Ne-Yo Wants to be Country with New Song. But He’s No Alan Jackson

Look. You don’t want to get up in the morning, take a swig of Haterade, and go knee capping guys like multi-Platinum, and multi Grammy-winning R&B singer, songwriter, and producer Ne-Yo. The guy’s a legend, and congratulations to him on all of his success, and everything he’s done in his career.
You also don’t want to be the prick that throws up a stop sign every single time some artist or superstar from another genre decides they want to make a country song, or perhaps even transition to a country artist. If someone has a love for country music in their heart, they should be allowed to express it, and we should all be at least a little bit open-minded to these performers … as long as the music is actually country.
About a year ago, Chappell Roan released a silly pop country song, and it was a harmless, passing anomaly. If you’re too uptight about this stuff, you run the risk of coming across like a pearl-clutching prude.
But apparently, Ne-Yo has decided the only thing you really have to do to transition to country music is make a declarative statement proclaiming as much, maybe bury a steel guitar way down in the mix to where it’s almost indecipherable, and then all of a sudden all the rights and privileges of a country star are bequeathed to you via the power vested in the music industry. And unfortunately, he might not be wrong about that assessment.
“Ne-Yo Releases New Country-Crossover Single ‘Up, Out, & Gone’,” is what a press release declared late last week, saying the new song “continues NE-YO’s move into country inspired music.” Apparently Ne-Yo even debuted on the Grand Ole Opry back on November 20th. But of course if you listen to the new single “Up, Out, & Gone,” even calling it country “inspired” feels like a stretch, while saying it’s part of his “move into country” sounds ominous.
“But Trig, this sounds just like every other country radio single!” Eh, not really. If anything, it sounds like every other Ne-Yo song. This feels like yet another naked and transparent marketing ploy to revitalize a career that is sagging in the present-tense by transitioning to country where the competition isn’t as fierce, and you can leverage the nostalgia of older listeners.
Can you hear these types of R&B-infused “country” tracks on country radio as well? A few of them maybe. But frankly, one of this R&B-ness is very rare. You don’t hear those type of Sam Hunt-style singles much anymore. Let’s not forget that the #1 song in all of music is at the moment is Ella Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas.” We’re living in a more country moment. That’s the whole reason we’re seeing performers from other genres wanting to “go country.” They want to nestle up to that sweet and lucrative country music teat.
And some folks will want to talk about the “gatekeeping” in country music if you question Ne-Yo’s “move into country.” But in truth, it’s the lack of gatekeeping that allows such career transitions to be made unchecked with such frequency that “going country” feels like a cliché all unto itself. Also, it’s superstars like Ne-Yo and Beyoncé moving into the country space that continues to overshadow actual Black creators in country music and “gatekeeps” them.
Beyoncé didn’t open up doors for more Black up-and-comers in country. She opened the door for more established stars like Ne-Yo to siphon off attention from more deserving artists. And like we’re seeing with Nelly and Ludacris, I’m sure Ne-Yo will be booked to headline country festivals in the future, and don’t be surprised if he shows up at awards shows and such, just like we’ve seen recently with BigXthaPlug. Ne-Yo was already photographed on the red carpet of the CMA Awards.
What does all of this have to do with Alan Jackson? Why was he name checked in the title of this article? Again, you don’t want to be the sniveling, needling little country purist calling foul at every little infraction. But it happens to be that the single art for Ne-Yo’s “Up, Out, & Gone” rips off the sign for Alan Jackson’s bar on Lower Broadway, AJ’s. It basically puts Ne-Yo in Alan Jackson’s boots.

Yes, there are worse artwork offenses. But let’s not forget the controversy that swirled a few years back when Midland and The Washington Post photoshopped the sign of the legendary “Sam’s BBQ” in Austin to brand it for the band’s puff piece spread. It seems a little tone-deaf to mess with the visage of Alan Jackson for your marketing when you apparently want to ingratiate yourself to country fans.
Do we really have to worry about a Ne-Yo taking over country music in 2026? Probably not. He’s coming to the genre from a position of weakness unlike Beyoncé or Post Malone. But why create conflict here? There’s already too many mouths to feed among the ranks of country hopefuls to just let Ne-Yo waltz in and try to fill Alan Jackson’s boots, especially with subpar music.
No more than we should want country artists dive bombing the R&B space, R&B singers can’t just declare their music country now because it’s the hot commodity.
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April 2, 2026 @ 11:21 am
Inoffensive pop music. Definitely no relationship to country music. My sincere belief is east and west coast label heads HATE country radio being a separate ecosystem and just want to roll it into the pop ecosystem, and are trying to do so by having non country artists on country radio until they reach a tipping point where they can just eliminate the country artists completely.
April 2, 2026 @ 12:10 pm
Taylor Swift created the template with her “Eras” bullshit so expect every other pop act from whatever genre their label first parked them in to follow “suit.”
Pun intended.
April 2, 2026 @ 12:23 pm
Watch Charley Crockett go on tour with him.
April 2, 2026 @ 12:24 pm
Man folks just need to stay in their own lanes, its hard to believe Watermelon Crawl and Chicken fried seem like great traditional Country compared to this garbage. 🙂
April 2, 2026 @ 1:31 pm
Sounds like a Bruno Mars reject (with a massive downsize in production quality) with a DJ Mustard-esque gang vocal chant.
No thank you.
April 2, 2026 @ 1:53 pm
This has been happening long enough, with enough prevalence that Alan Jackson cut a song about the phenomenon called “Gone Country”. It seems like people get more upset about it when it’s a rapper or RnB artist. I like the Chaprell Roan song (I haven’t listened to it since the first time, but I liked it). I enjoyed a couple of the tracks form Beyonce’s album. I’m not sure I’ve heard of Ne-Yo before this, and 20 seconds in I knew this song wasn’t for me, but I’d listen to 20 seconds of 100 shitty songs by Ne-Yo on the off chance I find one Ween “12 Golden Country Hits” a Tina Turner “Tina Turns the Country On” or a Bob Dylan’s “John Wesley Harding” or “Nashville Skyline”.