one of these guys who wants the towels to hang on the rack just so?I like things very clean and organized.
Is that because you grew up in that kind of environment or because you grew up in the opposite?My mom was very clean and organized. But I don't know — I've never one time gone to bed with dirty dishes in the sink. My wife cooks dinner all the time when I'm home, and as soon as we're done, I do all the dishes and load the dishwasher and wipe the counters down.
You could never just chill and let it go.No, it's messy. It's gross.
Do people ever interpret your intensity as, 'This dude's kind of a d—?'People would always tell me I was cocky, and I'd be like, I don't feel cocky at all. I was raised to have great manners: take my hat off when I meet a lady, look somebody in the eye with a firm handshake, 'Yes, ma'am,' 'No, ma'am,' 'Yes, sir,' 'No, sir,' no matter the age or the gender of the person. Manners were such a crazy thing in my childhood — it's the only way I know how to speak to people. So I've always thought it was so weird, in high school, girls would be like, 'Oh, you're so cocky.'
I mean, I've seen the 'What Kinda Man' video. You obviously know you look cool.I don't think that at all. I think I look kind of dumb.
I'm not sure whether to believe you.I couldn't be more serious. This is very weird for me to say, but Frank finally put into words what I've always felt with every photographer, anybody I've ever worked with in the business since I was 19 years old — he said, 'This record sounds like Parker's heart and mind and not his face.' The fact that I'm not 5-foot-7 with a beard and covered in tattoos — it's like nobody ever thinks that the songs are gonna have any integrity.
Boo-hoo for the pretty boy.People always called me 'Hollywood,' 'pretty boy,' all this stuff. I guess it's better than calling you a f—ing fat-ass. But I've never tried to capitalize on that at any point in time. I've always just wanted to be a songwriter.
But you know how to dress.Kind of?
Come on, man — the gold chains, the Lucchese boots.That's all to compensate for the fact that I don't know what the f— to wear. I know I like gold and diamonds. Loved rappers when I was younger. Waylon Jennings wore gold chains and diamonds, Johnny Cash did — they always looked dope. I was always like, I want to do that too.
If the fans' approval isn't crucial, whose approval does mean something to you?George Strait. John Mayer. Steve Earle. My older brother. My dad.
You know Mayer?We've talked on Instagram.
Why is he such a big one for you?The commitment to the craft, I think, is what I've admired so much about him. It's funny: When I was younger, I always said I was never gonna get married and have kids because I knew John Mayer was never going to, and I really respected how he was just gonna chase whatever it is that he was chasing forever. Then he got into records like 'The Search for Everything' and 'Sob Rock,' and he kind of hints at the fact that he missed out on that — he wishes he had a wife, wishes he had kids. That really resonated with me. I was like, all right, I don't want to be 40 and alone. It completely changed my entire perspective on my future.
You played 'Courtesy Of The Red, White And Blue' by the late Toby Keith at one of Donald Trump's inaugural balls in January. What do you like about that song?I bleed red, white and blue. I'm all about the United States of America — I'm all about what it stands for. A lot of people get turned off by that nowadays. I don't care — I'm not worried about if you're patriotic or not. But Toby was a great songwriter, and I love how much he loved his country.
In that Texas Monthly interview, you said you felt it was embarrassing for people to be affected emotionally by an artist's political affiliation.Nobody used to talk about it, and now it's so polarizing. Am I not gonna listen to Neil Young now? I'm gonna listen to Neil Young all the f—ing time.
Why do you think audiences started caring?Social media and the constant flood of information and political propaganda that people are absorbing around the clock. It's just so dumb. I've got guys in my band and in my crew that are conservative and guys that are liberal. It makes no difference to me.
Of course you knew how your involvement with Trump would be taken.Think about being 16, wanting to be a country singer, then getting to go play the presidential inauguration. What a crazy honor. There's not a single president in history who was perfect — not a single one that didn't do something wrong, not a single one that only did wrong. I just don't care what people think about that stuff. Everybody feels different about things, and nowadays it's like two sides of the fence — you either agree with this or you agree with that. I'm not that way.
