Rocky Mountain Low
by Corey Kent (featuring Koe Wetzel)

Album: released as a single (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Rocky Mountain Low" is a rough-hewn duet from two Texan cowboys of heartbreak, Corey Kent and Koe Wetzel. It leans hard into Western imagery as Kent and Wetzel trade verses, each crooning lines about regret and longing.
  • The phrase "Rocky Mountain low" is a metaphor for the isolation and emotional coldness Kent and Wetzel feel in their hearts from the loss. It serves as a dark, gritty counter-narrative to John Denver's iconic "Rocky Mountain High." Where "Rocky Mountain High" soared with wide-open skies and mountain euphoria, "Rocky Mountain Low" explores the depths of hitting rock bottom.
  • Kent co-wrote the song with his songwriting pals Thomas Archer, Michael Tyler, and Austin Goodloe. Archer and Tyler had already helped shape Kent's sound on singles like "Wild As Her" and "This Heart," while Goodloe, who also handled production duties, previously co-penned Kent's gritty fan favorite "Something's Gonna Kill Me." Kent said he pictured Koe Wetzel for the second verse while writing it, making the collaboration feel authentic to him.
  • "Rocky Mountain Low" came together after a moment of altitude-induced awe. Kent got the spark while on a family ski trip to Crested Butte, Colorado, when he and his wife rode a lift to the mountain's peak before their final run of the day. As the lift crested the top, the view - complete with a rainbow - hit him hard.

    "It was just like this magical moment," Kent told Billboard. "Out of nowhere, the song title hit me."

    He logged the title Rocky Mountain Low into his phone on the spot, not knowing when - or if - it would turn into a song.
  • The idea resurfaced on January 15, 2025, during a writing session in the attic office of Combustion Music writer Austin Goodloe, joined by Thomas Archer and Michael Tyler. Outside, the temperature dropped from a mild 50 degrees to a wintry 32, which helped set the tone. As Archer put it, "It's not like we had to write it when it was sunny and 85 outside."
  • Goodloe arrived with the musical backbone: a pulsing, midtempo groove built around a 1950 Kay N-5 Parlor guitar, a modest acoustic he'd picked up at a yard sale. After installing a pickup and running it through tape delay, the guitar took on a strange, bouncing texture. "It just sounded wild," Goodloe recalled. "I was like, 'Guys, I have this wacky, weird vibe.'"
  • Kent framed the title as a story about a newly single guy sliding back into old habits. One of the first vices mentioned is a "stack of vinyls," including a nod to Eric Clapton's album Slowhand. Kent didn't mind if the reference flew over some listeners' heads. "It sounds cool," he said. "I know what it means."
  • As the track took shape, Kent invited Koe Wetzel to handle the second verse. They recorded Wetzel's vocal in Cisco, Texas, on a day that seemed determined to test everyone's patience: Wetzel's pickup broke down, the keys got locked inside during repairs, and midway through the session Kent received an emergency call that his daughter had fallen and split her head open. Everything turned out fine, but the stress lingered.

    "It really put us in the right mindset to go sing about a terrible day," Kent said.

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