
Carrie Underwood Honors Late “Jesus Take the Wheel” Writer Brett James After His Tragic Death
Carrie Underwood just lost the man who helped her launch one of the biggest songs of her life, and her tribute read like a hymn and a heartbreak all at once.
Brett James, the Nashville songwriter behind “Jesus, Take the Wheel” and so many more, died in a plane crash on September 18 at 57 years old. His wife, Melody Carole Wilson, and her daughter, Meryl, were also on board. The news rattled Music Row to its core, but for Carrie Underwood, it was personal.
She poured her heart into Instagram the next day, writing, “The loss of Brett James to his family, friends and our music community is too great to put into words.” Then she filled the silence with stories only she could tell.
She remembered him rolling up on his motorcycle, hair somehow still perfect after hours under a helmet. She called him “the epitome of cool” and laughed about how he’d sing “Cowboy Casanova” like it belonged to him. A macho guy delivering a sassy anthem should’ve been ridiculous, yet Brett made it sound effortless.
Carrie also remembered his generosity in the writing room. He once walked in with a song that was already three-quarters done, but when they finished it together, he refused to take more credit. He wanted everything split evenly. “He was just that kind of guy,” she wrote.
For Carrie, the grief runs deeper than losing a co-writer. She said her comfort is knowing Brett “loved the Lord.” She remembered singing with him in church and said her favorite songs they shared were the ones about faith because they came from such a real place. “I won’t ever sing one note of them again without thinking of him,” she admitted. That’s the kind of line that makes you stop scrolling and just sit with it.
Brett James was more than a behind-the-scenes pen. He gave Carrie Underwood “Jesus, Take the Wheel,” the song that took her from American Idol winner to country powerhouse. He gave her “Cowboy Casanova,” too, and his catalog stretched far beyond her. Kenny Chesney, Jason Aldean, Miranda Lambert, Tim McGraw, and dozens more cut his songs. Eight hundred recordings. More than 25 number ones. And still, Carrie described him simply as “a good guy.”
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That says it all.
His death left what Carrie called “a hole in all of us that I fear won’t ever go away.” She asked fans to pray for his family and everyone lucky enough to know him. And then she closed with words that read like both a goodbye and a promise: “Love you, man. I’ll see you again someday.”
The man who gave country one of its most powerful modern prayers is gone. But the song lives on, and every time Carrie sings “Jesus, Take the Wheel,” Brett James will still be in the room.
Sometimes Nashville legends are loud and flashy. Sometimes they’re the guy who insists on sharing credit he didn’t have to share, who walks in with a grin and leaves behind a piece of himself in every chorus. That was Brett James.
And if you want proof of how much he mattered, just look at Carrie Underwood’s words.