On Ella Langley’s New Duet with Morgan Wallen

On Friday (4-24), Ella Langley released a new duet with Morgan Wallen called “I Can’t Love You Anymore.” The duo first debuted the song live on April 18th during a Wallen tour stop in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Though Langley has previously performed with Wallen live as an opener for him on tour, this is the duo’s first official studio release.
“I Can’t Love You Anymore” comes just a couple of weeks after Ella Langley released her latest album, the blockbuster all-genre #1 Dandelion. Her song “Choosin’ Texas” also remains the hottest single in all of music, while it’s followup “Be Her” also sits at #4 on Billboard’s all-genre Hot Country Songs chart—the first time a country woman has ever had two singles simultaneously sit in the Top 5 in all of music.
Meanwhile, tracks from Dandelion dominate Billboard’s Hot Country songs chart, filling five of the Top 10 spots, eight of the Top 20 spots, and 16 spots in the Top 40, with only her “Froggy Went A Courtin” intro/outtro being left out due to track length eligibility.
Though “I Can’t Love You Anymore” didn’t appear on Dandelion originally, it does come with a similar late ’70s, early 80s dreamy vibe that helps define the Dandelion experience, with some comparing it to a Fleetwood Mac song. It was co-written and co-produced by Ella Langley herself, with Austin Goodloe also credited as a co-writer and co-producer, and Alex Maxwell also picking up a writing credit.
Also credited on the track are steel guitarist Spencer Cullum, and guitarist Charlie Worsham—two musicians who also participated in the Dandelion sessions, so it’s not out of the question the song might have initially been slated for the album, and left off for whatever reason. The song has also officially been added as the last track on Dandelion on streaming DSPs.
The track itself is pleasant enough, and country enough despite the synthy stylization, though doesn’t feel especially exceptional either. If anything holds it back, its how Morgan Wallen’s vocal signal sounds so processed, especially when contrasted with the otherwise organic nature of a song that allows the steel guitar to swell in the mix.
Wallen’s vocals were likely subject to the same default digital sweeteners you hear on many mainstream radio country tracks these days, insisting that perfection is what audiences crave as opposed to authenticity.
But the biggest criticism of the track has nothing to do with the track itself. It has to do why it’s being released at all, and especially the timing. Ella Langley is not starved for attention. On the contrary, she’s already created a traffic jam for herself at the top of numerous charts with “Choosin’ Texas” and “Be Her,” which both feed data into the chart performance for Dandelion. Releasing a new song with Wallen risks taking attention away from those high performing tracks, and for multiple reasons.
Morgan Wallen remains one of the most vilified characters in all of country music, if not the most vilified, whether those notions are valid or otherwise. He’s a favorite whipping boy of politically-oriented musical commentators and social media pundits who love to use their hatred for him to socially posture and morally preen, despite Wallen never having espoused any sort of political thought. Frankly, it’s fair to question just how much Wallen thinks about anything.
The continued obsession with Morgan Wallen as a hate vector feels completely outdated if nothing else, especially in the face of the accusations against Jelly Roll. It’s fighting the last battle as opposed to the one that’s in front of you. It’s a default.
But whether it’s fair or not, some have and will perceive Ella Langley releasing a duet with Morgan Wallen as a strident, naked, unmitigated political act and expression, publicly endorsing any and all of Wallen’s actions and ideologies, both true and perceived. You’re already enjoying universal consensus, so why take a risk? She might as well have come out on stage in a MAGA hat, with a backlash already ensuing in a way that will parse her current popularity, with the only question being how marginal or significant that parsing will be.
But an even bigger question remains, why release this song now? Perhaps Langley’s label feels they need to goose attention for her to make sure her winning streak is extended beyond the immediate release of Dandelion, even though “Be Her” is doing that just fine, if not better than “I Can’t Love You Anymore” will.
The ugly truth is that behind the scenes in the music business, who records a duet with who, and who opens for who on tour is a delicate, intricate dance of label and booking agency politics and pay-offs in often mutually beneficial promotional schemes to leverage exposure. Morgan Wallen has featured Ella Langley out on the road multiple times, including bringing her out during his set, and introducing her to his massive audience. Now that Ella Langely is getting so much heat, perhaps it’s time for her to return that favor.
