Nobody to Blame

[3] The country rock song[4] is a mid-tempo composition about a man looking back on the events following a break-up.

His ex has kicked him out of the house and destroyed all of his belongings, often in sadistic fashion (dumping out his whiskey, breaking his fishing rods, burning his guitar in a bonfire, running his hot rod car into a pond and putting sugar in the gas tank of his lawnmower).

It rambles along like the best from Waylon while providing a de facto education to the 21st century boy.

Stapleton doesn't deviate from what he does best: simple, honest story songs that lean heavy on his once-in-a-lifetime voice.

[6] The song peaked at number 10 on the Country Airplay chart, making it Stapleton's first single to reach the top 10.