
With her upcoming eighth studio release, Sara Evans wants listeners to refocus on the power and strength of Words.
For the 14-track album, set to release July 21, Evans turned to a stable of 30 of Nashville’s top songwriters, among them 14 female tunesmiths, including Ashley Monroe, Caitlyn Smith, Hillary Lindsey, Sonya Isaacs, and Evans herself.
Evans says she didn’t realize female writers made up approximately half of contributors to the album until A&R executive Tracy Gershon brought it to her attention.
“It wasn’t intentional,” Evans said during an interview with MusicRow. “I tell people not to tell me who wrote songs because I don’t want any preconceived notion about it. I don’t want to know when they were written or whom they were pitched to. When we were done, Mark Bright, Tracy Gershon, Craig Dunn and I were sitting and having wine at the very end of tracking on the third day. Tracy said, ‘Do you realize there are 14 female writers on this album including you?’ I think that makes it cooler.”
Helmed by producer Mark Bright, the album begins with Evans’ smooth voice covering the plucky bluegrass track “Long Way Down,” a stark reminder of Evans’ deeply-held country and bluegrass roots. Her versatile voice easily navigates the varied rhythms on Claude Kelley and Charles Harmon’s “Rain and Fire,” and is perhaps at its best on her new single, the cautionary “Marquee Sign,” which she co-wrote with Jimmy Robbins and Heather Morgan.
“Words,” the album’s title track, serves as a potent, yet never preachy, reminder of the building and destroying influence even the smallest utterances can have on relationships. For Evans, it is also a one-term charge for a song’s lyrical substance to resonate as much as its hooks.
“I’m trying to make a point that we need better lyrics. Not everybody can be a prolific writer. I don’t even call myself some genius writer; I’m no Jason Isbell or Patty Griffin. But as soon as I sit down to write with somebody I can tell whether or not they are going to just rhyme or if they are really going to think about it.”
Earlier this year, Evans announced that Words would be released on her own label, Born To Fly Records. The singer, songwriter and businesswoman’s vision for the new venture includes plans for a publishing company and development program for new artists.
The move to launch her own independent label follows a former deal with Sugar Hill Records.
“We were totally going to go with Sugar Hill, then everything changed and Tracy Gershon left, so that was when we were like, ‘Lets just dive into it and start our own label.’”
Similarly, Evans has immersed herself into every aspect of the new album, inviting fellow songwriters to her home just outside of Birmingham, Alabama, where Evans relocated after marrying Jay Barker in 2008.
Bringing writers to her home turf was an apt choice, given that much of Words is a family affair for Evans.
Evans teamed with Victoria Banks and Emily Shackelton to pen “Letting You Go,” an ode to her 17-year-old son Avery, who will begin his senior year of high school this year.
“It was so overwhelmingly sad, we were sobbing,” Evans says of the writing session. “I had a hard time doing a work tape for it because I was crying. I loved that I could pay tribute to Avery since it will be another couple of years before I make another record.”
The track comes full circle for Evans, who notes that Avery’s voice can be heard on “I Keep Looking,” a track from her 2000 project Born To Fly, which was recorded soon after Avery was born.
“I was such a protective mom so when we were tracking the album I was singing scratch vocals and I would just hold him the whole time so you can hear him,” Evans says. “We just left it on the record and now I just wrote this song about him graduating.”
Evans’ 14-year-old daughter Olivia contributed vocals to “Marquee Sign,” while Evans’ siblings, who have spent years touring with their sister, lent harmonies to “Night Light.”
“I told Olivia, ‘Just sing how you sing.’ She’s much more like Beyoncé/Ariana Grande. She will end up being a better singer than me, and she wants to do that—not country, though. We didn’t fix her vocals at all. She was very adamant about not having anyone fix her vocals. Avery is a musician also and they are so concerned about being legit.”
That passion and desire for authenticity and respect is one their mother shares and still fervently pursues, even within an industry where she has co-written two of her five No. 1 singles and notched three platinum and two gold albums. Still, Evans has had to fight to have her voice as an artist heard—sometimes even in her own co-writing sessions.
“I’ve always wanted to prove myself. Even when I started writing as an artist, I was like, ‘I will not sit in here and have you two write and only sort of include me.’ I even had an experience like that writing for Words. These two really young, although successful writers who write together all the time literally came down and kind of ignored me. One said, ‘Seriously though, the song should be like this…’ It’s amazing that so many people still have that idea that the singer doesn’t really do anything and isn’t legit.”
