Ain't A Bad Life
by Thomas Rhett (featuring Jordan Davis)

Album: About a Woman (2025)
Charted: 53
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Songfacts®:

  • "Ain't A Bad Life" is what happens when two of country music's most affable optimists, Thomas Rhett and Jordan Davis, come together to count their blessings. The track is a warm, three-minute smile that drifts in on acoustic guitar and settles into a lyrical hammock of trucks, family ties, and that holy grail of down-home comfort.
  • Co-written in the early 2020s by Rhett and producer Mark Trussell alongside John Byron, Ashley Gorley, and Blake Pendergrass (a trio often found in Morgan Wallen's orbit), the song trades bombast for sincerity. Trussell's production keeps it light, breezy, and refreshingly unpretentious.
  • Rhett explained the collaboration on Apple Music Country's The Kelleigh Bannen Show, noting he wanted to record the tune with someone who shared his positive, glass-half-full attitude. Enter Jordan Davis, who has become one of his closest friends; the pair even filmed the promo footage for the song while duck hunting together in Arkansas. "Me and Jordan just got to goof off and do a bunch of the content for the song," Rhett said.
  • The song found its home in About A Woman (& A Good Ol' Boy), a deluxe reissue of Rhett's 2024 album About A Woman, itself a 14-track valentine to his wife Lauren Akins. Released as the lead single in July 2025, "Ain't A Bad Life" feels like a gentle reminder from two country stars that happiness might just be a screened-in porch where the dogs lay, some boots you actually like, and a splash of Seven and blessings in your cup.
  • Thomas Rhett wrote "Ain't a Bad Life" during a 2022 weekend on tour through the Dakotas with Mark Trussell, John Byron, Ashley Gorley, and Blake Pendergrass. The song was born out of a late-night conversation and jam session.
  • On September 28, 2022, Trussell, Byron, Gorley, and Pendergrass flew into a Midwest airport and met Rhett's tour bus on its way to a Grand Forks, North Dakota show. They spent the evening eating and talking about how hard it is for a man, or a woman, to find contentment in life.

    And Rhett would know. Early in his career, even while landing hits, he was losing money as an opening act. He and his wife Lauren scraped by on overlapping club shows, clinging to their faith and sense of humor. "Those days when my wife and I had zero, like, those were arguably more fun," Rhett reflected to Billboard. "When you're scrapping for something, those are the times that really kind of built our marriage."

    Finally, past midnight, they got around to making music. Rhett strummed a chord progression and tossed out a line he'd been saving: "Didn't win the Lotto, but the Dawgs won."

    Another writer shot back: "Didn't bag a big 'un, but I saw one." Then someone offered the clincher: "Ain't a bad life for a good old boy." That sealed the deal - the song's hook had arrived.

    From there, it was organized chaos. Mark Trussell took the guitar, building the track on his laptop while Rhett and Gorley threw melodies back and forth in a 15-minute frenzy of ideas. "It's usually a fast-paced thing, especially with him and TR," recalled Pendergrass. "They're just bouncing melodies and feels off of each other."
  • The crew finished the song a few days later, October 1 in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, after Rhett's show. The verses trace a journey from chasing money and possessions to finding joy in faith and family. As Pendergrass explained, "When you're doing a life song, where it's not just about one thing, you're aiming to make it more substantial as time goes on lyrically."

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