Song Review – Hardy, Tim McGraw, Eric Church, Morgan Wallen – “McArthur”

Traditional Country (#510) on the Country DDS.
A unique collaboration that gets your attention, “McArthrur” matches up slightly strange bedfellows to tell an epic story across generations, while remaining starkly relevant to a contemporary audience. It’s also produced as an authentic, stripped down traditional country track.
It’s definitely not strange to see Hardy and Morgan Wallen collaborating together. They are regular songwriting buddies. Eric Church and Morgan Wallen are also good friends, purchasing the “Field & Stream” brand together and attempting to revitalize it, as well as collaborating on other songs in the past. Church was also one of the few people to reach out to Wallen after the notorious N-word incident with guidance and friendship.
Tim McGraw is the wild card here, who along with being an older artist, is also one of country music’s more liberal voices, even if rather passive. But his presence here feels like it raises the credibility of this entire collaboration, irrespective of how you might feel about McGraw himself, anyone else involved, or even this song.
“McArthur” tells the story of four generations of a family trying to hold on to the family land. Not to give away too much, but the idea of holding onto the land becomes a struggle as it’s passed down. The song ends with the open question if the property will remain in the McArthur name, or if the big payday will be taken to create yet another suburban neighborhood.
The song was not written by the performers, but by Jameson Rodgers, Chase McGill, and Josh Thompson along with Hardy. Officially, this is a Hardy single, with the other folks playing the roles of the forefathers, namely Tim McGraw as the elder John McArthur, Eric Church as the first son Junior McArthur, Junior’s son Jones McArthur played by Hardy, and eventually Hunter McArthur portrayed by Morgan Wallen.
You really have to pat these guys on the back for trying to do something unique with this four-person collaboration, and something that’s distinctly country-sounding. You just don’t see these kinds of songs happen, now or really ever outside of supergroups.
But as unique as the approach to “McArthur” is, there’s one pretty obvious criticism that can be levied about the composition, given away by the very first line sung by McGraw, “My name is John McArthur and I work this dirt.”
As Saving Country Music pointed out back in October of 2024, there has been a rash of songs released in country music that leaned heavily into the theme of folks being asked to sell their family land, and specifically with the word “dirt” in the title. Cody Johnson’s “Dirt Cheap” was topping the country radio charts about the same time Justin Moore’s “This Is My Dirt” was doing the same thing.
And the Cody Johnson/Justin Moore songs were just two popular examples. There have been multiple other songs that fit this “dirt” trope that have been released over the last two years. “McArthur” is yet another, even if it takes the more novel approach of the multi-generational perspective utilizing multiple voices.
But one of the reasons the lyrical theme of “McArthur” continues to come up is because it continues to be strongly relevant along the exerb line surrounding major cities, especially in the American South where so much of the population is migrating. You also don’t want to be too critical of a track that looks to do something original in country, and that happens to sound super country while doing so.
Can you hear a song like “McArthur” competing something like the CMA’s Musical Event of the Year? Sure. And you wouldn’t be too exercised if it won. It’s good, if not as great or epic like it could have been with a slightly more original theme. But for mainstream country, “McArthur” is superior.
8/10

January 30, 2026 @ 12:59 pm
It’s not a bad song but the subject matter is incredibly unoriginal and almost so tired to the point of making the song forgettable. Hearing the same rehashed story about losing family land or “dirt” to rich investors over and over again starts to get old and, dare I say, even a little preachy.
January 30, 2026 @ 3:46 pm
I do have a soft spot for Corb Lund’s “S Lazy H” (Released 2015, a decade before the SCM article needed to be written)
Fred Eaglesmith’s “Katie” might have the best twist on the subject.
January 30, 2026 @ 10:09 pm
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s “Leon McDuff” told the rich investors what he thought of their plans with his shotgun. Early ’80s.
February 2, 2026 @ 9:06 am
No Trespassing by George Fox is also a fantastic example. Released in “89.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hk1N27yvvj8
February 17, 2026 @ 11:50 am
Maybe to someone that doesn’t live with that challange.
