Released: October 20, 2017

Featuring: Charles Kelley Luke Bryan Jason Aldean

Songwriter: Kevin Kinney

Producer: Ross Copperman

[Intro]
1,2

[Verse 1]
I grew up just west of the tracks
Holding me to hold me back
Around your door
She's calling out my name
She she said son, won't you go outside, I got a man coming over tonight
The seventh one in seven days
So I go down to the parking lot
And hang around all my friends
And roam the streets 'til dawn
Breaks again
I come in at 5 AM
And she is waiting for me
She said, "Where have you been?", I said, "I was out!"
She said, "You're no good cause you're running without love"

[Chorus: Darius Rucker, Jason Aldean & Charles Kelley, Jason Aldean]
And I'm going straight to hell
Just like my momma said
I'm going straight to hell (to hell, woohoo)
I'm going straight to hell
Just like my momma said
I'm going straight to hell
Oh and I'm gonna burn it down, baby

[Verse 2: Luke Bryan, Charles Kelley, Darius Rucker, Luke Bryan, Charles Kelley & Darius Rucker]
The black widow and the ladies man
Met down at the laundromat
And tried to make me understand
The neighbors were all in a stir
About what they might have heard
And runnin' down they shouted out
So it seemed
Next door, a girl she lived
About the same age as me
And asked me to come upstairs
For a see
And just then, her mother bursts in
And said, "You're the son of that bitch in the wind
Get out of my house and hit the road"
And I kept falling like a Rolling Stones' song

[Chorus: Luke Bryan, Charles Kelley & Darius Rucker]
'Cause I'm going straight to hell
Just like my momma said
I'm going straight to hell (oh straight to hell)
I'm going straight to hell
Just like my momma said
I'm going straight to hell

[Break]
Aww shuck boys

[Verse 3: Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean, Charles Kelley, All]
The stars came out
And warned me so
As I walked on down the road
Fifty bucks and a suitcase steered me clear
She took my hand as we walked into the sun
A new day's promise had just begun
We'll make it alone whether you like it or not
And I turned around and shouted "Help me momma!"

[Chorus: All, Darius Rucker, [?]]
'Cause I'm going straight to hell
Just like my momma said
I'm going straight to hell
'Cause I'm going straight to hell
Just like my momma said
I'm going straight to hell
Alright boys sing it one more time
Oh yeah, I'm going straight to hell
Just like my momma said
I'm going straight to hell

[Outro]
(Oh Lord help us
Yeah I'll bring the whiskey boys
Y'all taking me with ya
Help me Jesus, help me Jesus, we all are
Oh)

Darius Rucker

Darius Rucker (born May 13, 1966) is an American musician. He first gained fame as the lead singer and rhythm guitarist of the rock band Hootie & the Blowfish, which he founded in 1986 at the University of South Carolina along with Mark Bryan, Jim “Soni” Sonefeld and Dean Felber. The band has released five studio albums with him as a member, and charted six top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100. Rucker co-wrote the majority of the band’s songs with the other three members

He released a solo R&B album, Back to Then, in 2002 on Hidden Beach Recordings but did not chart any singles from it. Six years later, Rucker signed to Capitol Records Nashville as a country music artist, releasing the album Learn to Live that year. Its first single, “Don’t Think I Don’t Think About It”, made him the first African American to chart a number one on the Hot Country Songs charts since Charley Pride in 1983. It was followed by two more number-one singles, “It Won’t Be Like This for Long” and “Alright” and the number three “History in the Making”. In 2009, he became the first African American to win the New Artist Award from the Country Music Association, and only the second African American to win any award from the association. A second Capitol album, Charleston, SC 1966, was released on October 12, 2010. The album includes the number-one singles “Come Back Song” and “This”