Song Review – Blake Shelton’s “God’s Country”
It’s one thing to take The Bellamy Brothers and John Anderson out on tour with you, give them an opportunity to give contemporary crowds some classic country learning in the middle of your show to hopefully remind folks where the music came from. It’s another thing to cut a few classic country cover songs in digital form and throw them out there for people who may have not heard them before. It’s something else to speak out about how you think country music should stick closer to its roots, even if it’s counter to things you’ve said in the past.
All of these things Blake Shelton has done recently. But when people look back in history and assess his influence and impact on the music, it’s going to be his singles, and his albums that will define him—that is unless a certain reality TV singing competition doesn’t permanently typecast him as “The guy from The Voice” before everything else, which it very well might. Though his name continues to be mud to many traditionalists, Blake Shelton’s last record Texoma Shore was a return to his roots, with some exceptions of course. These were still Blake Shelton’s roots mind you, so this wasn’t material to compete with Tyler Childers. But it was still a welcome development in the Blake Shelton saga.
“God’s Country” is Blake’s latest single from a yet-to-be-named upcoming record, and just the title gets you interested, hoping perhaps it will evidence an even further retrenching towards Shelton’s more traditional starting point, with maybe some Gospel overtones mixed in there. In some respects “God’s Country” delivers on these hopes, but in other aspects, the substance and originality feels a little skin deep.
“God’s Country” certainly surprises you at first for a country radio single with it’s dark and moody tone—something counterclockwise to the sunny disposition of most mainstream country selections. And no mistaking it, the initial burst of the song inspires a carnal reaction, like a wave of thunder rolling out from the clouds and rumbling the ground at your feet. “God’s Country” tries to evoke the awe-inspiring version of the Almighty, bequeathing us mere mortals patches of soil to toil upon from his perch high up in the clouds, peering down as the beads of sweat form across our brows, and calloused hands fold in prayer for rain. “God’s Country” is both nostalgic in its reverence, and here-and-now in its relevance to the modern farmer, re-affirming the hearty and honest nature of America’s agrarian forgotten.
But as a track, “God’s Country” does little to address the lack of work for Nashville’s drumming professionals, instead focusing on mostly computer-generated tambourine taps, bell strikes, bass thumps, and gated hand claps as opposed to sticks on skins. Later some actual drums may chime in, if they weren’t administrated by a central processing unit as well for consistency. This composition makes “God’s Country” compromised for most traditional country listeners, but will render it palatable to the modern ear, since a sweet and catchy melody is nowhere to be found. The raw power of the “boom, clamp” is what they hope gets the public’s attention, and it probably will. It also tries to put the song in touch with the Rick Rubin era of Johnny Cash’s output, though more loosely approximated as opposed to dead on accurate in approach and understanding.
“God’s Country” feels inspired, yet its verses begin to feel familiar, list-like, and self-affirming in almost an indulgent manner as the song progresses, however poetically composed they may be, and powerfully delivered by a clearly impassioned Blake Shelton they are. We’ve heard these same sort of bombastic proclamations many times before. Jason Aldean specializes in this kind of canonizing of rural life, if he’s not out there chasing whatever radio trend is hot out there himself.
But judged among its peers and the patterns that Blake Shelton has carved for himself in now nearly 20 years of releasing music, “God’s Country” is unexpected, expressive, passion-filled, and hard not to feel the power of. It won’t be interesting enough to assuage Johnny Cash hipsters to pay attention to commercial radio or have traditional country fans come around on the Blake Shelton legacy, but it makes for a good conversation piece. Debut singles from new projects come with the primary purpose of training attention back on a performer before they unleash a full boat of songs. It’s hard to see “God’s Country” not accomplishing this, especially since it’s already being quickly adopted by both consumers and radio. Meanwhile it won’t be offensive enough to draw active outrage from country music’s independent thinkers like some of Shelton’s previous efforts.
TheRealBobCephus
April 4, 2019 @ 8:22 am
It reminds of Bon Jovi’s dead or alive, more than anything.
HartsvilleAL
April 4, 2019 @ 11:36 am
Or Blaze of Glory.
J
April 6, 2019 @ 8:26 am
Good call…Blaze of Glory for sure but I can see why some say “Wanted” too. I like it though. I’m also a big Jovi fan.
