Chris Young just opened his Famous Friends bar in Nashville, and the single he’s working overlaps thematically.
“I Didn’t Come Here to Leave,” his new release to radio, delivers a good-timin’ ambience behind an upbeat tempo, a barroom plot and a long, anthemic chorus.
“It’s a very long chorus, for sure,” Young says.
Its genesis comes from one of his Nashville hot spots, Losers Bar & Grill, where he ran into songwriter Dallas Davidson (“Put a Girl in It,” “Boys ‘Round Here”) on Aug. 15, 2023.
“Me and Dallas were standing next to each other, and I was like, ‘You want one more?’” Young recalls. “He goes, ‘Well, I didn’t come here to leave.’ I was like, ‘Do you know what you just said?’ He goes, ‘I didn’t come here to… oh, crap.’ I was like, ‘Yeah, we’re writing that.’”
They weren’t wasting time, either. Davidson was already booked the next day at 11 a.m., a standard starting time for Music City writing sessions, but he was willing to come in two hours early. Davidson and fellow songwriter Kyle Fishman (“Thank God,” “Small Town Boy”) got to their office – on 17th Avenue, at the time – at 9 o’clock, in case Young was serious about their last-minute appointment.
“Damn, if he didn’t show up,” Davidson quips.
They could have fashioned “I Didn’t Come Here to Leave” as a commitment-focused ballad, but a breezy bar song made more sense. It was, after all, the scenario that inspired them the previous night. Plus, Davidson had some incentive to go down that thematic road: he was such a prominent customer at Losers that he was allowed to park in an employee space.
“I’ve always wanted to write a song about Losers,” says Davidson, who would quit drinking two months later. “That’s about as close as I got to it, so that was my Losers song.”
The three started out on guitars, and after a bit of noodling, Fishman locked into a repeating, four-chord pattern in which the first and third of those harmonic stacks served as short, syncopated lead-ins to the second and fourth. “That’s a Kyle Fishman trick,” Davidson says. “He does that a lot.”
They weaved the title into the chorus three times, stretching that stanza out to 14 lines. After starting the chorus with the “I Didn’t Come Here to Leave” title, they closed the first half by repeating the title, then jumped into a line about tequila shots to start the second half, using the same compact melody and ending the refrain once more with the title.
“I love double choruses, and I love melodies that are just a couple notes,” Fishman says. “It felt like that [first half] just needed to happen again. None of us were tired of it.”
That chorus included a mild contradiction. In the first verse, the protagonist proclaims his desire for a good time, but in the back half of that chorus, he takes control of the bar’s music so he can play some melancholy titles. “It’s very freeing to play sad songs,” Young says. “And I think that’s indicative of country. We aren’t afraid to put anything into a song.”
Since long choruses chew up a fair amount of time, the verses were necessarily shorter, and the writers made them thematically direct. The entire first verse previews the bar run, with the guy driving to the club to ease his boredom at home.
Once the chorus establishes his place at the bar, verse two introduces a woman. “You gotta have a girl,” Davidson says. “You know I’m gonna write a song with a girl in it.”
The singer flirts a bit, leaving the door open for something to happen, but then runs through the chorus a second and third time. Between those two stanzas, they inserted a two-line bridge, with the guy asserting he may stay until four a.m. – an hour or two past closing time.
The bridge, Fishman says, “needed to happen musically, because two back-to-back double choruses would probably be a little too much.” Young sang it two or three times, and Fishman built a moderate demo around a composite vocal performance, leaving time for them to get to their 11 a.m. commitments.
In December 2024, Young announced he’d signed with Black River after 18 years with RCA, and he tabbed co-producer Andy Sheridan (Chris Janson, Avery Anna) to help him pull the project together. They cut “I Didn’t Come Here to Leave” the following Jan. 8 with several Black River executives attending at Sound Stage.
The musicians played to Young’s pre-recorded demo vocal, allowing the singer to co-produce from the control room. It didn’t take long for them to find the groove, including a distinct uplift when the song reaches the chorus. “When we got to that first chorus on the second or third pass, I was like, ‘Man, this is gonna be a single,’” Sheridan remembers.
The song didn’t need anything gimmicky, though they give it a few special touches. For starters, instead of making the intro busier with a signature lick, Sheridan enhanced Tim Galloway’s acoustic guitar with some light tones that sound almost like a glockenspiel. “Some of that is maybe a little synth, maybe little piano parts, something like that,” Sheridan notes.
Electric guitarist Derek Wells added an almost-subliminal oscillating guitar at the end of the first verse to create a sense that something is about to happen. Drummer Nir Z launches a more energetic chorus with a simple, two-handed pop on the snare. “They just wrote it really well,” Sheridan says. “The melody – it’s just a great lift – and the chords are right, and all the ingredients are right. Then you get the guys in there, and don’t mess it up, you know, you really get that impact on the first chorus.”
They also had Wells drop a guitar solo in to a tight space ahead of the bridge, just to create more change in that window between the second and third double choruses. “It was like, ‘Somebody get me a shoe horn,’” Young says. “We needed to put something right there.”
When he cut his final vocals at a later date, Young hit the opening syllables in most of the chorus’ lines hard, matching the song’s inherent energy. “I was like, ‘Do I feather it? Or do I attack real hard on the encounter?’” he recalls. “That, I think, is more of a statement.”
Young felt strongly enough about the Losers song that he titled his first Black River album I Didn’t Come Here to Leave, releasing it on Oct. 17, 2025. He considered it as the project’s first single, but instead made it the second, issuing it to country radio via PlayMPE on May 21, with a June 15 impact date.
Meanwhile, as Young celebrates the opening of his Famous Friends bar, fans should not expect that they can recreate the song’s storyline and get him to keep the bar open until 4 a.m. The legal closing time in Nashville is 3 a.m. Staying later would be a violation.
“As someone opening a bar,” he says, “we have determined hours.”
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