Country on Film
New documentary goes behind the scenes of McKinney country music fest

This year, 2026, is a banner year for the Texas Music Revolution festival.
A new documentary will take viewers behind the stage of the big Texas Music Revolution festival in McKinney.
The annual independent music festival, hosted by KHYI 95.3 "The Range," has been digging into alternative country western subgenres for 30 years as of this summer. The new documentary by the same name, Texas Music Revolution, chronicles "the festival's reinvigoration post COVID during its 2021 show and 25th anniversary," a release says.
The film will screen at Alamo Drafthouse theaters, including locations in Dallas, Denton, Richardson, Austin, San Antonio, and more. Screenings are ticketed (with tickets at the links below).
The Dallas-area screenings will take place as follows:
- Dallas: 7 pm April 28 at Alamo Drafthouse Cedars
- Denton: 7:30 pm April 28 at Alamo Drafthouse Denton
- Richardson: 7 pm April 29 at Alamo Drafthouse Richardson
The 30th anniversary Texas Music Revolution festival itself will be staged in downtown McKinney on June 5-6. The full film will be available for streaming during the festival.
"Shane Smith and the Saints, Ray Wylie Hubbard, William Beckmann, Wade Bowen, Shelby Stone, the Kruse Brothers, Ellis Bullard, King Margo, Two Tons of Steel, Lance Roark, Mason Lively, Wesley Hanna, Katrina Cain, special guest Kiefer Sutherland, and many more will be taking the stage June 5th and 6th at the multi-stage festival held about 30 miles north of Dallas," says the festival's website.
From festival to film
KHYI broadcasts to Dallas-Fort Worth, prioritizing a version of country music that hasn't been smoothed out by a desire to appeal to the mainstream. That means genres like Red Dirt, outlaw country, and Americana.
The station's irreverent website calls itself "a beacon of hope in the murky ocean of cheesy, generic, pseudo, so-called “Country” music." It makes digs at Jason Aldean, Kenny Chesney, and "Rascal Flattulence," while pledging allegiance to Robert Earl Keen, Ray Wylie Hubbard, the Turnpike Troubadours, and other artists who get less radio play.
Festival founder Joshua Jones takes a leading role not just in the festival, but in the film as a subject and as a producer. Directed by Troy Paff (cinematography for Dirty Jobs), Texas Music Revolution ponders the ethos of KHYI and the styles of music it plays, recounts the 1997 start of the festival, documents the exposure it creates for up-and-coming acts, and follows a dramatic storm that derailed the festival while creating an opportunity for an even more fun Plan B during its silver anniversary year in the wake of COVID.
"As much a document of reintroducing live music in the wake of a pandemic, it is a celebration of Texas and its roots," says the release.
A newly released trailer gives fans an idea of what the film will cover and who will be onscreen. Austin musician Charley Crockett features heavily in the trailer, and actor Kiefer Sutherland also appears. Others throughout the film include Ray Wylie Hubbard, Joshua Ray Walker, Zane Williams, Ottoman Turks, and more.
