Morgan Wallen

Morgan Wallen’s song “Don’t We” comes from his massive album era surrounding One Thing at a Time (and the continuing singles that spun out of that project), and it fits right into the reflective side of his catalog rather than the party tracks. The song was written by Morgan Wallen alongside frequent collaborators Ernest K. Smith (ERNEST), Ashley Gorley, and others from his regular Nashville writing circle, and produced by Joey Moi, who’s been the architect of Wallen’s sound since the beginning. Sonically it’s restrained — acoustic guitar, light steel, and a steady groove — designed to spotlight the lyric. Wallen has mixed it into select tour setlists during his stadium run, usually in the portion of the show where things slow down and the crowd sings along rather than the big pyro moments.
The title is really the chorus idea: it’s built around shared memories and habits in a relationship — the things couples always say they’ll stop doing but never actually do. Instead of a breakup song, it lives in that in-between space where two people know the patterns aren’t perfect, yet they keep coming back to each other because the connection feels familiar and real. The “Don’t we…” line becomes almost a conversation, like two people acknowledging their flaws but also their comfort with one another. It’s very much Wallen’s lane: conversational, nostalgic, and rooted in everyday life rather than grand drama — the kind of song that hits hardest for listeners who recognize their own relationship in the details.















