Carter Vail
19th Feb 2025 - 7:00 pm
The Deaf Institute

Carter Vail is the kind of guy who can look on the bright side no matter what. Take one listen to

the infectious pop-rock he’s been making since 2018 or watch his hilarious videos on TikTok or

Instagram, and you’ll find a relentless optimist who crafts inviting tunes with humor and heart.

Though the Los Angeles songwriter’s sophomore LP 100 Cowboys boasts the same tasteful

and turbocharged alternative that dominates his catalog, beneath the breezy arrangements are

his most bracingly personal lyrics yet. Written following a devastating breakup, Vail channels

messy, heartbroken feelings into nine galvanizing and cathartic songs. It’s as anthemic as it is

compelling, all delivered with palpable, tongue-in-cheek charm.

The Connecticut-raised Vail released his first single “Melatonin” in 2018 as a college student at

the University of Miami. His degree in music engineering led him to Nashville in 2019 where he

started a recording studio with his friends. “We were not very good at it,” says Vail. “We pretty

much just ate black beans for two or three years because no one would hire us. The good thing

was that gave me a lot of time to work on my own music.” While he amassed a large following

on social media making comedy songs and sketch videos on TikTok and Instagram during this

span, he also put out three increasingly adventurous albums: 2020’s full-length Red Eyes along

with the EPs The Interstellar Tennis Championship Pts I and II in 2020 and 2023. “With all of my

music so far, it just came out of a desire to make music rather than a specific inciting incident in

my life,” says Vail. “That all changed with 100 Cowboys.”

In 2023, Vail, now living in Los Angeles, went through an unmooring breakup that marked the

end of a six-year relationship. “Emotionally, I just didn’t want to deal with it beyond wanting to

write about it,” says Vail. “I locked myself in my studio with my roommate and we wrote this

whole record in a month.” Recorded with co-writer and co-producer Noah Tauscher, all but one

of the nine songs on 100 Cowboys was written and tracked during this month. The exception is

the single “Nashville.” Originally written two years ago as a goodbye to his former home city, he

realized the melancholic lyrics like “It’s better to see you all on your own / Than know that you’re

out there moving on” took on new, prophetic meaning after the dissolution of the romance.

Despite the raw feelings Vail was navigating while making 100 Cowboys, it’s an ebullient,

energetic listen throughout. “My friends make fun of me because I never write truly sad songs,”

says Vail. “Even if I’m channeling a sad emotion, the thing that’s coming out is usually an

upbeat pop banger.” There’s no better example of this than the sunny opener “Arizona.”

Complete with fuzzy guitar riffs that evoke Phoenix and the Strokes, Vail sings of the spark

leaving a once-thriving relationship, “We’re gonna fall eventually / So baby don’t stop don’t stop /

Do it again.” With such an earworm chorus, it takes a keen ear to catch the sadness at the

track’s core. Elsewhere, the single “Marilyn Monroe” is the most uplifting offering. With a

propulsive bass line, Vail sings in the chorus, “I know we’ll be alright.”

For Vail, writing these songs proved to be healing. “Writing felt so cathartic,” says Vail. “Because

so many of the songs came together super quickly, I was processing my emotions in real-time. It

all just kind of came out.” Though Vail played every instrument on 100 Cowboys, he credits his

creative partnership with Tauscher, his first time working with another producer and songwriting

collaborator, with taking him out of his comfort zone. “Writing with him feels super natural,” says

Vail. “We’ve been friends for eight or nine years and I live with him in Los Angeles. He’s just a

really great songwriter and a great producer. After knowing each other for so long, we’ve

developed so much trust between us.” This tandem finds its most resonant peak on “Harder To

Kill,” a rocker that finds Vail channeling Springsteen in its explosive chorus. Its second verse is

an emotional gut-punch with the lines, “How’s your dog / how’s your sister / I shouldn’t care / I

shouldn’t miss them.”

100 Cowboys is a playful and perceptive pop-rock album about getting through a bad time. It

takes its title from Vail’s infatuation with campy Spaghetti Westerns and a throwback to his time

recording country acts at his former Nashville studio. “I like how like campy old cowboy movies

are and in a lot of ways I think that’s what being a musician is like,” says Vail. “You can be your

own persona. A lot of these songs are super personal to me but dressing them up as pop and

rock songs is a lot of fun. It’s how I can share this brief period of my life that was really sad.”

Venue

The Deaf Institute 135 Grosvenor St
Manchester M1 7HE
UK