Florida Georgia Line Scores 16th No. 1 Single With “Simple”

Florida Georgia Line Scores 16th No. 1 Single With “Simple”

Tyler Hubbard and Brian Kelley of Florida Georgia Line are in familiar territory this week as their current single, “Simple,” is No. 1 on the Mediabase chart.

“Simple,” which is the lead single from FGL’s upcoming fourth studio album, is the duo’s 16th No. 1 single.

“The song ‘Simple’ was born on the road on the Tree Vibez Bus,” says Tyler. “That was just a special song that was born out of an idea that I kinda had—just living in a world where things get so complicated and everybody seems to want to complicate things. Majority of the time, I just find that for us it’s just easy to keep it simple. There’s no need to complicate it, especially when it comes to love and [our] relationships with our wives and our families. Just a little reminder to simplify things every now and then and have a good time while you do it.”

“I think Tyler and I both knew and our whole team kinda knew that ‘Simple’ was probably gonna be the first single off of this next project,” says Brian. “We just feel like it’s the next step for FGL. It has a fresh sound and it’s just a good time to put it out. It’s a good time to live simply as much as things can get complicated.”

Penned by Tyler, Brian, Michael Hardy and Mark Holman, “Simple” was produced by longtime studio collaborator Joey Moi.

FGL’s next album will follow 2016’s Dig Your Roots, which spawned No. 1 hits “H.O.L.Y.,” “May We All” and “God, Your Mama, And Me.”

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Thomas Rhett & Keith Urban Join “The Voice” as Advisors for the Next Two Weeks

Thomas Rhett & Keith Urban Join “The Voice” as Advisors for the Next Two Weeks

Thomas Rhett and Keith Urban are coming to a TV screen near for the next two weeks.

TR and Keith will serve as advisors on Season 15 of The Voice during episodes that air on Oct. 15, 16, 22 and 23.

TR will join coach Kelly Clarkson’s team, while Keith will handle advisor duties for coach Blake Shelton.

Advisors typically assist the contestants with song arrangement and stage presence, among other variables, during the battle rounds. Coaches Jennifer Hudson and Adam Levine selected Halsey and CeeLo Green, respectively, as their advisors.

Tune in to NBC at 8 p.m. ET for all of the action.

photos: Keith Urban by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com; Thomas Rhett by Jason Simanek

Kane Brown Marries Longtime Girlfriend Katelyn Jae

Kane Brown Marries Longtime Girlfriend Katelyn Jae

Kane Brown married his longtime girlfriend Katelyn Jae on Oct. 12 in downtown Nashville.

Kane posted a wedding pic on Instagram that features his new bride. Kane and Katelyn, who got engaged in April 2017, plan to honeymoon in Dollywood.

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Kane will release his sophomore album, Experiment, on November 9. Kane’s headlining Live Forever Tour kicks off in January.

Congrats to the happy couple.

photo by Tammie Arroyo / AFF-USA.com

Offseason Changes Pay Off for JG, Vols on the Plains

Offseason Changes Pay Off for JG, Vols on the Plains

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – After Tennessee’s 2017 season ended with a loss to Vanderbilt on Nov. 25, quarterback Jarrett Guarantano said the culture was going to change and hard work would be the No. 1 priority for the Volunteers.

“As soon as Jan. 1 hits, we are al

Jarrett Guarantano – Vols QB / Credit: UT Athletics

l going to be back in the weight room; we are going to be back on campus and things are going to change,” he said a little over 10 months ago. “The culture is going to change. We are going to be working our tails off every single day…I think we will be back soon.”

Tennessee’s offseason of hard work came to fruition on Saturday on the Plains in Auburn, Ala. A brilliant game plan by head coach Jeremy Pruitt and offensive coordinator Tyson Helton – coaching from the sideline for the first time this year – allowed Guarantano to spearhead a 30-24 upset victory over the 21st-ranked Tigers at Jordan-Hare Stadium.

He passed for a career-high 328 yards and two touchdowns on 21-of-32 pass attempts against an Auburn defense that entered the game ranked sixth in the nation in points allowed and No. 20 in total defense.

Tigers’ opponents entered the game converting just 28 percent of third downs, but the Vols were 10 of 19 (53 percent) on third down for the day. Guarantano completed 11-of-14 passes on third down, including 8-of-8 on third-and-8 or longer.

