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Kellie Pickler Talks ’100 Proof’: ‘I Put Everything in My Heart on Paper’

By Parade   |  Celeb Stalker, Country  |  January 24, 2012

Audiences were first introduced to Kellie Pickler in 2006 as the lovable, spunky contestant on American Idol.

Since then, the 25-year-old has grown into a bona fide country star. And with her new album 100 Proof in stores on Jan. 24, Pickler is bearing her Southern soul.

Pickler, who wed songwriter Kyle Jacobs on New Year’s Day 2011, talked to Parade.com about her new album, married life, and more.

On her new album, 100 Proof.
“I’m so excited for everyone to hear it. I have never been so infatuated with making a record like I have been with this one. It’s pretty country. I love Tammy Wynette and Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton, they are big reasons why I fell in love with country music, so I kind of pay tribute to them a little.”

On the revealing song, “Mother’s Day,” which she wrote with her husband about her bumpy relationship with her mother.
“Kyle and I wrote that on Mother’s Day, actually. It was kind of like putting everything in my heart on paper. I wrote that song for me, and it was never written to be on the record. I had no intentions of anyone even hearing it. Kyle actually convinced me to sing it for very close songwriter friends of ours and they said I had to put it on the record. It found its place and I’m glad I put it on there.” Read the full story

Posted in Celeb Stalker, CountryComments (0)

Rascal Flatts preps new album for April 3 release

By Associated Press   |  Country, Music News  |  January 19, 2012

The last time Rascal Flatts recorded an album, the trio ditched dreary Music City in the winter for sunny California. This time around they stayed closer to home when recording new album “Changed.” Well, bassist Jay DeMarcus’ home.

“We actually cut the whole thing at Jay’s house, in Jay’s studio,” singer Gary LeVox said. “We mixed it up and did something a little different.”

“Changed” is out April 3 and follows “Nothing Like This,” their sixth straight platinum-selling album and the first with the Big Machine Label Group. Only three other country acts have matched the band’s streak of million-selling albums.

LeVox says the band, which also includes guitarist Joe Don Rooney, believes “Changed” could be Rascal Flatts’ strongest album yet. They hope the Dan Huff-produced record will build on the success of “Nothing Like This,” which spawned their 12th and 13th No. 1 singles and a top five hit. “Banjo,” the first single from “Changed,” has been released to radio.

“It’s really exciting some of the songs we’ve got set to go,” LeVox said. “It’s probably the most really good, up-tempo stuff that maybe we’ve ever had pitched to us. And we wrote some really good stuff. … I think it’s musically at even another level.”

Posted in Country, Music NewsComments (0)

Rounding up the South Florida Fair’s country music

By Janis Fontaine   |  Country, South Florida Fair  |  January 11, 2012

The Eli Young Band, performing on Jan. 25, had one of 2010's biggest country hits with 'Crazy Girl'.

The South Florida Fair talent bookers seem to have a sixth sense about who is on the verge of being next year’s big star. In years past, Luke Bryan, Lady Antebellum and Blake Shelton have performed at the South Florida Fair.

For country performers, earning a spot on the festivals and fair circuit is the first step in the career-building process. But fairs also bring out veteran performers whose careers exist along the periphery of country music, and this year is no different.

Here’s a primer on this year’s acts:

John Anderson, 7:30 p.m. Friday

Native Floridian John Anderson’s most enduring composition may be “Seminole Wind”, the song he wrote about his beloved state, even if his signature song is “Swinging” — the lighthearted smash single that won a CMA award, and catapulted Anderson to the CMA Horizon Award winner.

Aaron Lewis, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday

OK, so he’s really a rocker. The front man and lead singer of the band Staind offered up a solo country crossover single, “Country Boy”, a year ago. The political tune featured George Jones, Charlie Daniels and Chris Young. It got played on country radio, and the video made its mark, too.

John Michael Montgomery, 7:30 p.m. Jan. 19.

The younger brother of Eddie Montgomery (Montgomery Gentry) was a mainstay on country radio in the ’90s, with two dozen Billboard singles under his belt. It all started with the classic “Life’s a Dance” in 1992. He cut one of the most popular wedding songs ever (“I Swear”) and the tongue twisting “Sold (The Grundy County Auction Incident)”. Other memorable contributions include “Be My Baby Tonight”, “I Love the Way You Love Me” and “The Little Girl”. He released his 10th studio album Time Flies in late 2008.

