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A riff can change a room. That’s the spark Jerry Flowers chases as he walks us through the real stories behind hits for Sam Hunt, Ryan Hurd and Maren Morris, Old Dominion, Morgan Wallen, Keith Urban, and more—plus the hard turns only a long road can deliver. From the first glint of House Party’s pre-chorus to the soul-steeped simplicity of Chasing After You, Jerry shows how tempo, tone, and lived experience shape songs that last.
We dig into the writing retreat that birthed Kinfolks, the late verse rewrite that made radio, and the rare week-long sprint that got Last Drive Down Main to Morgan Wallen. Jerry opens up about being fired mid-session after decades with Keith Urban, then choosing to finish Water My Flowers—and how Old Dominion’s cut turned a gut-punch day into a keeper. He shares the unexpected lineage between old-school country and R&B, why he’s often the “energy guy” in the room, and how a great demo can sit for years before the right voice brings it to life.
There’s touring wisdom here too: from playing on an airport baggage carousel in Tamworth to facing 800,000 people in Philly, the takeaway is clear—be the best hang, use your downtime, and build a second lane with writing or production. Jerry’s closing advice to new writers and artists lands like a compass: figure out who you are, defend it, and let time reward the work. If you love songwriter stories, Nashville craft, and the moments where resilience becomes melody, this one hits home.
If this conversation moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. It helps more music fans find these stories and keeps the conversations coming.
By Chris Blair4.8
1212 ratings
A riff can change a room. That’s the spark Jerry Flowers chases as he walks us through the real stories behind hits for Sam Hunt, Ryan Hurd and Maren Morris, Old Dominion, Morgan Wallen, Keith Urban, and more—plus the hard turns only a long road can deliver. From the first glint of House Party’s pre-chorus to the soul-steeped simplicity of Chasing After You, Jerry shows how tempo, tone, and lived experience shape songs that last.
We dig into the writing retreat that birthed Kinfolks, the late verse rewrite that made radio, and the rare week-long sprint that got Last Drive Down Main to Morgan Wallen. Jerry opens up about being fired mid-session after decades with Keith Urban, then choosing to finish Water My Flowers—and how Old Dominion’s cut turned a gut-punch day into a keeper. He shares the unexpected lineage between old-school country and R&B, why he’s often the “energy guy” in the room, and how a great demo can sit for years before the right voice brings it to life.
There’s touring wisdom here too: from playing on an airport baggage carousel in Tamworth to facing 800,000 people in Philly, the takeaway is clear—be the best hang, use your downtime, and build a second lane with writing or production. Jerry’s closing advice to new writers and artists lands like a compass: figure out who you are, defend it, and let time reward the work. If you love songwriter stories, Nashville craft, and the moments where resilience becomes melody, this one hits home.
If this conversation moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. It helps more music fans find these stories and keeps the conversations coming.

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