No hurry zac brown band lyrics

Lyrics © BLACKSTONE ENTERTAINMENT, REACH MUSIC PUBLISHING, O/B/O CAPASSO, RESERVOIR MEDIA MANAGEMENT INC, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

Lyrics powered by LyricFind

Log in now to tell us what you think this song means.

Don’t have an account? Create an account with SongMeanings to post comments, submit lyrics, and more. It’s super easy, we promise!

The Web's Largest Resource for

Music, Songs & Lyrics


A Member Of The STANDS4 Network

more tracks from the album

No hurry zac brown band lyrics

Our awesome collection of

»

Quiz

Are you a music master?

»
"But you know that when the truth is told; That you can get what you want; Or you can just get ______."

The Web's Largest Resource for

Music, Songs & Lyrics


A Member Of The STANDS4 Network

more tracks from the album

Our awesome collection of

»

Quiz

Are you a music master?

»

"And let me feel it isn't real that I've been losing you."
  • A. Raissa Anggiani - Losing Us

  • B. Vince Gill - I Still Believe in You

"No Hurry"

You know my old car needs washing
And the front yard needs a trim
And the telephone keeps ringing
And the bossman knows I know its him
And the bills ain't gonna pay themselves
No matter anyway
Cause I ain't in no hurry today

There's nothing wrong with an old cane fishing pole
And the smell of early spring
Sit down in a fold-up easy chair
On a quiet shady river bank
Let the world go on without me
Wouldn't have it any other way
Cause I ain't in no hurry today

Ain't in no hurry
I'd Be a fool now to worry
About all those things I can't change
And the time that I borrow
Can wait till tomorrow
Cause I ain't in no hurry today

When I must return
To the cold cold ground
Have 'em take their time
When they lay this sinner down

Heaven knows that I ain't perfect
I've raised a little cain
And I plan to raise a whole lot more
Before I hear those angels sing
(Gonna get right with the lord)
But there'll be hell to pay
But I ain't in no hurry

Ain't in no hurry
Be a fool now to worry
About all those things I can't change
And the time that I borrow
Can wait till tomorrow
Cause I ain't in no hurry
Ain't in no hurry
Ain't in no hurry today

Writer(s): James Otto, Wyatt Beasley Durrette, Zac Brown

album: "You Get What You Give" (2010)

No hurry zac brown band lyrics

"Highway 20 Ride" is a song recorded by American country music group Zac Brown Band, written by lead singer Zac Brown and Wyatt Durrette. The song was released in November 2009 as the fourth single from the band's 2009 album The Foundation. It is the band's third Number One on the U.S. country singles chart.

History[edit]

Wyatt Durette was inspired to write "Highway 20 Ride" while driving along Interstate 20 between Atlanta, Georgia and the Georgia/South Carolina state line in Augusta, Georgia to drop off his son, Wyatt IV, so that his mother could pick him up.[1] Durette told Country Weekly magazine that, during one such trip, he began to think about "how [Wyatt IV] would perceive [him] as a father."[1] After he showed some of his lyrics to Zac Brown, Brown helped Durette finish the song.[1]

Music video[edit]

The music video was directed by Darren Doane and was released on December 22, 2009.

Critical reception[edit]

The song received many positive reviews. Matt Bjorke of Roughstock stated that it "give[s] country music their 'new Alabama.'"[2] Leeann Ward of Country Universe gave the song an A, referring to it as "touching and tastefully constructed" and saying that it "may turn out to be one of the best singles of 2009."[3] Mark Deming of Allmusic, in his review of the album, stated that the song, as well as "Free," "show the influence of the more sentimental branches of the Texas singer-songwriter tradition."[4] Pierce Greenberg of Engine 145, in his review of the album, referred to the song as a "geographical heartbreak song."[5] Jessica Phillips of Country Weekly magazine gave it four stars out of five, with her review calling it "honest, not syrupy" and describing Brown's "powerful vocals" as a standout.[6]

Chart performance[edit]

On the week ending December 19, 2009, the song became Zac Brown Band's fourth consecutive Top 40 hit on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts.[7] It debuted on the Hot 100 at #98 on the week ending January 30, 2010. It has since reached #40, becoming their fourth consecutive Top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100. In April 2010, the song became Zac Brown Band's third Number One single on the Hot Country Songs chart. The song reached over a million copies in the US in April 2014,[8] and as of February 2015, it has sold 1,058,000 copies.[9]