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Tyler halverson

  • Templeton Mercantile 508 South Main Street Templeton, CA, 93465 United States (map)

Good Medicine & Numbskull Productions Present: TYLER HALVERSON live at Club Car Bar!

7:30pm - All Ages - Tickets available now at the link below!

Full bar + food menu will be available for purchase onsite.

“Tyler Halverson knows who he is, and sometimes he doesn’t like it. But all of the mistakes he’s made and hearts he’s broken have led him to In Defense of Drinking, his stone-cold honest country album that takes a stark look at a life lived on the road.

“It’s been a life spent falling in and out of love and finding something to write about, at the expense of your heart and somebody’s else’s,” Halverson says. “I’m not proud of the actions that that boy took to inspire these songs. But I’m very proud of how they turned out. The Nashville scene today is all so pretty and polished, and some artists try to come out looking a certain way, but how about you just show yourself exactly how you are, the good and bad?”

Growing up in the tiny town of Canton, South Dakota, Halverson has never been afraid to be himself. Before he answered the call of the road, playing bars and rodeo beer gardens, he spent as much time on his skateboard as he did showing cattle at livestock shows. “I grew up in sale barns and skate parks,” he says, and those two disparate worlds inform the music he makes. There’s a decidedly alt-country edge to the songs on In Defense of Drinking, including the thumping, unrepentant single “More Hearts Than Horses.”

“If you come walking my way/I’ll send you running someday,” he sings over pedal steel and acoustic guitar. It’s an admission as striking as that of Willie and Waylon, when they sang “Take what you need from the ladies and leave them/with the words of a sad country song” in “My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys.”

“That comes with the territory of being a troubadour,” Halverson says. “It’s a warning: whatever you’ve heard about cowboys and cowboy singers is probably true, and sometimes you best just leave it alone.”

Recorded at Amber Sound in Hermitage, Tennessee, and produced by Halverson, Ryan Youmans, and Gary Stanton (of Muscadine Bloodline), In Defense of Drinking builds on the foundation Halverson created with his 2024 Western Amerijuana project. There are songs about self-induced heartbreak (the alt-rock/country stomper “Ft. Worth Losing”), self-medication (the deceptively gentle title track), and the desperate search for redemption (the hushed hymn “Son Brother Believer”), all of it shot through with a decidedly Western vibe.

Halverson comes by that aesthetic naturally. He spent time not only in his native South Dakota, but all throughout the American West, including playing cowboy on a Wyoming ranch (which inspired the cult hit “Mac Miller”). “Beer Garden Baby,” his beloved fan favorite, was born from those rodeo gigs, and he re-records it as a duet with Parker McCollum for In Defense of Drinking. He’s also set to open a string of shows for the Texas-turned-Nashville-star.”

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Line Dancing Night at Club Car Bar