Cold Beer & Country Music

Cold Beer & Country Music is the second studio album by American country music singer Zach Top. It was released on April 5, 2024, via Leo33. It includes the single "Sounds Like the Radio", which was released as Top's debut single to country radio on January 8, 2024.

Content
In September 2023, it was announced that he was signed as the flagship artist for the newly-formed independent record label Leo33. Cold Beer & Country Music marks Top's first release under the label, and his first marketed as country music, following years of recording as a bluegrass performer.

Top co-wrote all of the album's 12 tracks with Carson Chamberlain, who also solely produced the album. Top began a working relationship with Chamberlain in 2019, regularly flying to Nashville on a monthly basis to write songs with him and others, including Wyatt McCubbin, Roger Springer, Paul Overstreet, Michael White, Mark Nesler, and Tim Nichols. After five years of songwriting, they put together a cohesive project, with Top saying: "It's just fun to get these songs to finally see the light of day and let people hear what I've been working on for a while. You only get one chance to make that first impression and we wanted to get it right".

Top named the title track, "There's the Sun", and "Cowboys Like Me Do" as some of his favorite songs on the record in an interview with Billboard. In another with American Songwriter, he also cited "Use Me".

Critical reception
In a review for Holler, Soda Canter described the album as finding "Top soaring through an array of diverse and intriguing song selections. It's material that triumphantly succeeds in representing his rural Washington upbringing and natural sentimentality, while propelling his exceptional artistic range front and center", and gave the album a 9.5 out of 10 ranking. Will Chapman of Country Central called the album "a masterclass in traditional country music", praising Top's vocals, the neo-traditional production choices, and the diversity of material from slow jams to honkytonk rockers. Roughstock writer Matt Bjorke praised the singer for his genuine approach to 90s country music and favorably compared him to the likes of Randy Travis, Keith Whitley, and Joe Diffie, citing his background in bluegrass music and unique vocal phrasing as elements that make him a standout in the modern country genre.