JUSTIN CHAMPAGNE’S EP IF SHE AIN’T COUNTRY AVAILABLE NOW
Published 7:30 am Sunday, May 15, 2022
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Listen to the IF SHE AIN’T COUNTRY here.
Track Listing:
I’m The One (Written by Justin Champagne and Austin Dore)
Slow Down (Written by Champagne, Austin Dore and Samuel Marcellus Cunningham)
If She Ain’t Country (Written by Champagne, Samuel Marcellus Cunningham, Tredell Rener, and Andrew P Jackson Jr)
Refill (Written by Champagne, Austin Dore, Dalton David Richardson, David Ray Stephens) Bottom of the Bottle (Written by Champagne and Austin Dore)
Drank (Champagne and Austin Dore)
About Justin Champagne
Born and raised in south Louisiana, Justin Champagne
Champagne has been releasing new music over the past couple of months including the vibey and sure to make you dance “I’m The One,” latin remix featuring El Taiger, the sultry break-up anthem “Refill,” and the much anticipated EP IF SHE AIN’T COUNTRY.
Everything changed in 2016, when Justin Champagne wrote “Sun Goes Down.” A breakup anthem filled with hip-hop beats, countrified guitar riffs, soaring vocal hooks, and rhythmic rapping, “Sun Goes Down” was the first song to embrace the full range of Justin’s musical tastes. By combining a variety of different sounds together, he created something new: a boundary-breaking genre that showcased not only the depth of his influences, but also his versatility as a songwriter, storyteller, vocalist, and rapper. Unsurprisingly, the song became a hit, earning more than a million listens on Spotify and laying the foundation for a unique, trendsetting career.
Champagne’s full-length debut, Small Town Sentiments, was released in 2018. Tracks like “Beers” and “In Them Jeans” became fan favorites, introducing a growing audience to Justin’s sound. Things accelerated once again in 2019, when Justin teamed up with hip-hop artist Gabe G to record the wildly-popular “BackRoads.” A tribute to rural living and the great outdoors, “BackRoads” earned Justin a dedicated following not only on Spotify, but also on YouTube, where the song’s music video — shot in the mud bogs, fields, lakes, and country lanes of his home state — amassed 5 million views during its first year. The song was an anthem for small-town residents across America, but it was personal, too, grounded in the experience of a musician who has always preferred country roads to city streets.