Cowgirl

Album: Fell in Love with a Cowgirl (2025)
Charted: 50
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Songfacts®:

  • "Cowgirl" is about the kind of love that sneaks up on you when you least expect it. Parmalee frontman Matt Thomas tells the tale of falling head over boots for a woman with Bud Light in her hand, two-stepping skills to spare, and enough Southern charm to render him permanently smitten. Before he knows it, she's riding shotgun in his Chevy and he's making it very clear he's never letting her go.

    "It's about falling in love with that cowgirl or just somebody different that has you going out and trying new things, and you're loving every bit of it," Thomas explained.
  • The song began life across the Atlantic, where four UK songwriters - James Daniel Lewis, Peter David Newman, Robbie Jay, and Thomas Frank Ridley Horsley - assembled a demo built around a punchy, syncopated beat. The track eventually made its way into the hands of 33 Creative co-owner Tina Crawford, who found it intriguing enough to pass along to her business partner, Parmalee producer David Fanning. He played it for Thomas, who played it for the rest of Parmalee while they were on their bus.

    "I don't think there was a bridge in there, but for the most part, it was pretty much there," bassist Barry Knox told Billboard. So Fanning and the band got to work, swapping out lyrics, tweaking melodies, and adding a bridge - essentially making it fully Parmalee.
  • The band set out to add some lyrics that were abstract but still made sense, such as:

    And I ain't comin' home
    Yeah, she my twenty-four karat Palomino


    It was, in Thomas' words, the kind of abstract, fun phrase that people could yell, which is one of the most important criteria for a country hit. "I was like, 'Yeah, man - palomino, golden horse. That's it,'" he said.
  • "Cowgirl" also leans heavily on country's holy trinity of lyrical touchpoints: trucks, Levi's, and Bud Light. But as Fanning pointed out, they may be clichés, but those things never get old. The trick is saying them differently.
  • Parmalee's 2012 debut single, "Musta Had a Good Time," suggested they were a hard-partying, high-energy group, but most of their biggest hits - "Take My Name," "Girl In Mine" - have trended more toward ballads. When it came time to pick a lead single for their eighth album, they debated a few options before Knox put an end to the discussion.

    "Barry walked on the bus one night," Thomas remembered, "and he's like, 'What are we doing? What are we doing? Why are we listening to any of these other songs to be the first single? We're crazy if we don't go with Cowgirl.'"

    They released "Cowgirl" to country radio on January 8, 2025.
  • When Parmalee were deciding which songs would make the cut for Fell in Love with a Cowgirl, they didn't rely on fancy software or a producer's decree; they went full March Madness. On their tour bus, the band created an old-school bracket system, scribbling out head-to-head matchups of over 50 favorite tracks, gradually narrowing it down to just seven. They told IHeartCountry's Emily Curl the floor was littered with crumpled paper from all the revisions. Surprisingly, despite the passionate opinions, there were no fights, only a lot of "weekend relistens" and group consensus. "No visible bruising," the band joked.

    "Cowgirl" lit everyone up - especially bassist Barry Knox' kids, who wouldn't stop singing it. That excitement pushed the song to the top of the list as an easy, fun choice.

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