Age is often treated like a reason to slow down. Justin Headworth would clearly like to have a word with that idea. Released on March 25, 2026, “Still a Hurricane,” featuring Wayne Wright and Adam Knight, is a high-energy folk-country track built around movement, confidence, and the refusal to let age decide what comes next. From the opening lines, Headworth makes his position clear: reaching forty does not mean the party is over.
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The song moves with the kind of lively, forward-driving energy that keeps listeners moving. Its story is simple but effective. There are younger performers around, there are long nights ahead, and there may be a sore morning waiting on the other side, but Headworth is still showing up, still performing, and still ready to give the night everything he has.

The repeated phrase “still a hurricane” is the song’s perfect centrepiece. It works as both a hook and a statement of identity. The message is not that getting older changes nothing. Headworth openly admits that he may not be able to play six nights a week like he once did. The difference is that experience has not erased the desire to keep going.
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That honesty gives the song much of its charm. “Still a Hurricane” is not pretending to be twenty years old again. It is celebrating the fact that the fire is still there, perhaps with a little more experience, a few more aches, and an even stronger sense of who you are. With its folk-country energy, rowdy spirit, and memorable refrain, Justin Headworth delivers a track that feels made for honky-tonks, live stages, and anyone who has ever been told to slow down when they were nowhere near finished.

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