Bar None

Album: Learn the Hard Way (2025)
Charted: 37
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Songfacts®:

  • If country music has taught us anything over the years - besides the importance of trucks, heartbreak, and cold beer on a Friday night - it's that the bar is not just a place to drink. It's a confessional, a battleground, and, in the case of Jordan Davis's song "Bar None," a scoreboard.

    The song is about a man losing a valiant, if doomed, match against heartbreak. He's trying to drown sorrow with liquor, which, as history and country music have demonstrated time and again, is rather like trying to put out a fire with kerosene. But "Bar None" isn't just another tale of emotional defeat set to the soothing twang of a guitar. It's a clever lyrical sleight of hand, full of wordplay and unexpected turns. The title, for instance, plays on the phrase "bar none" (meaning "without exception") while also implying a literal bar, as in "me and this bar: none"- zero points, nothing, nada. A heartbreak shutout, if you like.
  • Jordan Davis, normally a co-writer on his hits ("Buy Dirt," "Next Thing You Know"), didn't write this one. It came courtesy of Hunter Phelps (Jameson Rodgers' "Cold Beer Calling My Name," Hardy, and Lainey Wilson's "Wait In The Truck"), Lydia Vaughan (Jason Aldean's "If I Didn't Love You,"Carrie Underwood's "Out Of That Truck") and Ben Johnson (Parmalee's "Take My Name," Nate Smith's "Bulletproof") during a writing session at Johnson's Nashville's Skyline Studio in the summer of 2024.
  • The song starts with a banjo and gradually layers in a fast-paced stomp-clap rhythm that turns the melancholy theme into something almost toe-tappable.

    "That's actually what, for me, makes the song great," Lydia Vaughan told Billboard, "It turns what lyrically is a sad, getting-over-somebody song into more of a fun drinking song, just sonically."
  • The song hooked Davis immediately, and he convinced MCA Nashville to include it on his already finished album.

    "I fell in love with it from the first time I listened to it," he told Billboard. "The second you hear the hook, you want to be like, all right, I bet you they're going to do this. This one surprised me. I didn't really see it going here. I think about the line, 'If moving on had a scoreboard it'd say, 'You and your memory one. Me and this bar none.' It gave me a smile, like 'Well done.'"

    "It's something that feels like a song I haven't done from a production standpoint," Davis added, "even instrumentation-wise, with the banjo part."
  • Lydia Vaughan first considered "Bar None" as a title when she heard it in a conversation. Realizing the potential for double meaning, she pitched it at the session, albeit nervously, worried it might be too clever by half. Hunter Phelps admitted he had never actually heard the phrase "bar none" in its original without exception context, which triggered a brief philosophical debate, resolved only when he texted his wife and she replied with a one-word answer: "Yes."
  • Though Davis loved "Bar None" as soon as he heard it, he wasn't sure it had the hit potential to be a single. It wasn't until he played it live and saw the crowd erupt that he had a moment of self-reckoning. "I see the reaction," he told Audacy's Katie Neal. " I'm like, I'm an idiot. Do I know anything?"

    Davis credited his team for pushing "Bar None" as a single, saying they were "right on this one."

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