“I think Jarrett did a really good job today of him having an effect on his teammates.” Pruitt said. “We had some guys today, who I think they played their best football.

“I thought our coaches on the offensive staff put in a really good plan and gave him an opportunity to have success. He did a good job of executing the plan and our guys protected him for the most part. Our wide receivers played really good out there. It was a good team win.”

Pruitt was hired by Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer on Dec. 7 and he said his expectation “was to win every game we play.” That moxie is rubbing off on his first Tennessee team six games into the 2018 season.

Game-changing plays were made on offense and defense as Tennessee showed no fear in picking up the Vols’ first win at Auburn in 20 years and their first upset victory over a ranked team on the road since 2006.

“The fans were loud,” Guarantano said. “Our team was ready to play, though. We had a long week of practice. We came out ready to go.”

Redshirt junior wide receiver Jauan Jennings had his best game in nearly two years, making clutch third down catches, including a 25-yard touchdown in the third quarter that gave Tennessee the lead for good. He finished with five receptions for 71 yards and secured Auburn’s last-ditch onside kick effort to clinch the win.

Guarantano also found junior Marquez Callaway for gains of 30 yards and 25 yards, and sophomore Josh Palmer for a 42-yard gain on first down early in the fourth quarter that led to sophomore kicker Brent Cimaglia’s third field goal of the day that gave the Vols a 30-17 lead with nine minutes remaining in the game.

Sophomore Ty Chandler scored on a 42-yard catch-and-run, and freshman cornerback Alontae Taylor added touchdown on a fumble recovery after senior defensive linemen Kyle Phillips and Alexis Johnson combined to sack Auburn quarterback Jarrett Stidham in the third quarter.

“We had many, many explosive plays,” Guarantano said. “(Our wide receivers) did a great job high-pointing the ball. Those 50/50 balls – we talk about it all the time. That is what’s going to win SEC games. There are great defenses and great defensive backs all around, and we know that we have to make those catches in order to compete and they did an excellent job. The offensive line did an excellent job today. That’s one of the best defensive lines in the SEC and in the country. As an offensive I think we played very well. There are definitely things we can fix, and we are going to go back and elaborate on those and work on them. I’m very happy with what we did today.”

Guarantano’s breakout performance came nearly one year to the day of his first career start – a 15-9 loss to South Carolina on Oct. 14, 2017. He has weathered some tough defeats in the year since and Saturday’s upset win at Auburn marked his 12th career start.

“He’s tough,” sophomore left tackle Trey Smith said. “You can’t ask for a better quarterback than him. I’ve got to keep him cleaner. That’s my job. Jarrett just keeps playing. He keeps showing his toughness week in and week out and what type of man he is.”

His emergence on Saturday bodes well for the Vols the rest of the season. No. 1 Alabama is on the horizon followed by a trip to South Carolina. The Vols host Charlotte, No. 14 Kentucky and Missouri before capping the season at Vanderbilt.

As Pruitt said to media from inside Jordan-Hare Stadium on Saturday following the win, Tennessee is a top tier program that is creating a top tier team. Wins on the road over ranked opponents will go a long way toward bringing the Vols to the top.

“Our guys are working hard to do that,” Pruitt said. “The program is here and it’s our job to create the right team, and we will do it with the men in this locker room and the guys that we are going to recruit.”

 

UT Athletics

Guarantano Named to PFF College National Team of the Week

Guarantano Named to PFF College National Team of the Week

Jarrett Guarantano – Vols QB / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – After passing for a career-best 328 yards and leading Tennessee to a 30-24 victory at No. 21 Auburn, redshirt sophomore quarterback Jarrett Guarantano was named to the Pro Football Focus College National Team of the Week on Sunday.

Guarantano picked up a 93.3 grade from PFF College – the highest grade of any offensive player on the National Team of the Week.

The third-year Vol from Bergen, N.J., tallied career-bests in attempts (32) and completions (21), while tossing two touchdowns and committing zero turnovers as Tennessee won its first SEC game of the season, picking up its first win over a ranked team in over two years.

Guarantano was incredible on third down, completing 11-of-14 passes, including 8-of-8 on third-and-8 or longer.

