Vince Gill Marks 30 Years of “Go Rest High on That Mountain” With a Powerful New Extended Version
4 mins read

Vince Gill Marks 30 Years of “Go Rest High on That Mountain” With a Powerful New Extended Version

Thirty years later, Vince Gill is still breaking hearts with the song that became country music’s ultimate hymn of goodbye.

Back in 1995, Vince Gill poured his grief into “Go Rest High on That Mountain,” a song that felt like it was carved out of stone, eternal and unshakable. He started writing it in 1989 when Keith Whitley died, but the words did not fully come until after his brother Bob’s passing in 1993. What Gill delivered was a ballad that made the entire country world stop in its tracks. It won CMA and Grammy awards, climbed up to No. 14 on the charts, and over time became the soundtrack of funerals, farewells, and the moments when words simply are not enough.

But for Gill, even with all that, the song never felt finished. He has admitted for years that something about it felt incomplete, almost like it was still waiting on a final chapter. As he told The Boot, “In all these years of singing that song, truthfully it felt just the slightest bit incomplete to me. I always thought it needed to tie itself up in some way.” That nagging feeling never left him, and in 2019, during a performance at the Ryman with Amy Grant, Gill quietly added a third verse. Fans who heard it live knew they were witnessing something special, but it never made its way onto a recording until now.

To honor the 30th anniversary, Gill has released an extended version of “Go Rest High on That Mountain,” and this time, he finally gave the world the complete version of the song he has carried for decades. The new verse ties the song together with a simple but soul-crushing beauty, lifting the grief of loss into the hope of reunion. It begins with “You’re safely home in the arms of Jesus,” and ends with Gill promising he will one day meet his brother again “in that sacred place, on that holy ground.” It is country music at its purest, direct and unpretentious, and completely drenched in faith and heartache.

The new version uses the original sound bed from the 1995 recording, which means fans will still hear that familiar ache in every steel guitar note and in Gill’s voice. However, now there is an added weight that makes the song feel whole. As Gill himself said, “With this new third verse I finally feel like the song is complete.” And in truth, it feels like the song was waiting thirty years for this moment so Gill could circle back and bring it home.

The release also came with MCA Nashville officially certifying the song Double Platinum through the RIAA, which is proof of its enduring grip on listeners who have turned to it again and again in their darkest hours. And as if that was not enough, Gill will perform the extended version at the 2025 Emmy Awards during the In Memoriam segment. That means millions of people, country fans and otherwise, will hear the new verse in a moment where it will resonate the most.

When Vince Gill first delivered this song, it was not written to chase radio hits or awards. It was a man trying to put his pain into words that others could hold onto. That is why “Go Rest High on That Mountain” has lasted long after most of its chart peers faded into the background. It was built to endure because it was built on truth. Now, with the new verse, Gill has given fans a version that feels like the final chapter of his most sacred song.

It is hard to overstate what this moment means. Country music has its share of party anthems and rowdy stadium stompers, but every once in a while, it delivers a song that feels timeless, holy, and necessary. Thirty years on, Vince Gill has reminded us that grief never really leaves us, but neither does love. And with this extended version of “Go Rest High on That Mountain,” he has proven again why some songs are more than hits. They are lifelines.

Source link