Jelly Roll: Stagecoach Full Show (4.26.25)
This is Jelly Roll performing LIVE at Stagecoach 2025 on April 26th. All credit to @RemasterKingdom6.0 . Also, be sure to follow Wyatt's Metal Life on social media as well, if you'd like.
#jellyroll #stagecoach #wyattsmetallife
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WyattsMetalLife
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wyattsmetallife9628/
Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/wyattsmetallife
Snapchat: https://snapchat.com/add/wbirdwell96/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@wyattsmetallife
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/WyattsMetalLife
Setlist:
Heart of Stone (Intro Tape)
Heart of Stone
Get By (Band introductions at the beginning, with drum solo from Pork Chop)
Liar
Lonely Road (mgk cover) (with mgk)
My Ex's Best Friend (mgk cover) (with mgk)
Son of a Sinner
Amen (with Shaboozey)
Texas (BigXthaPlug cover) (with BigXthaPlug) (Shaboozey was standing in the background)
The Largest (BigXthaPlug cover) (with BigXthaPlug)
Wild Ones (Jessie Murph cover) (with Jessie Murph)
Ordinary (Alex Warren cover) (with Alex Warren)
Oh My Brother (with Alex Warren) (Unreleased)
She (Changed the second verse to "he")
I Am Not Okay
Halfway to Hell
Sweet Home Alabama/How You Remind Me/California Love/Flowers
Young, Wild & Free (Snoop Dogg & Wiz Khalifa cover) (with Wiz Khalifa) (Snippet)
Black and Yellow (Wiz Khalifa cover) (with Wiz Khalifa)
Need a Favor
Hard Fought Hallelujah (Brandon Lake cover) (with Brandon Lake)
Save Me (with Lana Del Rey) (Extended Outro)
Summary:
Jelly Roll, born Jason DeFord in the gritty outskirts of Nashville, Tennessee, is the kind of artist who doesn’t just sing about pain—he's lived it. He’s not your polished, radio-made superstar. He’s a tattooed, rough-around-the-edges outlaw who clawed his way from the bottom with nothing but his voice, his demons, and a refusal to quit. He started out in the trenches of the Southern hip-hop scene, hustling mixtapes out of the trunk of a car and spitting bars about street life, addiction, incarceration, and the kind of soul-breaking battles most people only watch from a distance.
But Jelly didn’t stay in just one lane—he’s a genre-bender, a musical shapeshifter who poured country grit, rock soul, and southern rap swagger into something uniquely his own. He’s not afraid to get ugly in his lyrics, to talk about the pills, the prison time, the broken relationships, the weight of regret—and somehow turn all that into something hauntingly beautiful. His breakout into mainstream came with tracks like "Save Me" and "Son of a Sinner", songs that sound like late-night confessionals laced with whiskey, guilt, and hope.
What sets Jelly Roll apart isn’t just his sound—it’s his brutal honesty. He sings like a man who’s survived the worst of himself and still carries the scars. He doesn't pretend to be healed. He doesn't sugarcoat $#@!. He tells you how bad it got, how hard he fought, and how music became the one thing that didn’t give up on him. That kind of vulnerability resonates. It hits different when you know the person behind the mic isn’t playing a part—they’re telling the truth.
Now, Jelly Roll's reaching audiences far beyond the underground. He’s selling out arenas, topping country charts, and rubbing shoulders with Nashville royalty—without ever losing that raw, real energy that got him here. He's proof that broken people can still rise, still create, still inspire.
He’s not a perfect man. He’s a story of second chances, survival, and the power of a brutally honest song. And when Jelly Roll sings, you don’t just hear it—you feel it in your bones.