His 42-yard touchdown pass to sophomore running back Ty Chandler tied the game 10-10 at the start of the second quarter, while his 25-yard touchdown strike to redshirt junior wide receiver Jauan Jennings gave the Vols the lead for good (20-17) with 3:25 remaining in the third quarter.

Guarantano’s 328-yard performance is the most by a Vol since current Pittsburgh Steelers’ backup quarterback Joshua Dobbs passed for 340 yards at Vanderbilt on Nov. 26, 2016.

Tennessee’s victory over Auburn was the Vols’ first over the Tigers since 1999 and first on The Plains since 1998.

In his 12th career start, Guarantano led the Vols to their first road upset over a ranked SEC team since Phillip Fulmer led Tennessee to a 51-33 win at No. 10 Georgia on Oct. 7, 2006.

On the season, Guarantano has completed 80 of 125 pass attempt for 1,129 yards and six touchdowns with only two interceptions. His 64.0 completion percentage ranks fifth in the SEC. He is averaging 9.0 yards per attempt, which is fourth in the SEC and No. 16 in the nation.

The Vols return to action against No. 1 Alabama on Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET at Neyland Stadium. Tickets are available at AllVols.com. The SEC Network’s traveling pregame show, SEC Nation, will be live from Tennessee’s campus on Saturday morning from 10 a.m. to Noon, as well.

Jimmy’s blog: Guarantano, defense led Vols to first SEC win in 23 months

Jimmy’s blog: Guarantano, defense led Vols to first SEC win in 23 months

By Jimmy Hyams

The drought is over.

For the first time in 23 months and 12 tries, Tennessee has won an SEC game.

And for the first time since 2010, it came against a West Division opponent.

Behind the arm of Jarrett Guarantano, big-time plays by big receivers and a run defense that stiffened up after the first series, Tennessee took down No. 21 Auburn 30-24 Saturday in a victory that has rejuvenated hope that the Vols could be a bowl team.

Playing by far his best game in a Tennessee uniform, Guarantano completed 21 of 32 passes for 328 yards and two touchdowns. Better yet, on nine plays of third-and-at-least 8, he was 8 for 8 for 166 yards with seven first downs and a touchdown. He was sacked on the other one.

If Guarantano continues to play like this, and the defense continues to improve, the Vols (3-3) have a chance against every team on the schedule not named Alabama.

“This was by far and away the best offensive performance we’ve had in six games because that was a good defense,’’ said Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt, who named every one of his assistant coaches in praising the victory.

“Jarrett played with good poise and with confidence. The other 10 guys can affect how the quarterback plays and the quarterback can affect how they play.’’

Pruitt said Guarantano held the ball too long one time and Auburn “about killed him.’’

For the first time this season, offensive coordinator Tyson Helton roamed the sideline rather than call plays from the press box. It worked.

“The most important position on offense is probably the quarterback,’’ Pruitt said. “We talked about (moving Helton to the sidelines) as a staff. If you coach Jarrett every play, it’s easier to coach him from the sidelines.’’

Tennessee did a terrific job of stopping Auburn’s run game after the Tigers plowed through the Vols for 58 rushing yards on the opening possession of the game to take a 7-0 lead. On Auburn’s next 10 drives, the Tigers rushed for 68 yards, totaling only 126 on 34 carries for the game.

Pruitt said the improvement wasn’t about adjustments, just handling your assignments.

“We executed better in the second half until the last drive,’’ Pruitt said.

“If we fight hard, create turnovers, execute in all three phases of the game, we have a chance.’’

Tennessee also did something it should have done earlier this season – it called plays to help its beleaguered offensive line.

When you’re predictable with your playing calling – like the Vols were against Florida – it makes a weak line look even worse.

The counter to that is to get outside, run sweeps, run speed sweeps, throw flare passes, hit wideouts on slants and bubble screens, and throw fade routes.

That’s what Tennessee did with amazing success against a solid Auburn defense and, guess what, it made the offensive line look good.

The Vols had 10 plays of at least 18 yards and converted seven times on third-and-at-least 8 yards. UT made good on 10 of 19 third downs which allowed the Vols to have a commanding 34-to-26 minute time of possession advantage.

The opportunistic defense forced three turnovers – two interceptions and a fumble – and turned those into 14 points.

