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Cody Jinks in San Francisco

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Cody Jinks
Shoreline Amphitheatre — Mountain View, CA

Cody Jinks is an outlaw country artist from Seymour, Texas who built his following the hard way—years of relentless touring before landing on most people's radar. He's known for a gritty, unpolished approach to country that feels more like something your uncle would play at a backyard barbecue than something built for radio. His lyrics tend toward the working-class and the reflective, dealing with drinking, faith, relationships falling apart, and the kind of self-examination that comes at 2 AM. Songs like 'Must Be Doing Something Right' and 'I'm Not The Devil' showcase his ability to write hooks that stick without sounding slick. Jinks has maintained creative independence largely by staying off major label deals and leveraging direct-to-fan relationships, which has earned him a fiercely loyal audience that actually shows up. His catalog spans albums like The Burning Hell and Lifers, both of which solidified his position as a genuine voice in modern country rather than another polished imitation.

Cody Jinks shows draw crowds that actually know the words. The energy is more sing-along intensity than arena enthusiasm—people care about being there, not performing their attendance on social media. He plays tight, doesn't waste time between songs, and the room gets noticeably quieter during the slower tracks because nobody wants to miss anything.

Known for Loud and Heavy, Must Be Doing Something Right, I'm Not The Devil, Hippies and Cowboys, She's Got the Honey

Cody Jinks has a real connection to San Francisco's live music scene. He played Great American Music Hall back in 2017, running through 24 songs that night including 'What Else Is New.' The venue's intimate setup suited his brand of Texas country—the kind that doesn't need much production to land hard.

San Francisco's country scene exists in the margins, overshadowed by indie rock and hip-hop. But there's always been a contingent of people who want something rawer and more straightforward — less Bay Area slickness, more actual feeling. Jinks's unpolished Texas country should find those people, even if they're not the obvious default audience here.

Stay in Hayes Valley or the Mission—both neighborhoods have the kind of restaurants and bars that make a weekend feel deliberate rather than touristy. Head to State Bird Provisions for dinner if you can get in; it's precise and inventive without being pretentious. Spend a day in Muir Woods or hiking around Twin Peaks for actual views of the city. The de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park is worth a couple hours if the weather holds. Hit up a coffee place on Valencia Street in the Mission just to sit and watch the neighborhood move around you.

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