Todd Snider passed away on Friday. This one hurts.
Todd lived the kind of artistic life that felt unfiltered and cosmic, marked by humor, heartbreak, grit, and a spirit that refused to fade. Fans loved him because his songs felt alive. He wrote like a friend telling the truth. He performed like someone who understood that connection was the whole point. His passing leaves a space that American roots music will feel for a long time.
Here are 50 thing you need to know about the man.
50 Facts About Todd Snider
- Todd Snider was born on October 11, 1966 in Portland, Oregon.
- He grew up in Beaverton and graduated from Beaverton High School in 1985.
- After high school he attended Santa Rosa Junior College for one semester.
- He learned to play harmonica while studying in Santa Rosa.
- He moved to San Marcos, Texas with the help of his brother, who bought his plane ticket.
- He decided to become a songwriter after seeing Jerry Jeff Walker perform at Gruene Hall.
- He began writing songs the day after that show.
- He bought a guitar because of seeing Walker perform.
- His first writers night was at Cheatham Street Warehouse in San Marcos.
- Kent Finlay became his early mentor and introduced him to writers like Prine and Kristofferson.
- He quickly began packing small rooms in San Marcos.
- He soon developed a following in Austin.
- While living in San Marcos he discovered the music of Keith Sykes.
- Snider sent Sykes a demo tape that led him to move to Memphis.
- He earned a weekly residency at The Daily Planet in Memphis.
- Audiences at The Daily Planet already knew his songs and sang along.
- He met John Prine in 1991 while assisting on preproduction for Prine’s album The Missing Years.
- In 1992 he signed a development deal with Capitol Records.
- Capitol declined to pick up his option for a full album.
- His early band was called the Bootleggers before he renamed them the Nervous Wrecks.
- By 1994 the Nervous Wrecks lineup included Will Kimbrough, Joe Mariencheck, and Joe McLeary.
- He signed with Margaritaville Records after Bob Mercer saw him perform in Memphis.
- His debut album Songs for the Daily Planet reached number 23 on Billboard’s Heatseekers chart.
- The hidden track Talking Seattle Grunge Rock Blues became a minor radio hit.
- The Alright Guy video was in rotation on VH1.
- Billboard praised his second album Step Right Up as more stunning than his debut.
- His third album Viva Satellite was recorded mainly at Ardent Studios in Memphis.
- He was released from his MCA contract after an incident at a private performance.
- He next signed with John Prine’s Oh Boy Records.
- His album Happy To Be Here was recorded solo acoustic with instrumentation added later.
- New Connection was released by Oh Boy in 2002.
- His 2003 live album Near Truths and Hotel Rooms documented his post Wrecks solo shows.
- East Nashville Skyline was released in 2004 and became a cultural breakthrough.
- Pitchfork called East Nashville Skyline the wittiest and feistiest album of his career.
- The album included the songs Play a Train Song and The Ballad of the Kingsmen.
- He released Peace, Love and Anarchy, a collection of rarities, in 2007.
- That Was Me collected material from his Margaritaville and MCA years.
- The Devil You Know was released in 2006 and reached number 4 on the Heatseekers chart.
- He performed material from The Devil You Know at Grimey’s in Nashville in 2006.
- He launched his own label, Aimless Records, in 2008.
- Peace Queer was Aimless Records’ first release.
- His album The Excitement Plan was produced by Don Was and released in 2009.
- His double disc Live: The Storyteller was released in 2011.
- He released Agnostic Hymns and Stoner Fables in 2012.
- That same year he released a tribute album to Jerry Jeff Walker titled Time As We Know It.
- He cofounded the band Hard Working Americans in 2013.
- The First Waltz documentary and live recordings were released in 2014.
- Hard Working Americans released their second album Rest in Chaos in 2016.
- Snider released the folk focused Cash Cabin Sessions Vol. 3 in 2019.
- He died on November 14, 2025, following complications that developed after a violent assault eleven days earlier.