What do you think happens next for you?This is the only record I've ever made that I didn't think about that as soon as I walked out of the studio. I have no idea what the next record is gonna be. Not a clue.
If we meet again in two years and you've made a record full of trap beats, what would that mean?Probably that I was on drugs again.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Iconic '80s Singer and Model Wife Deemed 'Hottest Couple' in Stunning Date Night Photos
Iconic '80s Singer and Model Wife Deemed 'Hottest Couple' in Stunning Date Night Photos originally appeared on Parade. Richard Marx and Daisy Fuentes just delivered the kind of date night content that has fans saying, "Relationship goals!". The power couple shared a series of elevator mirror selfies that showcase not just their individual stunning appearances, but the kind of authentic chemistry that makes other couples take notes. The Grammy-winning Chicago native and his Cuban-born model wife proved that some combinations simply improve with time. Marx, 61, looked effortlessly sophisticated in a tan linen suit with crisp white shirt, his fashionably short hair perfectly complementing the refined elegance that's defined his decades-long career. Meanwhile, Fuentes, 58, channeled timeless glamour in an all-black ensemble featuring a flowing dress with jacket draped over her shoulders, her wavy hair cascading beautifully as she posed with characteristic grace. What makes these photos particularly captivating is the genuine affection captured between takes. The carousel reveals intimate moments where Marx gazes lovingly at his wife while she looks down coyly, followed by Fuentes looking adoringly at her husband as he focuses on the mirror. These aren't posed professional shots—they're authentic glimpses into a relationship that radiates genuine happiness. Fuentes's playful caption "Your elevator music could never" perfectly captures the couple's sense of humor while acknowledging Marx's musical legacy. The former MTV VJ's wit combined with the "Right Here Waiting" singer's charm creates content that feels both aspirational and reactions consistently celebrate their obvious connection, with comments in both English and Spanish praising their beauty and declaring them "made for each other." The international appreciation reflects both stars' global appeal—Marx through his 30 million albums sold worldwide and Fuentes through her groundbreaking role as MTV's first Latina VJ. 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 Since marrying in 2015, the couple has consistently demonstrated that second chances at love can create the most beautiful partnerships. Their ability to look simultaneously glamorous and genuinely happy proves that real relationship goals aren't about perfection—they're about finding someone who makes ordinary moments, like elevator selfies, feel extraordinary. Iconic '80s Singer and Model Wife Deemed 'Hottest Couple' in Stunning Date Night Photos first appeared on Parade on Jul 21, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 21, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword


Fox Sports
2 hours ago
- Fox Sports
'The Joel Klatt Show' Heads to Columbus Ahead of Ohio State-Texas
College Football 'The Joel Klatt Show' Heads to Columbus Ahead of Ohio State-Texas Updated Aug. 4, 2025 8:21 p.m. ET share facebook x reddit link Next stop, Columbus! That's right, "The Joel Klatt Show" is going back out on the road. Join Joel Klatt and special guests in the heart of Ohio State's campus for a live edition of the show on Aug. 28, two days before the Buckeyes host Texas — two of the top teams in Klatt's newly released preseason rankings — to open the 2025 college football season. It's all going down at Browning Amphitheater, which will serve as the backdrop for the live show. Tickets are free, but space is limited, so RSVPs are required. The first 300 guests to RSVP are guaranteed two free drinks, food and other perks. The show will be hosted by Klatt and will have some surprise guest appearances, contests and prizes. "Buckeye fans have always been incredible to us at this program, so we wanted to come out there and bring our show to you," Klatt said Monday. This will be Klatt's second live show on the road. Last year, he traveled to Madison, Wisconsin, ahead of the Badgers' game against Alabama and hosted a show with guests including former NFL stars Melvin Gordon and Mark Ingram. ADVERTISEMENT Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! share


Buzz Feed
