It wasn’t just a duet. It was a detonation.
When YUNGBLUD and Jesse Jo Stark took on “Jackson” — the fiery classic made famous by Johnny Cash and June Carter — no one expected this. Gone were the polite nods to nostalgia. In their place: cigarette smoke, leather boots, and a reckless, magnetic tension that felt more like a rock ‘n’ roll standoff than a love song.
From the first note, it was clear — this was not your parents’ “Jackson.” YUNGBLUD, wild-eyed and grinning like a man with a match in his hand, snarled through the verses with just the right amount of bite. Jesse Jo, equal parts velvet and venom, threw it back with a don’t-mess-with-me smirk that turned every line into a flirtation and a dare.
The chemistry? Volcanic.
The aesthetic? Pure outlaw glam — think spaghetti western meets punk noir.
And the crowd? Unhinged.
Fans who thought they knew the song were left reeling. This wasn’t a cover. It was an exorcism of every rule country and punk had ever agreed on. It was two rebels crashing into tradition at full speed and emerging from the flames laughing.
One fan called it “the sexiest musical bar fight of the decade.” Another said it “felt like watching Johnny and June fall in love again, only in hell with better boots.”
In a world full of safe tributes and sanitized homages, YUNGBLUD and Jesse Jo Stark chose chaos — and turned “Jackson” into a bonfire of everything familiar.
And honestly? We’re still trying to catch our breath.