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"Miami"
Song by Morgan Wallen
from the album I'm the Problem
ReleasedMay 16, 2025
Genre
Label
Songwriter(s)
  • Morgan Wallen
Producer(s)

"Miami" is a song by American country music singer Morgan Wallen, released on May 16, 2025, as the thirty-fifth track from his fourth studio album, I'm the Problem.

Background

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In March 2024, Wallen posted a video of a song he was working on to his social media, showcasing his MacBook Pro with mixing software, playing the song with the caption "Redneck". The original teaser had Wallen singing the first verse, which was eventually changed to Hardy in the release version. A few months after posting, Wallen deleted the post with no explanation.[1] On March 29, Wallen was the musical guest on Saturday Night Live, and performed "I'm the Problem" and "Just in Case".[2] During his performance, there was a television in the background that displayed several titles for unreleased songs on the album, along with their track number, including the title of "Come Back as a Redneck" with the feature blurred out.[3] On March 31, 2025, Wallen posted another teaser, this time of the finished version, only posting his second verse with a video of him in the woods hunting.[4] The song, now in it's finished state, replaced the slow tune of the original demo with more of a "rock feel", prompting fans to speculate that Wallen's longtime close friend Hardy was the artist featured.

Lyrics and composition

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"Come Back as a Redneck" tells the story of a man who lives in the city disapproving of the country lifestyle of someone he sees in a truck at a red light. The chorus talks from the perspective of the country boy at the light, saying that he hopes that when the city man dies, he comes back as a redneck in order to "understand the lifestyle of a redneck": "When you die I hope you come back as a redneck / I hope it sticks on you like a hell-hot sun tattoo / I hope you break your back for that barely-get-by paycheck / And when you can't you gotta go and bloody up a buck or two". The "redneck" in question wants to explain to the disapproving city man (aptly named "Mr. City Man"), that the country lifestyle is way different than in the city, and while the city man has a "rollie on his wrist" and "Nasdaq in his hand", he has no idea what the country life entails. Wallen comes in on the second verse explaining that he didn't choose how he was raised, just like the city man didn't, and that even though the city man "work in four walls" and Wallen "works with four-by-fours", they aren't as different as the city man thinks they are. Wallen rounds out the second verse with the line of "We ain't as different as you think we is / But I didn't pull up sayin' "Won't you look at that born rich, fed with a silver spoon, trust fund kid" / Like you did". Wallen explains that while he notices a difference between the two people, he didn't immediately jump to judgement like the city man did. For the rest of the song, Hardy and Wallen take turns talking about the things that the country folks do that the city man would only understand as a redneck: "Why we say grace / Why we hold hands / Keep a shotgun right by the nightstand / And why we love a good rain comin' down / And never leave these so-called backward, backwood, good-for-nothing, hillbilly hick towns".[5][6][1]

Charts

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Chart performance for "Darkest Hour (Helene Edit)"
Chart (2025) Peak
position
US Bubbling Under Hot 100 (Billboard)[7] 21
US Country Airplay (Billboard)[8] 25
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[9] 38

References

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  1. ^ a b "'Come Back As a Redneck' by Morgan Wallen & HARDY - Lyrics & Meaning | Holler". holler.country. Retrieved 2025-05-16.
  2. ^ Peters, Mitchell (2025-03-30). "Morgan Wallen Returns to 'SNL' With Performances of 'I'm the Problem' & 'Just in Case': Watch". Billboard. Retrieved 2025-03-31.
  3. ^ Liptak, Carena (2025-03-30). "WATCH: Morgan Wallen Shares a Peek at His Album Track List During 'SNL'". Taste of Country. Retrieved 2025-03-31.
  4. ^ Nicholson, Jessica (2025-04-01). "Morgan Wallen Digs Into Country-City Tensions on 'Come Back as a Redneck' Song Preview". Billboard. Retrieved 2025-05-16.
  5. ^ Morgan Wallen (Ft. HARDY) – Come Back As A Redneck, retrieved 2025-05-16
  6. ^ "Morgan Wallen Sets the Record Straight on the Southern Way of Life on New HARDY Collab, 'Come Back As A Redneck' | Holler". holler.country. Retrieved 2025-05-16.
  7. ^ "Eric Church Chart History (Bubbling Under Hot 100)". Billboard. Retrieved May 13, 2025.
  8. ^ "Eric Church Chart History (Country Airplay)". Billboard. Retrieved May 13, 2025.
  9. ^ "Eric Church Chart History (Hot Country Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved May 13, 2025.