Yes, George Strait Actually Wrote New Songs in His Career

It seems like every time the topic of “King” George Strait comes up in conversation, someone feels the need to pipe up how he’s a fraud of a country star because he never wrote any of his own songs.
First off, to make this accusation is to completely misunderstand the legacy of songwriting in country music, and how even some of the genre’s greatest performing songwriters like Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, George Jones, and so many others still relied on the songs of others to fill out their albums and even compose some of their biggest hits.
Yes, it’s always a bonus when a performer also writes many of their own songs. Alan Jackson and Toby Keith who wrote nearly all of their own material are the exceptions in the superstar realm. Taylor Swift is another one. Aside from that, most all other artists have relied on outside songwriter.
These days in the “songwriting by committee” era, it’s uncommon, if not impossible for a performer to not walk away with a songwriting credit under the “third for a word” rule, meaning if they change one word in a song, they get a third of the songwriting royalties (if there’s two other writers). This is nearly required for a song to be cut by a performer.
But there is an art form to selecting great songs, knowing what a great song is, and then singing the hell out of it like it’s your own once you’re in the studio. George Strait might have been the greatest to ever do this in country history, and made lots of money for songwriters like Dean Dillon and Jim Lauderdale over the years through it.
But George Strait actually did write songs himself throughout his career. Sure, they were rare, and nobody would mark George Strait as a preeminent songwriter in country music. But George Strait-written songs weren’t non-existent. At the start of his career, he actually wrote more. And now in the twilight of his career, he’s been writing more as well. He just found Dean Dillon and others early on, and decided he couldn’t match their level of songwriting. That’s how George Strait minted more #1s than anyone else in country history.
George Strait’s second album Strait From The Heart actually included a song he wrote by himself, the Western swing-inspired tune “I Can’t See Texas From Here.” Another solo write was released in 1995 via Strait’s box set Strait Out of the Box.
Starting with the 2009 album Twang when Strait’s radio relevance was starting to subside, this gave him an opportunity to start writing more of his own stuff as opposed to worrying about the commercial implications. Nonetheless, Strait co-wrote the title track to his 2011 album Here For a Good Time that went #2 in country, and has since become one of his signature songs. So yes, Strait even co-wrote on of his hits.
Many of the song Strait co-wrote later in were done with Dean Dillon, as well as Strait’s son Bubba, who works as a songwriter.
It was George Strait’s respect for the craft of songwriting that resulted in him relinquishing that position to others throughout most of his career. It’s also the reason the NSAI gave Strait the President’s Keystone Award in 2019 for his service to songwriting.
“I believe songwriting is a gift from God, and I think God has truly blessed all of you songwriters in here. I want to thank you all for sharing that talent with me over the years,” George Strait said in his acceptance speech.
No, George Strait was not a prolific songwriter. But it’s incorrect to say he never wrote at all. A list of his songwriting credits can be found below.
- “I Can’t See Texas From Here” – Strait From The Heart – 1982 (solo write)
- “(That Don’t Change) The Way I Feel About You” – Strait Out of the Box – 1995 (solo write recorded in 1978)
- “I Don’t Want To Talk It Over Anymore” – Strait Out of the Box – 1995 (solo write recorded in 1979)
- “I Just Can’t Go On Dying Like This” – Strait Out of the Box – 1995 (solo write)
- “Out of Sight, Out of Mind” – Twang – 2009
- “Living for the Night” – Twang – 2009 (#2 hit)
- “He’s Got That Something Special” – Twang – 2009
- “Drinkin’ Man” – Here For a Good Time – 2011
- “Shame On Me” – Here For a Good Time – 2011
- “Here for a Good Time” – Here For a Good Time – 2011 (#2 hit)
- “House Across the Bay” – Here For a Good Time – 2011
- “Three Nails and a Cross” – Here For a Good Time – 2011
- “Blue Marlin Blues” – Here For a Good Time – 2011
- “I’ll Always Remember You” – Here For a Good Time – 2011
- “I Believe” – Love Is Everything – 2013
- “That’s What Breaking Hearts Do” – Love Is Everything – 2013
- “The Night Is Young” – Love Is Everything – 2013
- “Let It Go” – Cold Beer Conversation – 2015
- “It Takes All Kinds” – Cold Beer Conversation – 2015
- “Everything I See” – Cold Beer Conversation – 2015
- “Kicked Outta Country” – Strait Outta The Box: Part 2 – 2016
- “Every Little Honky Tonk Bar” – Honky Tonk Time Machine – 2019
- “Blue Water” – Honky Tonk Time Machine – 2019
- “Sometimes Love” – Honky Tonk Time Machine – 2019
- “Código” – Honky Tonk Time Machine – 2019
- “Take Me Away” – Honky Tonk Time Machine – 2019
- “The Weight of the Badge” – Honky Tonk Time Machine – 2019
- “What Goes Up” – Honky Tonk Time Machine – 2019
- “Sing One with Willie” – Honky Tonk Time Machine – 2019
- “The Little Things” – Cowboys and Dreamers – 2024
- “The Book” – Cowboys and Dreamers – 2024
– – – – – – – – – – –
If you found this article valuable, consider leaving Saving Country Music A TIP.