Evans took control of the project, overseeing every detail from writing, recording, sequencing, and musicianship. It was a deeply hands-on process that rendered some of her most commercially successful albums including Restless and Born To Fly.
“I literally lived in the studio on those albums,” she says. “I didn’t let any detail go without being there [in the studio]. There have been times in my career where I haven’t been as careful or particular with the albums. More than ever, I have to prove myself over and over. There is something weird about turning 40. All of a sudden people start questioning your abilities. I’m better now than I’ve ever been and I know myself better. With this album, I remembered the respect that I have for my music.”
Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy Expands Team
/by Jessica NicholsonEntertainment business management firm Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy, Inc. has hired Lauren Dempsey and Iva Lowe as account assistants and Sarah Morse as an office administration team member.
“We are pleased to welcome Lauren, Iva and Sarah to the FBMM team,” said Julie Boos, FBMM senior vice president. “I am confident their talent will help us continue providing the high level of service we are known for to our clients.”
Dempsey, a Belmont University graduate with a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in music business, comes to FBMM after working as an accounting services and royalties assistant at Bluewater Music Services Corp. in Nashville. She managed invoices to all major music labels, entered royalty statements, prepared payouts to clients and handled bank reconciliations. During her time at Belmont, she completed internships at Big Loud Bucks and Warner/Chappell Production Music.
Lowe is a recent Middle Tennessee State University graduate with a Bachelor of Science degree in music business. She also has a Bachelor of Arts degree in vocal performance from the University of Arkansas, Fort Smith. Prior to joining FBMM, she interned with Farris Self & Moore in Nashville, where she created and updated royalty trackers, addressed clients’ account problems and ensured clients claimed all property and revenue.
Morse joins FBMM with more than 15 years of customer service and clerical experience, of which 13 years were spent with the City of Clarksville. She has successfully managed several offices in a variety of industries.
Webster Public Relations Adds Three
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Molli Carter, Megan Gill, Dana Kyle
Nashville-based Webster Public Relations has expanded its team by three.
Molli Carter has joined as publicity manager, and will work with John Anderson, T. Graham Brown, Jimmy Fortune, Janie Fricke, Charley Pride, T.G. Sheppard and Sylvia. The native Nashvillian joins full-time after working as Associate publicist for the past year.
Megan Gill joined as publicity manager and will work in tandem with Webster VP, Publicity Scott Adkins on Bellamy Brothers, Billy Ray Cyrus, Brenda Lee, Craig Wayne Boyd, Crystal Gayle, Kiefer Sutherland, Lee Greenwood, Lifehouse, LOCASH and Tanya Tucker.
Texas native Gill moved to Nashville after graduating from Auburn University’s public relations program in May. Previously, Gill worked on the marketing team at Charles Schwab in Austin, Texas and also worked with the director of Auburn’s Chicken Salad Chick Foundation to organize the Music & Miracles Superfest 2017, which headlined Thomas Rhett and Blake Shelton.
Dana Kyle has joined the team as publicity manager and will work with Webster Sr. VP Jeremy Westby on Seether, Kenny G, Don McLean, Sam Moore and Taylor Hicks.
A Pennsylvania native, Kyle graduated from Penn State University where she studied Public Relations. Kyle previously held internships in the marketing/communications departments of both the Bryce Jordan Center in State College and the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C.
Gill can be reached at mgill@websterpr.com or 615-777-6995 x229.
Carter can be reached at molli@websterpr.com or 615-777-6995 x225.
Kyle can be reached at dana@websterpr.com or 615-777-6995 x241.
Artist Action: Rhiannon Giddens, Randy Rogers, Hudson Moore, Becca Mancari, Charles Esten
/by Lorie HollabaughRhiannon Giddens To Give Keynote At IBMA Business Conference
“We are thrilled and honored that Rhiannon Giddens will be this year’s Keynote Speaker to kick off the IBMA’s World of Bluegrass,” notes IBMA executive director Paul Schiminger. “Rhiannon has embodied this year’s Business Conference theme of Community and Connection throughout her life and musical career. Her passion for American roots music, along with her thoughtful and purposeful career, provides each of us a lens through which we can see beyond our own barriers.”
