Songwriter: Casey Beathard Dean Dillon

Producer: Bobby Braddock

[Verse 1]
There she was... laughin', talkin', window shopping with a new guy
An' I'd heard about him... I heard she found him right around when we said goodbye
And I came real close and almost lost my temper
But I bit my tongue, kept my cool, 'cause I remembered

[Chorus]
I don't care, she don't matter
I don't love her anymore, he can have her
I don't know why it slips my mind, I tell myself all the time
Guess I forgot again, for a second there, that I don't care

[Verse 2]
Almost 10:00... should've known his car would still be parked in her drive
Almost pulled in... knocked on her door and gave her a piece of my mind
Oh, but I just kept on drivin' back to my place
Wonderin' why I went so far out of my way, when...

[Chorus]
I don't care, she don't matter
I don't love her anymore, he can have her
I don't know why it slips my mind, I tell myself all the time
Guess I forgot again, for a second there, that I don't care

[Bridge]
I got home the light was blinkin' on that old machine
She said, "My brother's been in town, but he just left, and I miss you. Give me a ring"

[Chorus]
I still care, she's all that matters
I still love her just like always, gotta have her
I never got her off my mind, been hopin' she would call sometime
I know it's late, to be drivin' over there, but I don't care
I don't care

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.