“This tour is permanently burned into my brain & has given me some of the happiest times of my life,” Moroney said
Emo cowgirls and cowboys will now be able to carry the entirety of Megan Moroney‘s Am I Okay? Tour in their pockets. On Thursday, as she celebrated her 28th birthday, the country queen released her first-ever live album, featuring the entire setlist of her sold-out 2025 North American run.
“I’ve decided the only way I can possibly come to terms with this chapter ending is knowing that we’ll have the entire show to listen back to whenever we want… and we get to relive these memories forever,” Moroney wrote on Instagram. “This tour is permanently burned into my brain & has given me some of the happiest times of my life.”
The release of the live album comes just a day before she’s set to wrap her tour with three back-to-back sold-out shows in Dallas. “To all my emo cowgirls/cowboys, my rockstar band & my incredible touring crew… thank you for bringing your heart into this show with me night after night,” Moroney said of the 24-song alubm.
During her royal-blue tour run, Moroney performed album hits such as “Indifferent” and “Am I Okay?,” along with Lucky standouts “Tennessee Orange” and “I’m Not Pretty.” Moroney ended up adding her breakthrough hit “Wonder” to the setlist thanks to fan requests, and later included “6 Months Later,” her post-Am I Okay? single.
The live album was recorded in different cities on the run, including Charleston, Boston, and Charlotte. It also includes her sweet speech before “Girl in the Mirror,” and also the moment she crowns a little girl as Miss Am I Okay? Tour during “Miss Universe.”
It’s been a huge year for Moroney, who Rolling Stone predicts will be nominated for Best New Artist at the 2026 Grammy Awards. Last month, she joined Tate McRae at her Nashville show to duet “6 Months Later.” And earlier this week, she joined Ed Sheeran for a stripped performance of unreleased song “Beautiful Things,” which she played for Rolling Stone for a cover story interview earlier this year. “We wrote the crap out of these songs,” Moroney said at the time. “We exerted all of our options on every verse, every word.”