Jelly Roll stopped by Jimmy Kimmel Reside to carry out his new track “Burning,” showing on the late-night present’s outside stage alongside his band and back-up singers. Visitor host Martin Quick introduced the musician, who supplied an upbeat efficiency of the previously-unheard observe — full with hearth.
The musician then sat down with Quick to debate writing songs whereas in jail and his different latest single, “I Am Not Okay.” Jelly Roll additionally took the chance to tease his subsequent album, which might be out this fall (“Jelly Roll’s music favors the autumn,” he hinted), and to announce that he’s added 16 dates to his forthcoming enviornment tour.
He confirmed that the tour will embrace Canada, an enormous second for the musician as he’s just lately admitted to having some challenges touring exterior the U.S. resulting from his prison file.
“It took American 38 years to let me go away and now I received to persuade different nations to let me come,” he advised Quick, earlier than asking just a few “Canada questions” concerning the language and what they name Canadian bacon there.
Jelly Roll dropped “I Am Not Okay” earlier this month, marking the musician’s first solo providing since his hit 2023 album, Whitsitt Chapel. It’s also the primary official track off Jelly Roll’s subsequent album. The musician debuted the observe final month on the season finale of The Voice. Per week earlier than that, on the 2024 ACM Awards, he premiered one other still-unreleased tune, “Liar,” which can also be anticipated to look on the upcoming LP.
Jelly Roll’s tour kicks off Aug. 27 in Salt Lake Metropolis, Utah. Over the previous few months, he’s performed a handful of festivals and made some very particular visitor appearances as nicely: Throughout his Stagecoach set, he tapped T-Ache for a canopy of Toby Keith’s “Ought to’ve Been a Cowboy”; at Welcome to Rockville, he linked up with Limp Bizkit for his or her cowl of the Who’s “Behind Blue Eyes”; at Hangout, he sang “Candy Dwelling Alabama” with Lana Del Rey; in Dallas, he sang “Cowboy” with Child Rock (in a Cybertruck no much less); and, most just lately, in Detroit, he joined Eminem for an up to date model of “Sing for the Second.”