Karl
June 4, 2019 @ 5:20 pm
I hear Nickelbacks Rock Star
Amanda
June 25, 2019 @ 8:07 pm
I thought the same thing
Corncaster
April 4, 2019 @ 8:26 am
I’m good with this, but it’s not very memorable. The stomp beat is from old-time country, despite the computer. I don’t see the nostalgia: all the old-timey photos are displayed as constantly disrupted and disintegrating. Everything is ash-colored. This makes sense. Rural communities are disappearing. Maybe we should see some irony here. Nothing is affirmed by the video, even as the song makes its big claims.
Anyone else seeing Thanos here?
618creekrat
April 4, 2019 @ 10:06 am
The pixelation of the images to the stomp beat made me think of dust – perhaps Genesis 3:19 is the inspiration here: “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.” Generations come and go, working the ground which remains after them.
Corncaster
April 4, 2019 @ 10:53 am
Plausible. It’s also Lent, iirc.
Rob
April 4, 2019 @ 8:33 am
My friend showed me yesterday. I was turned off by the electronic beats hand claps, but it’s a step up form a lot of what’s on the radio. I still have trouble forgiving him for his “old farts and jackasses” quote though. I’ll stick to Ben Jarrell’s new album.
albert
April 4, 2019 @ 9:02 am
” since a sweet and catchy melody is nowhere to be found.”
”yet its verses begin to feel familiar, list-like, and self-affirming in almost an indulgent manner as the song progresses, ……”
your rating may be a tad generous , trigger , but a good review , imo .
you nailed it with the quotes above , I think .I might add that to my ear the song sounds congested …a bit overwhelming lyrically ( the ‘list’ factor you refer to ) and ultimately forgettable . but nowhere near as crappy as most blake radio songs .
63Guild
April 4, 2019 @ 9:22 am
Blake Shelton trying to appeal to old farts and jackasses after realizing he is becoming an old fart and jackass
Fiddle Me This
April 4, 2019 @ 9:26 am
It’s a solid single from Blake. I love the gloomy church bells echoing throughout. Definitely gives me Ol’Red vibes
Andy
April 4, 2019 @ 9:43 am
I want to point out it has been #1 on all-genre itunes for an entire week now (Ariana Grande had a new song that pushed it to #2 for a day). I’d be interested when we get the sales numbers in the next few days. Not sure that last time a country song has debuted so well like this.
Trigger
April 4, 2019 @ 10:09 am
I think a few folks are wondering why I bothered to review this song. It might be one of the biggest songs in all of 2019. One of the reasons it’s doing so well at iTunes is because it appeal to the Christian demographic, and the Christian demographic still downloads songs. They may not even listen to the downloaded version, but they’ll buy it to support the song and artist. Add on top of that all of Blake Shelton’s fans from “The Voice,” and it’s put a turbo charge in this track. It’s also clearly resonating with people. It was a bold move by Blake, and looks like it’s paying off.
Corncaster
April 4, 2019 @ 10:56 am
George Strait has a corker of a religious song on the new record. I wonder how that one is doing for him.
eisenhorn
April 8, 2019 @ 3:54 pm
Ugh. As a committed Christian (I avoid the term “religious person”), I hate it when songs like this “appeal to the Christian demographic”. It has nothing to do with Christianity, it just peppers the word God throughout it. Stuff like that is one of the reasons I listen to very little Christian music. It’s more of a reflection of the listeners than the artists, though, to be fair.
Overall, it is not too bad of a song, and I wouldn’t turn it off if it popped up on my music stream. Pleasantly surprised by this.
Doyle Hargraves
April 4, 2019 @ 9:52 am
chorus sounds like a mashup of Brand New Man and Hurricane by Band of Heathens
Jumpin' Jack Flash
April 4, 2019 @ 10:32 am
I seriously thought the same thing.
Barstool Hero
April 12, 2019 @ 5:22 am
I agree. It’s not a bad song, but it immediately reminded me of “Hurricane”, which is probably why I think it’s not a bad song. The lyrics are pretty good too.
Black Boots
April 4, 2019 @ 9:56 am
Thank U, next.
OlaR
April 4, 2019 @ 10:18 am
HARDY, Devin Dawson & Jordan Schmidt co-wrote “God’s Country”
Devin Dawson about “God’s Country” (Billboard Online – Annie Reuter – 03/29/2019):
…”HARDY and I both come from a metal background and it’s pretty heavy.”…
Yes…it’s HARDY…not Hardy.
