Bitrate:320K/s
Year:2026
Time:57:46
Size:133,0 MB
Label:Gulf Coast Records
Styles:Blues/Modern Electric Blues/Blues Rock
Art:Front
Year:2026
Time:57:46
Size:133,0 MB
Label:Gulf Coast Records
Styles:Blues/Modern Electric Blues/Blues Rock
Art:Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Sick Of This Shit - 8:29
2. Tired Of Tryin’ - 4:18
3. The Big DisEasey - 7:07
4. Leo Watkins Rag - 4:27
5. Long Twisted Night - 4:24
6. Bubble Gum Pop - 4:26
7. River’s Invitation - 5:49
8. Renegade - 3:54
9. Nuit Waltz - 2:51
10. 13 Hours - 11:56
1. Sick Of This Shit - 8:29
2. Tired Of Tryin’ - 4:18
3. The Big DisEasey - 7:07
4. Leo Watkins Rag - 4:27
5. Long Twisted Night - 4:24
6. Bubble Gum Pop - 4:26
7. River’s Invitation - 5:49
8. Renegade - 3:54
9. Nuit Waltz - 2:51
10. 13 Hours - 11:56
On 13 Hours, Jason Ricci strips his music down to the nerve. Released on May 29, 2026 via Gulf Coast Records, the album captures exhaustion, defiance, and survival with brutal honesty. Backed by The Bad Kind and featuring vocalist Kaitlin Dibble, Ricci delivers a record that confronts burnout, addiction, and modern chaos without searching for easy answers. 13 Hours is not an album that tries to impress. Instead, it confronts. Released on May 29, 2026 via Gulf Coast Records, Jason Ricci & The Bad Kind deliver a record that feels more like an unfiltered confession than a polished artistic statement.
Ricci places the listener in the uneasy space between exhaustion and defiance. Frustration with the world, the music business, relationships, and oneself collide throughout the album. There is no search for comfort here—only an honest documentation of what it means to stay present when optimism wears thin and survival itself becomes an act of resistance. Endurance as a Central Theme.
At its core, 13 Hours is about endurance—emotional, physical, and spiritual. The songs move between fury and fatigue, between dark humor and brutal self-reflection. Sharp social commentary sits comfortably alongside deeply personal moments, capturing the pressure of modern life without softening the edges.
The album confronts burnout, addiction, grief, and the absurdity of the systems that shape our daily lives. Rather than offering solutions, Ricci chooses truth over resolution and tension over release.
Moments of Grace Amid the Tension.
Despite its raw nature, 13 Hours is not a hopeless record. Moments of intimacy and clarity emerge, enhanced by the interplay between Ricci, The Bad Kind, and featured vocalist Kaitlin Dibble. These passages provide breathing room without breaking the album’s emotional honesty. Ultimately, 13 Hours asks a simple but unsettling question: how long can you keep going—and what does it mean to keep going anyway? It is a record about staying awake, staying alive, and telling the truth while the clock keeps ticking. This album is dedicated to the memory of John Perkins.
Ricci places the listener in the uneasy space between exhaustion and defiance. Frustration with the world, the music business, relationships, and oneself collide throughout the album. There is no search for comfort here—only an honest documentation of what it means to stay present when optimism wears thin and survival itself becomes an act of resistance. Endurance as a Central Theme.
At its core, 13 Hours is about endurance—emotional, physical, and spiritual. The songs move between fury and fatigue, between dark humor and brutal self-reflection. Sharp social commentary sits comfortably alongside deeply personal moments, capturing the pressure of modern life without softening the edges.
The album confronts burnout, addiction, grief, and the absurdity of the systems that shape our daily lives. Rather than offering solutions, Ricci chooses truth over resolution and tension over release.
Moments of Grace Amid the Tension.
Despite its raw nature, 13 Hours is not a hopeless record. Moments of intimacy and clarity emerge, enhanced by the interplay between Ricci, The Bad Kind, and featured vocalist Kaitlin Dibble. These passages provide breathing room without breaking the album’s emotional honesty. Ultimately, 13 Hours asks a simple but unsettling question: how long can you keep going—and what does it mean to keep going anyway? It is a record about staying awake, staying alive, and telling the truth while the clock keeps ticking. This album is dedicated to the memory of John Perkins.

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