Whether this is the true motivation behind this song release, Ella Langley doesn’t need Morgan Wallen. Morgan Wallen needs Ella Langley at the moment. But Ella is the one assuming all the risk and public backlash, while Wallen just sucks up more attention, and perhaps is given a goosing of legitimacy with certain audiences.
Another admittedly cynical reading of the situation might be that Ella Langley and/or her camp is anticipating the controversy under the premise of “no pub is bad pub.” Or maybe Langley and her camp is using the duet as a way to stoke the same kind of relationship rumors that have swirled around her and Riley Green, and Morgan Wallen and Megan Moroney, creating a whirlwind of attention for all the respective parties and their music.
Either way, Ella Langley could have used this moment to release a single with Kaitlin Butts, or perhaps Megan Moroney to codify their 1 – 2 status as country’s top women. Instead, adding Morgan Wallen who already has plenty of attention and a polarizing aspect seems to misunderstand the moment. It’s almost like the powers that be in country music are still working off the now deprecated notion that women need to piggy back off men for attention.
Let’s also not overlook the potential that Ella Langely might just like the song, considers Wallen a friend, doesn’t care about any controversy, and wanted this song released herself since it didn’t make the record. Maybe the idea was to leave the song off Dandelion initially so it didn’t distract from it. And now that the album is released, it can be added in post. Still, the question of “why now?” is a fair one. Why not wait for the deluxe edition six months down the road?
But ultimately, none of this might matter in the grander scheme. There’s a chance that “I Can’t Love You Anymore” is equivalent to an album cut, gets a bunch of early attention, and then goes forgotten for the next thing in people’s information feed. That might actually be the best case scenario for Ella.
But measuring the song’s potential ramifications really helps you realize just what a new day it is for women in country music. Ella Langley doesn’t need Morgan Wallen or anyone else. As the success of “Choosin’ Texas” and Dandelion prove, she’s excelling all on her own.
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April 24, 2026 @ 11:33 am
This article was written by someone with obvious personal issues. I felt embarrassed reading it.
April 24, 2026 @ 11:52 am
Yeah, so there seems to be a pretty strong social media reaction to this article that seems to think that if you wishcast that there is no controversy with this duet, there won’t be any. But that’s not how life works. There’s a difference between saying there should be no controversy, and an objective assessment that there is or isn’t. Multiple other outlets have already published stories giving examples how there is a controversy. This article actually argues that there shouldn’t be, but that it’s inarguable that it is. The only question is, is that controversy significant enough to harm the universal consensus Ella Langley has built, or is it a tempest in a teapot? I don’t think we’ll know this for a while.
But either way, you can try to undercut this article because it says things you don’t like (or most likely, don’t understand). It won’t make the realities surrounding this collaboration disappear.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:21 pm
Here’s another question – if it harms her universal acceptance, it might only harm her universal acceptance within Country.
Now that she’s topping the pop charts, she might care a little less also.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:11 pm
As I said in the article, I have no idea how much this might affect Ella Langley’s popularity. It might not affect it at all. It might increase her popularity for all I know. It might make her super controversial. I can’t predict that in real time, and I won’t try.
What I will say is that Ella Langley has risen to #1 in all of music both on the singles and albums charts by incorporating pop fans into her fan base with a traditional-leaning country song. That is what has made this whole phenomenon such a critically-important moment for country music.
If a Morgan Wallen affiliation turns some of those fans off, it will LESS likely be country fans, and MORE likely to be pop fans, not vice versa. There’s already an acceptance of Morgan Wallen in the country space. It’s in the pop space where you see the anger towards him.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:14 pm
Maybe they can have Morgan throw a chair at her.
April 24, 2026 @ 11:39 am
Well, let the comments begin.
April 24, 2026 @ 11:42 am
Im sorry but this article did not need releasing at all. Its totally laughable to say morgan wallen needs lanfgley. Hes done quite well without her. Yea she probably dont need him right now either but that means didly squat. Maybe they did it just for fun since they tour together or have been anyway. The whole propping up of female singers specifically gets annoying as well. Also to point out wallens bad vocals to somehow gloss over her horrible vocals is rather interesting. Theres a myriad of choices of far better female vocalists on the new music playlist on sporify alone to put her to shame. If its been time to move on from wallen, its def past time to move on from langley.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:16 pm
I’m just going to come out and say it. Morgan Wallen fans are acting like soft-spined, overly-sensitive little girls over this article, and are having a deeply emotional reaction to it that’s irrational. I said myself in the article that Ella Langley might’ve just released the track because she wanted to. Saying that her vocals are “horrible” on the track but Wallen’s are above criticism is just so obvious. So now we have to attack Ella Langley to save face for Morgan Wallen? Come on.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:43 pm
I’m gonna take my ball and go home.