No play was bigger than the fourth quarter sack of Auburn quarterback Jarrett Stidham, one of the SEC’s most overrated players. Stidham was first hit by tackle Alexis Johnson, then stripped by end Kyle Phillips. The ball bounded around until freshman cornerback Alontae Taylor picked it up at the 1-yard line and hopped into the end zone.

Suddenly, the Vols were ahead 30-20 with nine minutes left in the game.

A key sack by Deondre Johnson stopped one Auburn drive and while the Tigers scored on their next possession, only 37 seconds remained.

Jauan Jennings, who had five catches for 71 yards in his best performance of the season, clinched the outcome by recovering Auburn’s onside kick.

“We needed to win because we need to gain some confidence,’’ Pruitt said. “We’ve got some good players. We just needed to have success.’’

That success could propel the Vols to solid second half of this season.


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Vols Upset  Auburn 30-24 at Jordan-Hare Stadium

Vols Upset Auburn 30-24 at Jordan-Hare Stadium

Credit: UT Athletics

AUBURN, Ala. – Tennessee outscored No. 21/21 Auburn 17-7 in the final two quarters of Saturday’s game to earn its first road and SEC win of the season at Jordan-Hare Stadium.

“We beat a really good football team today,” head coach Jeremy Pruitt said. “It’s like I told them in there, if we learn to execute and raise our level of fight, we’ve got a chance to have a really good football team. There were times in the game where things didn’t go our way. I didn’t think we played very well at certain times in the game, but our guys kind of kept their poise. Fought a little bit harder. They played with a little better technique. We got some turnovers and didn’t turn the ball over.”

The conference victory is the first of the Jeremy Pruitt era and marks UT’s first road win over a ranked Auburn team since the 1980 season when the Vols defeated the No. 18 Tigers 42-0 in Auburn.

With the win, Tennessee improves to 3-3 (1-2 SEC) and Auburn moves to 4-3 (1-3 SEC) on the season.

Redshirt sophomore quarterback Jarrett Guarantano paced the Vols offensively, completing a career-high 21 of 32 passes for 328 yards and two touchdowns. Sophomore running back Ty Chandler rushed for 50 yards on 16 carries while redshirt junior wide receiver Jauan Jennings caught five passes for 71 yards and a touchdown.

Auburn quarterback Jarrett Stidham completed 28 of 45 passes for 322 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions. Andrew Schwartz led the Tigers in rushing with 44 yards on three carries and added 83 yards on two receptions.

The Tigers got the scoring started with a 14-play, 75-yard drive, capped off by a 1-yard touchdown rush by running back Chandler Cox with 9:44 remaining in the opening frame.

Tennessee then added three points to the board in its ensuing possession with a 42-yard field goal by sophomore kicker Brent Cimaglia. Chandler had an 18-yard rush to start the drive while freshman running back Tim Jordan made two plays for a combined 37 yards to set up the kick.

The Vols’ defense proceeded to hold Auburn to a field goal in the redzone after the Tigers marched 73 yards down the field to UT’s two-yard line during their final drive of the first quarter.

In the second quarter, freshman defensive back Bryce Thompson ignited Tennessee’s third scoring opportunity, intercepting Stidham’s pass on a second-and-four try with 13:05 to go to set the Vols up at their own 41.  Guarantano then marched the Big Orange 59 yards in five plays, capping the drive with a 42-yard pass to Chandler for a touchdown. Cimaglia’s successful PAT tied the game up at 10-10.

Stidham was intercepted again in the second quarter with 6:34 left to play by redshirt senior linebacker Jonathan Kongbo. He returned it 10 yards to the AU37. The resulting Tennessee drive ended in a Joe Doyle punt. Auburn capitalized on the opportunity with a 76-yard touchdown pass to make it a 17-10 ballgame.

In Tennessee’s final drive of the half, Cimaglia made his second field goal of the game, a season-long 45-yard kick which capped a seven-play, 24-yard drive.

The two teams exchanged punts to start the third before Tennessee ate up 6:24 on a 12-play, 86-yard drive. The Vols used three plays over 10 yards to get down the field before Guarantano connected with Jennings in the back of the endzone for a 25-yard score. Cimaglia’s PAT was good and gave the Vols a 20-17 lead.