January 30, 2026 @ 8:01 pm
Pretty damn near every subject you can think of has been done before in songs. Good songwriters and artist still find a way to put a new twist on it and make it original. This is a good record and having four A-list artists appearing on it as equals works. Though I have to admit, that when I saw the title, I was expecting a WW II-related song.
BTW, the song on this subject that grabbed me is “Five Generations of Rock County Wilsons,” written by John Scott Sherrill. Some Heavy hitters like Dan Seals in the 1980s and John Anderson in, 2000, recorded it, but to my ears and mind, the guy who really nailed it was the highly troubled (and no-longer-with-us) artist, Doug Supernaw, on his strong, debut album, “Red and Rio Grande” from 1993.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNdpd3R4TQw&list=RDjNdpd3R4TQw&start_radio=1
January 30, 2026 @ 9:16 pm
How is something unoriginal that actually does happen?
You’d deep throating the song if it was isbella,Sturgill and whoever 2 other people are this place empties kleenex boxes over
January 31, 2026 @ 8:02 am
Can’t speak for everyone, but the fact that I wrote a specific article 15 months ago about how this same song theme was being done over and over—and that you had two songs both addressing it, both with “Dirt” in the title at the top of the radio charts at the same time—it made it essential to at least bring it up here. That doesn’t mean that this is a bad song. This is a positive review, and for a mainstream song involving Morgan Wallen and Hardy to get an 8 rating here shows there’s no bias. But it was fair for myself and others to point out this song idea has been done before. This is a review. You’re supposed to scrutinize. But it’s a good song, and we see a lot of agreement on that.
January 31, 2026 @ 10:32 am
Ok yall reviewed it and most didn’t care for it. Got news for you. All songs and subjects have been written about. What is different is when different artists get together to perform them and maybe hit different notes. Either way I enjoy listening to their collaboration or I don’t buy it. Lol it’s that simple people.
January 31, 2026 @ 10:58 am
I wouldn’t say “most” didn’t care for it. Most seem to like it. And this is from an audience that’s behind enemy lines for someone like Hardy and Wallen. I think folks are being very fair to this song.
February 1, 2026 @ 2:38 pm
Allow me to congratulate you on your rapier-like wit. “I loathe Isbell. Oh! I can put an ‘A’ on the end of his name to femininize him and show he’s not a real man. Haha! That’s a sick burn! I rock!” That’s Vicious Circle-level wit, sir. You would have owned the Algonquin Round Table.
February 1, 2026 @ 6:32 pm
Well your opinion s__ks. What have you written that’s even close to this
January 30, 2026 @ 1:11 pm
I am an Eric church fan. Tim McGraw has tons of great songs from the 90s. Look even I can tolerate wallen in some circumstances. But HARDY is truly intolerable to me. I cannot listen to any song with him at this point he’s the worst of the worst.
January 30, 2026 @ 4:30 pm
Man the ppl on this site must love pissing in their morning coffee every day
February 1, 2026 @ 6:33 pm
You said it! What have any of these nobody’s written!
January 30, 2026 @ 1:25 pm
Not quite the epic that was Highwayman, but happy to see a well written country story-song performed by four heavy-hitter collaborators. Although it would have been badass to have Willie on the first verse, Strait on the second, McGraw on the third, then Morgan or HARDY on the fourth.
January 30, 2026 @ 1:27 pm
Very good song. If someone like Stephen Wilson Jr and Zach Top took Bro Country Kings Hardy/Wallen spot it would be outstanding
January 30, 2026 @ 1:59 pm
Given how hard the era-to-era decline it has been for Hardy from “the mockingbird & THE CROW” to “COUNTRY COUNTRY” commercially………..it was definitely smart for Hardy to pivot away from that album as soon as possible with something that might generate buzz. And his previous “HIXTAPE” series has demonstrated his ability to draw a bunch of established names together in Nashville much like DJ Khaled in commercial rap.
This is decent for the mainstream. My main criticism of Hardy as a songwriter is that he has beyond exhausted the well of redneck-isms to the point he’s just repeating himself for the umpteenth time or, worse, his lyrics were actually a screenplay for an animated “HARDY The Redneck Reindeer” series. With “Rednecker” and much of “A Rock” the former was obviously tongue-in-cheek and I felt there was some genuine descriptive effort throughout that debut, and I also felt similarly about much of the original “HIXTAPE”. But everything since then was Hardy on auto-pilot and lacking in personal touch and artistic growth. “McArthur” is definitely his best release since probably “Give Heaven Some Hell”.
