Dissecting ‘The New York Times’ 30 Greatest Songwriters List

Oh great, another list. And just like what always happens with lists these days, people treat them like it’s a “Where’s Waldo?” exercise, scouring through them to find what to tear apart based on their own tastes as opposed to attempting to use it to perhaps learn about something they might not know, or attempt to recalibrate their own perspectives, or use it to stoke important discussions.
Too many people have fallen in the habit these days of completely blowing off a list because so-and-so was left out, or because so-and-so was included. America has become too cynical for list. Ultimately, every list on any subject is going to be burdened by the limitations of perspective. But that doesn’t mean they still can’t be useful, informative, or even in some instances, authoritative.
The most recently list piercing through the zeitgeist comes from The New York Times and a panel of six journalists who compiled the “30 Greatest Living American Songwriters.” The Times also says they consulted with greater panel of some 250 minds in music while assembling the list. It is noteworthy that none of the top-line journalists/critics that worked on the list were from country music. But country songwriters are included, so they’re not entirely overlooked like we commonly see with all-genre lists.
Of course, we’re all going to bring our biases and tastes to an exercise like this. But when considering the overall scope and parameters set for this particular list, it’s honestly not that bad, even if those who love to rip these types of things apart will tell you otherwise. That’s not to compliment it as great. But it’s nowhere near the abomination that was Apple Music’s Top 100 Albums of All Time from 2024 where they included all of one country title (#85 – Golden Hour by Kacey Musgraves).
Dolly Parton and Willie Nelson are in The New York Times’ Top 30 Songwriters of course. And yes, it would be disqualifying of the entire list if they were not. Lucinda Williams is there as well, which is also perhaps an obvious, but still a strong pick outside of the commercial space, showing that the authors did make a concerted effort to represent the Southern, and more Americana side of songwriting where frankly many of the greatest living songwriters reside.
The other country inclusion on the list includes shoehorning Josh Osborne, Brandy Clark, and Shane McAnally all into one spot. No doubt, all three are very strong songwriters with successful careers and song catalogs. This spot feels like The New York Times knowing they needed to represent the current generation of Nashville songwriters, and grouping these three together accomplishes this, while also marking off an LGBT check.
But including these three in only one slot also feels like a bit of a cop out. You could kind of see Shane McAnally occupying his own spot on here with all the critical and commercial success he’s had here. Brandy Clark is an incredible songwriter, but not especially prolific or noted like the other songwriters on such a short and exclusive list. And though all three have written songs together, it’s not like they’re a famous troika beyond a few songs.
Another option, and perhaps a better one from the commercial country realm could have been to include the “Love Junkies,” a.k.a. Lori McKenna, Liz Rose, and Hillary Lindsey. They just feel like much bigger heavy hitters for this kind of list, along with being responsible for major commercial hits, from McKenna’s “Humble and Kind,” to Liz Rose’s work with Taylor Swift earlier in Swift’s career.
And of course, Taylor Swift is the name on this list that many are using to disqualify it entirely. But this feels a bit unfair. As has been shared here before, Taylor Swift’s greatest contribution to the songwriting community was exposing the whole idea of what songwriting is, and who songwriters are to much of the masses by writing such personal and resonant material, and talking about songwriting in a very forward manner.
Is Taylor Swift as good of a songwriter as Bob Dylan? Of course not. But one of the flaws of the New York Times list is lumping all the names together as opposed to ranking them.
The parameters and approach of this list really are the devil of it. 30 songwriters isn’t enough slots to give a true representation of the discipline. It should have been expanded to at least 50, which would have solved a lot of problems itself. Many are complaining that Paul McCartney is not included. But the list stipulates they must be “American” songwriters, which also feels a little unnecessarily limiting. Neil Young and Joni Mitchell also feels like they get the shaft with this stipulation.
Who was left off? Again, this is in the eye of the beholder. It’s not the place of a country critic to commentate on the worlds of rock, pop, and hip-hop. But it does feel like a few more names from the country and roots world could have been included, though they would have to be sparing due to the limited space.
What feels like the first and most obvious exclusion is James McMurtry—the reigning Saving Country Music Songwriter of the Year, and the songwriter many argue is the apex predator of the entire discipline irrespective of genre. Granted, his commercial success is not in any way significant. At least Lucinda Williams wrote some hits for others. But it does feel like McMurtry belongs on the list somewhere to take it seriously.