Tennessee then attempted an on-side kick that Auburn recovered at it’s own 25-yard line. On the second play of the drive, defensive linemen Kyle Phillips and Alexis Johnson Jr. forced a Stidham fumble that was recovered and returned for a touchdown by Alontae Taylor. It marks the first fumble returned for a touchdown by a Vol since VFL Corey Vereen did so at Georgia on Oct. 1, 2016.

Cimaglia added another field goal for Tennessee in the fourth quarter to extend the Vols’ lead 30-17. The score finished off a five-play, 47-yard drive.

Auburn recorded the last touchdown of the game with 37 seconds left in the fourth to make it a 30-24 final.

Tennessee takes on the No. 1-ranked Crimson Tide next Saturday, Oct. 20, at 3:30 p.m. ET in Neyland Stadium.

 

UT Athletics

Watch Cole Swindell Perform “Break Up In the End” From His Headlining “All of It Tour”

Watch Cole Swindell Perform “Break Up In the End” From His Headlining “All of It Tour”

To coincide with the August release of his third studio album, All of It, Cole Swindell embarked on a six-date tour of the same name that made stops in Cleveland, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and more.

During the tour, Cole treated fans to the album’s 12 new songs, including lead single, “Break Up In the End,” which was penned by Jon Nite, Chase McGill and Jessie Jo Dillon.

Check out Cole performing his current Top 5 single, “Break Up in the End,” during his tour stop at Joe’s Live in Rosemont, Ill.

photo by Jason Simanek

Jimmy’s blog: Pruitt says Auburn DC does great job with disguises, pressuring QB

Jimmy’s blog: Pruitt says Auburn DC does great job with disguises, pressuring QB

By Jimmy Hyams

Would Jeremy Pruitt have landed the Tennessee job if not for Kevin Steele?

Who knows?

Steele, Alabama’s defensive coordinator in 2007, convinced Tide coach Nick Saban to hire Pruitt as a director of player development on the staff. Pruitt was coaching at Hoover High School in Birmingham, Steele’s recruiting territory.

Pruitt gives Steele a lot of credit for getting him into college coaching and helping him learn Saban’s scheme.

What’s intriguing, Steele and Pruitt were two of the three finalists when Tennessee athletic director Phillip Fulmer was in the process of replacing Butch Jones as the Vols’ coach. Georgia defensive coordinator Mel Tucker was the other.

“Kevin was very patient with me as a young coach, and very instrumental in helping me kind of get going a little bit in my career,’’ Pruitt said. “I’m very thankful for that opportunity and he’s a good friend of mine.’’

Steele is in his third season as Auburn’s defensive coordinator.

Pruitt said Steele does a “fantastic job’’ in disguising his defense, pressuring the QB and creating negative plays.

Here some notes about the upcoming matchup between Tennessee and Auburn:

