Introduction

Vince Gill’s “Go Rest High on That Mountain” is one of those rare country songs that seems to hold people up in their hardest moments. He began writing it after the death of his friend Keith Whitley in 1989, then finished it in 1993 after losing his brother, Bob—two losses that shaped the song’s soul and purpose.

Released as a single on August 28, 1995, “Go Rest High on That Mountain” quickly became a modern standard and a touchstone at funerals, memorials, and quiet nights of remembrance. Even with its success, Gill often said it felt just a little incomplete—as if the story needed one more turn to close the circle.

The “missing” piece: a third verse (2019)

In 2019, during a performance at the Ryman (one of his Christmas shows with Amy Grant), Gill unveiled a third verse—a few tender lines that deepen the song’s message of reunion and peace. For years, fans could only hear that extra verse live; it was never on the original recording.

 

 

New today (Sept 12, 2025): the extended version

To mark the song’s 30th anniversary, Vince has finally recorded and released an extended version that includes the third verse. It arrived on September 12, 2025, giving listeners the most complete version of “Go Rest High” he’s ever shared.

Why this matters

Songs tied to real grief tend to evolve as their writers do. By adding the third verse and committing it to tape three decades later, Gill acknowledges that mourning—and the hope we find inside it—doesn’t end on a release date. It grows with us. The extended version also celebrates the song’s endurance: “Go Rest High on That Mountain” is now RIAA double-platinum, a status few meditative ballads ever reach.

Where to hear it

You can listen to “Go Rest High on That Mountain (Extended Version)” on major platforms now, including YouTube and Spotify.

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You Missed

THE SONG THAT WASN’T A LYRIC—IT WAS A FINAL STAND AGAINST THE FERRYMAN. In 2017, Toby Keith asked Clint Eastwood a simple question on a golf course: “How do you keep doing it?” Clint, then 88 and still unbreakable, gave him a five-word answer that would eventually haunt Toby’s final days: “I don’t let the old man in.” Toby went home and turned that line into a masterpiece. When he recorded the demo, he had a rough cold. His voice was thin, weathered, and scraped at the edges. Clint heard it and said: “Don’t you dare fix it. That’s the sound of the truth.” Back then, the song was just about getting older. But in 2021, the world collapsed when Toby was diagnosed with stomach cancer. Suddenly, “Don’t Let the Old Man In” wasn’t just a song for a movie—it was a mirror. It was no longer about a conversation on a golf course; it was about a 6-foot-4 giant staring at his own disappearing frame and refusing to flinch. When Toby stood on that stage for his final shows in Las Vegas, he wasn’t just singing. He was holding the line. He sang that song with every ounce of breath he had left, looking death in the eye and telling it: “Not today.” Toby Keith died on February 5, 2024. But he didn’t let the “old man” win. He used Clint’s words to build a fortress around his soul, proving that while the body might fail, the spirit only bows when it’s damn well ready. Clint Eastwood gave him the line. Toby Keith gave it his life. And in the end, the song became the man.