Explore Luke Combs' music on Billboard. Get the latest news, biography, and updates on the artist.
Luke Combs' new song "Six Feet Apart" has struck a chord with fans, but the singer admits he initially thought writing about the coronavirus pandemic might be cliche. When Combs hopped on a Zoom call to write with Brent Cobb and Rob Snyder, the heaviness of the COVID-19 shutdown was w...
Recently, I had the chance to sit down for a long conversation with country music giantLuke Combs, and he opened up about playingCMA Fest 2023withVince Gill. The two men got to spend some one-on-one time backstage, and it was an honor for Combs, whose song "Love You Anyway" is near...
1 debut single since Darius Rucker’s “Don’t Think I Don’t Think About It” in 2008. “To hear the fans sing it back to me now always reminds me that’s the one that started it all,” reflects Combs. “That song had been with me for a while by the time it finally went to...
Luke Combs' "Fast Car" wasn't supposed to be a radio single, at least not yet. But fan demand necessitated airplay for this song, and when that happens, everybody wins. For some reason, covers have become taboo over the last two decades, but if you go back 20 to 30 years before ...
Combs and Jameson Rodgers snagged a No. 1 hit after teaming up for this ode to blue collar workers. Hard work and long days don't seem so bad when you know there's a cold one waiting on you after quitting time, right? "Cold Beer Calling My Name" is technically Rodgers' song, but...
According to Combs, he wrote the first song in the trilogy about his wife, “Beautiful Crazy,” before they even started dating officially; they’d just been on a few outings together. "I'm not much of a ladies' man," he said. "But I was pretty proud of this one. I had written...
Luke Combs "Doin' This": Someone asked me once in an interview "What was growing up like, where'd you go to school? And what...
Luke Combs did something no country artist has done in five years on the way to setting a streaming record with his latest album, 'What You See Is What You Get.'
Bryan describes a young boy and his black lab growing up together. By the time the boy is ready to leave home, the dog has grown old. No dogs die in the lyrics of this song, but the passage of time — and the heartbreaking mismatch between dog years and human years — is still mo...