Coltt Winter Lepley – “Bandito”

Every once in a while a song stops me cold — not because it’s loud or clever, but because it makes me ask an uncomfortable question:

How in the hell did I miss this?

I live, eat, and breathe this kind of music. I spend my days digging through outlaw records, Red Dirt deep cuts, Appalachian truth-tellers, and barroom poets who still believe a song oughta mean something. I pride myself on catching the good ones early.

And somehow… Bandito slipped past me.

That’s on me.

Because this song is pure gold — the kind Bandito supposedly stole and the kind most folks stop looking for. Coltt Winter Lepley writes with restraint, confidence, and an understanding that silence can say more than a chorus ever will. No rhinestones. No smoke. Just a story that knows exactly when to speak and when to step back.

Bandito feels like folklore you overheard instead of something that was handed to you. You’re never sure if the outlaw’s real, remembered, or invented — and by the time you start wondering, you’re already too deep to back out. That’s elite songwriting. The kind you don’t explain… you just nod at.

In a genre that’s crowded with folks dressing up as outlaws, Coltt doesn’t have to raise his voice or wave a flag. He just tells the truth and lets it sit there. That takes nerve. That takes trust in the song.

So if you’re like me — someone who thought they had a pretty good handle on where the real ones live — do yourself a favor and hit play.

Because Bandito isn’t just worth finding… it’s worth admitting you missed.

Appalachia Forever: Philip Bowen

Appalachia Forever isn’t just another roots record. It’s a reckoning — the sound of a man carrying his home on his back and setting it down in front of the world with pride.

So if you’re tired of bubble-wrapped country and ready for something that actually feels like America — muddy boots, cracked hands, fiddle fire and all — give this one a spin.

Philip Bowen didn’t just make an album.

He built a mountain you can climb.

Bowen didn’t just invite voices; he invited kindred spirits:

Charles Wesley Godwin lends that coal-black vocal grit on “Blue As Water,” a song that feels like standing on the edge of a hollow, lookin’ down at your past.

Josiah & The Bonnevilles pour raw emotion into “Sure Could Use The Rain,” the kind of track that’ll break your heart and bless it all at once.

Julia DiGrazia brings a haunting beauty to “Hurricane,” while Madison Hughes softens the storm with “Slow It Down.”

Leon Majcen joins for “Big Fish,” a perfect closer — equal parts weary, wide-eyed, and wise.

It’s collaboration done right — every guest adds a layer, not a gimmick. Together, they build something that feels ancient and alive at the same time.