Beginnings, Turmoil & Tinfoil (2012–2019) In 2012, Don Julin, a mandolin player from
Traverse City, Michigan, and author of
Mandolin for Dummies, asked Strings to join him on a paying gig. The partnership lasted for the next four years.
Rolling Stone named Strings one of the Top Ten New Country Artists to Know in 2017. The
International Bluegrass Music Association awarded him with the Momentum Instrumentalist of the Year award in 2016.
Bluegrass Situation named him a scene tastemaker in 2016. In March 2018,
Rolling Stone released Strings' debut music video for his song "Dealing Despair" from his album
Turmoil & Tinfoil. He planned to play over 200 shows in 2018. He has been invited to play on stage with artists including
Phish,
Dierks Bentley,
Del McCoury,
Bill Kreutzmann,
Bob Weir,
David Grisman,
Tommy Emmanuel,
Larry Keel,
Sam Bush,
The Marcus King Band,
Greensky Bluegrass,
The Infamous Stringdusters,
The String Cheese Incident,
Leftover Salmon,
Widespread Panic,
Tool,
Dead & Company,
Zach Top, and more. He has performed at festivals including Frankfort Bluegrass Festival (Frankfort, IL),
Hookahville, Blue Ox, Pickathon,
Merlefest, DelFest,
High Sierra Music Festival,
Lollapalooza,
Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival,
Telluride Bluegrass Festival, John Hartford Memorial Festival, Aiken Bluegrass Festival,
Appaloosa Music Festival,
Wheatland Music Festival, Red Wing Roots Music Festival, Bristol Rhythm & Roots, Rooster Walk, French Broad River Festival, Makers Trail Festival, Under the Big Sky Festival and the All Good Presents 4848 Festival. At Grey Fox, he served as the very first Artist in Residence in 2017 and 2018. Strings has appeared on famous
PBS musical TV programs
Austin City Limits and
Bluegrass Underground. He has toured with
Greensky Bluegrass,
The Infamous Stringdusters,
Leftover Salmon, , Cabinet and others. Of those bands he played with early in his career, he has cited Greensky Bluegrass specifically as a major influence and his "favorite band." In February 2017, Strings was named one of the six new rising stars of bluegrass by
Acoustic Guitar. He also collaborated with
Molly Tuttle on the songs "Sittin' on Top of the World" and "Billy in the Lowground". In March 2018,
PBS announced that Strings was to be the inaugural performer at the new cave for the renowned series
Bluegrass Underground in the caverns of
Pelham, Tennessee.
Home and Renewal (2019–2021) In January 2019,
Rolling Stone wrote an article titled "Why Guitarist Billy Strings Is the Bluegrass Star You Don't Want to Miss." He was signed to
Rounder Records in June 2019. Strings released his album
Home (produced and engineered by Glenn Brown) under the label on September 27, 2019. On September 26, 2019, Billy Strings was voted the International Bluegrass Music Association Guitar Player of the Year in Raleigh, North Carolina. His album
Home won the
Grammy for Best Bluegrass Album at the
63rd Annual Grammy Awards. In 2021, he joined
Bill Kreutzmann's
Billy & the Kids for a number five shows, along with James Casey (saxophone). As a solo artist, he was part of the
Newport Folk Festival in July 2021. On September 24, 2021, he released his third studio album,
Renewal.
Me/And/Dad and live releases (2022–2024) Strings' touring band was expanded from a quartet to a five-piece when frequent guest fiddler Alex Hargreaves was asked to become a permanent member during a show in Baltimore on July 3, 2022. The band consists of Billy Failing (banjo), Royal Masat (bass), Jarrod Walker (mandolin) and Alex Hargreaves (fiddle). At the 2022
International Bluegrass Music Awards, Strings was nominated for six awards, winning Entertainer of the Year for the second consecutive year, while "Red Daisy" won Song of the Year. On October 3, 2022, Strings announced the album
Me/And/Dad, a project with his father Terry Barber. While Barber is not his biological father, Strings has said, "Terry raised me and taught me how to wipe my ass, tie my shoes, and play guitar. That's my fucking dad." The 38-minute long single, recorded on March 4, 2023, at
Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, contained a three-song medley of "Meet Me At The Creek" > "Pyramid Country" > "Must Be Seven" > "Meet Me At The Creek." On July 12, 2024, Strings released his first full-length live album,
Live Vol. 1. Announced on May 28, the album contained live recordings of eight tracks from 2023 and 2024. The album would go on to win the
Grammy Award for Best Bluegrass Album at the
67th Annual Grammy Awards.
Highway Prayers (2024-present) Strings's fourth studio album (and first for Reprise Records)
Highway Prayers was released on September 27, 2024. The album reached the first No. 1 on Billboard's all-genre Top Album Sales survey dated Oct. 12, 2024, the first bluegrass album to do so in over 20 years. On November 1, 2024, during a fall tour stop in Baltimore Maryland in support of the album Strings performed the album in its entirety for the first set of the concert On January 24, 2025, Strings launched his Winter Tour in continued support of the album with three shows at Denver's
Ball Arena. The 21,000-seat arena featured the biggest crowd he'd ever played for indoors on Friday night, only to top that crowd with a new personal best on Saturday night. As pre-planned weeks in advance, due to lower then expected ticket sales, Strings played Sunday's show for a reduced capacity configuration at Ball Arena. That same year, he recorded a bluegrass cover of "Yahoos and Triangles" for the end credits of the
Hulu revival of
King of the Hill. On August 1, 2025, Strings performed an opening set for
Dead & Company at San Francisco's
Golden Gate Park as part of the
Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary celebration. He later joined the band during their second set to perform "Wharf Rat." On February 1, 2026,
Highway Prayers won
Best Bluegrass Album at the
68th Annual Grammy Awards. Strings is also featured on
Kacey Musgraves' seventh studio album,
Middle of Nowhere, released on May 1st. He is featured on the Track
Everybody Wants to Be A Cowboy. ==Personal life==