Country Soul Breakout Kashus Culpepper Steps Into the Spotlight With Debut Album ‘Act I’

 For GRAMMY Artist to Watch Kashus Culpepper, music has always been about following an authentic path rather than a predictable one. His journey now culminates in the stunning Act I, his highly anticipated debut album that deftly mixes Americana twang, intimate soul and searing Southern rock. 

“Creating music has been the greatest joy of my life,” shares Culpepper. “What a magical thing it is. My debut album Act I serves as a beginning of that journey. I want to thank my label, band, friends and family for helping me bring this album to life! And thank you to every musical idol I’ve ever had.”

Some of culture’s most coveted co-signs pre-date the album’s release and usher in this moment. Icons and musical heroes like Elton John have claimed Kashus is, “if Bill Withers made country music,” [here] and John Mayer shared he’s “as good as it gets.” Rolling Stone declares: “If what we’ve heard so far is any indication, expect 2026 to be a breakthrough year for this Alabama singer;” while Paste concludes that, “the idea that Act I is Culpepper’s debut album is challenging… since he seems like one of those inevitable artists who has always been;” Nashville Lifestyles calls the debut “a blockbuster… the scene-stealing talent is just getting started;” and Parade logs the album as one of the five most highly anticipated country albums of the year.

Today’s 18-track release reveals the different facets of Culpepper’s sound and storytelling. The silky soul of “Break Me Like” and “Alabama Beauty Queen” are emotional high points, with the latter serving as a love letter to his hometown. The sweeping piano ballad “Cherry Rose” emerged from a friend’s frustration with work she hated, evolving into a song about people “doing work, just to get by, because they have to.” The swirling rock of “In Her Eyes” begins with a guitar tuning he learned at a blues café in the Mississippi Delta, before evolving into a ferocious, psychedelic number about knowingly getting involved with the wrong person. “Broken Wing Bird” features a guest turn from Sierra Ferrell, with the pair’s distinctive voices seamlessly blending over a delicate guitar part.  

Culpepper chose to record Act I at Ivy Manor Studio in Muscle Shoals—a decision rooted in both Alabama pride and musical history. “So much history between the soul giants of the world, like Aretha and Wilson Pickett, and then some of my favorite bands, like the Allman Brothers,” he notes. The converted mansion became the birthplace of his distinctive sound, a blend of country, soul and blues that reflects everything he absorbed growing up.

This year Culpepper takes his timeless new album on the road for headliners in New York, Boston, Nashville and more amidst dates in Australia with Wyatt Flores and an opening slot supporting Eric Church. For more information or tickets, visit kashusculpepper.com.

Act I Tracklist
Intro (Kashus Culpepper, Jordan Dozzi, Jacob Durrett)
Southern Man (feat. Marcus King) (Kashus Culpepper, Bear Rinehart)
Alabama Beauty Queen (Kashus Culpepper, Luke Preston, Diego Urias)
Woman (Kashus Culpepper, Anderson East)
Break Me Like (Kashus Culpepper, Grady Block, Hank Compton)
Believe (Kashus Culpepper, Foy Vance)
Stay (Kashus Culpepper, Jordan Dozzi, Jacob Durrett)
Mean To Me (Kashus Culpepper, Oscar Charles, Diego Urias, Matt Warren)
Broken Wing Bird (feat. Sierra Ferrell) (Kashus Culpepper, Brian Elmquist)
Better Weather (Kashus Culpepper, Luke Preston)
That’s The Feeling (Kashus Culpepper, Brian Elmquist)
Man Of His Word (Kashus Culpepper, Natalie Hemby)
In Her Eyes (Kashus Culpepper, Brent Cobb, Oscar Charles)
Is It True (Kashus Culpepper, Rhett Akins, Rocky Block)
After Me? (Kashus Culpepper, Mark Addison Chandler)
Out Of My Mind (Kashus Culpepper, Brian Elmquist)
House On A Hill (Kashus Culpepper, Rhett Akins, Jimi Bell)
Cherry Rose (Kashus Culpepper, Mikky Ekko, Brian Elmquist)

Alabama-born country crooner Kashus Culpepper encompasses the sound of the South. A student and reverent purveyor of Southern music – country, soul, blues, folk and rock – Culpepper’s husky, sandpaper growl bellows like a freight train over self-penned stories that are as raw and real as they are haunting. Finding his voice in church as young as five years old, it wasn’t until 2020’s global pandemic that Culpepper went from listener to performer, picking up a guitar and learning cover songs to play at barrack bonfires in Rota, Spain during his deployment with the Navy. Covers soon became originals, and once he landed home on U.S. shores, Kash played dive bars up and down the Mississippi Gulf Coast, making a name for himself with the fresh-yet-reminiscent sound that oozes from his very being. Crashing into prominence, Culpepper sold out headline club shows throughout the South before formally releasing a single song. With Nashville taking notice, Culpepper found a musical home at Big Loud Records. Culpepper has joined Leon Bridges, Sierra Ferrell and Darius Rucker on tour – embarking this year on a headlining run as well as dates with Wyatt Flores and Eric Church. Named one of the 2026 Shazam Fast Forward Class, WXPN’s Artist to Watch for January 2026, 2026 Nashville Scene Artist to Watch, GRAMMY.com’s 25 Artists to Watch in 2025, Apple Music Zane Lowe’s 25 Artists for ’25, 2025 Variety Power of Young Hollywood Impact Report, Opry NextStage Class of 2025, Billboard’s February 2025 Country Rookie of the Month, 2025 Amazon Music Bonfire Artist to Watch, Apple Music’s February 2025 Country Riser of the Month, 2025 Pandora Country Artist to Watch and Martin Artist Showcase Class of 2025, Rolling Stone declares: “If what we’ve heard so far is any indication, expect 2026 to be a breakthrough year for this Alabama singer.” Culpepper’s debut album Act I is out now.