April 8, 2026 @ 11:12 am
When I started listening to country music I was surprised to find out how few artists wrote their own music. I was used to the idea that the bands I listened to growing up (Rush, Journey, AC/DC, etc.) wrote all of their own stuff. But to think that discredits George Strait or any other performer is nonsense. On the other end of the spectrum, Don Schlitz wrote all sorts of hit songs, but couldn’t carry a tune if you put it in a bucket for him. But inexplicably, the Grand Ole Opry trots him out on stage routinely to nasally wheeze out the songs he wrote. I’ll take George Strait beautifully belting out a song written by someone else, vs. the opposite.
April 8, 2026 @ 11:50 am
True that!
April 9, 2026 @ 10:14 am
I once had a conversation with a rapper who was shocked at the very idea of singing someone else’s song. It was like the thought had never crossed his mind. I used the term “cover song” in conversation and had to define the term for him. “They sing a song that they didn’t write?”
April 9, 2026 @ 12:02 pm
You should have said “It’s like sampling, but they use the whole song”!
April 9, 2026 @ 1:00 pm
Prior to the advent of rock and roll, the popularity of music was measured in the sales of a song’s sheet music, not the record. The way music was made and consumed was predicated on performing other people’s songs. Then rock and roll, specifically Buddy Holly, popularized writing and recording your own songs.
April 13, 2026 @ 2:23 pm
Well, of course, rappers don’t sing.
April 8, 2026 @ 11:30 am
I like when an artist isn’t too full of themselves. They will choose a quality song vs “I wRotE iT MySeLF.” Country music & legendary songwriters go hand in hand. Are we coming after session pickers, too? Some people on here would drown in a rainstorm.
April 8, 2026 @ 11:49 am
Next you’re going to tell me the touring band isn’t playing on the record! 😉
April 8, 2026 @ 6:47 pm
George Strait can make any song good……
April 8, 2026 @ 12:28 pm
I feel many take for granted the ability of a singer to unpack, interpret and emote the essence of any given quality song, line by line. George Strait has always been that kind of skilled, intuitive vocalist to me.
Outside of that, we know Nashville to be a highly collaborative place built on long-standing working relationships. I’ve heard time and time again in artist interviews the phrase “At the end of the day: the best song wins!” when determining which tracks will make the final cut on any given release, and the reality is that there are many singers who will at the very least occasionally write but often find one too many songs they’ve listened to and interpreted simply speak more deeply to them, so they are prioritized because…………again…………it’s an inherently collaborative place.
And Strait has definitely increased his writing output in the latter phase of his career as was pointed out.
April 8, 2026 @ 12:53 pm
Thanks Trigger for this article. I’m glad to see that George Strait is so respectful of songwriters. Especially in country music, songwriting is a real and respected profession. Although Trigger has shown how George has written/co-written some of his own songs, I’m one of those folks who wonders how much it matters to his standing as a great artist.
Consider the Trio— Dolly Parton is a helluva singer/songwriter. Emmylou Harris has been one of the finest vocalists in country music. Linda Ronstadt has been one of the finest vocalists in popular music. Help me here folks, but I don’t recall them being characterized as songwriters, yet you can’t deny their greatness as singer/performers. And just like George Strait, they pick great songs to sing.