His trash…oops…track “Rednecker” is #44 on the Billboard airplay charts & he (co-)wrote songs for FGL & Morgan Wallen like the shitty “Up Down”.
Devin Dawson had a Top 10 hit with “All On Me”. His next single crashed & burned outside of the Top 40. The current single “Dark Horse” failed to reach the charts.
Aly
April 4, 2019 @ 10:51 am
Forget about Dawson, but I actually enjoy HARDY. Rednecker may not be his best but go listen to both his ep’s. “Signed Sober You” and “I’ll Quit Lovin You” are great.
Ronald
April 4, 2019 @ 11:50 am
I am with you on that. Dawson’s music is garbage but HARDY I can tolerate.
OlaR
April 4, 2019 @ 11:56 am
We will disagree about Har…HARDY.
I gave both EPs a chance. Hell…no!
HARDY – “Rednecker” – Lyrics:
…”dirt road”…”southern pride tattoo”…”My town’s smaller than your town”…”My truck’s louder than your truck”…” tailgate”…”Beer drinker buddy”…” raising hell”…”my red white’s a little more blue”…”more spit in my chaw”…”your boots got more dirt than mine”…”my collar’s a little more blue”
&
the ultimate “best” lines in a country song ever…”I piss where i want to…And i fish where i swim yeah”
(Source for the lyric-parts: metrolyrics.com)
Cody
April 5, 2019 @ 6:55 am
Go listen to Morgan Wallens cover of “Cover Me Up” By Jason Isbell. Dude actually has a really good voice. If he wanted to, he could put out some quality material.
Benny Lee
April 4, 2019 @ 10:33 am
Much better than I expected, but can’t help thinking it would be 10 times better if it had been composed and performed by the Steel Woods…
SameOld
April 4, 2019 @ 11:33 am
Saw a tweet saying it’s the top selling single worldwide on iTunes. It clearly has wide appeal and makes me interested to see what direction his new album is going to go in.
HartsvilleAL
April 4, 2019 @ 11:46 am
I agree with your review Trigger but want to point out that Blake’s vocals are so damn good on this track it makes me want to punch him for all the crap he has lobbed when he was capable of vocals like this. Of course, he showed his vocals on his cut of Conway’s Goodbye Time and All Over Me which he wrote with Earl Thomas Conley but on GC they are really on point.
I’ve always thought his old farts and jackasses comment was taken out of context and became a convenient vehicle for people who wanted to hate him to have full license to hate him. Not saying the dislike wasn’t warranted.
Overall, this is another Shelton single that makes me hope he turns even more traditional because he has a phenomenal voice and a lot of heart. It also makes me wonder what he could have been if he hadn’t sold out. His really bad music years seems to correspond to the years he was married to Miranda, which is interesting since she put out her best music during those same years.
albert
April 4, 2019 @ 4:51 pm
” I’ve always thought his old farts and jackasses comment was taken out of context and became a convenient vehicle for people who wanted to hate him to have full license to hate him. Not saying the dislike wasn’t warranted.”
You can think that, I suppose .
The reason I dislike him is for ALL THE SHITTY songs he records when he doesn’t even have to work another day in his life if he doesn’t want to . WHY , if he professes to have a love of REAL country singers and songs , does he feel compelled to release mostly SHIT – from singles to album tracks ? He can record the BEST stuff being written if he chooses to . A GUY WITH HIS SUCCESS doesn’t need to pander anymore . Who is he lying to ? REAL country music lovers or the soccer moms buying his music ?
I’m happy to support HIS efforts to support REAL country music . But I’m not climbing up on the fence with him .
HartselleAL
April 5, 2019 @ 5:12 am
Yep, but I don’t think Blake intended to change country music at some elemental level. I think he’s a fairly simple guy who records the type of songs he always liked to hear like Bellamy’s, Oaks, ETC, Keith Whitely, Conway, Eddie Rabbit types.
My problem with him is that he lets the producer take over. But you’re right, the guy doesn’t seem to spend much of his fortune except to buy more OK land to hunt and fish on, so time to stop and put out good music or nothing.
