
Kelly Clarkson’s Cody Johnson Cover Reminded Folks What Country’s Supposed to Feel Like
Kelly Clarkson’s voice could melt asphalt in the middle of a Texas summer, and when she turned her sights on Cody Johnson’s “When It Comes To You,” it wasn’t just another cover, it was a moment that proved why her name still holds weight in every genre she touches.
Clarkson rolled out the performance on her daytime talk show during a Kellyoke segment, and there was nothing half-baked or phoned-in about it. She didn’t just sing the song, she owned it. Every note dripped with conviction, every lyric sounded lived-in. If you didn’t know better, you’d think she penned the thing herself after a whiskey-soaked breakup in a Waco dive bar.
“When It Comes To You,” written by Jeremy Bussey and Tony Lane, originally dropped as part of CoJo’s Human: The Double Album, a monster of a record that carved out some of the best traditional country cuts in recent years. And while the song may not have been the radio darling some other singles were, it’s always been a quiet powerhouse in Cody’s arsenal, filled with heartache, restraint, and raw vulnerability.
That’s what made Clarkson’s rendition all the more jaw-dropping. She didn’t polish it up or smooth out the edges. She leaned into the grit, dragged it through the emotional dirt, and came out the other side with a performance that would make even the toughest cowboy set his beer down and listen.
It’s not surprising coming from Kelly. She’s dipped her boots into country waters before, famously teaming up with Jason Aldean on the chart-smashing “Don’t You Wanna Stay,” a duet that earned them ACM trophies and a Grammy nod. Over the years, she’s become a staple at country award shows, delivering renditions of classics like “Tennessee Whiskey,” “I Will Always Love You,” “The Dance,” and “Boot Scootin’ Boogie” with the kind of powerhouse delivery most of Nashville would trade their truck for.
But there’s a reason this one hit different. “When It Comes To You” isn’t flashy. It’s not designed for big belt moments or glittery stages. It’s a gut-check of a song, built for silence and slow burns. And Kelly walked right into that quiet storm and made it thunder. She brought just enough vocal fire to set it ablaze without ever once making it about herself. That’s a rare skill, and country’s finest better be paying attention.
Let’s not forget she’s also one of the loudest mainstream voices to call out the genre’s identity crisis in recent years. Back in 2019, she pulled no punches during a live stream, flat-out saying: “Country music is gone… now it’s weird word-rap.” And she wasn’t wrong. If anyone’s got the chops and credibility to light a fire under country’s ass and bring some substance back to the table, it might just be Kelly Clarkson.
And this wasn’t even her first CoJo cover. Earlier that year, she tackled “‘ Til You Can’t,” his #1 hit, and crushed that one too. You don’t keep going back to the same artist unless something in the songwriting or delivery speaks to you, and clearly, Cody Johnson’s music hits home for Kelly.
There’s always been a low hum of speculation around whether Clarkson would make a full leap into country music. After this latest performance, it doesn’t feel like a matter of if but when. Because if there’s one thing this genre needs right now, it’s more voices who sing with the kind of grit, reverence, and authenticity that Kelly Clarkson brought to “When It Comes To You.”
She didn’t just sing a country song. She reminded folks what country’s supposed to feel like.