
Riley Green Reveals Why Keeping Songs Simple Has Been the Secret to His Success
Riley Green swears by a simple truth: country music does not need to be complicated.
The Jacksonville, Alabama native is walking into the 2025 CMA Awards with four nominations, the biggest haul of his career, all tied to “You Look Like You Love Me,” his breakout duet with Ella Langley. That track is up for Single, Song, Video, and Musical Event of the Year, proof that sometimes the simplest stories strike the loudest chord.
Green recently explained why his songs connect the way they do, and it all comes down to simplicity. “I listen back to Merle Haggard and George Jones and all that and there’s not a lot of complicated stuff in there,” he said. “They’re just telling a story and that’s what I always did early on.” For him, a song does not need clever twists or stacked metaphors. It needs to sound like something the old men at the Chevron would say over a game of dominoes.
It is the kind of philosophy that sets him apart in Nashville, where writers can sometimes chase polish over heart. “In a writer’s room, I’m kind of stingy about that,” Green admitted. “I’ll say, ‘this is how I would say it, this is how that old guy down the road would say it.’” That stubbornness has turned into a strength. Whether it is the no-frills fun of “There Was This Girl” or the quiet ache of “I Wish Grandpas Never Died,” Green’s songs feel lived-in because they are written in the plainspoken language of everyday folks.
And fans know it. “I Wish Grandpas Never Died” never hit number one at country radio, peaking instead at eleven, but it is now triple platinum and the biggest moment of his live show every night. Green sees that as proof that hits do not live on charts alone. “What really matters is what fans think of it,” he said. Some songs are radio gold, and others are fan treasures, but both find their place if the storytelling is true.
His career has been built on that balance. “There Was This Girl” sounded like a radio hit, with its easy chorus and windows-down vibe, and sure enough, it shot to number one. But “Grandpas” was a tribute he wrote for family, never imagining it would echo far beyond his own world. Now it is one of his most enduring songs. The common thread between them is simplicity: words people can sing back and make their own.
Green is not shy about giving credit to the legends who shaped him. He grew up listening to Haggard, Jones, and the music his granddad played. Steel guitar, fiddle, and mandolin are not just flourishes in his catalog, they are anchors. “Keeping that alive a little bit is something I’m pretty proud of,” he said in an interview earlier this year. His sound is traditional without being stuck in the past, and it keeps him tied to the lineage of country storytelling.
Now, with five number one singles, including the recent “Worst Way,” a deluxe album packed with new material, and his biggest tour yet, Riley Green is proving that sticking to the basics has never held him back. The Damn Country Music Tour has stretched from Canada to the UK, with fans who once saw him in small-town bars now screaming his songs in arenas. He calls it surreal, but he is not about to complicate the formula.
“Music in three words: country, traditional,” he once said. That is Riley Green in a nutshell. He does not pretend to be the flashiest singer in town. He does not try to reinvent the wheel. Instead, he keeps it simple, just like his heroes did, and in doing so, he has carved out his own lane as one of the most trusted voices in modern country music.
No matter how many trophies he takes home, Riley Green has already won by proving you do not need complicated words to write timeless songs. You just need truth, heart, and a simple story told right.