If you were factoring in commercial aptitude and popularity into the equation, you would seriously have to consider Alan Jackson. From his meaningful songs that became massive #1s, to his more silly and simple songs, Jackson wrote the vast majority of his own hits and catalog—one of the last popular artists in all of music to do so in such a prolific manner. Of course, you can see something like The New York Times not assigning enough gravity to someone like Alan Jackson. It’s unlikely he was ever considered.
Though it’s still very early in his career, when you’re talking about songwriting, it feels like you would at least need to give Jesse Welles an honorable mention. No different than Taylor Swift, he has helped expand the knowledge and attentiveness to songwriting like few before him with his prolific and viral nature.
Though more roots-adjacent than country, Tom Waits also feels like an odd man to leave out, though in fairness, The Times did include Waits in a later honorable mention. Nobody else is like Waits, and nobody has ever even tried to be. Yet his influence among songwriters and American music is astronomical. He’s one of your favorite songwriter’s favorite songwriter.
It’s probably too much to expect songwriters like Dean Dillon, Steve Earle, Chris Knight, Robert Earl Keen, let alone Willy “Tea” Taylor or Emily Scott Robinson to be in the mix. There are only 30 slots, and you have to cover all genres. Again, the flaw of this list is the brevity of scope, making it difficult to include songwriters worth discovering, and favoring popular songwriting performers.
But hey, it really could be worse. Ultimately, it’s just another list. And if it gets people talking about songwriters and the important work they do often behind-the-scenes in music, that’s not a bad thing.
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April 29, 2026 @ 8:18 am
I read and wholeheartedly agree with the opening paragraph here.
That said…Missy Elliott, eh?
April 29, 2026 @ 9:28 am
DEI box checked.
April 29, 2026 @ 8:19 am
I also agree a list like this should make you ask what am I missing not what are they missing. But also country musics greatest living songwriter is Evan felker imo
April 29, 2026 @ 8:31 am
Evan Felker would be a great edition. But the bigger question is, who do you take out from the country realm to add him? Lucinda Williams? With so few slots, and covering every genre, this list was just doomed to be horrifically incomplete by most people’s perspectives.
April 29, 2026 @ 8:41 am
Very few people would even have the bandwidth to compare song writers across genres. Like I would include Felker, but also Mcmurtry, Corb Lund, Elizabeth cook… And I imagine a rap guy is gonna include a lot of rappers, and a pop guy is gonna include a lot of pop, and so on. Not many could objectively judge across genres. Plus, when you say “living songwriters” we are talking about people who wrote hits in the 60s, 70s, and 80s who are still alive.
April 29, 2026 @ 8:28 am
“while also marking off an LGBT check.”
–if they included anybody because of their sexual orientation, or included anybody for ANY REASON other than their qualifications, then THAT is certainly disqualifying of the entire list.
April 29, 2026 @ 8:44 am
lets not get too excited. The list is dumb, but that’s not why. There is absolutely no reason to believe they were trying to check off boxes other than “current nashville hit makers”.
April 29, 2026 @ 9:21 am
Good morning, Mr. Van Winkle! While you were asleep, identity politics completely ate the New York Times.
There’s lots of other stuff you’ll want to catch up on, too.
April 29, 2026 @ 10:07 am
You’re right. I’m sure the New York Times included three people 99% of their readership have never heard of to check off the “gay box”. You understand going on and on about institutions “checking boxes” without any tangible proof is identity politics in itself right? Like I am not doubting identity politics ate the New York Times and higher education and everywhere else really, but it also ate up your brain, and everyone else’s who immediately scream about it every chance they get.
April 29, 2026 @ 10:44 am
I think you would have to be a fool to not think that as they were curating this list, they were not mindful about making sure they were being inclusive. And I’m not even necessarily against that. It’s their list, and they can curate it however they want. Shane McAnally and Brandy Clark are good songwriters (so is Josh Osborne). But if you’re looking at the lists of potential candidates to make your Top 30 and you can include folks from the LGBT community, they’re going to win out in a push, if not be favored.
April 29, 2026 @ 8:30 am
“Checking off the gay box” seems fairly cynical, and maybe disingenuous, but maybe you’re right. Speaking of, any interest in discussing the Shane Mcnally twitter controversy? It will get a lot of comments.
As far as current Nashville writers go I guess those three are the ones. I’m not familiar enough with the landscape to say otherwise. However, with Dean Dillon and Scotty Emerick being alive I probably would have gone with them, or someone else not so current, if I wanted to check off the Nashville box. Real surprised to see Lucinda Williams on the list, but happy she is. Surprised not to see Isbell, that does sem like it would check off a box of some kind.
