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Before Songs About Us arrives on April 24, Jason Aldean will step onto a familiar kind of stage in Nashville — one that reflects both where he’s been and where he’s headed.
On Jan. 20, Aldean headlines Nashville Lifestyles Music in the City at Jason Aldean’s Kitchen + Rooftop Bar, offering fans an early look at an artist entering his next chapter with clarity and confidence. The timing is intentional. After two decades of shaping modern country music, Aldean isn’t chasing momentum — he’s guiding it.
That mindset defines Songs About Us, a 20-track album Aldean describes as his most deliberate and wide-ranging project to date. Released April 24, the album arrives the same week Aldean and Luke Bryan co-headline Sanford Stadium at the University of Georgia, but its foundation was laid long before any tour routing or release calendar.
“They’re all on there for a reason,” Aldean says of the songs. “You need tempos, you need ballads, you need different things. But everything on this record was put there intentionally.”
A Little Help From His Friends
That intention starts with Aldean’s creative circle — one of the most stable, productive teams in modern country music. Longtime bandmates Tully Kennedy and Kurt Allison remain at the core, joined by North Carolina singer-songwriter John Morgan, who has quietly become one of Aldean’s most important collaborators.
Morgan’s introduction to Aldean’s world came through a demo Kennedy and Allison brought him years ago. Aldean wanted proof Morgan was real. Morgan sent a video of himself singing and playing on his phone. Aldean signed him almost immediately — and then sent him money to fix his truck.
“He was like, ‘Here’s your platform,’” Morgan says. “‘Either take advantage of it or don’t.’”
Morgan has now co-written more than 30 Aldean songs, including several of his 30 No. 1s, and nearly three-quarters of Songs About Us. The album’s cohesion reflects that trust. Rather than chasing outside trends, Aldean leaned into the voices that already understood him.
The album’s title track serves as a mission statement about why country music endures. Co-written by Morgan, Allison, Kennedy, and John Edwards, the song pairs Aldean with Luke Bryan — his “best friend in the business,” as Aldean calls him. Bryan was Aldean’s only choice.
“We come from the same world,” Aldean says. “That song needed somebody who understood that.”
Jason Aldean, David Lee Murphy: Dusting Off a Collaboration
Songs About Us includes three duets in total. Alongside Bryan, Aldean reunites with David Lee Murphy on a new version of “Dust on the Bottle,” marking the song’s 30th anniversary. Aldean still remembers playing Murphy’s hit in clubs early in his career — even winning a Battle of the Bands with it — and opening for Murphy long before they’d share a studio.
Recording the song together brought things full circle.
The album also marks the first time Aldean has recorded a duet with his wife, Brittany. Though she once competed on American Idol, she isn’t a professional singer. Aldean waited for the right song — “Easier Gone,” written by Charles Kelley, Dave Haywood, Jimmy Robbins, and Josh Kerr — before asking her into the studio.
“She was nervous,” Aldean admits. “Day one was just learning the process. Day two was magic.”
The most emotionally weighty moment on the album comes with “Help You Remember,” a ballad Aldean co-wrote after learning that both his uncle and Brittany’s father had been diagnosed with Lewy body dementia. The song, written with his longtime collaborators, reflects a depth that comes from lived experience.
Jason Aldean: Everyone Started “Bawling”
“I played it for my mom, and she started bawling,” Aldean says. “I played it for Brit, she started bawling. Anybody who’s dealt with dementia or Alzheimer’s — it hits them.”
The album’s first single, “How Far Does a Goodbye Go,” wasn’t even written for this record. Aldean heard it once, called his writers immediately, and claimed it.
“This is going to be a heater,” he told them.
That instinct — the same one that carried him through early doubt and career-defining risks — still guides him. Touring remains his favorite part of the work, and 2026 will mark his first international run in a decade. This time, his children are old enough to travel with him, turning the experience into something he once couldn’t have imagined.
By the time Aldean takes the stage Jan. 20 for Music in the City, he’ll be doing so not as an artist looking back, but as one still very much in motion — anchored by a team he trusts, an album he believes in, and a career built on knowing when to listen to his gut.
Songs About Us arrives April 24. But the story it tells has been years in the making.