
Riley Green Wrote a Song About Loss and Loyalty — and Put His Grandfathers in the Credits
When Riley Green released I Wish Grandpas Never Died, listeners heard a song that felt personal from the first line. It was simple, honest, and full of the kind of memories that can stop someone in their tracks. But there was something else tucked beneath the title that made the story even more meaningful: the writing credits included Riley Green, Buford Green, and Lendon Bonds.
Riley Green wrote the song himself, but the people named beside him were not strangers. They were his grandfathers. By the time the song reached the world, both men were gone, yet their influence was still alive in every image Riley painted with his words.
The Family Life Behind the Song
The heart of I Wish Grandpas Never Died comes from the kind of upbringing that shapes a person long before fame ever enters the picture. Riley Green grew up around porch swings, family land, old country records, respectful manners, and the steady rhythm of small-town life. These were not just background details. They were the values that helped build the voice behind the song.
Granddaddy Buford Green played a major role in that foundation. He introduced Riley to classic country voices like Hank Williams, Merle Haggard, and Roy Acuff. He also encouraged Riley to sing while he played guitar, creating the early musical spark that would eventually carry Riley onto stages across America.
Why the Credits Matter
Songwriting credits usually tell a practical story, but in this case they tell something much deeper. Riley Green did not include Buford Green and Lendon Bonds because they sat in a Nashville writing room. He included them because the life inside the song came from them.
The world saw three songwriters’ names. Riley Green saw two men who helped write the man he became.
That choice turned the song into more than a tribute. It became a quiet act of gratitude. Riley was not just singing about the past. He was honoring the people who gave him his sense of home, his respect for tradition, and his understanding of what really matters.
A Song That Felt Personal to Millions
What made I Wish Grandpas Never Died resonate so deeply was its honesty. The song speaks to wishes many people have felt at one time or another: wishing good dogs could stay forever, wishing old memories could last longer, wishing family land and simple joys could be protected from time.
Riley Green turned those feelings into a song that sounded like a conversation with the people who raised him. And by placing Buford Green and Lendon Bonds in the credits, he made sure their influence was seen, not just heard.
A Lasting Tribute
In the end, the song is not only about grief. It is about inheritance, memory, and the kind of love that keeps showing up long after someone is gone. Riley Green gave his grandfathers a place in the writing credits because they had already earned a place in his life and in his music.
That is what makes the story so moving. Behind one of Riley Green’s most talked-about songs is a simple truth: sometimes the people who shape an artist never stand onstage, but they still help write the song.