Dandelion

Album: Dandelion (2025)
Charted: 37
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Songfacts®:

  • Ella Langley was born and raised in Hope Hull, Alabama, a small rural community near Montgomery. Growing up on a farm alongside two brothers and a sister, Langley learned early that survival, both social and agricultural, often depends on stubborn resilience, an outlook that blossoms at the heart of her song "Dandelion."
  • The track is Langley's affectionate and defiant tribute to her small-town Alabama roots, embracing the identity of the overlooked but indestructible weed, rather than aspiring to be a carefully cultivated rose. It places her squarely in the ongoing pop tradition of dandelion symbolism, where the humble yellow flower represents resilience, rebellion, or the mild inconvenience of growing precisely where you least expect it: sentiments echoed in songs like The Rolling Stones' childlike "Dandelion," which celebrates carefree innocence; Ariana Grande's dreamy, love-struck "Dandelion," where the flower symbolizes fragile devotion and emotional wish-making; and Ruth B.'s reflective "Dandelions," which uses the plant as a metaphor for fragile hopes and quiet romantic longing. Langley's interpretation leans firmly into country grit, presenting the dandelion as less wistful daydream and more botanical battle cry.
  • Tucked back in the weeds, guess that's just me
    In a bed of red roses, I'm the one growin' up on the wilder side


    Langley spent much of her childhood in Alabama trying to survive life with two brothers. "I always was trying to prove I was just as tough and fearless as they were," she told Realtor.com. "Being a tomboy like that, a lot of my friends ended up being guys. If you ask my band or people who know me, they'll tell you sometimes I seem more like a guy than a girl."

    Langley remains unapologetically direct and strong, qualities that feed directly into the "weed among roses" imagery of "Dandelion."
  • Langley wrote "Dandelion" with her frequent songwriting collaborator Joybeth Taylor, along with Austin Goodloe and Brett Tyler. Taylor and Goodloe previously co-wrote Corey Kent's "Something's Gonna Kill Me," while Goodloe and Tyler teamed up to co-pen another Corey Kent track, "Rocky Mountain Low."
  • Langley produced the song with fellow country singer and close friend Miranda Lambert, along with Ben West. Lambert's involvement feels particularly fitting, given her own long-standing reputation for celebrating fiercely independent, rough-edged Southern womanhood; a thematic lineage that stretches from Lambert's "Gunpowder & Lead" through to her collaborative work with Langley on the hit "Choosin' Texas."
  • Ben West plays Wurlitzer piano, and Austin Goodloe supplies background vocals. The other musicians are:

    Dave Cohen: Hammond organ.
    Tom Bukovac : electric guitar.
    Ben Flanders: electric guitar.
    Charlie Worsham: acoustic guitar.
    Spencer Cullum: pedal steel guitar.
    Rachel Loy: bass guitar.
    Aksel Coe: drums, percussion
  • "Dandelion" is the title track of Langley's second album, also called Dandelion, an 18-track project produced by Langley and executive produced by Miranda Lambert alongside Ben West. "Dandelions are masters of survival, thriving in even the harshest environments," said Langley. "Often dismissed as a common weed, this unassuming plant carries a deeper symbolism of hope, healing, and resilience."

    Langley said the record was her most authentic work to date, emphasizing its emotional openness and sense of personal growth.

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