Ashley Cooke: Behind the Mic and the Music

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Ashley Cooke: Behind the Mic and the Music

When Ashley Cooke took over co-hosting Backstage Country with Elaina Smith, she didn’t just bring her songs; she brought the stories behind them. Turns out, behind every track is a piece of her and personal experiences: love, heartbreak, and calling someone on their BS.

Ashley Cooke Songs

'The Hell You Are'

Ashley Cooke - the hell you are

Smith asked Cooke when she thinks is the perfect time to release a song, in this case, her single "The Hell You Are." The Florida native admitted, “This is like a different chapter for me. It's a different era. It's kind of like my song, ‘Your Place.’ If ‘Your Place’ had a cousin that's a little sassier and a little more sure of herself, this is ‘The Hell You Are.’"

She chuckled, “I don't wanna say the actual word that I'm thinking because I'm on the radio, but it's calling somebody out for their BS, if you will. It's the country phrase of ‘The Hell You Are,’ but there's a cool twist at the end of the song. It's a special song for me.”

'Your Place'

Ashley Cooke - your place (Official Music Video)

Cooke shared how her first number-one hit, “Your Place,” changed her life. “This song really changed my life in a lot of different ways. I mean, obviously, as an artist getting your first number-one song, it changes the rooms that you're in and the opportunities that you're given. It changes a lot career-wise, like just the amount of things that you have access to after that first number-one.”

She added that the song also changed her personal life: “It changed a lot about how I thought about decision-making. I don't know if you know the backstory to this, but ‘Your Place’ was a song that I loved and believed in, but my team wasn't super, super passionate about off the beginning, off the jump.”

She chuckled, “And I just remember, I'm a very indecisive person. I've always been very indecisive and have a hard time making decisions. I love to survey people. I love to ask a lot of questions and get opinions. And this song was one that I didn't care what the opinion was. I just was like, ‘This is a smash.’ This song, I believe in and I love it and I feel it. And the crowds that came to my headline shows, they believed it, and they sang it.”