Make A Liar

Album: Over And Over (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Make A Liar" is built on reverse psychology and playful romantic gamesmanship. Jackson Dean spends the song saying "no" with such dedication that the only reasonable response is to prove him wrong. The hook isn't seduction so much as a dare: go on, make a liar out of me.
  • The first verse sets the rules of the game. Dean insists he's not coming over, doesn't want company, or want her to want him. By the second verse, he's escalated to declaring his place off-limits altogether. Then comes the bridge, where the mask slips just enough:

    Just wanna make a fire so you can make a liar outta me all night

    It's the equivalent of Tom Petty's habit of letting the real meaning hover just out of focus - think "You Got Lucky," where the tough talk masks obvious insecurity - so the fun is in what's unsaid and what's transparently false.

    "It's all about daring somebody," explained Dean. The result is what he calls "a cheeky turn of phrase, and the song is a little bundle of stumbling, bumbling fun."
  • Dean wrote the song in late 2024 with Luke Dick and Randy Montana after Montana walked into the room with the title "Make A Liar" - short for the payoff line "make a liar outta me" - and a clear concept in mind. "Luke immediately agreed and wrote it down," Montana told Billboard.

    From there, Dick locked into the song's sultry, funky bassline, which became the engine for a fast-moving two-hour writing session. Whether the lines were meant to be spoken aloud, thought internally, or exist in that hazy in-between was left deliberately unclear. As Montana noted, that ambiguity is part of the charm.
  • After cutting the first verse, part of the chorus, and aligning the vocal melody with the bass groove, Dick stopped the session. "I truly believed this was a moment for Jackson to join in," he explained. "He could bring a personal touch to the song that would resonate with him, and I wanted him to contribute creatively."

    Within days, Dean helped finish the track, adding imagery and reshaping parts of the chorus melody to suit his voice.
  • Luke Dick also produced "Make A Liar," continuing a collaboration that began on Dean's debut album, Greenbroke. Dick's résumé includes production work for Miranda Lambert, Kip Moore, and Dierks Bentley. The track was recorded in spring 2025 at Nashville's Southern Ground Studios, a former Presbyterian church built in 1903 and later converted into a recording space by Monument Records founder Fred Foster. Now owned by Zac Brown, the studio has hosted everyone from Kacey Musgraves and Dwight Yoakam to Megadeth and Foo Fighters.
  • The production was intentionally stripped back. "The idea behind the record was to make the vocals feel more intimate, and the guitars more personal," Dick said.
  • The recording features four of Nashville's most sought-after session players:

    Rob McNelley on electric guitar. McNelley has recorded with country superstars like Carrie Underwood, Luke Combs and Eric Church. The Ohio native, who relocated to Nashville in the mid-1990s, brings a unique blend of blues, soul, and rock influences to his country work, having spent time touring with Bob Seger's band.

    Bryan Sutton on acoustic guitar. Widely regarded as the most accomplished acoustic guitarist of his generation, Sutton has provided the acoustic foundation for everything from Taylor Swift's earlier country-pop crossover work to Garth Brooks' massive returns to the studio.

    Craig Young on bass. An A-list Nashville session bassist, writer, and producer, Young played bass on Jewel's over-12-times-platinum Pieces of You album and Lady A's "Need You Now."

    Jerry Roe on drums. A Nashville native and third-generation musician, Roe is a sought-after session drummer who has recorded with the likes of Morgan Wallen, Bailey Zimmerman and Luke Combs.
  • To get in the right headspace for his final vocal, Dean hung Navajo blankets around the studio, creating a cocoon that helped him focus, though he admitted the stretched-out "Baby, plea-ea-ease..." at the end was the toughest line to land after powering through the chorus.
  • Stylistically, "Make A Liar" marks a sharp turn from Dean's 2024 sophomore album, On The Back Of My Dreams. It swaps the big, cinematic, slow-burn feel of tracks like "Heavens To Betsy" for a sparse, bass-driven, cheeky flirtation that leans into soul-influenced groove.

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