January 30, 2026 @ 2:22 pm
It sounds good. Had I not read this and knew going in it was Hardy singing the third verse I’da swore it was Parker McCollum (and probably liked it more thinking that). For my money Mellencamp’s Rain on the Scarecrow will forever set the impossibly high bar for these kind of songs.
January 30, 2026 @ 11:36 pm
Honestly I liked his vocal performance on his verse too.
Even though I wasn’t a fan at all of his latest album “COUNTRY COUNTRY!” (or really any of his albums sine his debut “A Rock”)……………I will say I thought his vocal performance on “Bottomland” was one of his best ones to date and hinted at the potential for further improvement vocally as he tapped into more of the understated parts of his range as opposed to the braying nasal realm of it I’m just not a fan of.
January 31, 2026 @ 4:18 pm
“For my money Mellencamp’s Rain on the Scarecrow will forever set the impossibly high bar for these kind of songs.”
My pick would be Steve Earle’s “The Rain Came Down.”
As for this song, it’s okay. I don’t have a problem with the subject matter (there are a million love songs, and no one is pissing and moaning about it). As others have said, every subject has been written to death. Listen to the song, if you like, cool, if you don’t like, don’t listen to it again.
I remember in the ’90s when there was an uproar over all the songs about rain. I thought, “Who gives a shit?” The same goes here. As someone else pointed out above, had this song been written and recorded by Zach Bryan or one of the other SCM darlings, the praise for it would embarrassingly over the top.
January 30, 2026 @ 2:24 pm
I can’t stand the music or personality of Morgan Wallen, any Hardy song I don’t mind ends up being an Ernest song, Eric Church is whatever, and I like McGraw as an actor, while enjoying some of his more nostalgic songs from when I was a kid. With that said I thought this was a very good song. I liked the content, and the production. I just happened to listen to the song The Highwayman several times last night, then the entire Road Goes on Forever album by The Highwaymen as well, then woke up to this. This song didn’t measure up, but that’s a pretty unfair comparison. I thought the last two verses of this song sort of petered out. But a good song, that I was surprised I liked. First two verses were great.
January 30, 2026 @ 2:58 pm
Aside from Morgan Wallen’s unbearable voice, it’s a pretty good song. In terms of content, I had hoped for more given the symbolic birth and death dates of the McArthurs posted by the contributors. But at least it’s a real country song.
January 31, 2026 @ 5:59 am
I’m proud to say that I still don’t know what Morgan wallen sounds like.
February 1, 2026 @ 4:14 am
I’ve actually listened to every Morgan Wallen album exactly once. – I want to know what I’m complaining about. Only after listening to music can I say that I REALLY don’t like it. This is the case with Morgan Wallen’s music. I really don’t like any of his songs.
February 1, 2026 @ 1:21 pm
One time I went to see Tristan Marez (awesome modern more or less neotraditoinal- go listen to him, people) and there was a country DJ doing a set before the real show, with some dance instructors teaching people how to line dance (all of which is an awesome way to do a show).
At some point in the DJ’s set, a horrible hip hop song, like horrible because the lyrics sucked, came on. After a few minutes I realized it was a country song because I heard the word ‘boots’ and ‘dirt’ in it I think. Tractor rap.
I know that wasn’t Morgan Wallen, but that’s the moment when I realized just how bad all the contemporary mainstream country that people were complaining about is. I’ve been really lucky to control my own soundtrack for the past 15 years so I don’t have to know any of these guys.
February 1, 2026 @ 4:02 pm
Absolutely right! On the other hand, it’s really cool to put on your favorite music after a session of musical self-torture. If you listen to 70s soft pop for half an hour and then the Sex Pistols or The Clash… Or if you listen to 80s teen pop for half an hour and then Nirvana… Or half an hour of Morgan Wallen or Bro-Country and then Bejamin Tod… That’s something…🤭
January 30, 2026 @ 3:23 pm
Hearty is a musical genius.
