
Giovannie & The Hired Guns
Tue, 6 Oct, 8:00 PM CDT
Doors open
7:00 PM CDT
Joe's on Weed Street
940 West Weed St., Chicago, IL 60642
Event Information
Age Limit
21+
Folk
Giovannie & The Hired Guns
Giovannie & The Hired Guns
Folk
Since their inception in 2015, Giovannie and The Hired Guns have made a blockbuster
career out of wildly defying expectations. With a visceral sound that merges alt-metal, Red
Dirt country, Latin pop, Americana, and much more, the Stephenville, Texas-based five-
piece have ascended from playing local honky-tonks to taking the stage at major festivals
and arenas across the country, drawing an ardent crowd ranging from cowboys to
metalheads to skate punks. As they continue their colossal rise—a journey that’s included
scoring a No. 1 radio hit with their smash single “Ramon Ayala” and winning the 2023
iHeartRadio Music Award for Best New Artist in Alternative & Rock—Giovannie and The
Hired Guns now return with their new album Quitter: a body of work that pushes the
boundaries with even more intensity, matching its explosive riVs and unforgettable hooks
with the band’s most brutally honest songwriting to date.
Produced by Johnny K (Megadeth, Sevendust, Plain White T’s), Quitter marks the fourth full-
length from Giovannie and The Hired Guns (frontman Giovannie Yanez, guitarists Carlos
Villa and Jerrod Flusche, bassist/tuba player Alex Trejo, and drummer/pianist Milton Toles)
and second LP since signing with Warner Music Nashville through a first-of-its-kind
partnership with Warner Music Latina. While the band have always brought a powerful
emotionality to their lyrics, the album embodies an unfiltered urgency that has much to do
with Yanez’s processing a number of life-altering troubles in real-time, including the death
of a close friend and his own relapse into addiction. Recorded at the famed Sonic Ranch (a
residential studio near the Mexican border in Tornillo, Texas), Quitter ultimately supplies
the kind of catharsis that can only come from exorcising your demons and bravely moving
toward a better future. “When I first listened back to this album I realized I wasn’t all there
for some of the songs; I was so blinded by the suppressants that I thought were helping me
out,” Yanez admits. “But it feels good to look back and know that I made it out to the other
side. I hope it ends up helping people realize that there’s always hope no matter how bad
things seem. There’s always a tomorrow.”
The follow-up to 2022’s Tejano Punk Boyz, Quitter finds Giovannie and The Hired Guns
doubling down on the freewheeling attitude they first embraced in their earliest days as a
band, back when Yanez was working the counter at a nearby pawnshop. “From the
beginning I told the guys not to worry about sounding too rock or too country on this
record,” Yanez recalls. “We just went in there and had fun and didn’t let anything hold us
back, and because of that the album shows the full range of what we can do as a band.”
Immediately delivering on that promise, Quitter opens on the galvanizing rhythms and
throat-shredding vocals of “Cheap Tequila”: a ferocious yet fun-loving track that speaks an
unvarnished truth about their shared life experience. “I wrote that song thinking about us in
our younger days, when we were all broke and working these mid-paying jobs,” says Yanez.
“There’s a feeling of not really caring what’s going to happen next—you’re just living for
today, waiting for your next paycheck so you can go out and get drunk again.”
Throughout Quitter, Giovannie and The Hired Guns reveal their rare ability to channel
painful self-reflection into songs with all the raw exuberance of a fist-pumping party
anthem. On “Quitter,” for instance, Yanez closely details the confusion and loneliness of
dealing with addiction (“Something’s really wrong with me/And I don’t wanna talk about my
history/Just crush ’em up so we can live happily”), but brilliantly twists the mood at the
track’s sing-along-ready and strangely carefree chorus (“I’m not a quitter/But I wish I was”).