  • Pruitt said 10 guys have started who did not go through spring practice and 8-10 more have played that didn’t go through the spring.
  • Pruitt said Auburn is a difficult place to play and that the Tigers have a “really good’’ front seven and front four. Auburn allows 135.5 rushing yards per game but that number is misleading considering Mississippi State ran for 349.
  • Pruitt said Auburn coach Gus Malzahn has always done a good job running the ball and that Auburn plays fast, has an experienced QB and good wide receivers. But Auburn has gone three straight games without reaching 100 rushing yards and the school’s nine-year streak of producing a 1000-yard rusher is in jeopardy.
  • Pruitt said senior safety Todd Kelly Jr., who played some snaps on special teams against Georgia, is “taking baby steps’’ from “severe (knee) injury’’ and it’s a credit to Kelly that he is still playing because he could have easily quit.
  • Pruitt said Auburn QB Jerrett Stidham has “great arm talent’’ and can “make all the throws’’ and can beat you with his legs. But Stidham was better last year when he completed 66.5% of his passes for 3158 yards and 18 touchdowns with just six interceptions. This year he has completed 60% of his throws for 1177 yards and just five touchdowns in six games.
  • Pruitt said QB Jarrett Guarantano has “had some bright spots’’ but “needs consistency’’ like many other players. Guarantano has completed 63.4% of his passes but has just four TDs. He has completed 70% of his passes inside the numbers on the field and 78% on play-action passes.
  • Pruitt said he has a “tremendous amount of respect’’ for Auburn’s coaching staff and that they do a “fantastic job.’’ Pruitt coached at Alabama with Steele. Also, two UT assistants played at Auburn: Tracy Rocker, Charles Kelly.
  • As Florida State’s defensive coordinator, Pruitt coached against Auburn in the 2013 national title game and Seminoles rallied from 21-3 halftime deficit to win the crown 34-31. Kelly was an FSU assistant at the time. Pruitt is 6-2 as an assistant against Auburn.
  • Mississippi State beat Auburn 23-9 as State QB Nick Fitzgerald ran 28 times for 195 yards. Pruitt: “They were willing to run the quarterback … basically in the wildcat. It’s a tough offense to defend because the quarterback and run and throw.’’
  • Pruitt said of Fitzgerald:  “I tell you this, that quarterback is sore.’’ Pruitt said if you run a QB “over and over’’ in the SEC “you better have another one.’’ In other words, that QB will get hurt.
  • UT-Auburn kickoff at 11 am CT. Pruitt likes the early kickoffs so you don’t have to wait around and you get back to Knoxville by 7:30 pm.
  • Pruitt said LT Trey Smith had a good off week and hasn’t played his “best game yet’’ but folks shouldn’t have unrealistic expectations considering his situation. Smith said playing left tackle is harder than right guard because he’d prefer to block the “fat guys’’ at defensive tackle, rather than agile defensive ends.
  • Pruitt is impressed with Auburn’s defense: “Auburn doesn’t have a good defense, they have a great defense. … I think one of the best defenses in the country.’’
  • UT has improved its run defense from 250 yards per game last year to 158 through five games. Pruitt said the run defense is “headed in the right direction’’ but not where it needs to be because “too many times the pile moves the wrong way.’’
  • While Auburn has gone 3 games in a row without rushing for 100 yards, Pruitt said Gus Malzahn and offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey “know how to run the football’’ and Auburn is usually “as good as any team in the country’’ running the ball.
  • Pruitt has coached many games against Malzahn and said the Auburn coach “finds new wrinkles and ways to be productive offensively.’’
  • Auburn played 42 minutes on defense against Miss State which might be one reason the Tigers didn’t have a good tackling day as the Bulldogs rushed for 349 yards.
  • Auburn coach Gus Malzahn said Auburn needs to be better in run game and were close against Miss State but didn’t run much because didn’t have many snaps due to inability to convert third downs (3×14) and defense didn’t do good job stopping State on third-down (7×17).
  • Malzahn said Pruitt mixes up defenses and makes more defensive changes from the sideline than most coaches. Malzahn also said UT plays hard for its next coach.
  • Malzahn again said he would prefer 9-game SEC schedule to better balance strength of schedule, which he feels overrides some years have 4 or 5 home games.  He said SEC schedules aren’t `balanced the way they could be or should be.’
  • Auburn is sixth nationally in scoring defense (14.3 points per game) and ninth in pass defensive efficiency and 10th in third-down defensive stops.
  • Stidham has completed 114 passes to Ryan Davis, the second most prolific combination in Auburn history. Pat Sullivan connected with Terry Beasley 140 times.

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Pistol Annies Roll Out New Song, “Stop Drop and Roll One” [Listen]

Pistol Annies Roll Out New Song, “Stop Drop and Roll One” [Listen]

The Pistol Annies—Miranda Lambert, Ashley Monroe and Angaleena Presley—will release their third studio album, Interstate Gospel, on Nov. 2.

The 14-track offering follows the trio’s two previous albums, 2011’s Hell on Heels and 2013’s Annie Up. All of the songs where co-penned by the three Annies, with the exception of “This Too Shall Pass,” which was penned by Ashley and Angaleena.

Interstate Gospel is available for pre-order now, with three downloadable instant-grat tracks: “Interstate Gospel,” “Best Years of My Life” and “Got My Name Changed Back.”

On Oct. 12, the Annies released the album’s fourth song, “Stop Drop and Roll One.”

“We’d just finished a song out at the farm, and Miranda said, ‘Girls, we’re on fire I think, so stop, drop and roll one,’” says Ashley regarding the song’s genesis.

Listen to “Stop Drop and Roll One” below.

photo courtesy Miller Mobley

photo courtesy Miller Mobley

photo courtesy Miller Mobley

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