Wheeler Walker Jr. is country music’s loudest outlaw, a hard-drinking, foul-mouthed hellraiser determined to drag country music back to its outlaw roots, whether Nashville likes it or not. Backed by top-tier session musicians and armed with a complete disregard for industry rules, Walker built a cult empire through brutally honest songs packed with sex, bad decisions, and unapologetic Southern swagger. Blending classic honky-tonk, outlaw country, Southern rock, and arena-sized attitude, albums including Redneck Shit, Ol’ Wheeler, WW III, Sex, Drugs & Country Music, and Ram turned Walker into one of the most controversial, and undeniably entertaining, figures in modern country music.
Walker first exploded onto the scene in 2016 with the now-infamous Redneck Shit, featuring viral tracks that mainstream country radio wouldn’t touch but fans couldn’t get enough of. While Nashville polished itself into a commercial machine full of influencers, sponsorships, and algorithm-approved heartbreak songs, Wheeler built a fiercely loyal fanbase by saying exactly what everybody else was too scared to say. His records are equal parts rebellion and a genuine love letter to classic country music’s raw, unfiltered spirit.
Over the last decade, Wheeler has released five acclaimed albums that all hit #1 on Billboard’s Comedy chart, with two of them debuting in the Top 10 on Billboard’s Country chart. He has amassed more than one billion career streams and earned two PLATINUM and GOLD-certified records. Bursting onto the scene with his debut album Redneck Shit, he was the first artist to ever simultaneously chart on Billboard’s Country Album (#9) and Comedy Album (#1) charts.
But now, Wheeler is finally PULLIN’ OUT of the new redneck Vegas that Music City has become and has announced his impending retirement. Releasing his final album on September 25, he’ll start throwing middle fingers on his accompanying farewell tour this October. Although WW Jr. may be going to live in rural isolation, or in federal custody, his sold-out tours, chart-topping albums and fanatic fanbase are proof that his cultural impact on outlaw country’s modern resurgence will forever live on