For Bryan, "Country Song Came On"
Monday, November 11, 2024 – Luke Bryan put out a new single to country radio today, "Country Song Came On."
Written by Ryan Beaver, Dan Alley and Neil Medley, the song is the follow up release to Bryan's recent 31st number one single "Love You, Miss You, Mean It." Both songs appear on Bryan's eighth studio album, "Mind Of A Country Boy."
This Friday, Hulu premieres a new docuseries "It's All Country" hosted by Bryan. The series will take a look at the stories behind country songs. The series features never-before-seen performances by some of the biggest stars of country music.
Bryan will co-host "The 58th Annual CMA Awards," with Peyton Manning and Lainey Wilson, on, Nov. 20 on ABC.
More news for Luke Bryan
- 01/13/25: Bryan heads west with Farm Tour
- 09/30/24: Bryan, Manning, Wilson host CMAs
- 08/08/24: Bryan has the "Mind of a Country Boy"
- 07/16/24: Bryan adds final Farm Tour date
- 06/14/24: Bryan has the "Mind of a Country Boy"
- 05/03/24: Bryan hits the farms this fall
- 03/21/24: Tennessee enacts law protecting against AI, voice clones
- 02/02/24: Bryan has the "Mind of a Country Boy Tour"
CD reviews for Luke Bryan
If there's one thing Luke Bryan knows how to do, it's to stay in his lane. And why not? It often leads to great chart position. The Deluxe edition of his seventh album "Born Here, Live Here, Die Here" was born out of the pandemic tour stoppage. It includes six new songs and increases the run time to 54 minutes. The original 10 tracks are mostly in the vein of the pop laced chart toppers "One Margarita" and "Knockin' Boots."
With writing ...
After taking in Luke Bryan's "Born Here Live Here Die Here," the listener will never guess this full length was released during a pandemic. Maybe that's a good thing. After all, we might need a diversion from the international health crisis now and then. The release opens with "Knockin' Boots," which is how modern cowboys describe sexual intercourse. A few songs later, Bryan gives us the drinking song (and single) "One Margarita." In between, "What ...
Luke Bryan aims to please often, and that rarely goes unpunished. The Georgia native has a strong voice, some songwriting skill and even legitimate farming cred. But Bryan still gets pegged as the face of corporate country - that pandering beast packaging artists for mass consumption. The label can be unfair, but not wholly undeserved - Bryan has a long track record, for instance, of records about chasing girls and Bud Lights. In truth, he married his college sweetheart and they share a quiet, ...
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