April 8, 2026 @ 1:05 pm
Yes, Emmylou Harris is another good example of a performer who made the Hall of Fame, but didn’t really write songs. She does have a few out there, but nobody would consider her a songwriter. During her country career, Ronstandt really didn’t write at all. Can’t speak about her later career. There’s a Ronstadt expert who reads this site, Erik North, who might have more insight into that.
April 12, 2026 @ 1:27 pm
I’m no Erik North, but for anyone interested, here’s an article that details five songs that Linda Ronstadt wrote between the 1960s and 1990s:
https://americansongwriter.com/5-songs-you-didnt-know-linda-ronstadt-wrote/
Linda is quoted in the article as having said, “I’ve written songs. Anybody can write a song, but it’s really hard to write a good song, and it’s almost impossible to write a great song. And I had people who were writing great songs around me.”
As Trigger suggests in reference to George Strait, being a great singer and being a great songwriter are two separate jobs that are both deserving of respect. Some folks can do both jobs at any given time, some folks can do just one of those jobs, and many can’t really do either.
A great singer will elevate a great song to an even higher plane, artistically. Linda is one of the all-time best examples of that.
April 8, 2026 @ 12:59 pm
He had an ear for good songs. It wasn’t like someone just brought him 10 songs for his albums, he went through thousands of songs before narrowing down a selection for an album. I can’t think of another Country artist that had anywhere near 50 1#’s that aged as well (aside from ‘Heartland’ and ‘Love Bug’)
April 9, 2026 @ 4:21 pm
What’s the problem with “Heartland”????
April 9, 2026 @ 5:45 pm
I don’t have a personal issue with it but I hear that mentioned as his least best song. I was being slightly facetious mentioning those two songs to make a point. (And it’s fairly obvious ‘Love Bug’ is a cover)
April 11, 2026 @ 8:41 am
Wasn’t that song written for his movie, like “Where the Sidewalk Ends”? IMO, they weren’t up to his usual quality and, since the movie wasn’t a hit (or very good), they were never going to become generation-spanning favorites, like the “Urban Cowboy” hits did.
April 13, 2026 @ 3:17 pm
Well, that soundtrack introduced Tony Brown, so career-wise, it was a very good album for Strait.
He wouldn’t be who he is today without Brown and those comeback-albums in the 90’s. The late 80’s/very early 90’s isn’t the best in Strait’s long career. He should be grateful for meeting Brown.
April 8, 2026 @ 1:12 pm
But the article sorta proved the point that the headline was trying to deny. From the time Straight hit it big, all those years of monster hits, until his radio days had passed, George Strait wrote basically zero songs.
And that is totally fine. Songwriting is a bonus in my book, not a requirement of a performer. Strait is an absolute legend. I’m old enough to remember all of his hit-making years. By the mid-90s, there were at least 3 regular criticisms of him. He didn’t write any songs, he never played the guitar he always was holding on stage, and his albums were always too safe and commercial instead of taking chances with maybe a hardcore western swing record or something outside the box.
I’m sure Strait is perfectly content with the incredible career he had, and these kinds of criticisms are meaningless
April 8, 2026 @ 1:30 pm
Good article and about time Trig. As I said in my comment on the Crockett review when this came up, in general this accusation/criticism about Strait seems like it’s likely originating from folks who didn’t grow up immersed in Country music. I meet lots of Americana fans who fit this description. Just had a nice chat in line to see Joe Stamm with a very pleasant young lady who is of a rock and roll background, shes discovered Stamm and others like him, and I talked to her about Country music. She asked me why is George Strait such a big deal considering he didn’t write his songs? She was sincere, not being a troll so I explained the industry tradition of dedicated songwriters and dedicated singers/entertainers. When I mentioned all the legends in pop music that never wrote songs, she had a glimmer of realization in her eyes and she said, that makes sense. Additionally I think in the Americana world there are so many singer-songwriters that fans of it consider that to be the norm, and when they find out in Country music it wasn’t the norm I think they are disappointed.
April 8, 2026 @ 1:48 pm
“I Can’t See Texas From Here” is an incredible song.
