Chevrolet
by Dustin Lynch (featuring Jelly Roll)

Album: Killed the Cowboy (2023)
Charted: 50
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Songfacts®:

  • "Chevrolet" opens like a porch swing on a summer night, gentle guitar plucks and snippets of bar chatter drawing you in.

    Dustin Lynch then spins a yarn about meeting a girl in a honky tonk joint who's "dressed to kill." He pegs her as a city-slicker gal, only to discover she's got a hankering' for the country life. They hit it off like cornbread and butter, and by the time the chorus kicks in, she wants to slip away with him in his Chevrolet.
  • The song samples Dobie Gray's 1973 hit "Drift Away," but with a country dust-up, adding grit and twang to that familiar melody. The original "Drift Away" talks about how music can turn a bad day around. Lynch swaps out the rock 'n' roll in Dobie Gray's song for six-packs, Brooks & Dunn tunes, and dirt roads.
  • Lynch's Broken Bow Records labelmate Jelly Roll steps in for the second verse. His gravelly voice confirms that the serendipitous romantic encounter became a full-blown love story.
  • Zach Crowell and Ben Phillips produced "Chevrolet." It was through Crowell that Lynch first met Jelly Roll. "Jelly and Zach started making music years ago, before I even moved to Nashville, when Zach was making beats for Jelly when he was rapping," he told Billboard.

    During the pandemic-induced touring hiatus, Lynch and Crowell stayed connected and first recorded this song without Jelly Roll in late 2022.

    Lynch initially tested "Chevrolet" at Luke Bryan's Crash My Playa festival in January 2023, and Jelly Roll added his part in Austin, Texas, a few months later.

    "With Jelly," said Lynch, "'Drift Away' is such a classic melody, and we kept this super loose and had some grit and rough edges to it, and Jelly has the perfect voice for it, with the soul he has in his voice."
  • Jessi Alexander, Hunter Phelps and Chase McGill wrote "Chevrolet" with "Drift Away" songwriter Mentor Williams listed as a contributor as well.
  • Originally recorded by John Henry Kurtz in 1972, "Drift Away" was a pop hit for Dobie Gray and country hit for Narvel Felts in 1973. It later found life with versions by Michael Bolton and Uncle Kracker (featuring Dobie Gray).

    Talking to Taste of Country Nights' Evan Paul, Lynch said he felt very fortunate that the late Mentor Williams' family signed off on the lyrics to "Chevrolet."

    "That song is a classic," he recounted. "Hopefully we continue that song's life into this next generation of country music fans. Getting to do that with Jelly Roll was a lot of fun. He's one of my favorite humans on Earth."
  • Although "Chevrolet" is based on Dobie Gray's original version of "Drift Away," it's Uncle Kracker's rendition that holds a special place in Lynch's heart. The country star grew up listening to that interpretation of the song, and when Uncle Kracker turned up at Lynch's CMA Fest pool party in June 2023, it created a nostalgic full-circle moment, connecting the singer's childhood musical influences to his current career.
  • Backing vocals on "Chevrolet" come courtesy of Madeline Merlo, whose voice brings a welcome shot of youthful energy to the track. She complements Lynch's laid-back country drawl, giving the song about a country girl and her beloved Chevy a feminine counterpoint that rounds out the story. Lynch told Taste of Country Night's Evan Paul that Madeline Merlo is "one of the best singers I've ever gotten to be in a room with."

    Merlo, a Canadian country-pop singer-songwriter, also sang backing vocals on Cole Swindell's "She Had Me At Heads Carolina."
  • The track kicks off with the familiar "Drift Away" guitar riff before Lynch declares:

    She was dressed to kill
    I was in my boots


    But it's the next line that's left fans scratching their heads. Lynch sings, "So I had her pegged as the uptown type," but with his thick Tennessee drawl, it sure sounds like he's saying something a bit more... suggestive. In fact, some fans swear they hear, "So I had to pay for the uptown time."

Comments: 1

  • K Dub from OregonThey took a great song, "Drift Away", and made it much, much worse. A cheap, karaoke like, cartoon of a song; it really sucks.
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