“Everything kind of clicked for this album after we wrote ‘Quitter,’” Yanez points out. “Jerrod
came up with a riV and I just jumped in and started singing those opening lines: ‘Here we go
again/Pass me a Xan.’ It was exactly what I was going through at the time, but I didn’t even
mean for it to come out.”
An album rooted in the band’s fearlessly candid storytelling, Quitter takes its title from one
of its most poignant tracks—a thundering but undeniably tender expression of longing and
self-doubt. “Quitter is about being out on tour all the time and never getting to be at home,
and also feeling like you don’t deserve the person who’s back at home waiting for you,” says
Yanez. Another track informed by all-consuming regret, “Letcha Down” unfolds in soulful
guitar work as Yanez confesses to certain missteps in his past. Meanwhile, on “Pineapple
Sunshine,” Giovannie and The Hired Guns bring breezy reggae beats and bright acoustic
strumming to an unguarded meditation on the destructive eVects of trying to hide your pain
(from the chorus: “Wearing my fake prescription smile/So my friends’ll think that I’m
alright”). “That song’s about feeling like you can’t talk to anybody about your problems,
because you’re worried they’re just going to judge you,” says Yanez. “It’s such a huge
problem in today’s world but it’s still something I really struggle with, so the only way I knew
how to tell the truth was in a song.”
Although Quitter includes plenty of heavy-hearted moments, Giovannie and The Hired
Guns let loose with absolute abandon on tracks like the lust-crazed “Talk Dirty” and the
luminous and groove-heavy “Chiquita” (a blissed-out track featuring the smoldering
saxophone work of guest musician Frankie Hill). “‘Chiquita’ happened in the moment in the
studio,” Yanez notes. “I asked Milton to play a disco beat and the words just fell out, and it
turned into something that’s disco but with a Latin feel.” On “Never Change,” the band slips
into a wistful but shimmering piece of funk-pop lit up in the gorgeously sweet backup
harmonies of singer/songwriter Cameron Jayne. And on “You,” Quitter drifts into ballad
territory as Giovannie and The Hired Guns present a heart-on-sleeve love song graced with
lush strings and beautifully cascading guitar lines.
Like all of their work thus far—including their 2017 debut Bad Habits and 2020 self-titled
sophomore eVort, both self-released—Quitter fully echoes the singular collision of
elements that makes their live show so glorious: the force-of-nature energy, formidable
camaraderie, and passionate refusal to stick to any particular style or sound. A self-driven
musician who got his start gigging in dive bars while working at a nearby rock quarry, Yanez
grew up on such wide-ranging genres as outlaw country, classic alt-rock, hip-hop, and
Mexican folk music and deliberately assembled a lineup with similarly eclectic
sensibilities. Thanks to word-of-mouth praise for their frenetic and party-like live show,
Giovannie and The Hired Guns quickly made the leap from can’t-miss regional act to a fast-
rising sensation playing sold-out shows all over the Lone Star State. Fueled in part by their
phenomenal performance on streaming platforms, the band soon broke onto the national
scene and achieved such triumphs as opening for country superstar Jason Aldean before a
crowd of 36,000 at Globe Life Field (a stadium in Arlington, Texas). Prior to signing with
Warner Music Nashville, they also shattered records with the meteoric success of “Ramon
Ayala”—a 2021 release that marked the first time in over 15 years that an artist’s first
career-charting radio single reached the No. 1 spot on both the Active Rock Radio Chart
and the Alternative Radio Chart.
Looking back on the making of Giovannie and The Hired Guns’ most personal album yet,
Yanez reveals that Quitter helped to clarify his overall mission and vision for the band. “This
record made me want to keep putting out songs that are fun and serious at the same time,”
he says. “I want to show everyone that it’s okay to feel sad and out of place, but that
doesn’t mean you can’t have a good time—it’s all a part of being human. We just want to be
real with our fans and let them know we’re all diVerent and a little oV-the-wall too. And
when they come out to the shows, I try to make them feel like they’re just as much a part of
the band as my guys are. We’re all connected, and without them we’d never be where we
are now.”