I can imagine Bob Wills cooking with that tune.
For anyone interested in Western Swing, check out his Tiffany Transcriptions.
April 8, 2026 @ 2:34 pm
Don Williams is my all-time favorite singer. He as well was not known for much song writing.
I have never understood why some look on this as a negative. When an artist comes on the airwaves and sings a song , my first reaction is not to look the song up to see who wrote it. Sheesh.
If one desires that as a requirement, go to many artist of the roots/Americana/folk scene. There are many songs that the artists both sang and wrote. Believe me, they will depress you to death.
And this trend to include the artist for writing credits because they added a period on the end of a verse just so they could be included as a “song-writer” is a joke.
April 11, 2026 @ 8:47 am
You’re selling Don short.
Williams wrote a bunch of songs, seven of which made the top 20, and two of which went to No. 1: “Til the Rivers All Run Dry” and “Love Me Over Again.” Most of his other songs wound up as album tracks, but there was no difference in quality between Don’s songs and songs others wrote for him.
April 8, 2026 @ 4:08 pm
This is like saying Elton John was a fraud in the pop music world because he did not write his own lyrics. Ridiculous. GS will always be king
April 8, 2026 @ 5:10 pm
The songs he wrote are not bad at all. I love Little Things and Every little honky tonk bar. He is a great song selector. George Jones did not write He stopped loving her. Willie Nelson did not write blue eyes. I hate that argument.
April 8, 2026 @ 6:47 pm
George Strait can make any song good……
April 8, 2026 @ 5:10 pm
I sit on the fence. While song-writing is not a requirement for success, it certainly is a huge plus. Performing music as an entertainer had its financial rewards. But in recent years, song-writing artists who sell portions of their music libraries are finally being compensated for their talents. I do have acteal appreciation for the Stevie Nicks’s of the industry.
April 8, 2026 @ 5:13 pm
George became more of a writer late in his career. He wanted to keep recording and the songwriters would have preferred to have someone with radio hits record them.
Frankly, why would George want to record junk from the bro-country era after having gotten the best songs from Dean Dillon and Whitey Shafer? Writing his own material at that point may have seemed unnecessary when the best of Nashville all wanted to have those coveted tracks on another huge George album.
April 8, 2026 @ 5:56 pm
The criticism of Strait for this has never made a lick of sense to me.
I don’t expect a great chef to be a great farmer.
I don’t expect a great quarterback to write the playbook.
I don’t expect a great surgeon to forge his own scalpel.
April 8, 2026 @ 6:38 pm
Good analogies.
April 9, 2026 @ 7:38 am
This is quite right but if a great chef was a great farmer or if a great quarterback did write his own playbook I would hold them to a higher esteem.
That being said I don’t criticize Strait for not writing his songs. But I do obviously think he would have a greater legacy if he did.
April 10, 2026 @ 7:06 am
A greater legacy? Hes got a STELLAR legacy as it is. One of the all- time greats in Country music history. Hes cemented in. Sheesh…
April 13, 2026 @ 2:21 pm
He has one of the best legacies in country music history.
Only music nerds or snobs care if the singer writes his material or not.
April 8, 2026 @ 6:36 pm
I definitely see both ways. Growing up, I listened to maybe different country artists who selected songs to record in addition to writing/co-writing their own songs. 🤷🏽♀️
Personally, I think that it’s pretty concerning that a few songs lately have been written by 4 or 5 writers. That’s a ton of voices, a ton of opinions for just one song, imo. But, that’s probably another article for another day, lol.
April 8, 2026 @ 6:52 pm
George Strait songs have never done anything for me. I don’t care for them. That being said, I recognize that he is a fine vocalist. All of these people deriding him, and others, because they don’t write the songs they sing baffles me. Why is that relevant? Singing and songwriting are different areas of expertise. Yes, a talented singer/songwriter deserves respect, but so does a talented songwriter and a talented singer. I don’t understand the distinction. People are strange.
April 8, 2026 @ 11:59 pm
You mentioned Here for a Good Time was a #2 hit on Billboard. If memory serves me Living for the NIght was also a #2 hit on Billboard and the song also has a video that was played a lot on CMT.
April 9, 2026 @ 8:20 am
Yes, good catch.
