“I Wrote This Song With Tears Still Falling”: Jelly Roll Donates to Flooded Texas Summer Camp, Releases Heartbreaking Tribute That’s Bringing America to Its Knees
“I didn’t just read the story. I felt it — like a punch to the chest,” country artist Jelly Roll said, recalling the moment he learned of the devastating floods that swept through Central Texas. Among the hardest hit was Camp Mystic, a beloved summer retreat that, within hours, went from a haven of laughter and childhood memories to a scene of heartbreaking loss.
Dozens perished in the disaster, including multiple children and counselors. Families were left grieving with little more than the clothes on their backs — and a silence where laughter used to live.
For Jelly Roll, a father himself, it hit too close to home.
“I kept thinking about those parents,” he shared. “Dropping their kids off at a place filled with joy, never imagining they’d never see them again. As a dad, that crushed me.”
In the days that followed, while headlines focused on search efforts and rising death tolls, Jelly Roll chose to act quietly. Behind the scenes, he donated over $250,000 to support families of the victims and to aid in rebuilding Camp Mystic’s infrastructure, counseling services, and emergency response programs.
But it wasn’t just financial aid he offered.
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In the stillness of his studio, fueled by raw emotion, Jelly Roll poured his grief into music. The result: a brand-new tribute song titled “Angels Don’t Pack Their Bags.”
The track, released just one week after the floods, has stunned listeners across the country. With stripped-down instrumentation — just a piano and his gravel-lined voice — the song begins with a haunting line:
“They were just kids chasing fireflies / Now they light the sky for us.”
As the song unfolds, Jelly Roll delivers what might be his most vulnerable performance to date. Gone are the heavy beats and swagger — in their place is a father’s ache, a citizen’s sorrow, and an artist’s desperate need to make sense of senseless loss.
“They didn’t get to grow old / Didn’t get to say goodbye / But their laughter still echoes / Every time we cry…”
The track has already been streamed over 10 million times in 48 hours, with fans flooding the comment sections:
“I haven’t cried like this since 9/11.”
“He didn’t just write a song. He gave those kids a voice.”
“Every parent needs to hear this.”
Jelly Roll performed the song live for the first time during a surprise appearance at a benefit concert in Nashville, where he sang before a black-and-white screen scrolling the names of the children lost. The crowd stood in silence, many with hands over their hearts, others holding back sobs.
At the end of the song, he said only:
“This one’s for the angels we lost — and the families still trying to breathe.”
He walked off stage without waiting for applause.
Beyond the music, Jelly has partnered with several organizations to create a relief fund and support long-term grief counseling for survivors and families of victims. He’s also pushing for better flood warning systems in rural areas, using his platform to advocate for change in memory of those lost.
When asked why he felt compelled to act so quickly and publicly, Jelly Roll didn’t hesitate:
“Because we can’t just cry and scroll. We have to do something. These weren’t numbers — they were kids. Futures. Light. I couldn’t ignore that.”
In a year already filled with division and noise, Jelly Roll reminded America what it means to show up — not for the headlines, not for the charts, but for humanity.
He gave us a song we didn’t know we needed.
He gave broken families something no donation can buy:
Acknowledgment. Memory. And a promise that their children will not be forgotten.
And he did it, as he said,
“With tears still falling.”