Colt Ford, 7:30 p.m. Jan. 24

You can call him Jason Farris Brown or Mr. Dirt Road Anthem. The former professional golfer performs under the stage name Colt Ford. He’s a country spoken-word artist whose appeal seduces bonafide artists including Tim McGraw and Luke Bryan into singing on his tracks. But his biggest contribution to country music comes as the co-writer on the Jason Aldean super-song, “Dirt Road Anthem”. Ford’s highest charting song to date is 2010’s “Cold Beer”, a duet with Jamey Johnson.

Eli Young Band, 7:30 p.m. Jan. 25

First of all, there’s no one named Eli Young in the band. Founders Mike Eli and James Young celebrated big with bandmembers Chris Thompson and Jon Jones when Billboard named their first No. 1 single “Crazy Girl” Country Song of the Year for 2011. It was the first single off their fourth album, Life at Best, and the second single, “Even If It Breaks Your Heart”, is climbing the charts now. It’s an autobiographical tune about not giving up on your dreams.

Posted in Country, South Florida FairComments (0)

Singing surfers play the Speakeasy in Lake Worth

By Janis Fontaine   |  Country, Folk, Music, Music Feature  |  November 21, 2011

William Kimball’s parents raised him to be a free spirit, so it was hardly surprising when he became a professional surfer and began touring the world.

But Kimball’s lifelong love of music has taken him on a new kind of tour: Kimball joined forces with another singing surfer, three time world champion Tom Curren, and their eight-stop Florida tour lands at the Speakeasy in Lake Worth on Wednesday.

As the story goes, in 1994, Kimball went to see Curren, one of his surfing heroes, perform in Pompano Beach. Whether he just jumped on stage or was invited is in dispute. What isn’t is this: Kimball closed the show with Curren, and boarded Curren’s tour bus the next day as a member of the band.

That kind of course correction would be impossible for many of us. But for Kimball, a kid who had tremendous personal freedom and unwavering support since childhood, the life of a modern day vagabond seemed perfectly natural.

“My father is the reason I am who I am,” Kimball said by phone from Orlando about his father, Terry Kimball of Jupiter. “He got me interested in surfing and diving at a young age, and he gave me my first guitar. He always encouraged me to follow the things I was passionate about. I was fortunate to have parents that said ‘Go for it.’”

His love of music came mostly from his mother, Nina Kimball of Juno Beach.
“My mom would always sing to the radio in the car,” Kimball said. “I used to lean forward from the backseat so I could hear her. Her voice was so good she could have had a career as a singer, but she put it all aside to bring up us kids.”

So it was natural that some of Kimball’s musical influences — Cat Stevens, Simon and Garfunkel, Peter, Paul and Mary — come from that era when his mother chose what got played on the car radio. Later, Kimball would discover his own vocal heroes.

“I learned how to sing from The Police Outlandos d’Amour. I’d sing it over and over again. Then, Queen and Ozzy Osborne. A weird mix. But classical music inspired me too: Mozart, Haydn, Brahms.”

Growing up near the beach, Kimball fell in love with the ocean early. “We were 7 or 8 years old, out on our bikes riding around all day. We’d catch all our own food, crab and sand perch, and cook it outside. We’d camp out for the weekend.” He made up his first song — Fred the Frog on the Log — around that age, but he was 19 before he wrote his first serious song.

Kimball continued playing music, bouncing around stylistically from rock to rap to punk, but in private, he was writing songs he calls his “songs at the end of the bed.” They’re the songs he wrote for himself, to make sense of the things on his mind. Kimball never planned to sing those songs in public, but a friend heard them and convinced him to get them out there. So, Kimball, now 41, released Along for the Ride, in September, with 11 songs at the end of the bed. Now that they’re out, they seem to have their own momentum.

This summer, Kimball found himself in Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., playing music in Carly Simon’s barn with Simon and Ben Taylor, Simon’s son with James Taylor. When Simon played Kimball’s song Sorry to him, he marveled at the legs his music had grown. Then, he got a call asking if they could use the title cut in the Sarah Jessica Parker movie, I Don’t Know How She Does It.

“Just another one of those things,” Kimball said. “It’s crazy. They got a hold of the CD and they liked the music.”

The music is homespun and sweet, acoustic and guitar-driven, lyrical and introspective. “I’ve had people say, I can’t quite call you country, but I can feel what’s being said, like a country song.”

The similarity is more that both Kimball and country music draw from the same pool: the folk/pop singer songwriters of the ‘60s and ‘70s — James Taylor, Jackson Browne, Elton John, Dan Fogelberg, even the Beatles.  

