
As two of the soon-to-be inducted newest members of the Country Music Hall of Fame, the timing couldn’t be better to celebrate the influence of Ronnie Dunn and Kix Brooks.
In 1990, then-Arista Nashville leader Tim DuBois saw something in two young singer-songwriters—Ronnie, an Oklahoma native with a sturdy, gospel-inflected voice, and Kix, a potent stage performer and vocalist hailing from Louisiana. Both fine songwriters, as evidenced by two tracks they penned within a week of meeting each other: “Brand New Man” and “My Next Broken Heart.”
By 1991, “Brand New Man” would earn the newly-minted duo Brooks & Dunn their first No. 1 single, with “My Next Broken Heart” becoming their second chart-topper.
The reaction from country radio—and country listeners—was immediate. Brooks & Dunn’s first four singles all reached the pinnacle of the country charts. “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” a groovy 1992 track seemingly custom-made for neon-lit honky-tonks and dusty dancefloors, revitalized line dancing across the U.S. and became an enduring classic for the duo.
Though Brooks & Dunn were put together, by the mid-’90s, it was hard to imagine them apart.
Brooks & Dunn earned the CMA Vocal Duo of the Year honor for eight consecutive years from 1992 through 1999—and followed with six more consecutive wins in the category from 2001-2006. Along the way, they amassed 20 No. 1 hits, two Grammys, and more than 30 million in album sales, and became known as two of the hardest-hitting live entertainers in country music.
In September 2010, the duo ended as they began, wrapping their Last Rodeo tour with a rendition of their debut single “Brand New Man,” before a sold-out crowd at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena.
Now, nearly three decades after their first chart hit, Ronnie Dunn and Kix Brooks are witnessing—and collaborating with–a whole new generation of artists influenced by their music.
Brooks & Dunn’s upcoming album, Reboot (out Friday, April 5), marks the first studio album from the duo since 2007’s Cowboy Town.
The album’s genesis came from B&D manager Clarence Spalding—along with some inspiration from Luke Combs and Kacey Musgraves.
“Somebody sent me a clip of Luke Combs doing ‘Brand New Man’ with a couple of his band guys. He was wearing Brooks & Dunn gear, that was real flattering,” Dunn tells MusicRow, settling in beside Brooks for an interview at a barn on Dunn’s property just south of Nashville, decorated in the familiar western tones often seen on the duo’s videos and stage production.
“And Ronnie sent me a copy of a version of ‘Neon Moon’ that Kacey Musgraves was doing,” Brooks adds.
“Of course, we already had a group of people covering our songs—Keith Urban was opening some shows with ‘Brand New Man,’ and now it’s morphed to another group. So, we’re three musical generations down from where we were, in a way.” Brooks says.
Spalding took notice of the cover choices, and the ‘90s country influence nestled in the sounds of artists like Combs, Midland, Jon Pardi, and Cody Johnson, all of whom are part of the Reboot project.
“It happened quickly,” Brooks says. “[Clarence] made one phone call. He said, ‘If I don’t hear back from them today, I’m going on down the line.’ And it happened like that. He’d call back and go, ‘Got ‘em, bam.’ ‘Got ‘em, bam.’”
“I wish I had thought of it,” Dunn quips.
Rather than lifting the duo’s s pre-recorded vocals from previous albums, or recording vocals separately and having them digitally added to the mix, Ronnie and Kix recorded each collaboration live in the studio.
“I think the first day of recording was with Luke [Combs] on ‘Brand New Man,’” Brooks says. “That same day, I think we recorded with Jon Pardi and Kane. We got like four cuts that day.”
Thomas Rhett guests on “My Maria,” a cover of a 1970s B.W. Stevenson hit that earned Brooks & Dunn their second Grammy in 1996. Brooks made the request to have Ashley McBryde collaborate on a sparkling version of “You’re Gonna Miss Me When I’m Gone.” Musgraves brought her full band into the studio, adding some sultry disco undertones to “Neon Moon.”
“She had a very definite idea of how she wanted to approach the song,” Dunn recalls. “And Kacey is as far out into that realm that we ventured.”
“Ain’t Nothing ‘Bout You” gets a slow burn treatment courtesy of Brett Young, while Cody Johnson offered a stripped down acoustic rendition of “Red Dirt Road.”