Harley
May 14, 2019 @ 10:46 pm
It’s really funny how those of you who are haters, choose to find ridiculous false reasons to belittle Blake’s work. The reality is, he’s made a very good living with his amazing voice, musical career. Ok, your not a fan! That’s fine! But, there are millions who are fans, love his music. That’s fine as well. To each their own. But why such insane nonsense of judgement. Try comparing your accomplishments to his. Can you measure up? He has hit the top charts because fans of all types enjoy his music. Not just soccer moms & Christians. Although proudly a Christian, I’m far from soccer mom! Although their is nothing wrong with being any kind of mom! Great song! Love it! I get it the meaning. It’s far from what you’ve described. Too bad. That’s ok. That just your opinion. Your entitled. As are we. The Blake Shelton fans. 🙏
Stone
May 20, 2020 @ 10:00 pm
Ridiculous. This isn’t a matter of taste. Blake can’t sing… Mediocre singer at best. What’s sad is his complete disregard for anything authentically musical at all. This isn’t music. It’s all done and arranged NY and on computers. Without autotune etc etc. The lyrics have nothing whatsoever with God or the spirit of Christ. The guy is as fake as they come. Why do people who hold this view need to compare our accomplishments to his. What’s your point there? Most people aren’t superstars.. I’m a real musician and a real writer. I’ve never made any efforts to be a star. That’s a hard mountain to climb.. Unless of course your some pretty boy completely fake sell out who does just as the big label tells you. Phenomenal voice?? Hahaha ya if you’re one of the millions of mindless zombies out there with no concern over anything sacred or real. This isn’t art. It’s garbage and plain stupid. Anyone over 28 years old who seriously listens to this can’t have an IQ over 50
King Honky Of Crackershire
April 4, 2019 @ 5:41 pm
It’s amazing how subjective, singing can be. To my ears, Blake isn’t a good enough singer to ever impress me, regardless of how good the song may be.
He’s one of the better singers amongst his peers, and that ain’t saying much.
Compared to Conway’s “Goodbye Time”, Blake’s version had no business being recorded.
Kevin Davis
April 4, 2019 @ 12:44 pm
I agree about the production and the checklist lyrics, but it hit me pretty strong, not least because I love Blake’s vocals, and I gave it a repeated two or three listens. This is a pretty bold and genius move from Blake. Even after the first listen, my initial reaction was that this will be a hit single. It’s such a sharp contrast to the happy clappy “hey girl” disco-country on the radio. It’s got its flaws, but I’m going to disagree with everyone in the Facebook comments who are trashing this song.
Kevin Davis
April 4, 2019 @ 2:56 pm
After having listened to the song even more times, I must also say that “The devil went down to Georgia, but he didn’t stick around” is a great line. So, even though the song is basically of the checklist sort, it’s better than most. It’s a very clever line, having the benefit of referring to a well-known classic song while playing off of this song’s theme.
That sort of lyrical point may seem small, but it’s important, and it works. Luke Combs gets that with his lyrics (…the same Luke Combs that has a #1 song on Country Airplay for now six weeks).
dukeroberts
April 4, 2019 @ 12:44 pm
It’s no “Chew tobacky spit” so it’s at least a step in the right direction.
Craig Thomas
April 4, 2019 @ 1:07 pm
I’ll probably get some abuse for this, but this is just another shallow fist pumping Southern pride and God song that says nothing about the South and everything about the oversize tire truck driving dipshits blasting it. And I love the fact that I’m from the South and that I live in the rural South. But the South is so much more than that mindless reactionary ‘pride’ that has cursed us since you-know-when. The devil went down to Georgia and he stuck around, and it doesn’t make you less Southern to admit that. These silly ‘anthems’ don’t do anything to scare him back to where he belongs.
Paul Cummins
May 24, 2019 @ 2:55 pm
Thanks Craig. I’m not a Southerner and I thought that the devil certainly had stayed in Georgia for a long while. Stamping it as God’s country sort of begs an alibi. Obviously God’s country is everywhere or nowhere. In God’s country we wouldn’t make distinctions between people or claim any special blessing. I am surprised that Blake seems to be doing that.
Jon Stalnaker
April 4, 2019 @ 1:18 pm
I love that Tyler Childers is now someone to be used as a reference. Awesome.
A reader
April 4, 2019 @ 1:58 pm
The cadence is challenging. I’m hard pressed to think of another mainstream country singer that could pull it off with such ease. Stapleton but obviously he wouldn’t cut this. Impressed with the range here.