“I start with a melody,” Kimball explains. “I’ll play the music and all of the sudden I’ll hear something and I’ll just sing whatever comes out. It’s like painting with a brush that’s just doing its own thing. I’m fortunate enough to have an open channel I can tune into, and these words, I don’t know where they come from, just come. They’re personal and they’re from me, but they’re not about me.”

Kimball is nothing if not modest, so he finds it out of character to talk about himself, but otherwise the life of a musician suits him. But some things take a little getting used to. “The craziest thing about it might be that people want my autograph!”

If you go:
Tom Curren with special guest William Kimball
When: 10 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 23
Where: Speakeasy Lounge, 129 N. Federal Hwy, Lake Worth
Info: (561) 791-6242; speakeasylakeworth.com.

Posted in Country, Folk, Music, Music FeatureComments (0)

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Taylor Swift returns to South Florida for one more enchanting evening

By Kate Dingle   |  Country, Live Shows  |  November 15, 2011

Taylor Swift performs at American Airlines Arena. (Christina Mendenhall / rhythmscene.com)

Taylor Swift is one of those artists that no one seems to hate. When it comes to her music, age, sex, race, and religion seem to not matter. Everyone can relate in one way or another to her songs of love and heartache.

Sunday night, Swift brought her “Speak Now” tour back to the Sunshine State for one final night of enchantment.

As 12,500 fans packed themselves into the American Airlines Arena in Miami, the country cross-over cutie did what she does best. She told her stories. And although Taylor’s stories were the main act of the night, also front and center were the hundreds of homemade t-shirts and handwritten signs with the number 13 and “T Swizzle” written on them. Throughout the two hour set, fans sung along with every word the 21-year-old singer sang; often times drowning out the very artist they paid to see.

Photos: Taylor Swift @ American Airlines Arena | Visit this writer’s website

Regardless, it was quite clear that fans are at the top of the list for Miss Swift. Cameras were constantly pointed at the screaming fans to display their images on the huge video screen onstage, and at one point, the mega-star exited the stage and walked through the crowd. She seemed to stop and say “hi” to everyone who stuck their hands out to get a piece of her.
Read the full story

Posted in Country, Live ShowsComments (9)

The song’s the thing for Taylor Swift, Kimberly Perry at CMAs

By Associated Press   |  Awards, Celeb Stalker, Country  |  November 10, 2011

Though still largely the domain of men, triumphs by Taylor Swift and The Band Perry at the Country Music Association Awards show that the young women of country music are finding their voices and shoving the boys out of the way.

Swift won the CMA’s entertainer of the year for the second time Wednesday night, Kimberly Perry of sibling act The Band Perry took home song of the year and two other awards with her brothers, Neil and Reid. Add in wins by Miranda Lambert, Lady Antebellum and Sugarland, and the songwriting strength of today’s country girls is undeniable.

“When Taylor won entertainer I secretly sang (Beyonce’s) ‘Who runs the world? Girls,’ to Blake,” Lambert said after she and husband Blake Shelton repeated as male and female vocalist of the year. “I’m just really happy that females are starting to be very prominent and it is the female singer-songwriter.

“It’s so cool that Kimberly wrote song of the year by herself. And that’s a dream of mine. I’m just so happy the girls were really celebrated tonight.”

Celebrated like rarely before. Swift became the second woman to win entertainer of the year twice, joining Barbara Mandrell, and she did it by the age of 21.

“To win it twice is like the coolest thing ever happening to me twice,” Swift said backstage. “I’m freaking out right now.”

Read the full story

Posted in Awards, Celeb Stalker, CountryComments (0)

Jason Aldean: My Tour Is Like a Traveling Frat Party

By Parade   |  Celeb Stalker, Country  |  November 04, 2011

WALTER SCOTT ASKS…Jason Aldean

The singer, 34, is up for five Country Music Association Awards, including Entertainer of the Year and Album of the Year. The show airs Nov. 9 on ABC (8 p.m. ET).

You went through some rough patches before hitting it big. What kept you from quitting?
“Playing music was all I wanted to do. I didn’t think I would be happy doing anything else. And I had a lot of support from family.”

Take Our Country Music Quiz

Will you bring any good luck charms to the CMA Awards ceremony?
“My wife—that’s about it!”

You’ve been touring for most of the year. What do you love about it?
“Performing is my favorite part of all of this. I love getting on a bus and hanging out with the guys in the band. It’s like a traveling frat party.”

Are there any quirky requests on your tour rider?
“For a while I had golf balls on there. I would go through 10 balls a round [playing on the road]. I’d just lose them, and I got tired of going to buy more.”

