West Texas Degenerate Out Now as the Band Hits Arenas, Amphitheaters, and Their First-Ever Red Rocks Headline

Treaty Oak Revival are done simmering at the edge of superstardom. They just announced a powerhouse 2026 headline tour, and if their recent trajectory is any hint, this will be the last time fans can score tickets without a full-on stampede to the resale sites. With their new album West Texas Degenerate earning some of the loudest acclaim of their career, the band is ready to take their rowdy, heart-on-fire live show to arenas and amphitheaters nationwide.
The tour kicks off February 5 in Worcester, Massachusetts, launching a 25-city run that includes Baltimore’s CFG Bank Arena, Seattle’s WAMU Theater, Portland’s Veterans Memorial Coliseum, and a major milestone for the band: their first-ever headline show at Red Rocks Amphitheatre on July 1. Support varies by date, with Wade Forster, William Clark Green, Laredo, Huser Brothers, Gannon Fremin and CCREV, and Parker Ryan joining the ride. Presales begin Thursday, December 11, with general on-sale Friday, December 12 at noon local time.
This is a band that built its empire from West Texas dust and DIY fuel, and critics are finally catching up. Rolling Stone calls their show “one of the most exciting live experiences in all of music,” while Houston Press basically declared the hype train already gone. Their third album, West Texas Degenerate, dropped last week and immediately reinforced what fans already knew: Treaty Oak Revival aren’t just rising, they’re erupting.
Tracks like “Bad State of Mind,” “Happy Face,” and the new slow-burner “Misery” show the band leveling up their grit and storytelling. “Bad State of Mind” hit No. 1 on Bubbling Under Hot 100 and got them a spot on Jimmy Kimmel Live, while “Happy Face” landed across multiple Billboard charts. Their latest video for “Blue Star” is already catching fire online.
And the momentum isn’t slowing. Treaty Oak Revival will close out 2025 with major Texas shows, including a hometown night in Odessa on December 11 and New Year’s Eve at Houston’s Toyota Center, before hitting the road hard in 2026. Recent years have seen them debut at the Grand Ole Opry, tear up festival stages from Bonnaroo to Warped Tour, and sell out 5-10k-capacity venues across the country. More than 1.4 billion global streams, five platinum singles, and weekly numbers that would make a major-label act sweat.
In other words, if you’ve ever wanted to say, “I saw Treaty Oak Revival before they were the biggest band in the country,” this tour is your shot.
Full tour dates are listed above. Tickets and more info at treatyoakrevival.com.