Country music star Eric Church delivered the 2026 Spring Commencement address at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill this weekend, giving the graduates a heartfelt message about life after graduation, using an out-of-tune guitar as a metaphor.
He told graduates to keep their “six strings” in tune: faith, family, marriage, ambition, community, and individuality. He closed by urging the class of 2026 to “make something worth hearing” and “play your song.”
“Your generation faces a temptation no generation before has ever faced: the temptation to perform for everyone and belong to no one, to be globally visible and locally invisible, to have thousands of followers and no one who actually knows where you live,” he said. “Resist this. Plant yourself somewhere. Put down roots.”
“Build the thing your community needs, even if the internet will never see it. Generosity is not something you do after you make it. It’s how you make it.”
“Social media is going to show you 1,000 versions of a life that looks better than yours. The comparison will be relentless, curated, and a lie dressed up in really good lighting,” he said. “Someone’s comments, someone’s criticism, someone’s cold opinion is going to try to convince you to retune yourself to match what they think you should sound like. Do not let them touch your string. You were made uniquely, wonderfully, distinctly. The world does not eed another cover song — it needs an original.”
“Six strings of life and willingness to keep them in tune. Six principles. Six pillars. When all six are in tune with each other, the chord your life makes is full and resonant and true,” he said. “All six will drift. Not one or two, all six, in their own time, in their own season.”
“Your faith will go quiet when you need it loud. Your family will get complicated in a way only the people who love you most can complicate things. You will go through hard seasons with your spouse. Your ambition will hollow out, and your resilience will wear thin. Your community will start to feel like an obligation, and your world will try to sand down the edges of exactly who you are.”
“This is not failure. This is not weakness. It’s the inevitable, universal experience of living in an imperfect world that doesn’t stop to let us tune up,” he said.
“The difference between a life that sounds like music and a life that sounds like noise is whether you stop and listen,” Church said. “Whether you’re honest enough to hear which string has drifted out of tune, and humble enough to make the adjustment instead of just turning up the volume and hoping nobody notices.”
So, if you’ll indulge me, I want to start with a sound.
You know this sound. It’s a guitar that’s out of tune. Something that almost gets there, that tries but doesn’t. And some ancient, honest part of your brain knows it immediately. You don’t need training to hear it. You just know that sound is the sound of something beautiful that has not been tended to.
Six strings. When all six are in tune, the chords they make can stop a conversation cold, carry a broken person through the worst night of their life, or make a room full of strangers feel, for three minutes, like they’ve known each other forever.
But if even one is off, the whole chord unravels, not gradually, not politely. The moment you strike it, you know.
I believe your life runs on this principle, and I’m going to break it down for you right now and tell you about your strings, OK?
String one, the low E. That is your foundation. The low E is the thickest string. It is the heaviest. Every chord a guitar can make rests on this string being in tune. Your faith is the low E of your life, the thing that sits at the very bottom of you. Your belief about what this life is for, what you owe, what holds the universe together when science reaches the edge of its own explanation and shrugs.
The people who tend to their faith in ordinary seasons do not come undone in extraordinary ones. They still hurt. They still sit in hospital waiting rooms asking unanswerable questions at 3 in the morning. But they have a foundation to return to. The world will try to untune this string through busyness, through slow accumulation of a full schedule, a full inbox, a full life. Listen to me: tend to your faith, not just when you’re broken, but when you’re whole.
String two is family, OK? Look out at these bleachers. Look around. Somewhere in that crowd is someone who has loved you longer than you’ve been easy to love. It’s true.
Someone who saw you at your actual worst, not your public-facing worst, and didn’t leave you. Someone who worked a job they didn’t love to put a book in your hands you sometimes didn’t open. Someone who sat alone in a quiet house and cried the weekend you moved into dorms and wondered, “Have I done enough?” That is family.
And the A string is where the music starts to get warm. It gives a chord its body, its richness. It’s the string that makes you feel like you’re not alone in a room. I want to warn you about something. You’re about to get busy in ways that feel important, and many are: professionally ambitious, creatively alive, building the life you’ve been pointed toward for four years.
And family, because they love you with the grace you will spend most of your life trying to deserve, will rarely demand your time. They’ll tell you they understand, and they’ll mean it.
Do not take them up on it.
Call your people, not when there’s news, but when there’s nothing. Show up when it costs you something. Let them see you when things are hard. The A string is not a holiday string. It’s an everyday string. Protect it.
The D string, the heart of a chord. On a guitar, the D string sits right at the heart of the instrument, in the middle of the low and high strings, giving the chord its body and its soul. Strike a full chord, and the D string is what you feel in the center of your chest.
That is not an accident. That is exactly what the right spouse and partner will do for your life.
The person you choose to share your life with is the most important decision you will ever make outside of your faith. They will either amplify every other string you’re playing or slowly pull the whole instrument into an out-of-tune mess.
Not that I know that. I love you, honey.
Find your best friend, someone you want to talk to at the end of a long day. Look for shared values over shared interests. You don’t need to love the same food or music. You need the same compass, though it would be a benefit if you both hated NC State.
We’ll see.
