Jelly Roll Says He is ‘Exhausted and Unstable’
Jelly Roll took fan questions on his Insta Stories this week and touched on several subjects, including his mental health, after wrapping his headlining “Backroad Baptism Tour” and why he…

Jelly Roll took fan questions on his Insta Stories this week and touched on several subjects, including his mental health, after wrapping his headlining "Backroad Baptism Tour" and why he is going without his phone through the end of the year.
When a fan asked about his mental health, Jelly replied, "This is probably too honest, but exhausted and unstable. Definitely when I get through the holidays, and I've got a lot of stuff to do between now and the holidays, but when I get through the holidays, I really need to take some personal time."
One fan asked the chart-topper and CMA nominee for Male Vocalist and Album of the Year (Whitsett Chapel) when he first realized that he was famous. He replied, "This is actually a really cool question. I still don't think I'm famous. There is levels to this s--- right? And it's like maybe I'm famous to some perspectives, but man, I got friends that are like famous, famous, you know what I mean? So I'm just glad to have a little bit of motion and glad that the music's touching people and helping people the way it is, but I don't think I'm famous."
Jelly returned to the question a few minutes later and said, "I hate to double back on the same question, but I'm playing video games with my friends right now, and they're all telling me I'm famous. They said every gas station they go into, I'm on the radio."
RELATED: Jelly Roll Will Go 'Phoneless For The Rest of The Year'
Jelly also explained more to fans why he is giving up his phone for the rest of the year. He said, "Honestly, it's for personal peace of mind and mental health. So I went phoneless at the top of this year for four months, and it was absolutely incredible. Frankly, I just get hundreds of messages a day of just people asking for stuff, just wanting stuff, and I just get exhausted, man. I overextend myself in so many situations, and I am never present with my family because I am always on my phone, and this thing is always glued to my hand."
He added, "I just got to go phoneless. I'm still gonna have a laptop, and I'll still post; I'll still hop on, but I just need to be away from sh-- for a minute."
Jelly Roll is having his big moment in country music, and he is a multiple award nominee at next month's CMA Awards in Nashville, including a nod for the album (Whitsett Chapel) and Male Vocalist.
Last week, Jelly debuted on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon. In a video clip posted to his Instagram, his team highlighted the appearance with backstage footage where Jelly says at one point in the clip, "I hadn't left much past Ohio three years ago. National TV, dude. Two shows in one day, baby, one on national television."
At another moment in the clip, Jimmy Fallon comes into Jelly's dressing room to say hi. The talk show host tells Jelly, "You're crushing it, bud, you're crushing it. Congratulations, and keep going." After Fallon leaves, one of Jelly's bandmates says that was pretty cool, and Jelly replies, "That wasn't pretty cool, that was (expletive) awesome." Jelly adds, "It was like Waylon Jennings on the Johnny Carson show." He says, "We're in the middle of Rockefeller Plaza; we're in the big leagues. Johnny Carson was here."
After he performed on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon, Jelly and his band boarded a private plane from New Jersey to West Virginia and, with a police escort, went straight on stage at a sold-out show. After the show, they made it in time to watch their performance on late-night TV.
See that post here. Note: there are many expletives in the Instagram video clip.
When he performed for the first time in June at Nashville's CMA Fest, he revealed that during his first performance at Nissan Stadium in June, which was televised as a TV special on ABC, he was "trembling."
Jelly posted a video clip of the performance on his Instagram. He wrote in a lengthy caption, "If you listen closely, you can hear my voice shaking the first half of the song— I was trembling; I was so nervous. 65,000 people in my hometown stadium- the same stadium my father took me to every Sunday for Titans games. The same stadium I've been taking my daughter to since she was a baby."
He continued, "Thank you, CMA fest, for letting me be a part of your 50th anniversary - I have literally been going to 'Fan Fair' since I was a child. This night was unbelievable... to hear 65k people [sing] 'and God, I need a Favor' in unison like one voice. Speaking of 'NEED A FAVOR,' I can officially say it is the #1 song on Country Radio right now. There is no greater achievement in this town than being #1 in country radio. The fact this is my 2nd number one at Country Radio this year makes it almost unbelievable to me, to be honest - and this same song also held 3 weeks at number 1 on Rock radio."
Jelly concluded, "Just when I thought things couldn't get any wilder, y'all continue to amaze me. Thank y'all - this has been an unreal year."
RELATED: Luke Bryan On Why Jelly Roll Is So Special
We gathered five of Jelly's friends in country music and share his connection to each of them.
Lainey Wilson
Lainey and Jelly have been friends for a while now and are currently nominated for a CMA together for Musical Event of the Year for their collaboration of "Save Me." They are on the same record label and are both having massive success. Wilson said in an interview earlier this year that she was an extra in his music video in 2013. She said it was the one Jelly did with Uncle Kracker, admitting she played "a drunk girl, passed out on the ground." While that was her first interaction with him, they have since become good friends, and he considers her to be a sister.
Ashley McBryde
Ashley recently opened shows for Jelly Roll. When I interviewed her recently, she told me about the man. Ashley shared about her friend, "He's so loving and so inviting. I love being on the road with him. The culture he has created with his band, crew, and everything about that is really welcoming." She added, "He told me my first day, 'You'll never feel more at home on any tour than you will on this tour.' And I thought at first, 'Aw, I don't know, I've toured with some really amazing tours.' He told me, 'You'll never feel more at home with any fanbase than you are with mine,' and he's right. His fan base is so diverse, and at first, when you look at a snapshot of it, you go, 'These people don't all belong under the same canopy right now,' but they do. And that feeling while you're watching a show is amazing."
Cody Johnson

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Cody told us of Jelly in June, "Jelly's one of my favorite people to hang out with. You may not look at me and know this, but I have a pretty jaded past as well." He added, "I've always said there was a time in my life when I had to make a decision, and that decision was to chase this dream professionally with a good mindset. There are a few mistakes I've made in my life and decisions in my life where I could have wound up here, or I very well could have wound up in jail." He concluded, "It's almost like a blessing and a curse because we put so much on ourselves. And I relate to him, and he relates to me, and we're so opposite; you've got the cowboy hat and the face tattoos... I think it's a very opposite attraction kind of thing. The respect is mutual and real recognizes real."
Miranda Lambert
Miranda revealed that she and Jelly Roll were writing songs together in January. Lambert posted a couple of photos to her Instagram, one with her, Jelly Roll, and a songwriter named Telenitry. She wrote, "Made a new friend this week! Jesse was right when he said we go together like biscuits and gravy! Loved writing a tune with @jellyroll615 and @telemitry."
Riley Green
Green recently announced he is releasing a new album, Ain't My Last Rodeo, on October 13 on BMLG Records. The 12-track project is named after a song on the album, "My Last Rodeo," which the singer wrote solo following one of the final conversations he had with his late Grandaddy Buford while in the hospital. Riley has a song with Jelly Roll called "Copenhagen In A Cadillac" that he co-wrote on the project and a cover of Tim McGraw's "Damn Country Music." Green has sung on stage with Jelly many times and considers the Nashville area native a good friend.