April 24, 2026 @ 11:48 am
I actually think this song is great, I like the sonic palette here and Ella and Morgan have good chemistry
April 24, 2026 @ 11:48 am
How fascinating that the moment golden boy gets knocked off his perch that he magically pulls out a song that is guaranteed to go #1, if not debut there. This is definitely a Dandelion track, though, and the unique sound of that album (for this era of pop country) has really grown on me. Ella Langley may just be the best crossover star country music has had in decades.
April 24, 2026 @ 11:50 am
I mean a good comparison was the Carly Pearce/Riley Green Duet which really felt like two hot people making a hot video for attention.
I hope it works for Carly as she is clearly the best and most country female going in the mainstream and I hope this gives her a much needed boost. Maybe that’s a low bar but there has been an uptick in more country sounding songs and females are leading the pack in that regards.
I think she released a pretty country sounding song today “You Can Have Him” which I though was going to be a Ballie & the Boys cover but it’s not but still a good song.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:03 pm
“But whether it’s fair or not, some have and will perceive Ella Langley releasing a duet with Morgan Wallen as a strident, naked, unmitigated political act and expression, publicly endorsing any and all of Wallen’s actions and ideologies, both true and perceived. ”
You are fabricating reasons to get mad about stuff. You can’t draw any conclusions based on social media. It’s all trolls, AI nonsense, and people just looking for engagement. No one in real life is mad or cares about any of this.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:29 pm
Wallen has 33.4 Million monthly listeners on Spotify, Ella has 26.4 M. Wallen doesn’t need Ella and vice versa. It’s been almost a year since Wallen released his last album. He’s not in a career slump…Ella is riding the wave of her recent release. Completely agree that social media “noise” is just chirping from the cheap seats.
“Ella Langely might just like the song, considers Wallen a friend, doesn’t care about any controversy, and wanted this song released herself since it didn’t make the record. Maybe the idea was to leave the song off Dandelion initially so it didn’t distract from it.” This is the most logical assumption on this whole thing.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:25 pm
It always makes me laugh when people use monthly listener numbers to make a statement. You don’t even know what they mean. You have to look at the total streams, and Morgan has 30 billion, and that’s without ever appearing outside the United States on TV or with a strong marketing campaign. It’s also much bigger on Apple Music, then Amazon, Pandora, etc.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:30 pm
“Wallen has 33.4 Million monthly listeners on Spotify, Ella has 26.4 M.”
Sure. But what a lot of people are not considering here is trajectory. Right now Ella Langley’s trajectory is much higher than Morgan Wallen’s. Of course, all of these things change in real-time, but she is the hot commodity, not Wallen.
Though I do think that this might have just been a harmless collaboration between the two, I think it’s also a possibility that Big Loud called in their favor for putting Ella Langley on tour with Wallen and saying, “Hey, what happened with that duet that was supposed to be on ‘Dandelion’?” Otherwise, why do you release the song right now? I’m still waiting for someone to try to answer that question.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:34 pm
Lyrically it seems more likely that it was a song excluded from the album, especially when you compare it to her quickly forgotten collab with BigButtPlug.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:46 pm
Yeah. It was super MAGA of her to duet with tha plug.
Super Jim Crow of her.
April 24, 2026 @ 1:25 pm
This is both cope and wish casting.
If you’re a Morgan Wallen fan, you have to be able to at least acknowledge he’s done some controversial things. We all know if you’re a famous White dude and get caught using the N-word, you’re going to be criticized. If you whip a chair off a four-story building and almost brain two police officers, you’re going to be criticized.
There are very, very real people who have seething anger for Morgan Wallen, who as I asserted in this article, do so irrationally. But that doesn’t mean they don’t exist. Just a couple of weeks ago, there was a whole news cycle about how Hayley Williams of Paramore called out Morgan Wallen again in an interview, and then invited Jason Isbell up to sing “Cover Me Up” in concert to “stick it” to Wallen.