Dawn Arsenault
April 4, 2019 @ 3:44 pm
Sorry. Yeah, Blake does sound great with Gods Country, but it isn’t country. Heard that song today on the radio directly after hearing George Strait’s Every Little Honky Tonk Bar. Now that is a traditional country song.
Kevin Davis
April 4, 2019 @ 4:57 pm
In that case, is Johnny Cash’s “God’s Gonna Cut You Down” a country song? I’m not saying that this is of the same caliber. It’s not. But, we need not throw around “that’s not country” carelessly. There is an overwhelming abundance of “that’s not country” songs on so-called country radio. This isn’t one of them.
Stone
May 20, 2020 @ 10:16 pm
Who ever said God’s gonna cut you down was country?? Cash never said that. That’s an Americana/folk song. Blake claims to be a country singer only and that this is a country song. What it is is trash. Like all of his soulless talentless material.
Conrad Fisher
April 4, 2019 @ 4:11 pm
Man I love this. I like the chord progressions, and even though the melody isn’t anything crazy, the way it’s presented makes me really dig it. The devil went down to Georgia but he didn’t stick around. I like it.
Tina
April 4, 2019 @ 4:37 pm
I think Garrett Shelton’s Song is better than this. At least it’s real. Listen
https://youtu.be/ZCPCQpFo8qM
SameOld
April 4, 2019 @ 5:50 pm
Those vocals need some work Garrett.
King Honky Of Crackershire
April 4, 2019 @ 5:51 pm
There is no universe in which this is a C(c)ountry song.
A 6 out of 10? Boy we’ve just about hit rock bottom, haven’t we.
Trigger, sometimes I admire your determination; other times I pity you. You seem to genuinely believe C(c)ountry music can be saved, yet here you are doling out a 6 to a song with that same ol beat they’ve been pounding out for at least a dozen years now.
Fed Up
April 5, 2019 @ 3:33 pm
There is no universe in which anyone cares about the self proclaimed King Honky. I am all for better country music but that doesn’t mean it has to be one singular thing. Name me a single period in history where country music was only one sound? Oh right you can’t because it has never occurred, it has always had variation not only artist to artist but also in different parts of the country. The only thing I dislike more than a generic edm country song is your get nothing done negativity.
Garrett
April 4, 2019 @ 6:05 pm
More interested in having songs picked up by another artist.
Charlotte Jane Johnson
April 4, 2019 @ 6:12 pm
Reminded me of “A Country Boy Can Survive”. I liked it a lot. Still not very far from Bro-Country which is fine by me. Bro-Country is fun. Appeals to people who like “Dirt Road Anthem” and “Boys Round Here” in the circles I run in. And I like my circles just fine. We appreciate the traditional stuff too.
Alex
April 4, 2019 @ 7:57 pm
Most of what I listen to is country. When I first listen to a song, I listen for the storytelling in the song and the instrumentals that give each track its own sound. Slow up Blake, tell more of the story, and DROP THE COMPUTER!
Casey
April 5, 2019 @ 12:39 am
I heard this for the first time the other day. Initially I thought it was a song from the 90s during Reba’s hayday because of the opener. I listened to the whole thing and realized it was current because of its over simplicity and constant repeating of “God’s Country”. As you said….not great compared to classics but when compared to what’s on the radio its refreshing. Was surprised it was Shelton. Who knows…..maybe he’ll fuel a rebirth.
Ann Stokman
April 5, 2019 @ 2:37 am
Love it!
Charlie
April 5, 2019 @ 4:03 am
So what?
He’s recorded a ‘traditional’ album this time. He’s equally likely to record an album of rapper duets next time. Or a tribute to EDM. Or something even worse.
He’s playing Deal or No Deal where every case holds a million dollars and he still somehow manages to pick the shittiest cases. How does he do it? Or to albert’s point above–WHY does he do it???
Johnnyboy Gomez
April 5, 2019 @ 4:12 am
Could have written “I fish where I want to … and piss where I swim” for even more authenticity!