April 9, 2026 @ 12:28 am
I have never understood the criticism of him that he is not a songwriter. This article addresses that criticism well. He has written a fair number of good songs but they are in the shade of the many great songs he chose to sing and he sung well. I am not sure I care who actually wrote the song although it is nice if the singer is also the songwriter. Some great songwriters have benefited massively from George’s singing. He is a great artist.
April 9, 2026 @ 1:13 am
Way back in the early 80s I interviewed George and asked him if he had written any of the songs he had recorded. He answered “I Can Almost See Texas.” That was it. After Pure Country came out Jim Lauderdale told me that when he played his own songs King of Broken Hearts and Where the Sidewalk Ends people thought he was doing Strait covers., even though both of them had been on one of his albums prior to being used in the film.
April 9, 2026 @ 4:45 am
Great article. I think Living for the Night reached #2 as well in 2009. It wasn’t a chart success but I really thought Drinkin’ Man was a good song as well.
April 9, 2026 @ 4:49 am
Criticizing Strait for not being a songwriter is really reaching for something to b*tch about.
April 9, 2026 @ 5:16 am
I actually have more respect for artists who pick great songs from outside songwriters to record. It’d be one thing if the George Straits and Don Williams of the world hand-picked formulaic dreck. I think Cody Johnson deserves some credit for selecting great songs in recent years even though most of his early catalogue was his own material.
There’s a humility put on display by singers who select great songs from outside songwriters over lesser songs of their own.
April 9, 2026 @ 6:01 am
A few thoughts at once on this …
For a long time, Strait has had enough clout that if he wanted to make some minimal contributions to the songs he picked and claim co-writer credit, he could’ve done it. Kudos to him for having the dignity and respect to NOT do that.
I think one of the things that distinguishes mainstream country artists over the last few decades is the record label’s desire for them to put a new full-length album out every 1-2 years. Most singer-songwriter types just don’t crank out material that fast! The expectation is just different for somebody like Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Bruce Springsteen, or for that matter more country-ish artists like Guy Clark or Steve Earle. With folks like that the albums are often received as artistic statements, and if it takes 3-5 years to get a new one then so be it. With mainstream country artists, even the good ones, there’s more of a sense of “product” to keep the machine going. Strait’s willingness to go along with that and still keep his standards high was always key to his next-level success.
And I know a lot of us, me included, prefer the more alt-country/Americana/”individualist” mold of artist, but a lot of those people leaned heavily on material by other writers, even if both they and the writers they covered were people outside of the standard Nashville system. Just off the top of my head … Jerry Jeff Walker, Joe Ely, Jimmy Buffett, Robert Earl Keen, Cross Canadian Ragweed, Charlie Robison, Jack Ingram (guess what state I’m from ha ha) all have big chunks of their catalog that weren’t self-penned even though they’re all capable of writing great material themselves.
A lot of justifiably-respected legends wrote more of their own material early on and shifted to outside writers more as their careers got bigger and busier. Wilie Nelson, Dolly Parton, Johnny Cash, and George Jones all come to mind. Dwight Yoakam is about as individualist as an artist gets and he’s done a ton of outright covers and had a few hits from outside writers. Same with Alan Jackson although he’s more of a straightforward country star.
Shout-out to guys like Merle Haggard, Tom T. Hall, Roger Miller, Clint Black and Earl Thomas Conley that wrote most of their own material during their career peaks. Pretty cool thing to do and worth celebrating, but you can’t expect that out of everyone.
April 9, 2026 @ 7:09 am
On a ‘related, but reversed’ note… got a lot of time for Dean Dillon’s album ‘Slick Nickel’
April 9, 2026 @ 8:12 am
Jake Bush released a song on his latest album written by George and Bubba Strait, “Hole In the Wall”. It’s a great, good time song. Is it “The Chair”? No, but it’s not supposed to be. It sounds like something George would sing, and that’s pretty good in my book.
