Blake Shelton Gets Honest About Why He Doesn’t’ Want Anyone Covering His Songs
4 mins read

Blake Shelton Gets Honest About Why He Doesn’t’ Want Anyone Covering His Songs

Blake Shelton is just fine being a country hit machine, but he doesn’t want anybody else messing with his catalog.

During a hilarious and surprisingly self-aware visit to Taste of Country Nights, the “God’s Country” singer cracked open a side of himself we don’t often see. When the topic shifted from his favorite Gwen Stefani tracks to the idea of musical covers, Blake didn’t miss a beat. He joked that he loves Gwen’s version of “It’s My Life” (originally by Talk Talk) even more than the original, then turned that spotlight on himself.

“I hope nobody ever remakes any of my music,” Shelton said with a laugh. “Because I know that will happen to me. People will be like, ‘Oh my God, way better than Blake Shelton.’”

And just like that, Mr. Oklahoma let his honesty show, dressed up in a joke. He was half-joking, but only half. There was plenty of truth behind the humor. In a world where every artist dreams of being the one others want to cover, Shelton’s take is a refreshing curveball.

It’s not about hating covers or being territorial. It’s about legacy. It’s about holding onto the heart and soul that went into the original. The thought of someone taking a song like “Austin” or “Ol’ Red” and putting their own spin on it, only to have people claim it’s an upgrade, is enough to make Blake crack another beer and shake his head.

Shelton’s self-deprecating streak is nothing new. The dude’s been roasting himself longer than he’s been trading jabs with Luke Bryan. But behind the jokes is a guy who takes his music seriously, even if he doesn’t always take himself that way. With 30 No.1 songs across Billboard’s country charts, Blake’s more than earned the right to want his hits left untouched.

And maybe that’s the thing. When you know the blood, sweat, and guitar strings that went into every line, it’s a little hard to imagine someone else trying it on like a rhinestone jacket at a thrift shop.

But for all his joking about not wanting people to cover his songs, Blake’s philosophy on music is the exact opposite when it comes to writing them. In another recent chat with CMT, he opened up about how he picks the tracks that make it onto his albums. Spoiler alert: it’s not about who wrote them, it’s about how damn good they are.

“I don’t care who writes the song,” Shelton said. “I could care less.”

He doesn’t even check the name behind the lyrics half the time. What he’s chasing is feel, that instinct that tells him a song’s a hit, whether it’s from a Nashville heavyweight or some unknown kid trying to break in.

That open-door policy has paid off in more ways than one. It’s helped bring unknown writers into the spotlight, giving them a shot when the rest of the industry might’ve passed them by. And in Blake’s world, that’s how it should be. The best song wins. Always.

Which is why it’s kinda poetic that he wants his own songs to stay as they are. He didn’t write all of them, but he picked them for a reason. They hit something in him. They stuck. And now they’re part of the country music fabric, stitched into radio playlists and barroom jukeboxes for a generation of fans.

So when he says he doesn’t want anyone to cover them, it’s not arrogance. It’s reverence. It’s the belief that the song found its home the first time around. And maybe that’s the most country thing about him.