For the fifth time in 13 years, Jason Aldean, the Academy of Country Music’s award-winning “Artist of the 2010s,” headlined a sold-out Bridgestone Arena concert in downtown Nashville on August 7.
The event highlighted that the enduring vocal quality and earnest storytelling of the “She’s Country” performer have allowed him to usher in a new career chapter.
Jason Aldean performs during his Full Throttle Tour concert at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025.
In six months, Aldean turns 49. The Georgia native will be celebrating 28 years of residing in Music City and the start of what could mark yet another 20-year run with BMG Nashville/Broken Bow Records.
He’s evolved from working for a decade as a scrappy outlier, whose country and pop-drenched rock stylings were often derided as “not country enough,” to being a proponent of a musical sound that’s ushered in a culture and vibe that’s a multi-billion-dollar global Nashville export.
More than anything else, it wasn’t just how ubiquitous every facet of Aldean’s artistry has grown into representing things that define modern America and Nashville as an aspect of the nation’s core that was celebrated.
Instead, a story of why the performer’s heavy metal-style stage presentation, featuring charging guitars, blistering drums and bluntly compelling lyricism, rose to most broadly define modern country music, was highlighted at Bridgestone Arena.
Aldean positions his ballads, not his politics, to stand the test of time
“You bought a ticket to hear me play songs, not talk,” Aldean said to the crowd at Bridgestone Arena.
In recent years, the performer’s conservative political beliefs has often overshadowed any critical judgment of his artistry.
Jason Aldean performs during his Full Throttle Tour concert at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025.
But he made no mention of Republican Party platform ideals or his friend, President Donald J. Trump.
Instead, a more reserved, sometimes almost wistfully grateful artist appeared onstage.
Ballads occupy one-third of Aldean’s 2025 setlist. Among them was “Why.” The 20-year-old song was co-written by Rodney Clawson, Vicky McGehee and John Rich. The song describes a heartbroken man struggling to admit how much he loves his partner. Alongside cementing him as a stylist adept at recording outside cuts, it also highlights the power of his work with longtime producer Michael Knox.
The line that appears drawn between songs like “Burnin’ It Down,” “The Truth,” “You Make It Easy,” “Trouble With A Heartbreak” and a solo take on his award-winning Carrie Underwood duet “If I Didn’t Love You” is one defined by a quality of a specific type of song that has aged impressively well without any loss of crowd connection or quality.
Texas-born RaeLynn’s family values-driven pop-country songs and vocalist Nate Smith opened Thursday night’s festivities.
Alongside possessing a magnificent, instantly recognizable tenor, the former faith and worship vocalist from Paradise, California, has sold 10 million singles in three years. Those hits include “Bulletproof,” “Wreckage” and the current No. 1 “Fix What You Didn’t Break.”
Nate Smith performs on stage opening for Jason Aldean during his Full Throttle Tour concert at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025.
When Kane Brown joined Aldean for “Dirt Road Anthem” with Aldean, the significance of RaeLynn, Smith and Brown sharing the stage was clear.
The trio were children and teenagers when Aldean began his rise. Though now seasoned in their own craft, their work still bears the unmistakable imprint of the “Amarillo Sky” crooner.
Aldean’s stylings are rooted in the resurgence of classic country music fusing with rap’s beats and breaks, plus country’s power chords to define pop’s most lucrative pinnacle again.
Aldean’s ‘Big Green Tractor’ wins over the crowd
The evening’s pinnacle moment was Aldean, surrounded by his longtime band members and songwriters like Kurt Allison and Tully Kennedy, being elevated on a riser some 20-plus feet in the air to perform “Big Green Tractor.”
The nearly two-decade-old hit is an ode to the virtues of slow-burning rural romance.
Jason Aldean performs during his Full Throttle Tour concert at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025.
With everything Aldean has come to represent, it’s a perfect song upon which he builds his interpretation of American values.
Alongside the set openers and closers “Hicktown” and “She’s Country” and the night’s penultimate performance of “My Kinda Party,” the blue-collar anthem was met with the evening’s most raucous ovation.
Jason Aldean’s Full Throttle Tour setlist, August 7
Trouble With A Heartbreak
Dirt Road Anthem (feat. Kane Brown)
This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Jason Aldean’s timeless country appeal showcased at Bridgestone Arena
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