2 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
31 "Beloved" Celebs People Think Are Actually Terrible
A while back, Reddit user brody0628 asked, "What is a celebrity everyone loves but you think is insufferable?" and people had some stronggggg opinions. Here are celebrities they think are actually bad people — along with some responses from the BuzzFeed Community and this Reddit thread. "Nick Cannon. The fact that the internet makes jokes about how many kids he has or tries to paint him as a good father because he takes his kids to Disney World is disgusting! He couldn't even remember the names of all his kids when asked. Most, if not all, of his kids are going to grow up having no relationship with him." "John Lennon. I know he's been dead for 40 years, but man, he was such a shit person." "John Stamos. He looks like a wax museum version of himself and it seems like his ego is as big as his Disney collection." —jessethecowgirlStamos also once told a story about convincing a woman she was having sex with him when it was really his friend:"[In the mid-eighties] I was in a band. I was playing somewhere in Finland, and there was a girl hanging around who was really drunk and interested in me. I wasn't into her, but my friend was. So the girl came back to my hotel, and I turned the lights down, and we started making out. I said, 'Hold on a second, I've gotta go brush my teeth.' It was dark, I left the room, and I sent in my friend who looked like me. And she thought she was having sex with me, but she was really having sex with my friend."Suggested by jeramoo "Whoopi. She's the boomerest boomer to ever exist. Has no empathy for younger generations and is constantly telling struggling millennials/Gen Z people they don't have it that bad." "Jackie Chan: Hong Kong-born but pro-Beijing. That's enough for me." "Brad Pitt isn't the stand-up guy he portrays! Maybe it was the story about him ... [allegedly] being abusive to his wife in front of his children that turned me off. Definitely not something a nice guy would do!" —quizzydog27 [Editor's note: You can read more about the plane assault allegations here, but Jolie did eventually drop the lawsuit. Pitt has denied there was any physical violence.]Pitt also dated Juliette Lewis when she was 17, and he was a decade by re89245 "I've disliked Jimmy Fallon since his SNL days when it felt like he'd break character in a sketch to get a bigger laugh. Ruffling Donald Trump's hair during his interview pretty much turned me off of him for good." —rachelc43 "Far worse is Jimmy Kimmel — he 'pranks' his family on his show, but they all seem to really hate it. I had to stop watching him during the Trump presidency because all he could do on his show was make 'fat jokes.' Trump does a million wild things; stop making the same cringey and offensive jokes from the early '90s! And if you have any doubts, look up The Man Show — absolutely horrific." —bric4349cd9f2 "Owen Wilson, a seemingly good dad to his sons, [is allegedly a] deadbeat father to his daughter: he underwent a paternity test, still refuses to meet her, and just threw money at her (he dated the child's mother on and off for five years)." —bigfinsquidWilson has not responded to these claims beyond a rep saying, 'This is a private matter, and it's not appropriate to comment further.' "Not to speak ill of the dead, but Kobe and the whole rape allegation. ... Not sure why people are so wild about him." "Matthew Broderick. Another example of rich people just not having to face consequences. For anyone that doesn't know, In 1987, he was driving during a head-on collision with another car, which killed a mother and daughter. He paid the equivalent of $175 and served no time." "Jerry Seinfeld. So many people seem to love him, and his show was wildly successful, but I can't stand him at all." "Steven Tyler, for [allegedly] convincing parents to sign a 14-year-old over to him. Then ... dumping her back on their doorstep at 17." —metal_jesterSome more info: Tyler actually admitted to having sex with a minor in his memoir. 