Fuzzy TwoShirts
April 5, 2019 @ 7:28 am
HA! however good the song might be, it comes from the same mouth that left behind such gems as
“Chew tobacco chew tobacco spit”
“old farts and jackasses”
“We just recorded the sound of money”
and quite frankly, I cannot imagine any Country created by a loving all-knowing God that would ever have included this as a part of the soundtrack, when so many better options exists
and so far as I know, God’s Country Music begins and ends with George Jones
Two Shirts WAY WAY DOWN
Mark Freed
April 5, 2019 @ 12:52 pm
watered down metal tune.
Marmarbama
April 6, 2019 @ 10:16 am
He sounds like Nickelbach. That Photograph song.
Hard pass. But better than “Money.”
Good. God.
Atomic Zombie Redneck
April 6, 2019 @ 10:42 am
It’s no “Interstate Gospel”, but it’s infinitely better than “Boys ‘Round Here”.
I like it, but I don’t love it.
Joe
April 6, 2019 @ 9:09 pm
“But when people look back in history and asses his influence and impact on the music”
Simple typo, intentional jab, or Freudian slip?
Diamond Girl
April 7, 2019 @ 11:14 pm
I think ole Blake is trying to hard with this one. I agree with others who noted that Blake himself is now an old Fart, actually…… he has always been a bit of a jackass. Now he is trying to appeal to those that he pissed off with that comment. He was much better singing ‘God Gave me you’ ….several years back.
JensenShovel
April 8, 2019 @ 3:54 am
I don’t love or hate this tune – it’ll probably end up being an earworm for most people. Though, it lacks the charm that “I’ll Name the Dogs” had as an album lead-off single. The one glaring eyebrow raiser for me is the fact that the opening melody of the chorus is a direct lift — cadence and melody — from “Brand New Man” by Brooks & Dunn. It jumped out at me immediately! Can’t help wondering if Ronnie and Kix are going to come knocking for their rightful share in this pie.
brandon
September 11, 2019 @ 4:33 am
he even says baptized!!!
Rosanna
November 23, 2019 @ 1:14 pm
Thank you! I was wondering if anyone else caught that!
PamO
April 8, 2019 @ 1:18 pm
Love the beat and gutsy sustaining breath throughout the verse. The video is depressing. Like the soul of the lyrics, tho.
Hope this moves us toward pushing aside Chris Stapleton’s gagging.
Desertbilly
April 8, 2019 @ 8:36 pm
I like the tune, it has good drama to it. It does remind me of “Old Red”, one of his better songs. But the lyrics don’t carry the weight of the dramatic tone the music sets. Just more “Im a hillbilly, deal with it” attitude.
This would have been much better as a story song. God, I hope those come back someday! I guess its too much to ask of the poor millenials attention spans. Songs like “Old Red”, actually. Maybe I will go listen to that one.
Marmarbama
April 18, 2019 @ 9:41 pm
His constant drinking has worn him out and looking like he needs a nap. And visine. Much prefer his old music without the constant drink in his hand. Gross.
Country Bass
May 12, 2019 @ 10:42 pm
Not a terrible song, but I can’t help imagining Blake listening to Tyminski and saying “Let’s do that, but dumber”. Seriously, listen to that opening line and tell me it’s not from “Southern Gothic”.
Julia Wills
May 15, 2019 @ 5:43 pm
I think it is awesome, and so does the rest of the country. You guys are so interested in your critical reviews and sounding profound, but your comments are really stupid. This song kicked true rap, Billy Ray Cyrus style, off the country charts. Thank God for God’s Country.
Julia Wills
May 15, 2019 @ 5:49 pm
Thank God for this song. It has been head to head standing against Rap takeover of country. Maybe you should be a little less critical of a good country song that can standup to Trap or pop-gum music. Without Blake there would be a lot fewer country fans. Don’t hate him because most people like him. You need Blake Shelton standing firm with his country roots.
Susan
June 12, 2019 @ 5:28 am
This is my favorite song in country music!!!!!!!!!!!!!! You da best dude, love you.
Amanda
June 13, 2019 @ 8:56 am
The whole song feels like stolen lines from 90’s country music. The intro feels like Garth’s Thunder Road or Reba. First verse reminds me of “Ole Red”. Brooks and Dun need to get their money for royalties on the first line of the chorus. He’s playing with fans’ nostalgia and I’m not sure whether to love or hate him for it.
Amanda
June 25, 2019 @ 8:10 pm
When I first heard the song I thought it was nickelback and Blake Shelton singing. I really love the song though