Chancey Williamsâ new hit song âThe Ballad of Uncle Donâ has hit No. 1 on the CMT Music charts and came about over cup of coffee and chewing the fat with his uncle in Moorcroft, Wyoming.
âMy Uncle Don and my dad were both great bronc riders,â the country music star told Cowboy State Daily. âGrowing up, we kind of idolized them.â
Because of those role models, Williams rode broncs himself for years in high school and college before turning to music for his career. He retained his love for bronc riding and enjoys listening to his uncle share feats of daring from a bygone era.
âThey are historical stories that I don't want to get lost,â Williams said. âI just tend to set my phone down and record him.â
It was one such story that Uncle Don shared while drinking coffee with his nephew that inspired Williams to write his latest hit song.
That ode isnât just a pure Wyoming cowboy tale, it embodies the spirit of the cowboy way.
âThe Ballad of Uncle Donâ
Don Williams had shared a story from his youth that especially caught his nephewâs imagination. He related how a stranger had passed through Moorcroft bragging about a horse he had in Oklahoma that nobody could ride.Â
Donâs dad, nicknamed Wild Horse Charlie, shook his head at this notion. He knew someone that could ride any horse and told this stranger, âMy boy can ride him. Bring him up here.â
âThey didn't think he would but a couple months later, this guy shows up with this horse,â Williams said. âHe thinks that nobody can ride him.â
Don made a deal. If he could ride the horse, he got to keep him. If he was bucked off, he would give the stranger $500.
The bet was made and Don won, so he loaded his new horse into the back of his pickup.
âIt was such a cool story,â Williams said. âSomething that you can't really make up.â
It was later in Nashville that Williams was writing one weekend with his producer and another songwriter. They were trying to come up with something to write about, so Williams played the recording of his uncle Don telling the story. Â
âThey're like, âOh my God, that is so cowboy,ââ Williams said. âLet's write that.â
The resulting song, âThe Ballad of Uncle Don,â has been No. 1 on the countdown show CMT Music 12 Pack for three weeks in a row. Williams has been competing for this spot against other singers such as Kenney Chesney, Melissa Ethridge and Jason Aldean. It has also been downloading more than 1 million times from Pandora.
âIt's unbelievable,â Williams said. âIt just made it super special because it is a personal song about my uncle.â
Video Shoot In Moorcroft
The music video of the song is also completely authentic.
Kenzie Holmberg of BonaFide Cowboy had been creating social media for Chancey Williams and was an experienced photographer. Since he liked her work, Williams talked Holmberg into shooting and editing the music video for âThe Ballad of Uncle Don.â  Â
Holmberg had never shot a music video before but, after some convincing, was willing to give it a try. They decided to shoot the video on location in Moorcroft and drove up to the small town for three days.Â
The scenes of Chancey with his guitar were shot in his familyâs barn and the scenes with Uncle Don drinking coffee, swapping stories and walking around were all shot on Donâs ranch.
âI now have my own wonderful stories from Uncle Don,â Holmberg said. âIt was like sitting there and talking with my own grandparents. I loved it and felt like I was transported back in time. That was all it took for me to get the vision for the video.â
Holmberg credits the storyline for the reason the music video is being received so well by Williamsâ fans. The bonus was when she discovered that they had actual footage of Don Williams from his bronc days.
âChancey had mentioned that his aunt had just digitized all of these old recordings of his uncle,â Holmberg said. âI was like, are you serious? This is such a rarity to have this.â
Delighted with the find, Holmberg used the actual footage of Don riding saddle broncs from the 1950s and 1960s. She credits this rare old film footage and the powerful storyline with the success of the music video.Â
âIt was such a cool song to put together and I kept telling Chancey that there is something about this that people are just going to fall in love with,â she said.Â
Reaching No. 1
âThe Ballad of Uncle Donâ premiered six weeks ago at the National Finals Rodeo. It was then picked by CMT as a contender for its â12 Packâ show. The top song is voted on by fans, which Williams said is why he feels so honored to have topped the list for the past three weeks. Â
âOur fans outvoted some of the biggest artists in country music,â Williams said. âCarrie Underwood's on there and Cody Johnson and everybody. So I was like, âWow.ââ
He has been encouraging his fans to keep voting on the CMT Music website so that they can retain their status as No. 1.Â
âYou can vote as many times as you want each day,â Williams said. âI think our fans are just really going to town on the voting, which is neat because it shows CMT and the music business how engaged our fans are.â
âMiles On Meâ
On Friday, Williams released his latest music video, âMiles On Meâ, which Holmberg once again shot and produced.
âWhile âThe Ballad of Uncle Donâ is definitely just a literal story, âMiles On Meâ is more artsy,â Williams said. âIt features scenes of me just driving and kind of thinking about my past. It just felt right.â
Holmberg enjoyed the freedom she had in shooting this latest music video although she was on a tight timeframe for the actual production. She filmed the video in two days of driving around Laramie and had three days to edit.Â
âWe just have fun,â she said. âThey've just been natural and candid, and it just sometimes feels too easy.â
As for the song itself, Williams said that he instantly connected with it when it was pitched to him. âMiles On Meâ was written by Nashville songwriter Tom Douglas and is about life on the road.Â
âIt is the kind anybody can relate to it,â Williams said. âIt is for all of us that's traveled on the road.â
Holmberg shot the video of Williams driving his van at night around Laramie. There is no actual storyline but more of a vibe that is being created.
âItâs more subjective and it's kind of hard to explain,â Williams said. âWe shot this video of me daydreaming and thinking back about all the things that I've done. All the miles that I've traveled.âÂ
Showcasing The Real Wyoming
The goals for both Williams and Holmberg for the music videos are to show off the real Wyoming and not the Hollywood version.
âThere's a lot of videographers and photographers out there that are great, but if you don't have that eye for what we are, which is cowboys from Wyoming, they can miss on the vision,â Williams said.Â
âI think the reason why we've been a great pair is both of us have very similar values in the sense of we just want things to be authentic,â Holmberg agreed. âWe want to showcase who we are.âÂ
As âThe Ballad of Uncle Donâ continues to grow in popularity, Williams said his Uncle Don is also enjoying the song and its message.
âHe's kind of a quiet, humble old cowboy,â Williams said. âHe's told me that he appreciates the song and that it is quite a tribute.â
Contact Jackie Dorothy at jackie@cowboystatedaily.com

Jackie Dorothy can be reached at jackie@cowboystatedaily.com.