Other tracks, such as Midland’s take on “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” and Jon Pardi’s “My Next Broken Heart,” hew closer to the original, by design.
“Jon’s a Sacramento boy and worked for his dad’s construction company,” Dunn notes. “He’s the one who walked in and said, ‘I want it done exactly like the record. I don’t want anything to deviate. That is what influenced me and that is what I like to do.’ So he was spot on with it.”
They called on producer Dann Huff, who has produced on albums for several of the artists involved with Reboot, as well as Megadeth, Keith Urban, LeAnn Rimes, Bon Jovi, Tim McGraw, Rascal Flatts, Reba, Taylor Swift and numerous others.
“It was fun,” Brooks says. “Dann said his greatest challenge was…he kept saying, ‘I’ve had more anxiety over this project than anything, just due to the fact that I feel like I need to honor the original versions, but at the same time give them a subtle twist.’”
“They have a nickname for Dann in music, they call him the sniper,” Dunn says. “Any time someone needs a project done within budget and within a certain amount of time, he can do it. And you’re having to herd a lot of cats for a project like this. He’s a great organizational wizard.”
Most of the artists selected their own favorite B&D song to cover. One of the most startling was Kane Brown’s choice of the 2005 hit “Believe,” which served as a visceral showcase for Dunn’s rich voice.
“That’s one of the most challenging vocals for me to do,” notes Dunn. “The second he walked up to the mics, we were facing each other, there was no set way to do it, we were just going to start singing and try to swap off and see what happened. I heard him sing and the whole room got quiet. He has the chops.
“He wasn’t competitive at all, he just slid in there and did his own thing in a really cool way. I think Dann said, ‘Well, when Ronnie’s singing that high stuff at the end, whatta you wanna try to do about that?’ And Kane said, ‘Let Ronnie sing that high stuff!’ I remember talking to Dann after the recording and he was like, ‘That’s that thing I’m wanting people to see about Kane. He’s got it.’”
“I don’t think any of us have seen that side of Kane,” Brooks says. “So he’s stepping right into this song that’s going to be a challenge as a singer more than anything else.”
Brothers Osborne’s improvisational rendering of “Hard Workin’ Man” amplifies its soul and pride, turning the blue-collar tribute into a guitar-thrashing, blues-soaked embodiment of those giving work (and life) their all. For Brooks & Dunn, the track just might be the most full-circle take of any on the album.
“Kane brought up that Brothers Osborne liked to do this ‘70s hippie stoner kind of thing, with elongated leads and instrumentals and stuff. And we’re going, ‘that’s right where we came from.’ Back in the day we were listening to that stuff, grew up on it.”
Given the star power and high-octane collaborations, one might naturally presume an all-star concert or more music from the superstar duo could be on the way. Dunn says no plans for more B&D collaborations are in the works for either at the moment, aside from the Country Music Hall of Fame induction later this year, several Vegas shows and a handful of festival dates. Earlier this year, the duo made a surprise appearance during Kacey Musgraves’ Ryman show, joining her on “Neon Moon,” and say more surprise appearances with their Reboot cohorts are possible.
“We are taking it one step at a time. We never say never…it’s like the mafia. It keeps pulling you back in,” Dunn says.
Opry Entertainment Launches Video Series “The Write Stuff”
/by Jessica NicholsonOpry Entertainment Group is set to launch their newest video series “The Write Stuff,” offering insight into the biggest hits for country’s top stars, as well as exclusive Opry performances. In the coming weeks, episodes of “The Write Stuff” will take deep dives into a number of songs including Little Big Town’s groundbreaking hit “Girl Crush.”
“We just didn’t think it was a song someone would cut,” recalls “Girl Crush” co-writer Lori McKenna, who penned the song with her “Love Junkies” co-horts Hillary Lindsey and Liz Rose. “It just seemed like such a personal thing. We didn’t even know if it made sense. It made sense to us because we were all there when it happened but we didn’t know if someone else coming in for the first time would get it right away.”
Other episodes will highlight songs from Lee Brice, Hunter Hayes and RaeLynn.
“We wrote ‘Boy’ because I was pregnant,” recalls songwriter Nicolle Galyon of Brice’s 2017 hit. “I was 39 weeks pregnant and it was my last day to write. This song was really more of a stream of consciousness. We literally wrote it from first line to last line.”