This is very real stuff, and just because it doesn’t puncture your reality bubble, doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.
That is the point of the media, is to rise above the acrimony and make dispassionate assessments about situations like I did with this article. You can stick your finger in your ears and close your eyes and scream “La La La!” but that is not going to make the reality go away.
Lots of people don’t like Morgan Wallen, and it’s stupefying how that is news to people on a traditional country music website. Whether it affects if people continue to like Ella Langley remains to be seen.
April 24, 2026 @ 2:00 pm
Dude, you’re copewashing.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:05 pm
Dollar Donkey meets Cash Cow.
And the money goes ’round and around and around
with Mainstream Nashville sound.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:07 pm
Yacht Rock.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:14 pm
Controversy aside, this song is not good. I doubt anyone is clamoring to hear this one more than once or feeling bummed if it’s left off the set list.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:16 pm
Not surprised that you referenced the controversy (you pretty much have to as the “Ella Langley is MAGA” is all over social now), but surprised that you seem to buy into its significance. You’re usually pretty good at reading the gap between the Twitter echo chamber and the real world, but it seems like you missed that here. Morgan Wallen really isn’t taboo with the general public anymore, and his commercial numbers remain stellar.
Twitter also told us that Tate McRae’s career was going to be ruined for doing the Morgan Wallen collaboration, and it wasn’t. And keep in mind that her working with him would be seen as a bigger “betrayal” since she’s a choreo-heavy, Britney Spears-influenced “gay club ready” pop artist very resonant with ultra-liberal demographics. She’s also not a country artist so there’s no obligatory “loyalty” to the genre.
A lot of the “Ella is MAGA” controversy is also really just rooted in her chart competition with Olivia Rodrigo. They’re also pointing to her doing Kid Rock’s tour and some shirt she wore that said “Political Affiliation: Country Music” as problematic. It’s just grasping at straws.
I’m also not sure what’s meant by “Morgan needing Ella more than vice vera.” That’s not really true at all. Ella Langley and Megan Moroney have probably eclipsed Luke Combs in terms of popularity, but Morgan’s still in a league of his own in terms of reach. His year-old album is basically going to do the same streaming numbers in like week 48 that Ella’s ultra-buzzy new album will do in its second.
He absolutely benefits from working with the hottest female act in country who’s celebrating a major hit right now (there’s a complementary effect here), but in terms of who needs who more, he’s still far more capable of launching a massive first-week hit than she is.
As for motivation, isn’t she just clearly looking to have a mainstream smash / song of the summer contender? Choosin’ Texas may have trouble sustaining its momentum through July/August, and while she has other songs that are doing well on streaming, it’s unclear that “pop” will jump on any of those (“you look like you love me” was a massive moment in its own right, but it didn’t get the mainstream support that Texas did).
April 24, 2026 @ 1:34 pm
“you pretty much have to as the “Ella Langley is MAGA” is all over social now”
So first off, this is very true, and by your own assessment. How anyone wants to weigh this truth is up to them.
But what I find extremely curious is you’re not seeing anti Morgan Wallen people in this comments section complaining about the Ella Langley collaboration. You’re seeing Morgan Wallen fans been overly-sensitive, not reading large swaths of this article, and acting like it’s an attack on Wallen as opposed to a dispassionate assessment of the situation, including that the entire thing might be a tempest in a teapot. It’s not left-wingers having a freakout here. It’s Morgan Wallen fans who can’t handle ANY criticism of him, even when mostly perceived than real.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:17 pm
I like how you quoted yourself in the third person for the accusations against Jelly Roll. Can we all just join hands and say the N-word together so it stops being a topic of discussion and just move on to more important things?
April 24, 2026 @ 12:19 pm
OK, so the song is OK, not great, and “nobody” goes better with the tone than “anybody.” – one too many syllables for the tune. Not great writing IMHO.
But most of all, Morgan Wallen does not have a good country music voice. As far as the politics are concerned, i try to stay out of that part and just judge by the music itself.
April 24, 2026 @ 12:40 pm
Morgan Wallen doesnt need Ella langley lol.
Cmon