Related Content from Parade.com

Posted in Celeb Stalker, CountryComments (0)

Aldean, Zac Brown Band lead ACA nominations

By Associated Press   |  Awards, Celeb Stalker, Country  |  October 13, 2011

Jason Aldean and the Zac Brown Band are the lead nominees for the American Country Awards.

The two rising country music acts received eight nominations apiece, including the second-year award show’s top honors, artist of the year and album of the year.

Thompson Square is next with seven nominations apiece for the fan-voted awards. The Band Perry and Taylor Swift each have six. Swift is an artist of the year nominee with Kenny Chesney and Lady Antebellum rounding out the category.

Voting opened Thursday morning at the ACA web site. Fans can vote once a day until Nov. 11 in all categories except artist of the year, which closes Dec. 2.

The show airs live Dec. 5 from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Trace Adkins and Kristin Chenoweth host.

Posted in Awards, Celeb Stalker, CountryComments (0)

Surprise! Rascal Flatts invited to join Opry

By Associated Press   |  Country, Music News  |  September 28, 2011
Rion Morgenstern

Image by Roebot via Flickr

Country music supergroup Rascal Flatts is the latest member of the Grand Ole Opry.

The trio was surprised with the news Tuesday night during their performance on the Opry. Twenty-year Opry member Vince Gill made an unscheduled appearance, interrupting singer Gary LeVox, bassist Jay DeMarcus and guitarist Joe Don Rooney mid-performance.

The men had tears in their eyes and the crowd gave them a standing ovation.

Rascal Flatts is the top-selling country group of the last decade. The trio joins a recent slate of longtime stars invited to join, including Blake Shelton and The Oak Ridge Boys.

Opry membership is among the highest honors for a country musician. It comes with an ambassador-like commitment to the history of the genre and a requirement to perform at least 10 times a year.

Posted in Country, Music NewsComments (1)

Paisley’s party hits all the right notes

By Janis Fontaine   |  Concert Reviews, Country, Live Shows, Music  |  September 11, 2011

Brad Paisley performs at the Cruzan Amphitheatre. (Andrew Nathanson / GatorProduction.com)

Brad Paisley’s fingers danced along the slender necks of his guitars, sometimes with the rhythmic fury of the best tapdancer, sometimes with the grace and precision of a prima ballerina. One after another, he coaxed every soung possible from those instruments.

And that’s just what Paisley the guitarist does.

There’s also Paisley the singer, whose ability is often overshadowed by his stringsmanship and his big personality. Case in point, his performance of Remind Me, his duet with the ethereal Carrie Underwood. Performing that challenging vocal alongside the reigning queen of country music — and America’s favorite Idol — has definitely improved the strength of Paisley’s voice.

Photos: Brad Paisley, Blake Shelton and Jerrod Niemann perform at the Cruzan Amphitheatre

Then there’s Paisley the entertainer. During Paisley’s H2O II Tour at Cruzan Amphitheatre in West Palm Beach Saturday night, Paisley made several forays into the audience to get closer to the fans, anything to make his show –- even in the largest venue, I’d guess -– a more intimate experience. Paisley has never depended on a lot of special effects but he does have dozens of video screens – at least 60 I’d say – and he uses them well. We’re always treated to some of Bradimation and on an extended version of the western riff, Eastwood, we saw tons of it. (And a little homage to Folsom Prison Blues.)

Paisley has never lacked confidence or enthusiasm, two very important qualities in a star. But he’s been able to achieve that while still revealing his vulnerability in love songs like She’s Everything, and he encouraged the guys in the audience to ‘get it done’ with this song. Right on cue, couples started dancing in the aisles.

If you go to a Brad Paisley concert to hear 15 songs all about the same thing, you’ll be disappointed. I think the most interesting thing about Paisley – and maybe about country music – is its social conscience. Country music is full of ‘teaching,’ and it’s a kissing cousin to Christian music, as Paisley admits in This is Country Music. And Paisley asks us to think about things: About Alcohol, about Celebrity, and of course about fishing and women. I’m Gonna Miss Her got some of the biggest cheers of the night.

But so did When I Get Where I’m Going, one of the most spiritual songs ever written. Paisley always shows photos of people we’ve lost during this song, and not just people we’ve lost recently. I’m sure Dale Earnhardt, who always draws a huge reaction from the crowd, will always be part of the montage. But when we saw the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center as the final shot, and this concert taking place on the eve of the 10th anniversary, prolonged cheering and chanting of USA filled the amphitheatre’s pocket.
Read the full story

Posted in Concert Reviews, Country, Live Shows, MusicComments (3)

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