Featuring: John Anderson George Jones

Songwriter: Bobby Braddock Michael Kosser Blake Shelton

Producer: Bobby Braddock

[Verse 1]
There a roadhouse just outside of town on a two-lane blacktop
Where all the folks come to hear country music play
And every year the city's getting closer, Lord knows it won't stop
And old Hank the bartender gave us the bad news today, yeah he said

[Chorus]
This land was our land but Lord now it's their land
And we're still here, but not for long
So let's raise a cold one and play all the old ones
Still we've sung the last country song

[Verse 2]
There's 300 acres of cotton corn and a little bit of gravel
All bought up by a builder from downtown
Tomorrow when the earth starts a-shaking and the walls start to rattle
A big bulldozer's going to take Hank's roadhouse down, so everybody sing

[Chorus]
This land was our land but Lord now it's their land
And we're still here, but not for long
So let's raise a cold one and play all the old ones
Still we've sung the last country song

[Bridge]
Will we play "Swinging'" or "He Stopped Loving Her Today"
It's really sad to see it end this way

[Chorus]
This land was our land but Lord now it's their land
And we're still here, but not for long
So let's raise a cold one and play all the old ones
Still we've sung the last country song

[Outro]
Still we've sung the last country song
Oh we've sung the last country song
Oh we've sung the last country song

Blake Shelton

Blake Tollison Shelton was born June 18, 1976, in Ada, Oklahoma to Richard (used car salesman)and Dorothy Shelton (beauty salon owner). He had a brother, Richie who was killed in an auto accident. The 6'5" country music singer/songwriter/TV personality has been married and divorced twice. First to Kaynette “Katt” Williams. The pair married on November 17, 2003, in the Smoky Mountains and divorced in 2006. Blake married country music star Miranda Lambert on May 14, 2011, and they split in 2015.

Blake was in two or three pageants starting when he was six or seven years old. He sang “Cat Scratch Fever” by Ted Nugent and “Old Time Rock

‘n Roll” by Bob Seger.