Don't We

Album: I'm The Problem (2025)
Charted: 21
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Songfacts®:

  • "Don't We" finds Morgan Wallen doing something he has turned into a bit of an art form: planting his boots firmly in the dirt of small-town America and inviting listeners to admire the view.
  • The song opens with a line that doubles as a thesis statement: Wallen wouldn't trade his patch of rural hillside for "a stone-cold million dollars." In other words, the place outsiders might consider the middle of nowhere is, to the people who grew up there, very much the center of somewhere. "Don't We" is a knowing nod between people who already understand the charm of a quiet fishing pond, a stretch of hunting land, and a town where everybody still recognizes your pickup.

    That theme runs like a country road through much of Wallen's catalog. His breakout single, "The Way I Talk" (2016), proudly celebrates his Tennessee drawl and rural identity. Later songs double down on the sentiment: "More Than My Hometown" from Dangerous: The Double Album has him choosing his hometown over a relationship, while "Still Goin' Down" is a love letter to the place that raised him. "Don't We" differs slightly in tone. Instead of telling a personal story, Wallen turns outward and speaks directly to the audience, as if sharing a quiet secret with the folks leaning on the tailgate beside him.
  • The song carries a reflective streak. Amid the images of back-forty land and unchanging downtown strips is a hope that towns like Wallen's won't fade away with time. The bridge widens the lens even further with a salute to US troops abroad:

    Not everybody takes off their hat, stands for the flag
    That them boys overseas got on their sleeves


    The moment lifts the song from a simple hometown celebration into something a bit more sentimental and patriotic.

    That lyric became a centerpiece of Wallen's shows on the I'm the Problem Tour. As he sang the line, an American flag unfurled across the giant screen behind him while footage of fighter jets streaking through the sky played overhead; the kind of arena spectacle that briefly turns a country concert into a Fourth of July parade.
  • Wallen wrote "Don't We" with five of his regular collaborators: Rocky Block, John Byron, Ashley Gorley, Blake Pendergrass, and Charlie Handsome. The track was produced by Joey Moi and Charlie Handsome, who handled much of the production on I'm the Problem.

    Rocky Block has become one of Wallen's key songwriting partners. His other Wallen credits include "Cowgirls," "Lies Lies Lies," "I'm the Problem" and "Kick Myself."

    "It's rewarding and fulfilling," Block told Billboard of writing songs for Wallen. "Obviously, the pressure's on because you're with Morgan Wallen, but the pressure's also off in a sense because he's so good as a writer. I want him to do what he wants to do and he makes that fun and easy."
  • The song first surfaced on April 9, 2025, in a promotional collaboration with the outdoor brand Mossy Oak; a natural pairing for a track that celebrates hunting land and country living. It was officially released on May 16, 2025, as part of the I'm the Problem album and later serviced to country radio.
  • At 37 tracks and nearly two hours long, I'm the Problem is Wallen's most sprawling project yet. Recorded largely at his farm outside Nashville, the album debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 and spent two months there, already producing six #1 Country radio singles before "Don't We" even began its own radio run.

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