Josh Crutchmer
View all posts by Josh Crutchmer June 12, 2026
Koe Wetzel processes the stardom that came from his 2024 album '9 Lives' on new LP 'The Night Champion.' John Park* Koe Wetzel brought together a mix of friends, industry VIPs, and journalists at a Nashville speakeasy late last month to preview The Night Champion, his sixth studio album and first since 2024’s 9 Lives transcended his career from cult Texas artist to mainstream country star.
The plan was for Wetzel to play a handful of tunes off the LP, which dropped on Friday, before settling into a series of handshakes and selfies with a crowd that mingled at cocktail tables and velvet couches. It was a far more intimate setting than one of country music’s most outsized personalities is accustomed to playing, but Wetzel decided to lean into the moment.
“When I talk about The Night Champion, and the sound up to now, it’s almost like closing a book,” Wetzel tells Rolling Stone.
Indeed, a lot has changed for the Pittsburg, Texas, native since 9 Lives: Wetzel has gotten engaged and became a father, and, in many ways, The Night Champion represents the final chapter of his answers-to-nobody era. “I don’t know what’s coming. I’m always going to be brutally honest when it comes to the lyrics, but I do feel like this record really embodies the wild, crazy, says-whatever type of guy I’ve been for 10 years,” he says.
As he did on 9 Lives, Wetzel teamed up with producer Gabe Simon (Noah Kahan) to record The Night Champion. They hadn’t set out to record an album, and were looking only to cut a few singles to keep momentum going after 9 Lives. “Before we knew it, we had a record,” Wetzel recalls now.
Ahead of Friday’s release, Wetzel had already given fans a dose of The Night Champion with its lead single about toxic relationships, “Hurts Like You.” Across the rest of the 11 tracks, he turns introspective on “Time Goes On,” defiantly embraces a breakup on “I’ll Lock Up,” and owns his vices on “The Man.” In one outside song, “Circus,” written by Sam Harris, he offers his perspective on music stardom. “When the lights come up, I’m still the same sad fuck,” he sings, “Guess the circus wasn’t what I thought it was.”
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“We’re trying to find the perfect balance between understanding what he’s saying and him being fucked up,” Simon says of Wetzel’s approach to the album’s song choices. “There’s a sweet spot.”
Wetzel kicks off the U.S and Canada portion of The Night Champion World Tour in July — a four-month, coast-to-coast run aimed largely at arenas and amphitheaters, with opening acts like Ole 60, Shane Smith & the Saints, and Wyatt Flores. There’s high-end production, a sound pushing decibel tolerance levels, and a set list that features requisites both old, “February 28, 2016,” and new, “High Road,” Wetzel’s collab with Jessie Murph that became a crossover hit.