January 30, 2026 @ 3:44 pm
The comments so far lean towards wishing they had more, but I have to vehemently disagree. With some of the participants in this, we should TOTALLY support this. Go country!
January 30, 2026 @ 6:24 pm
We need to take a breather from always disparaging a well worm theme. In country music, you are just going to hear alot about “dirt” or land references. It’s par for course. Doesn’t make it bad. You are going to hear many references to trucks. Goes with the genre’s territory.
I mean, reoccurring themes such as Mama, beer, and cheating have been reoccurring themes forever.
This is a good review. It looks at a song on isolation rather than relatively.
As it should.
January 31, 2026 @ 6:42 am
You forgot about trains, rain, pickup trucks, and prison. 😉
January 31, 2026 @ 7:32 am
And gettin’ drunk
February 1, 2026 @ 5:55 am
I was thinking the same thing. Even the best country music often runs on pretty well-tread themes, and innovation isn’t really the defining feature of the genre, it’s how you use those common themes that really makes the best of the best.
January 30, 2026 @ 6:36 pm
The his song was done really well by good artists. Hardy and Morgan Wallen have very powerful, projective voices. Eric and Tim seem like an odd choice for filler artists. But it works. The lyrics have weak spots for a song that has potential to be unforgettable. Overall this song is really good, but fell short of being really great.
January 31, 2026 @ 4:22 pm
Church and McGraw filler artists? 😂 The filler artists are the other clowns.
January 30, 2026 @ 6:47 pm
And by the way, each singer does a respectable job in my opinion.
January 30, 2026 @ 11:44 pm
Generally I’m not a fan of either HARDY or Wallen’s braying nasal vocal inflections……………but both of them have proven recently that they are capable of providing vocal performances I actually like between HARDY’s vocal performance on “Bottomland” (which lyrically didn’t really do anything but me but I think is a really fine vocal showcase)…………and with Wallen on several cuts like “Thought You Should Know”, “Silverado For Sale” and “Genesis”.
And yeah: I think they all do a commendable job with this one.
January 31, 2026 @ 5:44 am
I dont listen to any of these guys, save for the past when McGraw was a radio hit maker, so I’ve zero fanboyism in any of them. That said, this song is epic in my opinion. I dont see it as cliche. I live 2 minutes from farm fields all over the place, but my village is slowly selling out to developers every year. Its just like the song mentions, the 2nd or 3rd generation is retiring farming and the kids, grandkids and so on couldn’t be bothered to want to farm it. Work is too hard, for too little payoff in their estimation, so the family takes that big check, and two years later, condos, apartments and/ or section 8 or a retirement community springs up in its place. And then you hear about the overseas buyers….yeah the song resonates for a lot of us.
Sure there are other great songs from the past about this stuff, a few come to mind: Hillbilly Blood and Scarecrow in the Garden by Stapleton, The Rain Came Down by Steve Earle, Daddy Won’t Sell The Farm by Montgomery Gentry, and many more.
But these four have hit a home run with this song, and the execution is great. All this chit chat about The Highwaymen is just that, chit chat. No one’s claiming these four are The Highwaymen. Four guys who recorded a song, that’s all, and its a humdinger.
January 31, 2026 @ 3:08 am
I was OK with this one until they got to “my bloodline, that bled on this ground”. I’m sure there’s a way to either deliver or receive this line, but, maybe it’s me, maybe it’s them, maybe it’s the delivery or the tone of the song or it not being right up in my personal wheelhouse, I dunno, it was just not “it” for me once it got there and from that point on.
January 31, 2026 @ 6:24 am
It a good song well performed. Better than many but maybe not at the level of ‘great’.
January 31, 2026 @ 6:54 am
The song sounds country to you because you’re desensitized. It isn’t that it’s completely not country, but it’s not as traditional as you’re making it out to be.
I’m seeing some complaints on here about the originality of the theme. My challenge to that is that I don’t know what you expect people to write about a century after popular music was invented. At this stage in the game, the best anyone can do is find new ways to write about the same themes. I think they did that here.