“From the Grand Ole Opry stage to our backstage dressing rooms, we have been fortunate to hear firsthand so many moving stories behind these songs,” shares Sally Williams, SVP of Programming & Artist Relations for Opry Entertainment and General Manager of the Grand Ole Opry. “It is with those moments in mind that ‘The Write Stuff’ was created as part of our continued efforts to preserve the heritage and origins of these great contributions to American music.”
Watch the first episode, highlighting “Girl Crush,” below:
Industry Ink: AIMP, Nashville Pride Festival, T.J. Martell Foundation
/by Jessica NicholsonAIMP Nashville Tracks Performance Trends
Pictured (L-R): AIMP Nashville Board Members Shannan Hatch (SESAC), Michael Martin (ASCAP), and Tim Hunze (ole); AIMP Nashville Vice President Ree Guyer (Wrensong); Barry Massarsky (Massarsky Consulting Inc.); AIMP Nashville President John Ozier (Reservoir Media); Brad Peterson (Regions); AIMP Nashville Board Member Mark Brown (Round Hill Music); and AIMP Nashville Treasurer Dale Bobo (Big Deal Music)
The AIMP Nashville event “Trends in Country Performance Income That You Need to Know!” took place on April 2, at the CMA offices in Nashville. Hosted by Barry Massarsky, President of Massarsky Consulting Inc, the event covered current trends in country performance income and what those lifecycle events look like based on chart position. Attendees discussed an array of topics with Massarsky, who is a recognized economic expert in the evaluation of PRO earnings and in the formal valuation process for music transactions.
Performers Announced For Nashville Pride Festival
1990’s R&B group TLC will headline this year’s Nashville Pride Festival, set for June 22-23 at Public Square Park in downtown Nashville. The event will also include performances from Neon Trees, Madame Gandhi, Cakes Da Killa, Brandon Stansell, and Brody Ray.
Nashville’s own LGBTQ+ artists will be well represented on the festival’s multiple stages, with performances from Taco Mouth, The Blam Blams, Myylo, Spazz Cardigan, Mikala Jones, Jess Coppens, Adam Mac, Shelly Fairchild, Houston Kendrick, Sisters Mann, DJ Remedy, DJ Chris Spear, DJ Aazera, and many more. Rounding out the lineup will be national talent Joy Oladokun, Kate Yeager, and more.
T.J. Martell Foundation Young Professionals Advisory Council To Present Fourth Annual Bed Race Nashville
The T.J. Martell Foundation Young Professionals Advisory Council (YPAC) will present the fourth annual Bed Race Nashville on May 7, 2019 with kickoff at 5 p.m. The event benefits cancer research and netted over $70,000 last year. Team registration is now open at bedracenashville.com.
CCM Artist And Ragamuffin Band Founding Member Rick Elias Dies
/by Jessica NicholsonRick Elias, a founding member of late CCM artist Rich Mullins’s A Ragamuffin Band, died Tuesday, April 2, following a battle with cancer. He was 64.
Elias was born Jan. 7, 1955 in San Diego, California. He attended Azusa Pacific University. After playing in bands including Harlequin, Vision, and the Rick Elias band, he moved to Los Angeles in 1984 and later signed with Alarma Records in 1990, to release the album Rick Elias and the Confessions; the single “Confession of Love” reached No. 4 on the Christian Top 40 chart.
From 1993 until 2002, Elias worked as a founding member of Mullins’s A Ragamuffin band. He also wrote and produced music that was included in movies such as That Thing You Do!, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, Dawsons Creek and more. He produced artists including Mullins, Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith, Aaron Neville and others, and released four solo albums.
A benefit concert was held for Elias in February in Franklin, Tennessee to raise money for medical expenses. The concert featured performers from the original 1998 The Jesus Record, including Elias, Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith, and A Ragamuffin Band (Elias, Mark Robertson, Jimmy Abegg, and Aaron Smith). The Jesus Record had been scheduled as the ninth release from Mullins, before his untimely death in 1997. His foundation, A Ragamuffin Band, and record company determined to move forward with recording the project in his honor, alongside guest artists who were his friends. The project included two discs; Disc One — the nine rough song demos recorded by Mullins, and Disc Two — the studio version of the same songs, produced by Elias.
In addition, Elias’s work has received awards and nominations from the Gospel Music Association, The United Catholic Music and Video Association, and the Nashville Music Awards.
