

The Brook & The Bluff return to their rock & roll roots with Werewolf — a high-voltage, live-inspired record that turns up the amps, pushes the tempo, and howls in four-part harmony. Fueled by the sharp songwriting and stacked vocals that have defined their catalog, the album captures the raw, supercharged energy of the band’s concerts.
After nearly a decade of nonstop touring — earning 200M+ streams with fan favorites like “Halfway Up” and “Everything Is Just a Mess” — the band pressed pause and regrouped in Nashville, meeting every morning to write and rehearse like they did in their early days at Auburn University. Life unfolded in the background: weddings, divorces, real-world growing pains. Inside the room, it was all music.
Channeling the spirit of Creedence, Petty, and Eagles, Werewolf delivers loud, melodic, deeply human songs like the lead single “Super Bowl Sunday” — a crashing, introspective anthem about ego and emotional blind spots — alongside the highway-born “105” and the swaggering “Get By,” confronting modern masculinity, self-reflection, and the cost of chasing the road. “The goal was to treat the record like a live set,” says frontman Joseph Settine. And that’s exactly what they’ve done.