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"Give Heaven Some Hell" (stylized in all caps) is a song by American country music singer Hardy. It was released on January 25, 2021, as the second single from his debut studio album A Rock, released in 2020. The song was co-written by Hardy, Ashley Gorley, Ben Johnson and Hunter Phelps, and produced by Joey Moi and Derek Wells. [3]
His singles "Give Heaven Some Hell", "One Beer", "Wait in the Truck" and "Truck Bed" charted in the US and Canada and he was featured on the Dallas Smith song "Some Things Never Change". His album, The Mockingbird & the Crow , topped the country music charts in early 2023.
"Give Heaven Some Hell" "A Rock" Justin Clough and Benjamin Skipworth 2021 "Some Things Never Change" (with Dallas Smith) Stephano Barberis "Blurry" Tanner Gallagher "The Worst Country Song of All Time" (with Brantley Gilbert and Toby Keith) Brantley Gilbert and Brian Vaughn 2022 "Sold Out" Tanner Gallagher
"Give Heaven Some Hell" Released: January 25, 2021 [ 2 ] A Rock (stylized in all caps ) [ 3 ] is the debut studio album by American country music singer Hardy , released on September 4, 2020, via Big Loud Records .
Ben Johnson is an American songwriter, producer, and artist. His notable hits include "One of Them Girls," "Truck Bed," and "Take My Name," which was recognized as Billboard’s Country Song of the Year, and "All My Favorite Songs," which was nominated for Grammy Award for Best Rock Song" at the 64th Annual Grammy Awards.
Singer Hardy announced in early 2024 that he would be releasing the third installment of his Hixtape series, a series of mixtapes featuring various collaborators. The album includes Hardy and various other musicians, primarily from within country music, participating in covers of Joe Diffie songs.
About Wikipedia; Contact us; Contribute Help; ... Give Heaven Some Hell; God's Country (Blake Shelton song) H. Hate My Heart; Heaven by Then; Hell Right;
The song's main theme is the narrator waking up in the bed of his truck after becoming intoxicated, and expressing his anger at his situation. Billy Dukes of Taste of Country wrote, "one doesn't feel Hardy's fury until the very last chorus in this song, when a full-throttled electric guitar replaces the gentler version that had been plucking along as he tells of getting blackout drunk in the ...