Jelly Roll made a stop on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on Tuesday (Oct. 3), performing "Halfway to Hell," the tone-setting opening track from his debut country album, Whitsitt Chapel.

Flanked by a backing band that boasted equal parts steel guitar and rock 'n' roll horsepower, Jelly treated the Fallon studio audience to a hard-charging taste of his particular brand of soul-searching, haunted and redemptive country music. As Jelly Roll told fans in a tweet before his in-studio Fallon visit, "Halfway to Hell" is a song he'd never performed on television before.

"I'm a big Jimmy Fallon fan — this is awesome," he added.

During his performance, Jelly Roll worked the crowd and camera against a backdrop of gold and red flashing lights. He wore a black button-down shirt with the name "Noah" on the lapel. Jelly Roll often uses his outfits to honor his loved ones — he's previously been spotted wearing a shirt with the name of his wife, Bunnie Xo — and Noah is the name of the singer's six-year-old son.

Jelly Roll is currently in the midst of his headlining 2023 Backroad Baptism Tour, and after his performance on The Tonight Show, he immediately had to hop on a plane to Charleston, West Va., to play his scheduled tour stop. The singer was running a little late, but he let fans know he was on his way in an Instagram Stories slide from the plane.

"We're on the way, baby. We're running a little late but we're coming to the stage as soon as we get to the city," Jelly assured his fans, panning the camera over to show everyone that he was still on the plane. "See y'all soon. On the way."

The Tonight Show is getting a double dose of country music this week, as Carly Pearce is taking the stage on the late-night show on Wednesday (Oct 4). It'll serve as the unofficial kickoff to her Country Made Me Do It Tour, which opens Oct. 5 in New York, N.Y.

10 Things You Didn't Know About Jelly Roll

The Jelly Roll: Save Me documentary on Hulu tells Jelly Roll's complicated life story and spares no details. He's shockingly honest about addiction, prison, his childhood and his insecurities. Here are 10 key takeaways from the project.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes

Country Stars and the Songs They Regret, Resent or Apologized For

It's rare to hear a country star confess to hating a song they've recorded, but it has happened. This list includes several apologies, quite a bit of ambivalence and at least once complicated instance when love for a song died with love for a man.

A few on this list are more nuanced: Thomas Rhett, for example, probably doesn't really "hate" "Crash and Burn," but for a few months, he seemed to. Gretchen Wilson admits to coming to love a song she once fought against recording, and a major country group just re-cut a song they burned out on in the early 2000s.

Scroll down to find our list of 10 songs that country artists regret or resent, and the explanations why.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes