Last updated: 8 hours ago
Aaron Blackwell writes outlaw country-rock with blues edges and big, melodic hooks. Born November 2, 1990 in Knoxville, Tennessee, he grew up between backroad bars, garage bands, and long nights with a notebook. His voice—powerful, raspy, and human—carries stories about work, loyalty, and the miles between mercy and mistake.
Blackwell’s debut album Moonshine Saints (out now on all platforms) plants his flag: country, rock, and a cinematic sweep that still feels hand-played. The record moves from the barroom confessional of “Whiskey Psalms” to the rebel anthem “Wolf Chapel Badge,” the desert-noir run of “Santa Bala,” and the duet **“Outlaw Love (feat. Caela Raye).” You’ll hear steel-string swagger, Rhodes and upright piano, bowed strings, low brass, and a rhythm section that hits like a live room.
Signed to Wolf Chapel Music, Aaron keeps his compass set on honesty over polish. He writes the way he lives—straightforward, a little scarred, always reaching for a chorus you can shout back. Whether he’s on a tailgate at midnight or under stage lights, the songs aim for connection: names carved in wood, vows kept in the dark, and the kind of melody that lingers long after the amps cool down.
Follow to hear new singles, acoustic cuts, and the road that comes next from Knoxville to wherever the map runs out.
Blackwell’s debut album Moonshine Saints (out now on all platforms) plants his flag: country, rock, and a cinematic sweep that still feels hand-played. The record moves from the barroom confessional of “Whiskey Psalms” to the rebel anthem “Wolf Chapel Badge,” the desert-noir run of “Santa Bala,” and the duet **“Outlaw Love (feat. Caela Raye).” You’ll hear steel-string swagger, Rhodes and upright piano, bowed strings, low brass, and a rhythm section that hits like a live room.
Signed to Wolf Chapel Music, Aaron keeps his compass set on honesty over polish. He writes the way he lives—straightforward, a little scarred, always reaching for a chorus you can shout back. Whether he’s on a tailgate at midnight or under stage lights, the songs aim for connection: names carved in wood, vows kept in the dark, and the kind of melody that lingers long after the amps cool down.
Follow to hear new singles, acoustic cuts, and the road that comes next from Knoxville to wherever the map runs out.
Monthly Listeners
106
Monthly Listeners History
Track the evolution of monthly listeners over the last 28 days.
Followers
30
Followers History
Track the evolution of followers over the last 28 days.