Carson Beyer Slows It Down and Leans All the Way In on “Lovin’ You Yet”
- Mischa Plouffe

- Feb 24
- 2 min read

On his new single “Lovin’ You Yet,” the Nashville-based artist Carson Beyer pivots into something softer, warmer, and more intimate. It is not a rowdy Friday night track or a revenge-coded breakup ballad. It is a slow burn. The kind that lingers in the air long after the song fades out.
Beyer has been steadily building momentum, and this release feels intentional. His breakout hit “Bones” pulled in over 4 million streams on Spotify and positioned him as more than just another rising name in the Nashville pipeline. With “Lovin’ You Yet,” he proves he is not boxed into one lane. Instead of doubling down on grit, he leans into devotion.
The track unfolds with smooth production that wraps around his rich, swelling vocals. Beyer’s delivery has always carried weight, but here it feels more restrained in the best way. Controlled. Focused. Vulnerable. The lyrics capture that suspended moment in a relationship where you realize you are not done falling. Not done choosing the person in front of you. Not done loving them yet.
He describes the song as living in the space of midnight air, candlelight, old records spinning, and two people who are not ready to say goodbye. That atmosphere is embedded in the DNA of the record. It does not rush. It simmers. The instrumentation gives the emotion room to breathe, letting the chorus bloom instead of exploding.
What makes Beyer interesting in today’s country landscape is the blend. Raised on a Kentucky farm but influenced by artists like Justin Timberlake, Chris Stapleton, and Eric Church, he bridges rural storytelling with a subtle R&B smoothness. Recording in Nashville on Music Row and inside the legendary Muscle Shoals studios has only sharpened that hybrid identity.
“Lovin’ You Yet” arrives backed by Lucky Money Entertainment and follows prior editorial support from Spotify and Apple Music, setting the stage for continued streaming growth. But beyond playlists and placements, the real strength of this release is emotional clarity. It feels honest. It feels patient.
In an era where everything moves fast, Carson Beyer dares to sit in the moment. And sometimes, that quiet confidence hits harder than any stadium hook.


