Texas just reminded the world why it will always be the beating heart of country music.
The Texas Heritage Songwriters’ Association has announced that George Strait and Miranda Lambert will be inducted into the Texas Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2026, alongside Don Cook and the late Keith Gattis. For fans who care about where the soul of country lives, this lineup is nothing short of holy ground.
Let’s start with Strait. The King has long been the face of Texas country, the man with 60 No. 1 singles, 27 chart-topping albums, and over 113 million records sold. Yet critics have spent decades knocking him for not writing his biggest hits. Truth is, George never needed to prove himself with a pen. He’s the man who could take a Dean Dillon song, wrap his baritone around it, and turn it into scripture. But in the 2000s, Strait quietly leaned into songwriting, crafting songs like “Living for the Night” and “I Believe” with his son Bubba and longtime friend Dillon. Strait himself admitted, “For a lot of years, I put songwriting on the back burner. I had so much luck finding great material from other writers that I got lazy about it. Writing, for me, is not easy.” That humility says it all. Even the King had to grind.
Then there’s Lambert, the firebrand who has spent two decades proving she’s one of the sharpest pens in Nashville or anywhere else. Her catalog speaks for itself: “Tin Man,” “Vice,” “Over You,” “Heart Like Mine,” and deep cuts like “Pushin’ Time” that remind you why she’ll go down as one of country’s fiercest truth-tellers. She called the honor “a huge honor, especially alongside my hero George Strait,” and pointed back to her father as her first co-writer, the man who taught her to play guitar. In true Miranda fashion, she made it clear that this isn’t just about accolades. It’s about carrying forward the Texas grit that built her.
The class of 2026 also includes two men who shaped the soundtracks of countless country lives. Don Cook’s fingerprints are all over Brooks & Dunn’s run of hits, including “Brand New Man” and “You’re Gonna Miss Me When I’m Gone.” He’s written for Alabama, Charley Pride, Conway Twitty, and even Strait himself, racking up twenty No. 1 hits. His name may not be plastered across marquees, but without Don Cook, the ’90s country boom would have sounded a whole lot different.
Keith Gattis, gone too soon after his passing in 2023, will be honored posthumously. Gattis was a songwriter’s songwriter, the kind of guy who could hand George Strait “I Got a Car” or Randy Houser “What Whiskey Does” and then go write for Willie, Chesney, or Lambert without blinking. His songs carried that unmistakable Texas DNA, straightforward, aching, and built for the long haul. His induction is bittersweet, but it’s right.
Strait, Lambert, Cook, and Gattis will be formally inducted on February 21, 2026, at ACL Live in Austin during the 20th annual Texas Songwriters Hall of Fame Awards. The ceremony will be another reminder that while Tennessee may be where the industry lives, Texas is where the bloodline of country songwriting runs thick.
And let’s not miss the bigger picture. Country music has plenty of flash-in-the-pan stars who ride a wave of hits somebody else wrote. What Texas is honoring here isn’t just commercial success. It’s storytelling, conviction, and voices that last. Strait may not have written “Amarillo by Morning,” but when he sang it, he owned it. Lambert may have co-written “Tin Man,” but when she bled it out onstage, you knew it came from a place only she could reach. That’s the Texas way.
Legends write, legends sing, and legends make damn sure the truth cuts through. In 2026, Texas will raise a glass to four of them.