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5 June, 2026Print
GRAMMY-Winning Singer, Songwriter & Rap Legend Everlast Drops “Losing Man’s Game”
From Embers to Ashes Album Out August 28Ft. DJ Muggs, Amigo the Devil & Andy Frasco
Friday, June 5 – Today, GRAMMY-winning Irish-American rapper, singer & songwriter Everlast releases a new single and music video for “Losing Man’s Game” from his first album in eight years, Embers to Ashes. Produced by Yelawolf, mixed by Chris Lord-Alge, and with cover art by award-winning Tristan Eaton, Embers to Ashes is out August 28 on Everlast’s own Martyr Inc Records, in partnership with Thirty Tigers and Regime Music Group (more via Variety, Billboard & SPIN).
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“Losing Man’s Game”: Watch / Listen
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“There's a freedom in being broken. Go all in or go home. Losing man’s game,” Everlast says about the song. The video features an intergenerational cast of Amigo the Devil, Andy Frasco and DJ Muggs (Cypress Hill) – who also produced House of Pain’s hit “Jump Around.” Director Ryen McPherson (Sleater Kinney, Billy Strings, Rise Against) explains: “The cinematic carnage at the end of Luca Guadagnino’s “Suspiria”has always resonated with me. It wasn’t just the visuals, but Thom Yorke’s score. I was inspired to finally take a crack at pairing onscreen violence with a ballad, the condition being that it had to be shot beautifully. I found some of the most sick and talented on-screen talent I’ve worked with in my 20+ years directing music videos. This video was edited less than 24 hours after we wrapped shooting, so to say that my crew and I are excited to share it with Everlast’s fans is an understatement. Enjoy your nightmares.”
Previous single “My Hollywood” is a lighter hearted take on the ups and downs of success in the entertainment world, while the first single and music video for “Stones” is a journey from self loathing to self healing and forgiveness (“soulful and heartfelt" - VICE, “a masterclass in the genre-bending style Everlast pioneered” - BroBible).
There are two mantras Everlast keeps close: whatever’s happening is inevitable, and this too shall pass. The philosophy comes into focus on Embers to Ashes, shaped by a decade that saw his Los Angeles home burn down in the 2018 Woolsey fire, the pandemic, a divorce and more. But the seed was planted a decade before – in 2015, Everlast was in Berlin with plans to head to Paris for Eagles of Death Metal at Le Bataclan, and ended up staying to catch Yelawolf instead. That night, Yelawolf told him he’d love to produce a record for him, just as news started coming through that something bad had happened in Paris. Ten years later, they connected in Nashville to make Embers to Ashes, with Yelawolf producing - encouraging him to bring in co-writers like David Ray (Jelly Roll, Teddy Swims).
Maybe it’s hard to understand how the guy who recorded one of the biggest breakout hip-hop hits in history (1992’s “Jump Around” with his old group House of Pain) as well as the enduring empathy anthem of the 20th century (1998’s “What It's Like”) could go from Armand de Brignac to Canadian Club (“We went from champagne and crystal glasses to drinking cheap whiskey out of plastic,” he growls on “Stones”). After all, this is the same man who won a GRAMMY with Santana and went on to redefine rap’s relationship with blues and rock. But here’s the thing: this too shall pass.
The wider world, with all its own hurt, looms throughout the record, as well. On the ghostly protest song “Rubber Bullets,” written as Everlast watched the fallout of George Floyd’s murder, he reminds listeners: “Rubber bullets kill exactly like the real ones.” The incendiary “Peace of Mind” mixes down-home blues and epic rock as Everlast takes aim at the absurdity of modern life and escapism. And to close things down, the hopeful “Young Man” offers up the clearest of that aforementioned hard-earned wisdom, as Everlast assumes the role of elder, imparting what he’s learned during a life truly lived to those — like his two daughters — who are just setting out.
Everlast will announce more tour dates this year, performing at Calgary Stampede on Thursday, July 9, 2026 in Calgary, AB, Red Rocks on September 19, 2026 in Morrison, CO and Oceans Calling Festival on September 25, 2026 in Ocean City, MD.
Everlast fans can sign up for updates, exclusives, and giveaways by texting “RSVP" to the phone number (213) 319-4032.
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Credit: Lisa Franchot |
ABOUT EVERLAST:
Everlast is familiar. It’s not just that he recorded one of the biggest breakout hip-hop hits in history — 1992’s “Jump Around” with his old group House of Pain. Or that he made the empathy anthem of the 20th century — 1998’s “What It's Like,” from his triple-Platinum LP Whitey Ford Sings the Blues. It’s not the GRAMMYs he was nominated for, or the one he won with Santana. No, the reason we feel we know the artist born Erik Francis Schrody is twofold: It’s in the way he redefined rap’s relationship with blues and rock, and it’s in the humanity he’s always brought to that sound — a mix that rings across the airwaves today. For more than three decades, he has made it his work to document the whole picture as he sees it and as he’s lived it, from humbling highs to devastating lows. The latter defined the lead-up to Everlast’s eighth album, Embers to Ashes, his inaugural LP on Thirty Tigers / Regime Music Group, and first in eight years. Produced by Yelawolf and recorded in Nashville with input from kindred spirits like songwriter David Ray (Jelly Roll, Teddy Swims), the 2026 set is a collection of unflinching and moving music from a master of the medium — songs that tell tales of glory grasped and lost, sudden swerves that change a life’s trajectory, and hard-earned wisdom and warnings. Through his rap-honed pen and earthy baritone, he renders our universal experiences in a way that gets to the heart of it all. In short, we feel like we know Everlast, because Everlast knows us.
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