This song all started with this melody I came up with. I was drinking coffee on my back porch when these words came to me. Having served in the military, I used my experiences with my best friend in the military, John, to write this song.
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“Barstool Tradin’” was born from the moment you realize running from your demons just means they keep packing themselves in your suitcase. I wrote it about a man who’s convinced that the next bar, the next town, the next distraction will finally numb what he doesn’t want to face. But every mirror, every motel room, every new beginning keeps telling him the same truth: you can’t outrun pain with poison. The title came from picturing a guy trading one barstool for another like currency — city to city, excuse to excuse — until everything he loved slipped through his fingers: his woman, his job, his pride. The turning point hits in the most human place possible — a cheap motel floor. That’s where he feels God’s grace “slide under the door,” reminding him grace doesn’t wait on perfection; it meets you exactly where you break. This song is about: ? Addiction vs. redemption ? Losing everything before you change anything ? A man who finally chooses salvation over self-destruction ? Realizing the move he needed wasn’t to a new town — it was to a new life “Barstool Tradin’” carries the grit of Jelly Roll, the heart of Luke Combs, and the raw honesty of someone finally ready to fight for himself.
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It started as a simple Friday night image: tailgates down, coolers open, same old crowd, same old playlist… Until that one person showed up — and the whole night flipped. I kept thinking about how the energy of a party can completely change when the right person rolls up. It’s not just about the music or the beer — it’s who walks in and how they turn up the vibe without even trying. That’s where the hook came from: “Wasn’t a party ’til you rolled up…” It felt like something that belonged in a live show — the kind of song you shout back to the stage with your friends. I wanted it to hit that perfect mix of flirty, fun, and festival-ready, with chant-style vocals that make it feel like an instant anthem. The line that really brought it home was: “Danced on the cooler like it owed you a round.” That visual turned the song from a generic tailgate track into this specific, unforgettable moment — the kind of line people remember and post about after the show. It’s not just a party song — it’s a turning-point song. One minute it’s a background hangout, the next, someone rolls up and lights it on fire.
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