Kelly Clarkson Just Gave Country Music Another Gut Punch of Soul — And It Came Wrapped in a Cody Johnson Cover
Kelly Clarkson’s voice could probably melt pavement on a 100-degree day in Amarillo. So when she took on Cody Johnson’s “When It Comes To You,” it wasn’t just another Kellyoke segment—it was a masterclass in emotional storytelling, and a reminder that her name still commands respect in any genre she touches.
No autopilot, no fluff. Clarkson sank her teeth into the song like she lived it. Every lyric landed heavy, like it came from her own backstory. If you didn’t know better, you’d swear she wrote it herself after a smoky, soul-searching night in a Texas roadhouse.
The original, written by Jeremy Bussey and Tony Lane, might not have topped the charts like some of CoJo’s other work, but “When It Comes To You” has always been a slow-burning standout—a quiet, aching confessional buried inside Human: The Double Album. Clarkson knew exactly what to do with it. She didn’t gloss it over. She dove headfirst into the heartbreak and came up dripping with grit and grace.
And let’s be honest—it’s not her first rodeo. Kelly’s flirted with country more than once, famously teaming up with Jason Aldean on “Don’t You Wanna Stay,” snagging ACM wins and a Grammy nod. She’s done jaw-dropping tributes to “Tennessee Whiskey,” “The Dance,” and “I Will Always Love You.” Each one showed why she’s got the kind of pipes most singers in Music City would trade their boots for.
But this one? This hit different.
“When It Comes To You” isn’t built for flashy notes or arena fireworks. It’s a still, painful kind of song—the type you feel more than hear. And Clarkson respected that. She didn’t over-sing it. She let the silence breathe. She let the ache do the talking. That kind of restraint, that kind of control, is rare. Nashville should take notes.
Let’s not forget—Clarkson’s also been one of the only big voices to publicly call out country music’s recent identity crisis. Back in 2019, she didn’t mince words: “Country music is gone… now it’s weird word-rap.” And yeah, she had a point. Which is why it’s no small thing to see her return again and again to artists like Cody Johnson. Earlier this year, she crushed a cover of “’Til You Can’t.” Clearly, something about CoJo’s music speaks to her—maybe that same sense of honesty and fire that country used to live by.
So will Kelly Clarkson ever fully cross into country? After this performance, it feels less like a hypothetical and more like a countdown.
Because country music doesn’t just need big voices. It needs big hearts. And with this cover, Clarkson didn’t just sing a song. She reminded everyone what real country feels like.