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    You are at:Home»Music»Todd Snider, Alt-Country’s Wandering Troubadour, Dead at 59
    Music

    Todd Snider, Alt-Country’s Wandering Troubadour, Dead at 59

    Team_The Industry Highlighter MagazineBy Team_The Industry Highlighter MagazineNovember 16, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Todd Snider, a driving force of the alt-country scene over the last two-plus decades, has died at the age of 59.

    The news of his passing was confirmed by Snider’s label, Aimless Records, which wrote a lengthy post in honor of their “Vice President of the Abrupt Change Dept.” The post when on to say that Snider was someone “who could almost always find the humor in this crazy ride on Planet Earth,” and that he created “rhyme and meter that immediately felt like an old friend or a favorite blanket.”

    A cause of death was not immediately shared. However, prior to his passing, Snider had been receiving extensive treatment for walking pneumonia that had only recently been diagnosed.

    Todd Daniel Snider was born on October 11th, 1966 in Portland, Oregon. By the mid-80s, he’d relocated to the San Antonio, Texas region, where he met his future mentor in songwriting legend Kent Finlay (who also founded the venerated Cheatham Street Warehouse venue). For years, Snider packed clubs across both San Marcos and Austin, Texas, delighting fans with his earnest, heartfelt approach to country and folk.

    By the early ’90s, Snider had relocated to Memphis and signed a deal with Capital Records. Though that agreement fizzled out before any music was released, he did briefly join Jimmy Buffett’s Coral Reefer Band — a stint that led to a separate deal with Buffett’s own Margaritaville Records. That period produced Snider’s earliest and most foundational work, including his 1994 debut, Songs for the Daily Planet (which yielded a modest Billboard hit with “Talkin’ Seattle Grunge Rock Blues”), as well as 1996’s Step Right Up.

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    By the time he released 1998’s Viva Satellite, Snider embarked on something of a career pivot, stepping away from Margaritaville and sharpening his own distinctive musical voice. That shift led to a deal with John Prine’s Oh Boy Records, where Snider further made a name for himself with records like 2000’s Happy To Be Here and 2002’s New Connection. But it was 2004’s East Nashville Skyline where Snider where Snider truly came into his own, a record now regarded as a cornerstone of 21st-century alt-country.

    Snider continued to perform and release records over the next several years, eventually leading to the launch of Aimless Records in 2008 to manage this steady stream of music. Though he would work with Aimless for the rest of his career, he partnered with Yep Roc for 2009’s The Excitement Plan. The album was warmly received and climbed to No. 6 on Billboard’s Heatseekers Albums chart. Meanwhile, Aimless’ first release, 2008’s Peace Queer EP, also made an impact, earning strong placement on Billboard’s Americana charts.

    Into the 2010s, Snider maintained his schedule of regular performances and releases. That included 2011’s Live: The Storyteller; a pair of albums in 2012 (Agnostic Hymns & Stoner Fables followed by the tribute LP Time As We Know It: The Songs of Jerry Jeff Walker); co-founding the supergroup Hard Working Americans (alongside Widespread Panic bassist Dave Schools); 2016’s Eastside Bulldog (which was more in line with the ’50s-era rock of Snider’s alter ego, Elmo Buzz); and 2019’s Cash Cabin Sessions, Vol. 3, where Snider returned in glorious fashion to his folk roots.

    Snider’s final official release was 2023’s Crank It, We’re Doomed. Even so, he remained active over the years with a variety of projects and side ventures outside of country and folk. He collaborated frequently with filmmakers Brad and Todd Barnes, resulting in two mockumentaries: 2009’s Peace Queer: The Movie and 2013’s East Nashville Tonight. He also appeared in and narrated 2014’s The First Waltz, a documentary chronicling the formation of Hard Working Americans; made several cameo appearances on Squidbillies as Lobster Freak; and published his own “quasi-memoir,” 2014’s Never Met a Story I Didn’t Like: Mostly True Tall Tales.

    It’s worth noting that Snider’s death followed a stretch of troubling news. Per Rolling Stone, he’d been arrested in Utah in early November for causing a disturbance at Salt Lake City’s Holy Cross Hospital, where he was reportedly seeking treatment following a “vicious attack” on Halloween night.

    Tributes and eulogies for Snider have already begun popping up online. Writer/rock critic Steven Hyden called him “one of the greats,” and an “unheralded songwriters’ songwriter.” Hyden went on to write that Snider was a guy “not only influenced by [John] Prine/[Kris] Kristofferson/Jerry Jeff but he seemed to come out of the same world.”

    On a personal note, go listen to “Just Like Old Times,” which has a perfect line that sums up not only Snider’s art but his singular way of living: “Your goal was always the same as mine/You didn’t want to throw a fishing line in that old main stream.”





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