Before Ne-Yo ever set foot in Nashville with a new creative mission in mind, he had already been talked out of expecting a warm reception. The warnings came from multiple directions. People in his circle told him the city was cliquey, resistant to outsiders, and not particularly open to artists who did not come from within its own tradition.
He went anyway, and what he found was the opposite of everything he had been told.
The 46-year-old R&B artist, born Shaffer Smith, opened up about his experience in Music City during a recent podcast appearance, describing how everyone he has worked with there has welcomed his artistic direction without hesitation. The curiosity has been genuine, he said, with collaborators wanting to understand how his background in R&B and the country sound can be fused into something that feels real rather than forced.
It is not entirely new territory for Ne-Yo. He traveled to Nashville over a decade ago to work on a collaboration with country star Tim McGraw, and he attended the CMA Awards for the first time last year, later calling the experience an unqualified success.
What drew Ne-Yo to country music in the first place
The pull toward country did not come from a calculated career move. It started with the music itself and the qualities that set the genre apart from nearly everything else on the commercial landscape.
Ne-Yo pointed to the storytelling tradition of classic country as the thing that first captured his attention. The lyrics, he said, have a specificity and emotional honesty that he does not hear as often in contemporary music. Dolly Parton’s Jolene became a touchstone for him precisely because of how nakedly human it is. The song does not posture or perform confidence. It is a plea, raw and unguarded, from someone afraid of losing the person they love.
That kind of vulnerability, Ne-Yo suggested, has become rarer in music broadly. Artists today, he said, tend to project invincibility. A song built entirely around admitting fear and insecurity runs against that grain, and that is exactly what makes it timeless. He also cited Reba McEntire, Garth Brooks, and Clint Black among the artists whose work helped shape his understanding of what the genre can do at its best.
How Ne-Yo describes his own country-influenced sound
Ne-Yo has been careful about how he frames what he is making. He does not describe himself as a country artist, and he does not think the label would be appropriate given where he is in this process. What he is making, in his own framing, is country-inspired music rooted in his own artistic identity.
That distinction matters to him. It reflects both humility about entering a tradition with deep roots and an honest acknowledgment that what he is building draws from country without attempting to replicate it. The goal is a genuine fusion rather than a costume.
A career built on genre-spanning range
Ne-Yo released his debut album in 2006 and followed it with a string of records that established him as one of the defining voices in contemporary R&B. His second album earned him a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary R&B Album, and his collaborations over the years have included work with some of the most prominent artists in music.
The move toward Nashville represents a new chapter rather than a departure. It is the kind of artistic risk that tends to either confuse people or quietly make sense once the music arrives. Based on everything he has described about his time in the city and the reception he has received there, Ne-Yo seems confident it will be the latter.

