“Good Times and Better Company” lands at Mercury Lounge as a country bill in a room better known for indie rock turnover, a small cultural shift in New York’s club ecology. The night features Tyler Rich and the James Barker Band, working in the genre’s familiar materials: narrative songwriting, tight harmonies, and a band-forward sound built for singalong choruses. In NYC, where country often arrives as a touring export rather than a home scene, the show reads like a reminder of how portable these stories are. The most telling detail is the venue itself, which makes the music feel closer, less mythic, and more social.