April 29, 2026 @ 8:55 am
I’ve gone from a strong critic of Shane McAnally from his work with Sam Hunt, to respecting him for a lot of his work with Kacey Musgraves, Midland, etc. When he stopped writing for Musgraves, it exposed what a great songwriter McAnally really is. And like I said in the article, if you expanded this list, I could even see him in his own slot. Brandy Clark is obviously great as well. But I don’t think they’re even in the same universe as someone like Lori McKenna, who has both commercial and critically-acclaimed songs, and tons of them, and is a solo artist who performs, tours, and releases albums in her own right. You could make the case that Lori McKenna IS the greatest living songwriter. And Liz Rose might not be the greatest living songwriter, but she might be the greatest living songwriting guru. And her proof is in the pudding. So I just don’t understand if you make the decision to put in a troika of songwriters why you lump Josh Osborne, Brandy Clark, and Shane McAnally together, but ignore the Love Junkies, who are actually a legitimate active songwriting troika.
April 29, 2026 @ 10:28 am
As a casual the only current behind the scene Nashville songwriters I can name is McAnally. I only know McKenna from her solo stuff (which I really enjoy, but no one like that is getting on this list). As a “Nashville Songwriter” the only reason I’m familiar with her is cause she was on Oprah with Faith Hill along time ago. I wasn’t aware of her recent “nashville” work. Looking up “the love junkies” you are right, they are better, but I think most people are more familiar with the “gay box” representation. Until now I though Josh Osborn and John Osborn were the same person. John produced a non-country record for The Hodge Podge I really enjoyed.
April 29, 2026 @ 8:32 am
Lists like this are frankly sort of bankrupt as a concept. If they were using some sort of quantitative metric – albums sold, songs in the charts, awards won, number of covers – they might at least have some sort of value (though even that would be questionable for a number of reasons).
But just asking “best” (or “worst” or “most influential” or whatever) provides no information about the individuals on the list, and instead only informs about the opinions and biases of those doing the ranking.
I suppose that you’re not entirely wrong that there is some potential incidental educational effect, but that’s always going to be washed out by the underlying structural problems.
April 29, 2026 @ 8:44 am
I mean you’re right except that that’s bad. This website is good because trigger is an informed smart person with opinions and biases who attempts to shape public opinion of country music. That’s what art criticism is and it’s a very valuable thing
April 29, 2026 @ 8:39 am
If these lists are really meant to be taken literally and/or seriously then they are pointless and meaningless. The history of Rock and Country music since The Beatles is so completely different from the history of Rap music. You can’t draw a line from Paul Mccartney thru DMX or Kanye. I get that rap fans have historically been left out of “greatest music lists” for decades but rap has always been reliant on the actual musicianship of actual real musicians. Virtually ever single prominent rap song of the 90’s sampled or “stole” music from a classic rock icon. There isn’t a way to shoehorn in rap artists into the same list as Rock/Soul/Blues/Pop and Country artists and not have it look silly and cobbled. Rap has always been the dim-witted outsider that waits to steal the radio from the car of other genres that actually understand what chords and music theory is.
Also have these retards at The New York Times honestly never heard of Don Henley and The Eagles?!
April 29, 2026 @ 9:28 am
Maybe they thought Henley would try to copy copyright strike them for mentioning his work without paying him. (sarc)
April 29, 2026 @ 9:44 am
Considering how bad he is about copyright strikes it’s barely sarcasm
April 29, 2026 @ 8:51 am
I do miss when the rolling stone top whatever list felt like an authoritative canon. Both the good and bad of our modern moment is the death of monoculture means that can’t really exist anymore but also there’s way more quality indie music.
I do sort of hate the poptimism of lists like this. Not really a problem in isolation but there’s few music critics with any meaningful platform willing to negatively review something popular. I would like it if something exited with both the desire and the influence to try and shape the canon beyond simply here’s this billionaire we all love. But maybe that’s just not possible anymore.
April 29, 2026 @ 11:25 am
This is a good point. Rolling Stone would regularly trash albums at the time that are now revered as classics. For decades RS’s “greatest” lists were always skewed towards the same classic rock grading framework “Rockism”. This newest generation of writers grew up listening to Rap and they view it as historically important to music as The Beatles and Elvis.
It is poptimism to include all these rap artists because it’s done to justify the popularity of Rap in a generation that is mostly unaware of the music that was previously on the “Greatest” music lists. All of this is inevitable though and goes for every genre. Your average 20 yr old metal fan isn’t going to understand the importance of Cream or John Coltrane for what eventually became heavy metal music.
April 29, 2026 @ 9:06 am
My main gripe is that they clearly went for name recognition while mostly ignoring the professional songwriters who crank out hit after hit for others.
