Hero: A Second Wind
Maren Morris
Hero: A Second Wind is the 10th‑anniversary deluxe edition of Maren Morris’s breakthrough major‑label debut, Hero, originally released in 2016 and widely praised for its blend of country, pop, and sharp, witty songwriting. Issued in June 2026 on CD, double vinyl, and streaming, the expanded set takes the original 11‑track album—featuring hits like Sugar, Rich, My Church, I Could Use a Love Song, 80s Mercedes, and Second Wind—and adds a generous slate of material from the era. In addition to previously released bonus cuts Bummin’ Cigarettes, Company You Keep, and Space, Hero: A Second Wind includes two “vault” songs, We Can’t Be Friends and Hard Liquor and Soft Rock, plus demo versions of Sugar, Company You Keep, I Wish I Was, and Drunk Girls Don’t Cry, nearly doubling the length of the original record.
The concept behind Hero: A Second Wind is to give fans a fuller picture of the creative world around Morris’s debut—the songs she wrote but initially held back, and the rougher demo takes that reveal how her ideas first took shape. The new tracks lean into her mix of Texas drawl, genre‑fluid production, and wry storytelling: Hard Liquor and Soft Rock plays with the tension between traditional country signifiers and pop‑rock gloss, while We Can’t Be Friends extends the breakup‑and‑boundaries themes that run through Hero. The demos strip away some polish to highlight Morris’s voice and pen, underscoring why Hero earned Grammy nominations and pushed her from Nashville upstart to one of country‑pop’s defining figures; in this expanded form, the album feels like both a celebration of that moment and a more intimate, behind‑the‑scenes look at how those songs came to life.
Hero: A Second Wind is the 10th‑anniversary deluxe edition of Maren Morris’s breakthrough major‑label debut, Hero, originally released in 2016 and widely praised for its blend of country, pop, and sharp, witty songwriting. Issued in June 2026 on CD, double vinyl, and streaming, the expanded set takes the original 11‑track album—featuring hits like Sugar, Rich, My Church, I Could Use a Love Song, 80s Mercedes, and Second Wind—and adds a generous slate of material from the era. In addition to previously released bonus cuts Bummin’ Cigarettes, Company You Keep, and Space, Hero: A Second Wind includes two “vault” songs, We Can’t Be Friends and Hard Liquor and Soft Rock, plus demo versions of Sugar, Company You Keep, I Wish I Was, and Drunk Girls Don’t Cry, nearly doubling the length of the original record.
The concept behind Hero: A Second Wind is to give fans a fuller picture of the creative world around Morris’s debut—the songs she wrote but initially held back, and the rougher demo takes that reveal how her ideas first took shape. The new tracks lean into her mix of Texas drawl, genre‑fluid production, and wry storytelling: Hard Liquor and Soft Rock plays with the tension between traditional country signifiers and pop‑rock gloss, while We Can’t Be Friends extends the breakup‑and‑boundaries themes that run through Hero. The demos strip away some polish to highlight Morris’s voice and pen, underscoring why Hero earned Grammy nominations and pushed her from Nashville upstart to one of country‑pop’s defining figures; in this expanded form, the album feels like both a celebration of that moment and a more intimate, behind‑the‑scenes look at how those songs came to life.
Hero: A Second Wind
Maren Morris
Hero: A Second Wind is the 10th‑anniversary deluxe edition of Maren Morris’s breakthrough major‑label debut, Hero, originally released in 2016 and widely praised for its blend of country, pop, and sharp, witty songwriting. Issued in June 2026 on CD, double vinyl, and streaming, the expanded set takes the original 11‑track album—featuring hits like Sugar, Rich, My Church, I Could Use a Love Song, 80s Mercedes, and Second Wind—and adds a generous slate of material from the era. In addition to previously released bonus cuts Bummin’ Cigarettes, Company You Keep, and Space, Hero: A Second Wind includes two “vault” songs, We Can’t Be Friends and Hard Liquor and Soft Rock, plus demo versions of Sugar, Company You Keep, I Wish I Was, and Drunk Girls Don’t Cry, nearly doubling the length of the original record.
The concept behind Hero: A Second Wind is to give fans a fuller picture of the creative world around Morris’s debut—the songs she wrote but initially held back, and the rougher demo takes that reveal how her ideas first took shape. The new tracks lean into her mix of Texas drawl, genre‑fluid production, and wry storytelling: Hard Liquor and Soft Rock plays with the tension between traditional country signifiers and pop‑rock gloss, while We Can’t Be Friends extends the breakup‑and‑boundaries themes that run through Hero. The demos strip away some polish to highlight Morris’s voice and pen, underscoring why Hero earned Grammy nominations and pushed her from Nashville upstart to one of country‑pop’s defining figures; in this expanded form, the album feels like both a celebration of that moment and a more intimate, behind‑the‑scenes look at how those songs came to life.
Hero: A Second Wind is the 10th‑anniversary deluxe edition of Maren Morris’s breakthrough major‑label debut, Hero, originally released in 2016 and widely praised for its blend of country, pop, and sharp, witty songwriting. Issued in June 2026 on CD, double vinyl, and streaming, the expanded set takes the original 11‑track album—featuring hits like Sugar, Rich, My Church, I Could Use a Love Song, 80s Mercedes, and Second Wind—and adds a generous slate of material from the era. In addition to previously released bonus cuts Bummin’ Cigarettes, Company You Keep, and Space, Hero: A Second Wind includes two “vault” songs, We Can’t Be Friends and Hard Liquor and Soft Rock, plus demo versions of Sugar, Company You Keep, I Wish I Was, and Drunk Girls Don’t Cry, nearly doubling the length of the original record.
The concept behind Hero: A Second Wind is to give fans a fuller picture of the creative world around Morris’s debut—the songs she wrote but initially held back, and the rougher demo takes that reveal how her ideas first took shape. The new tracks lean into her mix of Texas drawl, genre‑fluid production, and wry storytelling: Hard Liquor and Soft Rock plays with the tension between traditional country signifiers and pop‑rock gloss, while We Can’t Be Friends extends the breakup‑and‑boundaries themes that run through Hero. The demos strip away some polish to highlight Morris’s voice and pen, underscoring why Hero earned Grammy nominations and pushed her from Nashville upstart to one of country‑pop’s defining figures; in this expanded form, the album feels like both a celebration of that moment and a more intimate, behind‑the‑scenes look at how those songs came to life.