'She was 16, she knew how to nasty, and there wasn't a hair on it," Tyler wrote. He was 26 at the time. He also wrote, 'Her parents fell in love with me, signed a paper over for me to have custody, so I wouldn't get arrested if I took her out of state. I took her on tour." It's likely that Tyler is referring to Julia Holcomb, who sued him in 2022 for sexual assault, sexual battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress back in the '70s. She says that Tyler persuaded her mother to sign over guardianship to him. Holcomb also says in court documents that she became pregnant and Tyler made her have an though not directly named in the suit, denied these claims, said their relationship was consensual, and claimed immunity because he was her legal guardian then, calling for the suit to be dismissed. Similarly..."I always find it weird that Anthony Kiedis from The Red Hot Chili Peppers admitted to having sex with a child in his autobiography, and barely a word is said about it." —bgar1432Some more info: Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers wrote about having sex with a 14-year-old in his autobiography Scar Tissue. The girl — who reportedly inspired the song "Catholic School Girls Rule" — came backstage at his concert, and the two had sex. According to Keidis, she then continued on with the band to Baton Rouge. After their show, the girl revealed that she was 14 and her father was the chief of police in her town, adding that "the entire state of Louisiana" was looking for her because she'd been reported said he wasn't scared "because, in my somewhat deluded mind, I knew that if she told the chief of police she was in love with me, he wasn't going to have me taken out to a field and shot, but I did want to get her the hell back home right away. So we had sex one more time.' He was in his mid-20s at the time. "Prince. He met his ex-wife when she was sixteen (and later declared he knew he was going to marry her right then) and then put her on birth control at nineteen after they had 'a really deep friendship' (yeah right) for three years." "[According to her,] he later made her do an interview soon after their son died, threw that son's ashes away, ... and dumped her by the time she was 26. I love the man's music, but I wish people would talk more about the hell he put Mayte Garcia through."—ToasterGuacamoleWrap "John Mulaney. He was so funny and really killing it. But what he did to his ex-wife is so terrible." —prodigalpunSome more info: Mulaney filed for divorce from Anna Marie Tendler in July 2021, after which point she released a statement reading that she was "heartbroken that John has decided to end [their] marriage." It was reported they'd broken up in February 2021, though Mulaney later claimed he'd asked for a divorce in October 2020. In September 2021, Mulaney revealed that he had been dating Olivia Munn since the spring (right off the heels of his time in rehab), and that Munn was pregnant with their child, despite the fact that Mulaney had been open about not wanting children. Mulaney has since credited Munn and their child in his recovery journey. "Doja Cat has been problematic. Even before she blew up commercially, she was being accused of racism — against Black people. Ngl, I like some of her songs, but there's a lot of mental dissociation involved for me. Sometimes I don't like being aware of this shit because this is why we can't have nice things." —pbbtDoja denied participating in racist conversations and apologized for her behavior in chat rooms when she was younger. "Oprah was basically the O.G. Jerry Springer and pioneered that genre of shock-garbage-emotional-manipulation TV. Now she's interviewing Prince Harry like she's Barbara fucking Walters or something. I don't get it." "Nicki Minaj, and thankfully everyone's finally starting to get it. All this information came out back in, like, 2021, and it somehow got swept under the rug. I never got good feelings from her." "Drake is creepy, the way he befriends young teen girls! That's a weird thing for a grown ass man to do." "I can't stand Kevin Hart. He's not funny, and his stand-up shows are forced laughter in a nutshell." "Tom Cruise. Scientology." "Gwyneth Paltrow. She can Goop right outta here." "Julia Roberts." "Fred Armisen. Of that SNL era I like pretty much everyone else; he just deeply skeeves me out for some reason." "Bill Murray. I don't hate him, but for some reason the internet thinks he is God's gift to comedy. He's alright, but he's nowhere close to the idol that the internet makes him out to be." "I know I'll get hate for this but Jim Carrey. I find the guy totally obnoxious! He seems like he's got one schtick and that's all he knows." "Leonardo DiCaprio. He seems like such a creep." "Paul Walker. He...[reportedly] dated a 16-year-old in his 30s." "Johnny Depp. I think he's overhyped. Used to be a fan, but the last decade he lost his shine for me." And finally, "Drew Barrymore." What "beloved" celebrity do you think is actually a bad person? Let us know in the comments.