House Again

Album: Hudson Westbrook (2024)
Charted: 33
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Songfacts®:

  • "House Again" is a stripped-down, moody ballad where Hudson Westbrook recounts being left alone in a once-happy home, now emptied of love and companionship.
  • The song was written on June 4, 2024, in the River House office in Nashville. Westbrook walked into a writing session with Dan Alley and Neil Medley - two writers he had never met - and immediately started tossing out song ideas.

    "Hudson came in hot with probably five or six just really solid ideas right off the bat and blew me away," Alley recalled to Billboard. "One of them was basically the concept of a girl turning a house into a home; building a story around that, whether it was going to be positive, whether it was going to be negative."
  • The writing began with the image, "This kitchen used to be a dancehall," which set the tone for a song steeped in nostalgia and heartbreak. The collaborators flipped the familiar country trope of turning a house into a home; here the story is about a home reverting to just a house after a breakup.
  • The song draws on Westbrook's own childhood experience with his parents' divorce when he was 7, infusing the lyrics with genuine emotion and a sense of loss.

    "It was the idea of everything that makes something more like literally home," Westbrook told Songwriter Universe of the song's creation. "It's the picture frames, it's the memories. It's the couch you laid on, it's the food you ate. It's the Christmas lights you put on. It's all the little things that you did with the one that you loved. I feel like we captured all that. And whenever someone leaves, it's all gone. So I experienced that as a child when my parents divorced. I didn't understand it at the time, being like seven years old. But now looking back, it's been cool to write a song about it that millions of people could relate to. It's been life-changing for sure."
  • "House Again" was recorded in September 2024 at The Amber Sound, a studio in Nashville's Hermitage neighborhood. Producers Ryan Youmans and Lukas Scott inserted a Hammond B-3 and a stark electric guitar, while Kaylin Roberson's harmony vocals add an emotional depth and a sense of lingering presence.
  • The song resonated widely, quickly amassing millions of streams and helping Westbrook secure a deal with Warner Music Nashville.
  • "House Again" didn't explode overnight; it built slow and steady, one station, one fan, one road trip singalong at a time. "You don't instantly see it," Westbrook told Audacy's Katie Neal. "But when fans show up at the show and say, 'I heard you on the radio,' that's when it hits you."

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