Little Big Town Rode Controversy to Success With Their No. 1 Hit

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Little Big Town‘s “Girl Crush” lyrics propelled the group to new career heights, but ironically, one of its writers had to be talked into working on the song at all.

Who Wrote Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush”?

Lori McKenna, Liz Rose and Hillary Lindsey are frequent collaborators; they write together as the Love Junkies, and the song came about during one of their regularly scheduled co-writes.

McKenna already had the idea for the title “Girl Crush,” but not much else.

When she proposed the idea to Rose, she wasn’t very interested in working on it.

“It was early in the morning,” Rose told Taste of Country with a laugh. “It sounded like it was gonna be hard to write. I was like, ‘Naaaah. How are we gonna write that?’ Lori said it twice, and I went, ‘No, I don’t know how we would do that and make it work,’ before even thinking about it.”

READ MORE: Little Big Town Had a Wardrobe Malfunction at Their First ACM Awards

She changed her mind when McKenna pitched the title to Lindsey, who had slept later and was not privy to the earlier conversation.

“This really was one of those songs where Hillary just picked up a guitar and started singing it,” McKenna recalled.

“It really was one of those great moments where one person says something, and the other person just finishes the sentence, almost … Hillary just sang the first four lines, just following the melody that came out of her mouth. And she said, ‘You mean like that?’ And Liz and I looked at each other and said, ‘Yeah! Exactly like that!'”

“I don’t know where in the world it came from,” Lindsey said. “That’s how songs happen sometimes. It just comes from the god in the corner. I don’t know … I just sat down, and the first verse kinda came out. Even after that, we didn’t talk too much about it. It just kinda wrote itself.”

The “Girl Crush” lyrics describe a woman’s obsession with the woman who is in a relationship with the man she wants: “I wanna taste her lips / Yeah ’cause they taste like you / I wanna drown myself in a bottle of her perfume / I got a girl crush.”

In the end, the “Girl Crush” lyrics took just a couple of hours to write, and they remained unchanged from the work tape to the finished recording.

Little Big Town singers Kimberly Schlapman and Karen Fairchild were scheduled to co-write with the trio later that day, and when they played them their work tape from earlier, they were immediately interested in putting the song on hold.

We didn’t talk too much about it. It just kinda wrote itself.

What Was the Controversy Over Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush”?

With such an unusual subject matter, as well as a 6/8 time signature, the song was a big risk to release to country radio.

The song received some backlash at country radio, in print and online because some listeners believe that it was promoting an LGBTQ+ agenda, though there were conflicting reports as to just how much of that controversy might have been manufactured for publicity purposes.

How Did Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush” Do in the Charts?

“Girl Crush” overcame that initial controversy to become not only the biggest hit of LBT’s career, but a song that shattered all previously existing country music records for the longest run at No. 1.

“Girl Crush” became a phenomenon, winning CMA Awards for Single and Song of the Year, Grammys for Best Country Duo/Group Performance and Best Country Song.

“Girl Crush” earned Platinum certification on June 3,

It also won NSAI’s Song of the Year award, which the songwriters say is the most important to them since it was voted on by their songwriting peers.

“The great part about it is, the three of us, we write a lot of songs together, and we support each other and believe in each other and love each other as friends,” McKenna said.

“It’s been great for us as three pals that write songs together because we like to hang out together; it’s been a great ride for us to go through this together. Especially with Little Big Town, because they’re the nicest people in the world. We couldn’t have asked for a better journey.”

The success was especially sweet for McKenna, she shared.

“I didn’t have a Grammy,” she said. “Liz and Hillary already had their Grammys for other songs. So for me, this is a little bit of a confidence changer. We love our jobs, and we feel so blessed to have them, but I think for me, you just wanna earn your keep and write songs that you can be proud of. So to finally get to a point where we’ve had such a ride with the song, it’s like, ‘Oh my god, maybe I am supposed to be doing this!’ I’ve been trying to convince my family for about 15 years that I should be doing this.”

See the Most Played Country Song from the Year You Were Born

Who had the most played country song during the year you were born? This list is a fascinating time capsule of prevalent trends from every decade in American history. Scroll through to find your birth year and then click to listen. Some of these songs have been lost through the years, many of them for good reason!

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes

Most Popular Country Album From the Year You Were Born

Find out which country singer dominated on this list of the most popular albums from the year you were born or graduated high school.

This list is based on sales date from the Soundscan era (1991 to 2022) and total weeks spent atop Billboard‘s Hot Country Albums chart (1964-1990).

In 1999, Shania Twain‘s Come on Over album became the first to top the year-end chart in back-to-back years, but that feat has been done four times since, most recently in 2022. Which country album defined your childhood? Scroll down to find out.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes





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