That wasn’t in the speech. I added it. I’m throwing it in there.
The right partner is the string that makes the whole chord ring fuller and warmer and truer than anything you could ever play alone. Choose them wisely, and then love them fiercely.
The G string. It’s what it’s called. Sorry. I didn’t name the damn thing. That’s just what it is.
The G string drifts faster than the others on a guitar. I can promise you that is true. I have dealt with it my whole life. It’s because ambition and resilience both live on this string, and they pull in opposite directions.
I want you to want things. You should want things. The world has more than enough people standing at the edge of their own potential, waiting for a permission slip that was never going to arrive. Want the thing. Say it out loud. Build toward it with everything you have.
And when you fail, and you will fail, Hemingway wrote it plainly, right in the sternum: “The world breaks everyone. Afterward, the best of us are stronger at the broken places.”
Get back up. Tune the string. Keep playing.
The B string is about community. Your generation faces a temptation no generation before has ever faced: the temptation to perform for everyone and belong to no one, to be globally visible and locally invisible, to have thousands of followers and no one who actually knows where you live.
Resist this. Plant yourself somewhere. Put down roots with the full intention of growing there. Learn the actual names, not usernames, of the people around you. Volunteer. Coach the team. Build the thing your community needs, even if the Internet will never see it. Generosity is not something you do after you make it. It’s how you make it.
And if you get lost, and at some point I promise you you will, you have a place you belong now. Come back. Walk through the quad on a fall day, or sit on Franklin Street on a game day, and remember: “These are my people, because I am a Tar Heel.”
My last tour took me 42,185 miles over North America, and every single night, near and far, someone had on a Carolina flag, a Carolina hat, or a Carolina jersey.
You will find yourselves, speaking from experience, high-fiving strangers wearing Carolina gear in faraway airports, or staying up across time zones to catch the last moments of a game, or canceling a show in Texas to be with your people in the Final Four as you vanquish Coach K.
You’re welcome.
And having the ultimate pride knowing that’s the night my boys learned the Carolina fight song ends with, “Go to hell, Duke.”
True.
Carry this community with you as you plant your roots. It will reap a bountiful harvest and make your song richer and fuller.
And finally, the highest string. This is the thinnest string. It’s the highest note, the one that carries the melody, that single line above the chord that everyone in this room recognizes and takes with them on the way home.
It’s also the one bent most easily by outside pressure. Social media is going to show you 1,000 versions of a life that looks better than yours. The comparison will be relentless, curated, and a lie dressed up in really good lighting.
Someone’s comments, someone’s criticism, someone’s cold opinion is going to try to convince you to retune yourself to match what they think you should sound like.
Do not let them touch your string.
You were made uniquely, wonderfully, distinctly. There’s a sound only you can make, a voice that has never existed before you and will never exist again, a contribution only you can bring, a way of seeing that belongs only to you.
The world does not need another cover song. It needs an original.
Six strings. Six strings of life and willingness to keep them in tune. Six principles. Six pillars.
When all six are in tune with each other, the chord your life makes is full and resonant and true.
All six will drift. Not one or two, all six, in their own time, in their own season. Your faith will go quiet when you need it loud. Your family will get complicated in a way only the people who love you most can complicate things. You will go through hard seasons with your spouse. Your ambition will hollow out and your resilience will wear thin. Your community will start to feel like an obligation, and your world will try to sand down the edges of exactly who you are.
This is not failure. This is not weakness. It’s the inevitable, universal experience of living in an imperfect world that doesn’t stop to let us tune up.
And the difference between a life that sounds like music and a life that sounds like noise is whether you stop and listen. Whether you’re honest enough to hear which string has drifted out of tune, and humble enough to make the adjustment instead of just turning up the volume and hoping nobody notices.
Because you will notice. The part of you that knows what the chord should sound like will always notice. It will not let you go. Life won’t be right until it is tuned. Trust what your heart hears and is telling you about your song.
So graduates, now I encourage you to take your six strings, make it something worth hearing, and play your song as I leave you with mine.
Hang on, hang on. We’ve got to do this the right way. Hang on.
There’s a cabin in a valley
My grandpa built on your land
And your mountains are a canvas
For the Maker’s hand.
Tonight I’m fishing a river
If only in my mind
No, I haven’t seen her banks
In such a long, long time.
I carry you
In my heart
Your memory.
A phone call from my family
Saying, “Honey, I miss you like crazy.”
Yeah, kind of like the sound of a siren song
Calling me home, home, home.
Sometimes I grow weary
Staying on this road all the time
Yeah, I’d love to take a minute
And let your mountains ease my mind.
Yeah, I’d love to see my mama
And she’s in Kenan Stadium tonight
To hear me talk to the ’26 Tar Heels
About love.
Don’t get me wrong
I love what I do
It’s just another song about me
I’m missing you.
A phone call from my family
Saying, “Honey, I miss you like crazy.”
Kind of like the sound of a siren song
Calling me home.
Standing here tonight
I feel right.
You’re like a phone call from my family
Saying, “Honey, I miss you like crazy.”
I like the sound of the siren song
Calling me home.
Congratulations, class of 2026, and go Tar Heels.
