āA lot of people have it backwards,ā says Jelly Roll. āThey make music for money, not for people. I always say that I make music for people, not for moneyāand the byproduct of people listening to it is that you might make some money.ā
Outright genre-bending singer/songwriter/rapper Jelly Roll has quietly been building a remarkable career and creative empire, under the radarā under the nose of Nashvilleās Music Row and the entire music industryā and doing it on his own terms. Since his days selling his mixtapes out of his car, he has constantly been creating and releasing new music and videos, touring relentlessly, and consistently topping various iTunes charts with his deeply personal lyrics and music that blends Old-school Rap, Classic Rock, Country, and Soul that is therapeutic, raw and tackles the heaviness in life.
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In 2020 he released āSave Meāāa confessional, vulnerable expression of self-doubt that took him to new heights, with more than 65 million views on YouTube and Gold certification from the RIAA. The song also helped him find a new voice musically and explore a more melodic songwriting style that brought in more Rock and Country influence to his style.
Born and raised in Nashvilleās Antioch neighborhood, Jelly Roll found his strategy by observing the different tactics taken in different genres. āI love the way Rock nā Roll artists tour,ā he says. āUp-and-coming Rock artists do like 200 shows a year. But I hate the way they put out music. They put out an album every three years. When I was coming up, it was the mixtape era, and my favorite rappers had a new CD out every four months. So I wanted to tour like a Rock nā Roll act, but release music like a rapper.ā
In the last ten years, Jelly Roll has released a mind-blowing two dozen-plus albums, including the ongoing Waylon & Willie collaboration projects with his best friend and running partner, Struggle Jennings. Heās also put out countless singles, EPs, and features with such artists as Tech N9ne and Yelawolf. He also averaged more than 200 shows each yearāsomething not many of his peers are able to maintain. Itās added up to hundreds of millions of streams and a cult following of rabid fans that hang on his every word and generate millions of YouTube views with each video. He has now amassed more than one billion views on YouTube.
He notes that his unstoppable work ethic is a carryover from his days on the street. The former addict and drug dealer says, āI took the hustle from my previous work life,ā he says. āDrug dealers never take a day offāI had an eight-ball for you on Easter, Iād step outside a family funeral to sell you a sack of weed. These days, I put more emphasis on balancing time with my family but I still apply that drive to music.ā
The husband, father, and underground star on the path to redemption has since embraced the concept of duality, making sure to dedicate himself to his loved ones as well as his craft. He cherishes those daddy-daughter dinners and movie dates, celebrating Halloween together and their annual family vacation. That being said, once a hustler, always a hustlerāfinding that his creativity is something he canāt turn off, and he has arranged his life to accommodate the perpetual workflow, making sure to have a guitar on every wall of the house for when a song hitsāwhich often includes writing songs with his daughter.
2021 brought more headlining shows andāfor the first timeāan album on which Jelly Roll is only singing (not rapping but for one lone verse) and of which all demos were recorded acoustic. āIām nervous because thatās stepping into the unknown for me, but I never want to feel like Iām enclosed in a certain boxāmaybe being incarcerated kind of bleeds over into thinking about my artistry,ā he says. āThe album leans more toward Southern Rock-Soul with some real stripped-down acoustic records and some real heavy shit. The older you get, the more melodic things seem to be and this project is definitely reflective of my own journey and finding my voice.ā
Certainly, the success of āSave Meā (which was written on a Sunday, recorded and filmed on Monday, and posted to YouTube on Tuesday) was a turning point for Jelly Roll and laid the foundation for this next chapter of his musical journey. āWhen I put that out, I was expecting it to fall on deaf ears,ā he says, āand I was cool with it, because the song meant so much to me. It gave me a real sense of freedom because Iāve always shared my soul in the music, but how stripping it down really moved people and that I could do it anyway I want to meant a lotāit was also freeing to really sing on it and nice to know people donāt think I suck when I sing.ā
On September 17, ahead of his sold-out show at the Ryman Auditorium in his hometown of Nashville, Jelly Roll released Ballads of the Broken, an introspective 10-track album delves deeper into his current season of life and his growthāboth personally and sonically. Drawing from his own personal experiences, addressing his strugglesāwith relationships, substances, mental health, and life in generalāthe project tells the story of a man who has been through the wringer, has gotten his feet back under him but knows he has a long way to go. Ballads of the Broken doesnāt shy away from the dark for one second but instead embraces talking about the hardships and emotional turmoil life can bring with songs like āHollowā and āFucked Up Over Youā telling you exactly how badly something can hurt.
āPain is an international languageāeverybody shares it to some degreeābeing out on the road and meeting fans, Iāve learned that the more open you are in talking about it, the more people can relate to it. Hearing their stories and seeing how affected they are by the words I write means more than theyāll ever know.ā
Being vulnerable and sharing deep emotions might not be what you expect from a burly former inmate with face tattoos and piercings, but Jelly Rollās music is deeply rooted in the challenges of self-preservation, internal battles, and that push and pull between fighting what you need to do and what you want to do. Revisiting that concept of duality, Jelly Roll writes about his place on both sides of the line with the haunting āSon of a Sinner,ā as well as the vices that hurt and heal at the same time in the lead track off the project, āSober.ā
Even as his own life has changed for the better, he expects to keep drawing on those struggles for inspiration. āWhat I know about recovery, and my connection with it, is that itās a daily battle,ā he says. āThatās why writing songs about it never gets oldābecause you never know how youāre going to feel about it today. I love writing songs for the people nobody writes songs for. I could write a song about a truck and get on country radio, but I think thereās enough truck songs and that I need to write for other people.ā
The success heās had, and the lane heās created, hasnāt made Jelly Roll any less hungry or less passionate about his music and his need to tell the truth. āThey asked Dana White how he felt after he sold the UFC for four billion dollars,ā he says, āand he said, āAll thatās great, but when I wake up in the morning, I think about one thingāwhatās the best fight I can make?ā And in my world, the first thing I think is, what is the best song I can write? Whatās going to mean the most? So as long as I can continue to write good songs with a reason behind them, thatās the goal.ā
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