My beef with the song is that none of the 4 performers involved are vocalists. The closest of the bunch is Wallen, but he ruins his own vocals with the weird rap-influenced accent that he sings with.
January 31, 2026 @ 12:02 pm
To be fair, country is littered with people that arent vocalist but are indeed great artist in their own right. Same goes with songs. Sometimes they are done far betfer by artist that are less gifted in the vocals department. Take the blues man. Alan jackson has a better vocal abilty than hank jr in my opinion. But while i appreciate alans version and tribute, i believe hanks is far better because of his vocals. Now if you cant tell that this song is traditional country whatever that means, im not sure what to say. I know it isnt, folk, roots, pop. Rap, rock, or jazz n blues but to me its def country.
January 31, 2026 @ 7:16 am
I get kind of tired hearing about originality vs unoriginality. Each song is its own thing. You dont grade it on some word or idea thats in another song also. Country music is as great as it is because of the continuaty of its topics and its history. Also you will find when you start thinking you have an original idea or place, that someone else already had that same thought or had already been to that place or moment. I like the song quite a bit. Whether its great or not is up to the individual listener as is with any song.
January 31, 2026 @ 4:28 pm
Keith Richards once said “There’s one song and Adam and Eve wrote it; everything else is a variation,” or something like that. People are constantly pissing and moaning about how their guy (or gal) is original and everyone else is fake. I see artists with the same attitude, they’re so original well everyone else is a poser. It’s all been done, and in most cases, better. Unless you’re banging two rocks together and grunting and groaning, you’re not treading new ground. And I bet the rock and grunting thing has been done.
January 31, 2026 @ 9:45 am
Not a bad song by any means and the vocals and production is by far the best HARDY and Wallen have done in a long, long time (if ever).
I do wish the lyrics has a bit more “bite” to it though. Yes, the idea/subject matter is hardly original, but that in itself is not a bad thing. But I also don’t think this song has anything really original to grab folks with either lyric wise.
I hope it gets traction at radio and mainstream country streaming because Lord knows we need more of this than what Wallen and HARDY are typically churning out – but it also feels very much like “mainstream country songwriters try and write something deep” instead of feeling more authentic. Picking nits, I know, but something about the lyrics just fail to be memorable in a way I think everyone intended them to be.
January 31, 2026 @ 11:31 am
Big yawn to songs from successful and wealthy celebrities who own a home(s) lecturing us about why development is bad and things should always stay the same as they’ve always been. Felt this way about There Goes the Neighborhood by Sugarland too. Yawn.
January 31, 2026 @ 6:20 pm
Meanwhile, McGraw sold his historic property in Franklin to the highest bidder. Music Row and Nashville sold to the highest bidder as well. All that is sung in country music is the exact opposite in how they live and what Nashville has become. I agree that when you reach a certain status in life, it isnt relatable to those who live it out. Its like when Blake Shelon was singing Minimum Wage.
February 1, 2026 @ 4:12 pm
Well, it has been that way for decades in country music.
Singers are performers. They are musical actors. They play a character.
January 31, 2026 @ 11:59 am
I love this song. I rarely listen to mainstream and in my opinion this is better than almost anything independent artists are putting out. Everyone has their own taste, but this song is right in my wheelhouse.
January 31, 2026 @ 1:23 pm
Good not great is the write description for this song. The song title is original but the lyrics and hook aren’t great. The song is in no way unpleasant it’s not that compelling though either. A song isn’t automatically great just because it’s surrounded by crap but it’s better by comparison. My one complaint is that the vocal performances don’t stand out and the harmony singing is expertly produced but not compelling. If you listen to ‘Don’t Take The Girl’ the vocals stand out far more and you can hear the emotion in Tim McGraw’s voice way more than any of the vocals in this song. Also the instrumentation often covers the vocals rather than filling in around them. I’m not sure the answer to this question but I’m not given a good enough reason to truly care about the characters in the song – and that why is what makes certain songs great.
January 31, 2026 @ 2:47 pm
Well if this song isnt country enough for ya, jamie johnson just released more of what matters. I dont think its as good as mcarthur but it isnt bad.
