Tyler Childers

Singer

Birthday June 21, 1991

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Lawrence County, Kentucky

Age 32 years old

Nationality United States

#3301 Most Popular

1950

The release was followed by the announcement of a new upcoming album Rustin' In the Rain. The accompanying music video for the single was written by Silas House, and depicts a relationship between two gay coal miners in the 1950s.

Rustin' In the Rain was released on September 8, 2023.

The album features a cover of S.G. Goodman's song "Space and Time".

Childers was announced as one of the headliners in the 2024 Bourbon & Beyond festival in his home state, taking place in Louisville, KY in September.

Childers' music is influenced by his home state of Kentucky and its connection to country music and bluegrass.

He often writes about coal mining, which was his father's occupation, and its effects.

Rebecca Bengal, writing for The Guardian, described Childers' songs as a "counternarrative to the outsiders who seek to perpetuate stereotypes of backwardness and poverty."

1962

"All Your'n", the second single from the album, was nominated for Best Country Solo Performance at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards.

1991

Timothy Tyler Childers (born June 21, 1991) is an American singer and songwriter.

His music is a mix of neotraditional country, bluegrass, and folk.

2009

He attended Lawrence County High School until he transferred to nearby Paintsville, in Johnson County, Kentucky, from which he graduated in 2009.

Fellow country musicians Chris Stapleton (Staffordsville), Loretta Lynn (Butcher Hollow), and Crystal Gayle also hail from Johnson County, while Sturgill Simpson, a known acquaintance of Childers’, hails from nearby Jackson County.

Childers studied for a semester at Western Kentucky University, and enrolled at Bluegrass Community and Technical College for a few semesters.

He dropped out of college and did odd jobs for some time while pursuing a music career.

Childers began performing in Lexington, Kentucky and Huntington, West Virginia.

2011

In 2011, when he was 19, Childers released his first album, Bottles And Bibles.

2013

He has also released two EPs recorded in 2013 at Red Barn Radio, a radio show from Lexington.

The two EPs were later released as one under the name Live on Red Barn Radio I & II after the success of his album Purgatory, and reached No. 5 on Heatseekers Albums.

He performed with a backing band called The Food Stamps.

2017

He released his breakout studio album Purgatory in August 2017.

Childers has released six studio albums and a number of EPs and singles.

Tyler Childers was born and raised in Lawrence County, Kentucky.

His father worked in the coal industry and his mother is a nurse.

He learned to sing in church where he sang in the church choir.

He started to play guitar and write songs when he was around 13.

He had his first success with Purgatory, released on August 4, 2017.

The album was produced by Sturgill Simpson and David Ferguson and recorded at The Butcher Shoppe in Nashville.

Simpson also played guitar and sang backing vocals on the album, with Miles Miller on drums, Stuart Duncan on fiddle and Russ Paul on other instruments.

It debuted at No. 1 on Billboard's Heatseekers Albums chart, No. 17 on the Country albums chart and No. 4 on the Americana/Folk albums chart.

2018

In September 2018, Childers won Emerging Artist of the Year at the 2018 Americana Music Honors & Awards, where he gave an acceptance speech noted for its criticism of the Americana genre label, saying that "as a man who identifies as a country music singer, I feel Americana ain't no part of nothing and is a distraction from the issues that we're facing on a bigger level as country music singers. It kind of feels like purgatory."

2019

Country Squire, a second album under the Hickman Holler label, and Childers' third overall, was released on August 2, 2019.

This album was again produced by Simpson and Ferguson.

The video of the lead single from the album House Fire was also released on May 16, 2019.

2020

On September 18, 2020, Childers released Long Violent History, an album consisting mainly of traditional fiddle tracks.

The album closes with the title track, which discusses racism, civil unrest, and police brutality.

He released a video message to accompany the song, in which he discussed his intention for the album in general and the title track in particular, calling for empathy above all else, and explaining that the profits from the album will support underserved communities in the Appalachian region, through Childers' Hickman Holler Appalachian Relief Fund.

On September 30, 2022, Childers released a triple album Can I Take My Hounds to Heaven?.

The album is divided into three parts: Hallelujah, Jubilee, and Joyful Noise, and eight songs are presented in three different ways (Jubilee versions for example have additional instruments added to the Hallelujah version).

The album charted at No. 8, which is Childers' first top 10 album on Billboard 200, based on 27,000 units earned in the first week.

Childers released a new single in July 2023 titled "In Your Love", which was co-written with Geno Seale.