Cole Greenwalt Balances Barroom Bravado and Brutal Honesty on Folk-Rock Confessional “Alcoholic”
Midnight confessions taste strongest when the jukebox is low and the guilt is loud. On “Alcoholic,” U.S. singer-songwriter Cole Greenwalt fractures the shot glass and lets the shards gleam beneath an upbeat folk-rock backbeat, crafting an anthem that staggers yet somehow smiles.
The track’s engine is a propulsive acoustic-electric hybrid—stomping drums, twanging telecaster, and a bass line that paces the room like a friend debating whether to call you a cab. Greenwalt’s rasp balances defiance and devastation, delivering couplets that land like bar-top fist-thumps: “They sent me down to rehab, I just caught a relapse” rings both witty and wounded.
Indeed, the arrangement revels in contradiction. Sun-lit chord changes clash with lyrics steeped in 2 A.M. remorse; the resulting tension mimics that dangerous euphoria right before last call. Moreover, producer choices—slightly overdriven guitars, tambourine splashes, and gang-style background chants—evoke Bryan Martin’s rowdy candor while nodding to Zach Bryan’s narrative intimacy.
However, what elevates “Alcoholic” is its unflinching self-diagnosis. Greenwalt names the demon without metaphor, refusing the usual poetic veils. That candor invites the listener into complicity: toes tap even as the mind winces, a sonic reminder that recklessness often hides behind buoyant choruses.
Listeners will leave the track with adrenaline humming and conscience pricked—swept up by its barroom bravado yet haunted by its stark admission. Cole Greenwalt proves that folk rock can still dance on the fault line between catharsis and collapse, grinning through the hangover it predicts.
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