Tyler Childers pledges his love to the one he’s always missing in the breezy new song “All Your’n,” the latest release from his upcoming album Country Squire, due out August 2nd.
With its relaxed tempo and gently rising melody, “All Your’n” is one of the most laid-back entries in the Kentucky native’s catalog. Lyrically, he laments the fact that he’s chosen a life that keeps him constantly on the move but reiterates a feeling of certainty toward his partner. “Long before we ever met, I made up my direction/Long before I knew the half of half that I’m sure of now,” he sings. It’s packed full of characteristic lyrical detail and writerly flourishes, making mention of “fried morels and fine hotels” and “the goddess in my Days Inn pen” before he makes a solemn promise: “I’ll love you ’til my lungs give out/I ain’t lyin’/I’m all your’n, and you’re all mine.”
Granger Smith and his family are always thinking about late son River, who died earlier this month due to a drowning accident at home.
The country star’s wife, Amber Smith, shared a loving message to her 3-year-old son on Instagram Sunday after their family visited a museum in Chicago.
“We just happened to be in the same city as the ‘biiiigggggggest T-Rex’ ever found. We had to make a trip to see it in honor of River,” she wrote. “This dinosaur was discovered in FAITH, South Dakota by a woman named Sue. And he died by a River ♥️.”
Amber continued, “Open your eyes and you will see signs all around you. We think just maybe, Riv is having the best time of his life in Heaven with this 🦖.”
The family is in Chicago for the Country LakeShake music festival, where Granger is expected to perform during his first show since River’s death.
On June 6, Smith’s rep confirmed to PEOPLE that River’s tragic death was due to a drowning accident at home. That same day, the country singer, 39, shared the “unthinkable” news on Twitter and Instagram, revealing “despite doctor’s best efforts, he was unable to be revived.”
source: https://people.com/parents/granger-smith-wife-life-after-son-river-death-has-not-been-easy/