Treaty Oak Revival’s West Texas Degenerate debuts at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Rock Albums and Americana/Folk Albums charts, and at No. 3 on Top Country Albums (all dated Dec. 13), opening with 27,000 equivalent album units earned in the United States Nov. 28-Dec. 4, according to Luminate.
The group earns its first appearance on both Top Rock Albums and Americana/Folk Albums. The set becomes the act’s third and highest charting entry on Top Country Albums, following 2024’s No Vacancy (No. 28 peak) and Have a Nice Day (No. 32). The latter two titles rank at Nos. 31 and 44, respectively, on the current chart.
The Odessa, Texas-born band launched in 2018 as a regional covers act and adopted its name from Austin’s historic Treaty Oak tree — a landmark long tied to the region’s cultural legacy. That local grounding helped establish the group’s footing on the Texas/Red Dirt circuit, where early singles and live shows began to turn heads.
Treaty Oak Revival’s streaming footprint has expanded over the last five years, growing from 3.1 million catalog-wide on-demand U.S. streams in 2021 to 16.9 million in 2022. That progress accelerated in 2023 as the band pushed beyond Texas, surging to 133.2 million streams. The big inflection point came in 2024, when it soared to 907.2 million on-demand plays. So far this year, the act has amassed 1.3 billion streams.
Meanwhile, seven songs from West Texas Degenerate debut on the latest Hot Country Songs chart, and one reenters, led by the band’s collaboration with Muscadine Bloodline, “Misery,” at No. 31 with 3.2 million streams.
For a band that spent its earliest years grinding through regional rooms, West Texas Degenerate lands as a clear crossover moment — one backed by steady, measurable momentum that’s now being reflected, all at once, on the charts.
Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox
Sign Up

