Don Schlitz doesn’t qualify now that he’s passed, but it seems there was minimal consideration given to writers like him.
April 29, 2026 @ 9:13 am
The obvious misses to me are Jason Isbell, Patterson Hood, and Mike Cooley.
April 29, 2026 @ 10:46 am
Jason Isbell is definitely another good name to include. I’ve seen a lot of folks also pushing the Drive-By Truckers. Great songwriters obviously, but with only 30 slots to cover all genres, I’m not sure I would be nominating them. Their latter era has really trailed off.
April 29, 2026 @ 11:28 am
@cf The Times allow people to put in their own list of 10 people who should have been included. Three of mine were Patterson, Cooley, and Isbell.
Patterson gets in if for no other reason than his “duality of the southern thing.” You don’t have to go far beyond those five words to explain something multiple volumes of books can’t explain.
April 29, 2026 @ 9:33 am
Bill Anderson?
April 29, 2026 @ 9:35 am
JUSTICE FOR LORI MCKENNA!
April 29, 2026 @ 9:50 am
Ion if you serious or sarcastic but on God I’ll take Lori over every cardiac surgeon in Cook County that bitch has broken my heart and then put it back together a dozen times… what a unit.
April 29, 2026 @ 9:38 am
Well no ones gonna top Bob Dylan anyway.
April 29, 2026 @ 10:00 am
Let’s be real, they just wanted another excuse to put Taylor on the front page.
April 29, 2026 @ 10:05 am
I’ve never felt more like vomiting when reading a music article than after reading that list. Young Thug? Mariah freaking Carey? Jay Z? Who are they kidding?
They essentially considered everything but the songwriting.
April 29, 2026 @ 11:32 am
Maybe. But somewhere there is a Young Thug fan who is questioning why Lucinda Williams is on the list.
Just because you like it doesn’t mean everyone does or should. Who is a great songwriter is subjective.
They should have made it genre specific. Of course, even then the rap fans would have been complaining about how too many Bling era rappers got in relative to Trap or Old School rappers.
April 29, 2026 @ 10:24 am
When journalists/activists screech about including more LGBTQ artists in “getting their flowers,” they shouldn’t act surprised nor get unhinged when the LGBTQ artists they champion are looked at as checking a box.
I’m a straight, white male. Respect my opinion.
April 29, 2026 @ 10:42 am
Having Bad Bunny and Fiona Apple on this list and not John Mayer is wild to me. If you’re going to have Mariah Carey then yes to Alan Jackson. He is terribly underrated as a songwriter. (Clint Black too.) Bob McDill. Dean Dillon. Even Ashley Gorley over the ‘country three’ they chose. What was their criteria? Oh that’s right – the criteria was ‘no one is paying attention to us, so what can we do to rile people up (while checking boxes)?
April 29, 2026 @ 11:11 am
I I think lumping them together is better than ranking them.. people get really worked up about rankings.
I agree about shoehorning the trio.
And personally somebody should be bumped for Tom Waits. But that’s just me
April 29, 2026 @ 11:38 am
An issue that comes up with trying to assess songwriters is all the co-writing that goes on.
I understand that when Alan Jackson broke into the business he sort of came under the tutelage of Jim McBride a veteran songwriter who co-wrote “Rose In Paradise” for Waylon and who was ten years older than Alan.
Jackson and McBride wrote many of Jackson’s iconic early hits including “Chattachoochie,” “Neon Rainbow” and “Someday.”
That’s not something that Jackson tried to hide. When McBride died earlier this year, Jackson posted a statement:
Jim was a good man and a great and genuine songwriter. He understood country music and touched many with his songs. Jim and I wrote some of my favorite songs together and I don’t know if my career would have ended up quite the same without his help, inspiration, and encouragement in my early years. Thank you Jim, rest in peace. – AJ
But if you’re giving an award or recognition for just songwriting, maybe it should go to McBride. Who knows?
(Most of Garth Brooks’s “self-witten” songs were also done as co-writes with accomplished professional songwriters.)
At least in the cases of Dylan, Paul Simon and even Springsteen, they wrote ther canonical songs alone, so they’re the only ones to credit.
Alan Jackson has gotten carloads of awards and trophies including Entertainer of the Year award and Country Music H-o-F, and deservedly so.
April 29, 2026 @ 11:46 am
Mariah Carey is better than Tom Waits.
Just so we know.
April 29, 2026 @ 1:03 pm
No, it’s too much to expect songwriters like James McMurty or Robert Earl Keen in this list.