Last updated: 9 hours ago
Bryan Martin Scott is a name passed quietly from one jukebox to the next, whispered over whiskeys in the backwoods bars and honky-tonks of the American South. At 59, he's not chasing the spotlight — he's the shadow just outside it. A worn voice, carved by years and regret, telling stories you don’t just hear — you feel them settle in your bones.
His music is the rough-cut heart of the South: a dark blend of outlaw country, southern rock, gothic blues, and haunted Americana. These songs aren’t made for the charts — they’re made for empty roads, sleepless nights, and anyone who knows what it means to carry ghosts. You’ll hear the echoes of gospel hymns, not in praise, but in reckoning.
Bryan Martin Scott isn’t just a musician. He’s a living story, a man raised on dirt roads, hard lessons, and the kind of pain that never quite leaves you. Each track is a torn page from a life that’s been lived hard — part memoir, part myth. The people in his songs are real, or might as well be. Lovers. Sinners. Drifters. Himself, mostly.
He’s been called a southern gothic chronicler, a storyteller of the forgotten, and a ghost at the crossroads of truth and music.
If you’ve ever found healing in pain, if you’ve ever driven through the dark with nothing but a voice on the radio and your own memories to guide you — you’re already part of his story.
For fans of: Johnny Cash, Glenn Danzig, Waylon Jennings, Chris Stapleton, The Dead South, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, and Black Label Society.
His music is the rough-cut heart of the South: a dark blend of outlaw country, southern rock, gothic blues, and haunted Americana. These songs aren’t made for the charts — they’re made for empty roads, sleepless nights, and anyone who knows what it means to carry ghosts. You’ll hear the echoes of gospel hymns, not in praise, but in reckoning.
Bryan Martin Scott isn’t just a musician. He’s a living story, a man raised on dirt roads, hard lessons, and the kind of pain that never quite leaves you. Each track is a torn page from a life that’s been lived hard — part memoir, part myth. The people in his songs are real, or might as well be. Lovers. Sinners. Drifters. Himself, mostly.
He’s been called a southern gothic chronicler, a storyteller of the forgotten, and a ghost at the crossroads of truth and music.
If you’ve ever found healing in pain, if you’ve ever driven through the dark with nothing but a voice on the radio and your own memories to guide you — you’re already part of his story.
For fans of: Johnny Cash, Glenn Danzig, Waylon Jennings, Chris Stapleton, The Dead South, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, and Black Label Society.
Monthly Listeners
225
Monthly Listeners History
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Followers
127
Followers History
Track the evolution of followers over the last 28 days.