I need an acoustic version of this song the way I need air.
Riley Green’s duet with Ella Langley, Don’t Mind If I Do, continues to be one of those songs that just hits every single time. The track — which also serves as the title cut from Riley’s 2024 third studio album Don’t Mind If I Do — has already proven itself at country radio, previously climbing all the way to No. 1 on the Billboard U.S. Country Airplay chart. It even crossed over beyond the genre, peaking at No. 23 on the all-genre Billboard Hot 100.
And honestly? It’s easily one of the standout songs on the entire record.
There’s just something different that happens when Riley writes a song completely on his own. Tracks like “Jesus Saves” and “I Wish Grandpa’s Never Died” are proof of that, and the backstory behind “Don’t Mind If I Do” makes it even more interesting — especially when you learn it didn’t start out as the emotional gut-punch it became.
Riley shared the story during an interview with Katie Neal on her Katie & Company radio show, revealing he wrote the song backstage in Rogers, Arkansas.
“I was in the green room in Rogers, Arkansas. I had played a show at the Walmart amphitheater,” Riley explained. “There’s a Topgolf right next door, and I had a bunch of buddies from Arkansas at the show. They were all heading over there, and I remember thinking, yeah, I’ll send them that way so I can have a little peace and quiet.”
Once the room cleared out, inspiration hit.
“I sent everybody to Topgolf and stayed back in the green room to write,” he said. “My security guard kept popping in to check on me, and I kept telling him, ‘I’m good.’”
At the time, Riley was working with a slower guitar riff, and when he paired it with the phrase “don’t mind if I do,” the song came together naturally.
“I’d had the idea for a while,” he said. “At first, I thought it was going to be more of a fun, beer-drinking kind of song — like, ‘don’t mind if I do, I was out last night.’ That’s how I originally pictured it.”
But once he leaned into a different angle, everything shifted.
“I was playing this little guitar lick and thought, how cool would it be if ‘don’t mind if I do’ was about answering that call from an ex, or whatever that temptation is,” Riley explained. “Once I went down that road, it was a really easy song to write.”
He also pointed out that it was the first duet he’d ever written without having a female artist involved during the writing process — which led to an interesting challenge.
“It’s kind of strange writing a female perspective into the chorus at the end,” he admitted. “But I thought that was pretty cool.”
And cool doesn’t even begin to cover it. The song is a near-perfect country duet, and earlier on Instagram, Riley shared a stripped-down acoustic version that I simply cannot stop replaying.
I’ve said it a thousand times, but Riley Green with nothing but an acoustic guitar is peak Riley Green. Which honestly makes me question — yet again — why a studio acoustic version didn’t make it onto his Midtown Sessions EP.
You can watch the acoustic performance here, but fair warning: once you hear it, you’ll probably have it on repeat all day too.
“Don’t Mind If I Do.”
