When Jake Worthington performed at the Grand Ole Opry recently, he brought a special guest with him —a bit of family history, as he played his late grandfather’s guitar, while standing on the famed six-foot diameter oak circle embedded in the center of the Opry House stage.
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“My papaw was a big reason why I got the itch for a song,” Worthington tells Billboard, noting that his grandfather raised him on the sounds of George Jones, Merle Haggard and Ray Price. “He played dance halls in Texas, and he was a singer-songwriter. My dad has had [the guitar] for a while, and it wasn’t about maybe two months ago, he said, ‘Hey, you need to take this home.’ So ever since I’ve had it, I’ve been using it. To be playing the Opry, I thought it was appropriate.”
On the La Porte, Texas native’s (just southeast of Houston) second album When I Write The Song, out today (Sept. 12) on Big Loud Texas, Worthington also brings bit of history to the fore, with his throwback sound that feels pulled directly from dusty honky-tonks and barrooms that inspired Texas country greats such as George Jones and Willie Nelson. Alongside contemporaries including tourmate Zach Top, Worthington has played a key role in reinvigorating modern country music with a sterling shot of old-school country sounds.
“I like my music to sound like live music,” Worthington says. “And to me, it’s not a specific sub-genre of a type, It’s just country music to me. For the last good while, it seemed almost d–n near impossible to get anybody behind that idea, within country music. And I think I’ve never been more inspired with the world of music right now. I think it’s still the Wild West, and I like that it’s hairy and it’s a ‘Nobody’s going to do it for you’ type of thing. I just want to make music that I love and something I believe in, and I can only hope folks take to it.”
His new album continues to showcase Worthington’s growing star power as an ardent devotee of country music’s timeless sounds. His warm vocal, an instrument he can effortlessly bend to his will in old-school singing reminiscent of Jones or Mark Chesnutt, anchors Western swing in “My Home’s In Oklahoma,” ‘90s country-esque sounds in the humorous “Two First Names,” and somber, honky-tonk self-reflection on “I Only Drink When It Rains.” Fiddle, steel guitar, piano, and acoustic guitars flow throughout the album.
Worthington is a currently nominated for entertainer of the year at November’s Texas Country Music Association Awards, while the new album’s “It Ain’t The Whiskey” is nominated for the TCMA’s country single of the year accolade.
Worthington has been signed with Big Loud since 2021 and when Miranda Lambert and Jon Randall teamed with Big Loud to form Big Loud Texas in 2023, they quickly brought Worthington into the fold.
“I feel like it just garnered me more champions within the company,” Worthington says. “I feel really grateful for that.”
As the album’s title nods to, Worthington had a hand in writing nearly every song on the album. The lone exception is a song Lambert wrote with Jesse Frasure, Dean Dillon and Jessie Jo Dillon.
“She told me the story that she had gotten the write with Dean and they had tossed ideas out and nothing was happening. I guess it started raining and Dean is pretty well known to just go light a cigarette, walk away and come back with brilliance. I guess he lit a cigarette and said, ‘Hello, shitty day,’ and Miranda had said, ‘I want to write that.’”
Lambert sent the song to Worthington, who immediately decided to record it and asked Lambert to sing on it.
“When it’s all said and done, there will never be no one like her, and I feel really fortunate that I’ve gotten to see that firsthand. I just thought, hearing her sing, ‘She’s one of the best singers I’ve ever heard in my life,” Worthington says.
Country Music Hall of Famer Marty Stuart joins him on “I’m The One,” which has its own piece of guitar history embedded in the recording.