WILL OVERMAN & LOGAN MAC
https://www.willovermanmusic.com/
https://www.loganmacmusic.com/
THE OLD QUARTER IS A LISTENING ROOM. LOUD CONVERSATION DURING ARTIST'S PERFORMANCE WILL NOT BE TOLERATED. PLEASE CONSIDER THIS WHEN PURCHASING TICKETS TO SHOWS.
Restless by nature, a traveler with a poet’s eye for mountains but a working man’s taste for road food, Overman’s always on the move. He comes by it naturally. That’s because Overman spent his formative years as a child of two worlds. Summer surf sessions in Virginia Beach gave way to fall backpacking expeditions in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Rinse, wash, repeat. Sunscreen and fly rods, flip flops and hiking boots. Two different landscapes. Two different soundtracks. Rock and pop where water meets earth, bluegrass and folk where trees meet the sky. Somewhere in between, maybe on the interstate between Virginia’s edges and its heart, that’s where the country music is.
Ask Overman about his influences, and he’s just as likely to say The Killers as the Avett Brothers. So it’s inevitable all those worlds would sonically collide inside Overman’s head. A live performance will probably include a harmonica. But you’ll also get a good old-fashioned rock show. Or is it alt-country? Alternative?
Impossible to say, and that’s just the way Overman likes it. That’s because the versatile singer-songwriter has some road behind him now. Has lived enough life to know it doesn’t matter what you call a thing as long as it does the job. And that’s what Overman’s songs do. Aided by unforgettable vocal delivery, Overman fires each track directly at the heart by way of the ears.
Overman is as hard to pin down as his music, a trait illustrated in the album bookend “Landlocked Heart.”
Logan Mac doesn’t fit neatly into the traditional mold of a rising country artist—and he’s not trying to.
Raised in small-town Oklahoma, Mac’s story is rooted in grit, movement, and a working-class upbringing that shaped both his perspective and his songwriting. Growing up, his family moved often, shaping an early sense of how to adapt and find stability in people rather than places. Music was always present—long car rides with his father, hours spent in his mother’s salon picking songs, and early memories of singing alongside local musicians—but it was never the plan.
That path didn’t fully take shape until later. After briefly chasing music in his early years—playing small shows and even spending time in Nashville—Mac stepped away entirely, trading guitars for hard hats. He built a career in the oil field and construction, eventually launching and running his own company, where he still works full-time today. For over a decade, music took a backseat to building a life—one centered around his wife and three daughters, and the steady rhythm of blue-collar work.
It wasn’t until 2022, following the unexpected loss of his father, that music found its way back in. Just days before his passing, his dad encouraged him to pursue it again—a request that stayed with Mac long after he was gone. Two years later, Mac returned to songwriting, finishing a deeply personal track and sharing it online. The response was immediate and overwhelming, sparking industry attention and opening doors that once felt out of reach.
But even now, Mac’s relationship with music looks different than most. He’s still on job sites during the week, often working 50-hour weeks before heading out to play shows, sometimes arriving just in time to take the stage. He doesn’t chase the spotlight, and he’s quick to push back on the idea of success being tied to fame or metrics. For Mac, the music isn’t about recognition, it’s about telling the truth of where he’s been and what he’s lived.
That honesty defines his sound. Drawing influence from Red Dirt roots and storytellers like John Prine, Jason Isbell, and Turnpike Troubadours, Mac writes with a level of detail and emotional clarity that feels lived-in rather than performed. His songwriting is rooted in memory—specific, vivid, and deeply felt. He writes the kind of songs that don’t just tell a story; they let you see it, pulling listeners into moments that feel as real as if they lived them themselves.
His debut album, Til the Ground, serves as that foundation—a collection of songs that trace the experiences that shaped him, from childhood through early adulthood. Written as a series of snapshots across his life, the project captures both where he’s been and the perspective he’s carried with him along the way. But for Mac, that chapter is just the beginning. As his life evolves—now as a husband, a father of three daughters, and a man grounded in faith—so does the music.
Because at the end of the day, Logan Mac isn’t chasing a version of success defined by the industry. He’s already found his. If the songs reach people, that’s a bonus. If they don’t, he’ll still be writing them—because for him, the story is the point.