April 9, 2026 @ 8:57 am
The first album I ever bought by someone who didn’t write his own songs was Move It On Over by George Thorogood. I was 18 and the album was a gateway for me to older blues music. Plus he was a guitar player and I enjoyed his playing. The first singer that I ever got into who did not write their own songs was Nashville based Irish singer Maura O’Connell in the early 90s. She had great taste in the songs she picked and was a great interpreter. An artist as far as I’m concerned. And the joy to see in concert. Started to slowly get into Emmylou Harris also in really the 90s with her two classic live albums At the Ryman and Spyboy. Then got into a lot of her back catalog. I feel the exact same way about her as I do about Maura O’Connell.
Yes the artists in my album collection overwhelmingly write their own music, but that’s not a requirement for me. If the music moves me, that’s what matters.
April 9, 2026 @ 9:09 am
Just because he uses his guitar as an ornament rather than an instrument does not mean he cannot write songs.
April 9, 2026 @ 9:20 am
Bigtex on brand as usual.
April 9, 2026 @ 10:01 am
Heres Strait at Gruene Hall playing his acoustic. Plays it the entire time. Even has his capo on the headstock to use when he changes keys on other songs. Guitars plugged in, he’s doing standard chords. Not that we care Tex, the voice is the main thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNibWP8f5PQ&list=RDdNibWP8f5PQ&start_radio=1
April 9, 2026 @ 4:52 pm
I think you just short circuited bigtex with that video
April 9, 2026 @ 9:47 am
I think being a good musician is a good alternative to being a songwriter, as far as being a fully engaged artist. Nobody ever gave any guff to Roy Clark, Glen Campbell or Ricky Skaggs for not writing songs–those guys blew you away with their playing. I’d rather they spent their off-time with other players, working on and rehearsing their performing– than sitting in a room with three songwriters and trying to contribute a few phrases to a new song.
April 9, 2026 @ 10:00 am
If singers sang only their own songs, we would have never had Harlan Howard, Hank Cochran, Cindy Walker, Bob McDill, or perhaps even Kris Kristofferson.
April 9, 2026 @ 8:45 pm
Or Billy Joe Shaver.
April 9, 2026 @ 11:48 am
The “Strait Out of the Box” has two other George compositions from his D Records/Pappy Daily days: “(That Don’t Change) The Way I Feel About You” and “I Don’t Want to Talk it Over Anymore,” which are two solid songs that sound as though they would’ve come from a much more mature writer. Great article, nonetheless, Trig.
April 9, 2026 @ 1:08 pm
Thanks, they’ve been added to the list.
April 9, 2026 @ 5:01 pm
And “I Just Can’t Go On Dying Like This” was also a D records song of his that was included on “Strait Out of The Box”, and then re recorded for his “Love Is Everything Album” in 2013. The 2013 version has a lot slower tempo that time around
April 9, 2026 @ 3:00 pm
Im not really sure this article needed to be written. Everyone knew he had written some songs, some people just be crazy. But i guess its for those that are a little confused i guess.
April 10, 2026 @ 12:09 am
I can never call George Strait a fraud even if I’m not really a fan of his. George is as humble and respectable as they come as far as superstars go and being a great performer is enough to be an amazing talent. We all have strengths and weaknesses but at least George does have some writing credentials under his belt and anyone who says otherwise is nothing but a hater talking out of his ass.
George’s greatest strength is his voice. I’m huge fan of the Outlaws of country music, but guys like Willie, Johnny Cash, or Kris Kristofferson never had a voice as strong as George’s. What made them great was something more than just voice talent or their ability to write songs they had a presence that drew people in. George Strait may not have that same type of presence but, he has a great voice and a charisma that draws people to his music and that’s what makes him one of the best.
April 10, 2026 @ 2:23 am
…from the philosophy starter pack: who’s bigger, the person who invented something – or the one who maxed it?
April 12, 2026 @ 4:00 pm
Others may have commented on this, but it’s interesting that of the songs George wrote, many are religious songs. Is it possible to like him even more than I did before?
April 12, 2026 @ 10:00 pm
Elvis and Sinatra didn’t write songs. Were they lesser artists because of that? Hell no. Even hugely popular country singers like Patsy Cline and Ronnie Milsap weren’t songwriters. Criticizing George for interpreting others’ words wonderfully is stupid.
April 13, 2026 @ 4:40 am
I’ve never been a fan of George Strait.
Not shitting on him in any way here, I just never connected to his music.