After relocating to Nashville, Elias became an adjunct instructor at the Contemporary Music Center in Brentwood, Tennessee, teaching music business classes, as well as becoming a real estate agent.
He is survived by wife Linda Tollner Elias. Together they have four children, sons Graham Griffith, Zack Elias and Taylor Elias, and daughter Amber Elias Gould (husband Hamilton Gould, and their two children).
Funeral information has not been released at this time.
Keith Whitley’s Career Illuminated In New Country Music Hall Of Fame Exhibit
/by Lorie HollabaughKeith Whitley’s brief life and legendary career will be the focus of a new Country Music Hall Of Fame And Museum exhibition “Still Rings True: The Enduring Voice of Keith Whitley,” opening May 3, 2019.
Whitley completed only four solo studio albums before his death in 1989, at age 33, but despite the brevity of his career, he produced many significant country hits, and his music continues to exert tremendous influence on subsequent generations of country singers. Many of the groundbreaking artists who expanded country music’s audience in the 1990s—including Country Music Hall of Fame member Garth Brooks, Country Music Hall of Fame member Alan Jackson, Alison Krauss and Tim McGraw cite Whitley as a primary influence. His impact continues into the new century, through the work of acolytes Dierks Bentley, Blake Shelton, Chris Young and others.
Items featured in “Still Rings True: The Enduring Voice of Keith Whitley” include stage wear, significant instruments and personal artifacts representative of Whitley’s childhood and music career. Some highlights include:
“Whitley’s haunting and emotional voice represented the resurgence of the traditional sound on mainstream country radio,” said Kyle Young, CEO, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. “His bluegrass roots and love for honky-tonk music led to his unique, drawling style that continues to inspire and influence today’s country music artists. We are honored to examine the indelible impact of Whitley’s brief but significant career.”
Russell Dickerson Celebrates RIAA Multi-Platinum Certification
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Norbert Nix, Russell Dickerson, John Dennis
Russell Dickerson is celebrating his first multi-Platinum certification with his No. 1 single “Yours,” off the full-length debut album by the same name. “Yours” is also nominated at Sunday’s ACM Awards, for Song of the Year. Dickerson penned the song alongside Parker Welling and Casey Brown.
The hit has earned over 297 million worldwide streams to date, and Dickerson followed it with his sophomore No. 1 “Blue Tacoma.” His current single “Every Little Thing” is approaching Top 30 now. Next, he joins Thomas Rhett on the road for the Very Hot Summer Tour, kicking off next month.
“This is a huge week for us with ‘Yours’ hitting double Platinum and going into ACM’s week with a Song of The Year nomination,” said Dickerson. Adding, “‘Yours’ really is the song that could. It still just keeps on surprising us!”
iHeartMedia Files For IPO
/by Jessica NicholsonTexas-based iHeartMedia Inc. has filed for an initial public offering with the SEC to list its Class ‘A’ common stock, after more than 10 years of private ownership. The news comes as the company prepares to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization it entered a year ago.
The filing does not include the number of shares or price, but includes a placeholder amount is $100,000,000.
The company owns 848 live broadcast stations, and estimates that it reaches 275 million listeners each month.
“Radio continues to offer consumers something different in the form of curated, personality-led audio,” the company stated in the filing. “The medium is able to offer influencers a word-of-mouth style conversation, which propels audience engagement and connection in a very effective way.”
Additionally, iHeart offers digital broadcasting and 20,000 live events per year, and is embracing newer popular technologies such as podcasts.
iHeartMedia acquired Stuff Media in 2018; Stuff Media includes the “Stuff You Should Know” program, which became the first podcast to reach the 500-million download mark on Apple Podcasts.
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are listed currently as underwriters to iHeart’s IPO. Read the full filing here.
Big Machine Music Promotes Michelle Attardi
/by Jessica NicholsonMichelle Attardi
Big Machine Music has promoted Michelle Attardi to Director, Publishing. Joining BMM in 2017, Attardi will continue to represent the independent music publisher’s songwriters including Brandy Clark, Jonathan Singleton, Laura Veltz, Josh Thompson and Jessie Jo Dillon, among others.
BMM General Manager Mike Molinar commented, “Michelle is everything you can hope for in a publisher: great ears, passionate and aggressive. She is a wonderful advocate for our writers, while also supporting so many creatives in our community.”
