
Hit songwriter J.T. Harding is just a city boy, born and raised in South Detroitâjust like is says in Journeyâs âDonât Stop Believinâ,â a band that comes up later in our hour-long conversation at Nashvilleâs Crema coffee shop. Weâll get to that in a minute. But first, a little more about J.T.âs city-boy mentality, which is a big reason you wonât necessarily hear about dirt roads or Mason jars in the country songs he pens. J.T. writes what he knows, and since moving to Music City from L.A. about four years ago, itâs proven quite successful.
J.T. has co-written hits for Keith Urban (âSomewhere In My Carâ), Kenny Chesney (âSomewhere With Youâ), Blake Shelton (âSangriaâ), Jake Owen (âAlone With Youâ) and more. Fresh off of scoring his fifth No. 1 tune as a songwriter, Dierks Bentleyâs âDifferent for Girls,â J.T. sat down with Nash Country Daily over a cup of java to talk about 5 Songs He Wishes He Had Penned.
âThinking about this topic, I just realized thereâs kind of a link between the songs I like: a lot of them are sad songs,â says J.T. âIâm a very happy-go-lucky guy, which begs the question âDo I like sad songs because Iâm lonely sometimes?â or âAm I a little lonely sometimes because I like sad songs?â Thatâs the questions [laughing]. Iâve been totally overthinking this, but here are my Top 5 today, because Iâm sure it varies depending on the day.â
1. âTeenage Dreamâ
Writers: Katy Perry, Lukasz Gottwald, Max Martin, Benjamin Levin, Bonnie McKee
Artist: Katy Perry
The first time I heard this song, I was driving on the pacific coast in Los Angeles. The album was not released yet, but they played this song and I felt like I could drive my car into the ocean and get on the roof and surf around Malibu. Thatâs how invincible the song made me feel. It was like a teenage dream. The lyrics and imagery are great. I love super catchy pop music. A song that you can hear one time and sing back forever. The bridge is so catchyâthe skin-tight jeans partâthat they do it again at the end. I had never heard a song do that before. I copied that ideaânot the musicâin some of my own songs that I had written, and it finally stuck in the song âSangriaâ that I wrote with Josh [Osborne] and Trevor [Rosen]. I just think âTeenage Dreamâ is the perfect pop single.
2. âThe House That Built Meâ
Writers: Tom Douglas, Allen Shamblin
Artist: Miranda Lambert
Iâm very nostalgic and I drive by my house in Grosse Pointe [Michigan]âwhere I grew upâevery time Iâm back there. My mom used to read Home & Garden magazine and it reminds me of how much my parents loved each other. I had an incredibly happy childhood, and I guess I miss it now, and thatâs where the magic of the song comes in. When I first moved to Los Angeles, sometimes I would feel a little lost and overwhelmed and just like the song says I would come back home. Iâve seen both of the songâs writers, Tom and Allen, sing that at the Bluebird CafĂ© and I truly believe each version could stop an army in its tracks. Thatâs how great it is.
3. âPurple Rainâ
Writer: Prince
Artist: Prince
I would have loved to have written any song on that Purple Rain album. That album was released when I first started going to junior high dances and it justâno pun intendedâit colored my world. It went from black and white to technicolored. It was first when I started moving out of my â80s hair-metal phase. I still love those bands, by the way. The music combined with the movie and the image and the album cover, it was just overwhelming. My buddy, Rich Waller, and I, we werenât old enough yet, but we snuck into the Esquire Theatre to see the movie, and we watched Princeâs hands on the guitar. We ran home to my house after, grabbed my old beat-up guitar and figured out how to play the song. Itâs one of the only cover songs Iâve ever learned how to play. I just felt like we unlocked some kind of secret. On that beat-up guitar and an old drum set with no amplifier, we played that song over and over all weekend. The guitar solo at the end is unreal. Itâs unacceptable that Prince has passed away. A lot of people donât know this, after Price wrote it, he called the keyboard player from Journey, Jonathan Cain, and said something like âI wrote a song and Iâm afraid it sounds too much life âFaithfully.ââ Can I play it for you?â Jonathan listened to it and said something like âI think youâre fine. I think itâs great.â Speaking of, I wish I had written âFaithfullyâ as well. For all you music buffs out there, listen to âFaithfullyâ and youâll hear the seeds of âPurple Rain.â
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vJMTKtY4U8
4. âBorn in the U.S.A.â
Writer: Bruce Springsteen
Artist: Bruce Springsteen

Once again, I wish I had written any song on the Born in the U.S.A. album. âBorn in the U.S.A.â is an 80,000-people, beer-cups-in-the-air anthem, and yet, if you look at the lyrics, thereâs a sadness and a disillusionment in there. The song is only two chords, which most people donât realize, and yet the recording is this blistering assault of drums and keyboards and screaming. Itâs just fantastic. Springsteenâs imagery is the best in the business. You can read the lyrics to his songs like a book. Thereâs a lyric in there: Down in the shadow of the penitentiary / Out by the gas fires of the refinery. Iâve passed a million factories in a million small towns, but I would never think to describe it like that. He just knocks it out of the park. âBorn in the U.S.A.â is just fantastic. Sitting on the table next to me is Born to Run, the autobiography of Bruce Springsteen, which is incredible. Heâs very honest in it. He says that he read a movie script that gave him the song idea for âBorn in the U.S.A.â
5. âHappy Birthdayâ
Writers: Patty Hill, Mildred J. Hill
Artist: Various
Iâm calling an audible, I wish I had written âHappy Birthday,â and not because itâs made so much money. Imagine writing a song that children all over the world sing when they are eating cake and ice cream [laughing]. People of all ages, surrounded by their friends. Computers and technology are re-invented every year. Theyâll be new cars, new everything. But âHappy Birthdayâ will live forever. I tried to do that when I wrote âSmileâ with Uncle Cracker. I was shooting for the moon, and itâs certainly no âHappy Birthday,â but I was trying to write a song that kids and moms and everyone in between would like. Like I said, itâs no âHappy Birthday,â but they say âaim for a bird and youâll hit a tree, aim for the moon and youâll hit a star.â Maybe we hit a star with that one.
Here are a few honorable mentions off the top of my head.
âBoys of Summerâ
Writers: Don Henley, Mike Campbell
Artist: Don Henley
âEvery Breath You Takeâ
Writer: Sting
Artist: The Police
âJumpâ
Writers: Eddie Van Halen, Alex Van Halen, Michael Anthony, David Lee Roth
Artist: Van Halen
YouTube Playlist: 5 Songs Hit Songwriter JT Harding Wishes He Had Penned
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLN8pOcMuK1dgLRqATHnptIOkwHYIr7Cni
photos by Jason Simanek