January 31, 2026 @ 6:16 pm
As always. McGraw brings zero talent to the plate. He can’t sing live and he can’t harmonize even in the studio. As soon as he attempts it, the other 3 come in immediately. McGraw doesn’t play the guitar but uses it as a jewelry around his neck and then pretends to play 3 Chords & A Lie. Tim also is not a songwriter but gets the best ones handed to him on a plate as well. He is there in name only as the other 3 are true Musicians and song great. Morgan carries all of them and Hardy has powerful pipes to usher in the harmonies. Tim needs to stick to being Milli Vanilli and singing his stupid songs like Truck Ya and being in love with himself. So undeserving compared to the other three.
February 1, 2026 @ 5:24 pm
Morgan carries all of them? 😂 The air must be pretty thin on Fantasy Island.
February 1, 2026 @ 5:34 pm
Ill be honest, i knew it was tim mcgraw before listening but i guess hes getting much older cause he sounded a littlle different than he used to. Im not big on him either though he has a couple good songs
January 31, 2026 @ 8:14 pm
This is a great song.
I am under the impression that a lot of people who frequent this website are more of country music critics, than people who live in the “country” and live a “country” lifestyle. I consider myself a critic and someone who lives the lifestyle. A lot of folks on here are saying the theme of this song is worn out, overused and overplayed. That is easy to say from your keyboard in Cleveland, Memphis or Sacramento. For some of us, its real life and cant be overexaggerated or overplayed. It doesn’t matter if Corb Lund is telling it in S Lazy H or Florida Georgia Line (puke) in Dirt or this song. This hits home for the people who are in this situation. Its time we appreciate a good song for being a good song. This will never be a worn out trope, as long as it keeps happening. Appreciate all you do Trigger.
February 1, 2026 @ 5:30 pm
Totally agree with you.
February 1, 2026 @ 8:43 am
It reminds me of Yellowstone, but than in a song and with another family. Great song by the way. 😀
February 1, 2026 @ 1:00 pm
Ok you explained it better than I could with that single sentence. That’s also why I don’t like the song because I find Yellowstone incredibly stupid – it’s cowboy chic for people that live in a townhouse with an HOA. That’s what this song is.
February 1, 2026 @ 12:25 pm
I think this song is nice. Not great. I don’t remember the melody or the chorus line the next day or the day after. I think the vocals are stronger on the first two verses and Hardy and Wallen for some reason are weaker…volume, strength…perhaps Hardy is the least best vocalist and MW didn’t want to over shine him and so mumbled the lyrics in his verse? This makes the song kind of fade away from the strong beginning. It is also a short song with no real development. No strong instrumental or vocal bridge and so it seems rather undeveloped for the 2nd half. Then the strong Eagles-like harmony finish seems out of place as a tag on at the end. These things
could have easily been corrected and a better producer would have insisted with this line-up.
February 1, 2026 @ 6:40 pm
All of you who have criticized this song or the artist need to all submit your songs. Other than wanting to sound like yall are expert critics. I’d like to see what musical talents yall possess. It’s a beautiful song, performed by wonderful artists. Now let’s see what yall have done.
February 2, 2026 @ 9:53 am
I may have asked this Q the last time Trigger wrote about this genre so forgive me. I’m just curious; has this topic ever inspired a song where the narrator -wanted- to take the Developer’s Offer? Simply as the best choice among several difficult options?
February 2, 2026 @ 10:04 am
I’m sure there has been. But I would have to go back and listen to the many, many songs that cover this to find one.
February 2, 2026 @ 10:14 am
Listen to Corb Lund’s S Lazy H
February 2, 2026 @ 10:08 am
What is the difference between HARDY and ERNEST?
February 3, 2026 @ 6:22 am
the second has some good songs
February 7, 2026 @ 7:20 am
I know this topic has been covered a ton here but does anyone think that this would have ever been made had Zach Top not re-paved the way for sincere traditional sounds? I keep going back to Joe Nichols’ statement. But there is no way those 4 guys would have made something that sounds this traditional had he not shown there is a market for it.
February 18, 2026 @ 4:22 am
It would’ve been cool to see Marty Stuart in Tim McGraw’s spot since both he and Hardy are from the same town in Mississippi.