“You’ll Get No More of Me” was written by Hazel Dickens and recorded by Dickens during her productive mid-1980s solo period on Rounder. The recording belongs to Dickens’s mature solo register, working her usual blend of Appalachian-labour material, hard-edged feminist songwriting, and traditional-bluegrass-influenced arrangement.
The lyric is a refusal-and-departure piece: the narrator finally, unequivocally done with a partner who has taken too much for too long, declaring that he will get no more of her time, attention, or affection. The conceit gives Dickens the kind of directness her writing thrived on — not the more conventional bluegrass-female-narrator victim register but a hardened, self-respecting refusal.
Dickens’s hard-edged lead vocal carries the lyric’s controlled anger without overplaying it; the recording’s spare arrangement gives the song its emotional weight. The song works as a moderate-tempo vocal feature in G or A with a clear chorus harmony slot. It belongs to the broader Hazel Dickens canon of pieces written from a woman’s-perspective refusal frame, alongside “Don’t Put Her Down (You Helped Put Her There)” and her labour-folk catalogue.