
Get ready to dive into a record that feels like a late-night drive, a first heartbreak, and a story you can’t put down. We’re taking you inside Tucker Wetmore’s What Not To — a modern country ride through pride, love, and all the mistakes you swear you wouldn’t make. Let’s get into it.
1. “Whatcha Think Gonna Happen”
This track opens with a mid-tempo drive, built around a playful swagger that instantly feels familiar but personal. Wetmore’s delivery is easygoing yet confident, like he’s half-smiling through the verses. The lyrics paint a scenario loaded with inevitable tension — you sense early that he knows exactly where the night’s heading. The production feels clean but still rustic, and there’s a sharpness to the hook that makes it stick after just one listen. The vibe walks that fine line between laid-back country charm and radio-ready polish — a subtle flex in storytelling.
2. “Brunette”
“Brunette” shifts the mood into something a little more tender, but without slowing things down too much. The tempo keeps a steady heartbeat, enough to keep toes tapping while Wetmore turns the focus inward. The lyrics are rich in detail — the way he sings about noticing everything about this brunette feels genuinely observant rather than cliche. There’s a sweetness tucked into the delivery, even as the production remains sturdy and rhythmic. It’s a track for late-night thinking, for drives with the windows down, remembering someone specific.
3. “Break First”
Here, Wetmore brings the emotional gut punch. “Break First” dips the album into slow-burn heartbreak territory, leaning heavily on a softer instrumental bed that lets the lyrics breathe. It’s a classic standoff between pride and vulnerability — two people locked in the unspoken war of who’s going to fold first. Wetmore’s voice sounds a little more cracked here, a little more human. The vibe is aching but beautifully restrained, avoiding melodrama by staying rooted in real, messy emotion.
4. “Silverado Blue”
The title alone hints at nostalgia, and Wetmore delivers exactly that. The tempo is mellow, with a slight sway that feels like sitting in the bed of a truck at dusk. Lyrically, “Silverado Blue” captures that aching combination of love, loss, and the way physical objects — like a truck — can trap every memory you’re trying to forget. There’s a dusky, cinematic quality to the production, with subtle steel guitar flourishes that add a wistful shimmer. This is one of Wetmore’s strongest performances — an emotional high point.
Tucker Wetmore’s “What Not To” is a balancing act — between swagger and sincerity, between radio sheen and raw feeling. Each song carves out its own little world, and together they offer a portrait of a guy who’s still learning what not to do when it comes to love, loss, and pride.
The album succeeds because it sounds like Tucker isn’t chasing trends — he’s just telling his truth, one track at a time.
Check for Tucker Wetmore on IG: @tuckerwermore
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