“I’m thankful to represent such an incredible roster of songwriters and proud of all this team is accomplishing together,” said Attardi. “I’m so grateful to be surrounded by some of the most talented creatives in the world and continue my pledge to support their dreams and do my part in enabling their potential. A sincere thanks to Mike Molinar and Scott Borchetta for their continued confidence and support.”
Attardi can be reached via michelle.attardi@bigmachinemusic.net and 615-846-7739.
Rockabilly Hall Of Fame Member Billy Adams Passes
/by Lorie HollabaughKentucky Roots Rock pioneer and Rockabilly Hall of Fame member Billy Adams died on March 30, 2019 at Westmoreland Care and Nursing Home in Westmoreland, Tennessee. He was 79.
Willie Murray Adams, professionally known as Billy Adams, was born in Redbush, KY on March 6, 1940. Adams’ music was birthed in the hardscrabble existence of Appalachia. His father worked as a coal miner in the Van Lear coal mine and his mother was a housekeeper and cared for their 13 children. Adams was influenced by artists such as Bill Monroe, Jimmie Rodgers, the Carter Family, Merle Travis and Moon Mullican. He first performed on radio in 1952 at WCMI in Ashland, KY. In early 1954, after hearing Elvis Presley on the airwaves, Adams organized his first band, The Rock & Roll Boys and soon changed their name to The Rock-A-Teers.
During his musical career, Adams wrote and recorded the seminal Rockabilly classic, “Rock, Pretty Mama,” released on independent label Quincy Records in 1957. The original 45 RPM single is a highly sought-after and valuable collector’s item. The master recording has been released on numerous major label “Best Of” compilations, including the 2003 Sanctuary/BMG album, Rockabilly Riot, which included songs from superstar artists such as Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison and others.
Adams recorded several other Rockabilly and Rock ‘n’ Roll songs in the late ’50s that have gone on to become cult classics, including “You Heard Me Knocking” and “True Love Will Come Your Way,” released on Dot Records, and “You Gotta Have A Duck Tail,” “Walking Star,” “Return of the All American Boy,” “That’s My Baby,” “Blue Eyed Ella” and “The Fun House” for indie label, Nau-Voo Records.
By the late 1980s, Adams’ songs from the ’50s began to resurface on MCA, Bear Family, Ace Records and others, spurring a renewed interest in his music. Unfortunately, another recording artist named Billy Adams died in 1984 and many people confused the two. Surprised by the revival of his music and undaunted by the news of his “early demise,” he was motivated to realize a long-held dream when he recorded at the legendary Sun Studios and released his critically acclaimed Rockabilly comeback album, Legacy, in 2000. In 2002, Sanctuary Records of London released the 27 track career-spanning compilation, Billy Adams – Rockin’ Thru The Years. These releases garnered critical acclaim and opened doors for him to perform at SXSW and other prestigious music festivals across America and the U.K. in the final years of his life.
On July 9, 1961, Adams married Freda Louise Riffe and had three daughters, Tina Maria, Teresa Louise, and Janetta Darlene. In 1965, he received his calling into the ministry. This was a watershed time of creativity for him as a writer of gospel and country music and for the next 20+ years he wrote and recorded a massive body of work, including the Top 10 gospel hit “I Saw The Man” for the Happy Goodman Family. For several decades he toured the country by bus with his family band, spreading the gospel as an Evangelist and aiding in humanitarian efforts for people in need. Billy also became a Kentucky Colonel during this time and later an ordained Bishop.
Adams lost his wife, Freda, to cancer in 2007, and he married Sue Justice in 2010. Adams was preceded in death by his parents Charlie and Sarah Adams, daughter Teresa Williams, brother Charles and Wayne Adams and sisters Darcus Massie, Dixie Cooper, Opal Stanford, Dorothy Holbrook, Lillian Harris, Susie Traylor, and Carolyn Jones. He is survived by his wife Sue Adams of Portland, TN, daughter Tina Adams of Spring Hill, TN, daughter Janetta and son-in-law, Kelly Blevins of Argillite, KY, granddaughter, Hannah Kellene Grace Blevins, sisters Stella Jones and Sue Jenkins of Greenup, KY and Diana Clark of Flatwoods, KY.
Brooks & Dunn Discuss Collaborating With A New Generation Of Talent On ‘Reboot’ [Interview]
/by Jessica NicholsonAs two of the soon-to-be inducted newest members of the Country Music Hall of Fame, the timing couldn’t be better to celebrate the influence of Ronnie Dunn and Kix Brooks.
In 1990, then-Arista Nashville leader Tim DuBois saw something in two young singer-songwriters—Ronnie, an Oklahoma native with a sturdy, gospel-inflected voice, and Kix, a potent stage performer and vocalist hailing from Louisiana. Both fine songwriters, as evidenced by two tracks they penned within a week of meeting each other: “Brand New Man” and “My Next Broken Heart.”
By 1991, “Brand New Man” would earn the newly-minted duo Brooks & Dunn their first No. 1 single, with “My Next Broken Heart” becoming their second chart-topper.
The reaction from country radio—and country listeners—was immediate. Brooks & Dunn’s first four singles all reached the pinnacle of the country charts. “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” a groovy 1992 track seemingly custom-made for neon-lit honky-tonks and dusty dancefloors, revitalized line dancing across the U.S. and became an enduring classic for the duo.
Though Brooks & Dunn were put together, by the mid-’90s, it was hard to imagine them apart.
Brooks & Dunn earned the CMA Vocal Duo of the Year honor for eight consecutive years from 1992 through 1999—and followed with six more consecutive wins in the category from 2001-2006. Along the way, they amassed 20 No. 1 hits, two Grammys, and more than 30 million in album sales, and became known as two of the hardest-hitting live entertainers in country music.
In September 2010, the duo ended as they began, wrapping their Last Rodeo tour with a rendition of their debut single “Brand New Man,” before a sold-out crowd at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena.
Now, nearly three decades after their first chart hit, Ronnie Dunn and Kix Brooks are witnessing—and collaborating with–a whole new generation of artists influenced by their music.
Brooks & Dunn’s upcoming album, Reboot (out Friday, April 5), marks the first studio album from the duo since 2007’s Cowboy Town.
The album’s genesis came from B&D manager Clarence Spalding—along with some inspiration from Luke Combs and Kacey Musgraves.
“Somebody sent me a clip of Luke Combs doing ‘Brand New Man’ with a couple of his band guys. He was wearing Brooks & Dunn gear, that was real flattering,” Dunn tells MusicRow, settling in beside Brooks for an interview at a barn on Dunn’s property just south of Nashville, decorated in the familiar western tones often seen on the duo’s videos and stage production.
“And Ronnie sent me a copy of a version of ‘Neon Moon’ that Kacey Musgraves was doing,” Brooks adds.
“Of course, we already had a group of people covering our songs—Keith Urban was opening some shows with ‘Brand New Man,’ and now it’s morphed to another group. So, we’re three musical generations down from where we were, in a way.” Brooks says.
Spalding took notice of the cover choices, and the ‘90s country influence nestled in the sounds of artists like Combs, Midland, Jon Pardi, and Cody Johnson, all of whom are part of the Reboot project.
“It happened quickly,” Brooks says. “[Clarence] made one phone call. He said, ‘If I don’t hear back from them today, I’m going on down the line.’ And it happened like that. He’d call back and go, ‘Got ‘em, bam.’ ‘Got ‘em, bam.’”
“I wish I had thought of it,” Dunn quips.
Rather than lifting the duo’s s pre-recorded vocals from previous albums, or recording vocals separately and having them digitally added to the mix, Ronnie and Kix recorded each collaboration live in the studio.
“I think the first day of recording was with Luke [Combs] on ‘Brand New Man,’” Brooks says. “That same day, I think we recorded with Jon Pardi and Kane. We got like four cuts that day.”
Thomas Rhett guests on “My Maria,” a cover of a 1970s B.W. Stevenson hit that earned Brooks & Dunn their second Grammy in 1996. Brooks made the request to have Ashley McBryde collaborate on a sparkling version of “You’re Gonna Miss Me When I’m Gone.” Musgraves brought her full band into the studio, adding some sultry disco undertones to “Neon Moon.”
“She had a very definite idea of how she wanted to approach the song,” Dunn recalls. “And Kacey is as far out into that realm that we ventured.”
“Ain’t Nothing ‘Bout You” gets a slow burn treatment courtesy of Brett Young, while Cody Johnson offered a stripped down acoustic rendition of “Red Dirt Road.”
Other tracks, such as Midland’s take on “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” and Jon Pardi’s “My Next Broken Heart,” hew closer to the original, by design.
“Jon’s a Sacramento boy and worked for his dad’s construction company,” Dunn notes. “He’s the one who walked in and said, ‘I want it done exactly like the record. I don’t want anything to deviate. That is what influenced me and that is what I like to do.’ So he was spot on with it.”
They called on producer Dann Huff, who has produced on albums for several of the artists involved with Reboot, as well as Megadeth, Keith Urban, LeAnn Rimes, Bon Jovi, Tim McGraw, Rascal Flatts, Reba, Taylor Swift and numerous others.
“It was fun,” Brooks says. “Dann said his greatest challenge was…he kept saying, ‘I’ve had more anxiety over this project than anything, just due to the fact that I feel like I need to honor the original versions, but at the same time give them a subtle twist.’”
“They have a nickname for Dann in music, they call him the sniper,” Dunn says. “Any time someone needs a project done within budget and within a certain amount of time, he can do it. And you’re having to herd a lot of cats for a project like this. He’s a great organizational wizard.”
Most of the artists selected their own favorite B&D song to cover. One of the most startling was Kane Brown’s choice of the 2005 hit “Believe,” which served as a visceral showcase for Dunn’s rich voice.
“That’s one of the most challenging vocals for me to do,” notes Dunn. “The second he walked up to the mics, we were facing each other, there was no set way to do it, we were just going to start singing and try to swap off and see what happened. I heard him sing and the whole room got quiet. He has the chops.
“He wasn’t competitive at all, he just slid in there and did his own thing in a really cool way. I think Dann said, ‘Well, when Ronnie’s singing that high stuff at the end, whatta you wanna try to do about that?’ And Kane said, ‘Let Ronnie sing that high stuff!’ I remember talking to Dann after the recording and he was like, ‘That’s that thing I’m wanting people to see about Kane. He’s got it.’”
“I don’t think any of us have seen that side of Kane,” Brooks says. “So he’s stepping right into this song that’s going to be a challenge as a singer more than anything else.”
Brothers Osborne’s improvisational rendering of “Hard Workin’ Man” amplifies its soul and pride, turning the blue-collar tribute into a guitar-thrashing, blues-soaked embodiment of those giving work (and life) their all. For Brooks & Dunn, the track just might be the most full-circle take of any on the album.
“Kane brought up that Brothers Osborne liked to do this ‘70s hippie stoner kind of thing, with elongated leads and instrumentals and stuff. And we’re going, ‘that’s right where we came from.’ Back in the day we were listening to that stuff, grew up on it.”
Given the star power and high-octane collaborations, one might naturally presume an all-star concert or more music from the superstar duo could be on the way. Dunn says no plans for more B&D collaborations are in the works for either at the moment, aside from the Country Music Hall of Fame induction later this year, several Vegas shows and a handful of festival dates. Earlier this year, the duo made a surprise appearance during Kacey Musgraves’ Ryman show, joining her on “Neon Moon,” and say more surprise appearances with their Reboot cohorts are possible.
“We are taking it one step at a time. We never say never…it’s like the mafia. It keeps pulling you back in,” Dunn says.
Vince Gill, Amy Grant Return For Christmas At The Ryman Residency
/by Lorie HollabaughAmy Grant and Vince Gill’s beloved Christmas at the Ryman residency in Nashville is back for another year this year, with a special addition — matinee shows. For the first time in its history, Amy Grant & Vince Gill – Christmas at the Ryman will feature matinee times of the cherished show on Dec. 15, Dec. 22 and Dec. 23. Openers for all Christmas at the Ryman shows will be announced at a later date.
The shows have been serving as holiday tradition for many years, and tickets for the 12-concert run are set to go on sale April 5.
“Vince and I are thrilled to be able to return to the Ryman Auditorium for the holidays again this year,” Grant says. “We look forward to these shows because they are a great time to connect with family and friends and continue a Nashville tradition.”
Amy Grant & Vince Gill – Christmas at the Ryman
Wednesday, Dec. 11 – 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 12 – 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 15 – 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 16 – 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 17 – 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 18 – 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 19 – 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 22 – 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 23 – 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.