Randy Rogers Band Auctioning Salt Lick BBQ Hangout For MusicCares
Hudson Moore Becomes GIVN Brand Ambassador
“I couldn’t be happier to be teaming up with GIVN Water!” shares Hudson, “Their product is amazing and they’re making a huge impact by providing clean water to those in need. I’m honored to be part of such a meaningful and forward-thinking organization!”
Becca Mancari’s ‘Good Woman’ CD Slated For October Release
Good Woman Tracklist:
Charles Esten Celebrates One Year Of #EverySingleFriday
Charles Esten performs on stage for his #OneSingleYear Celebration Concert at CMA Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
Introduced by CMT’s Cody Alan, Charles
and his band Sixwire (Steve Mandile, Andy Childs, John Howard, Chuck Tilley and Steve Hornbeak, with Steve Hinson on steel guitar) were welcomed to the stage with a rousing standing ovation after which they played, “This Town Is Ours.” The concert ended with an encore that kept fans on their feet. Esten recently spoke with MusicRow about the craft of songwriting the creative freedom and challenges of #EverySingleFriday.Music City Hit-Makers Returns To Cheekwood For Two Shows In August
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (clockwise from top left): Kyle Jacobs, Jessi Alexander, Marcus Hummon, Hillary Lindsey, Rivers Rutherford and Chris DeStefano.
The symphony and songwriters mashup show Music City Hit-Makers will return to Cheekwood’s Swan Lawn for the fourth annual “Songwriters Under The Stars” on Aug. 25 and 26. The two-night concert series will feature some of Nashville’s most successful songwriters including Kyle Jacobs, Jessi Alexander and Marcus Hummon on Friday night (Aug. 25) and Hillary Lindsey, Rivers Rutherford and Chris DeStefano on Saturday night (Aug. 26). The hit creators will perform their chart-topping songs with the Music City Symphony during the special shows.
DISClaimer: Alex Williams, Shania Twain Offer Autobiographical New Tracks
/by Robert K OermannSometimes when you explore the landscape of indie releases, you find gems — and then there are explorations like today.
Finding gems amid this wasteland was easy. They stood out quite clearly.
The DisCovery Award goes to BMLG artist Alex Williams. I dig his “outlaw” vibe. Mitchell Tenpenny would have been right there with Alex, but I reviewed an earlier effort by him back in 2015.
With no competition in sight, Mercury Nashville’s Shania Twain earns a Disc of the Day award.
ANDY HUGHES/Heartland and Heartache
Writers: Andy Hughes/Becky Hughes; Producer: Joe Gantzer; Publisher: none listed; Move Along (track)
– He has a gentle, folk-ish delivery. His next step should be to find a producer. This sounds like a cheap demo.
MITCHELL TENPENNY/Truck I Drove In High School
Writers: Mitchell Tenpenny/Jordan Schmidt/Andy Albert/Devin Dawson; Producers: Jordan Schmidt/Mitchell Tenpenny; Publishers: Sony-ATV Countryside/WB/Freshy/We-Volve/Downtown DLJ/Neon Cross/Warner-Tamerlane, BMI/ASCAP; Riser House (track)
-He’s the grandson of music-biz legend Donna Hilley, and his EP is titled Linden Ave, which is the Nashville street where she lived. The single has a crunchy, “dirty,” bottom-heavy percussion track, some cool electronic effects and a super catchy tune. Turn it up and groove along.
SHANIA TWAIN/Life’s About To Get Good
Writers: Shania Twain; Producer: Matthew Kom/Ron Aniello; Publishers: none listed; Mercury (CDX)
– Bouncy, hooky and more than a little autobiographical. Eminently playable.
MARY SARAH/Without You
Writers: Mary Sarah Gross/Bart Butler/David Garcia; Producer: David Garcia; Publisher: none listed, BMI/ASCAP; 144e (CDX)
– I dig the spare, bluesy track. Her pert, conversational soprano has a piercing quality with just the right touch of attitude. Refreshingly different.
NITTY GRITTY GR/3 Up and 1 Down
Writers: Greg “Nitty Gritty” Roberts; Producer: Dulaa; Publisher: none listed; Reality (CDX)
– A complete audio garbage heap.
CRAIG COLLINS/Stand By My Country
Writers: C. Collins/J. Bates/B. Matthews; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; CC (track)
– Chest-thumping rock with a redneck accent and a barely-there melody.
SHANE OWENS/19
Writers: Jeffrey Steele/Gary Nicholson/Tom Hambridge; Producer: Kevin Wayne Waldrop; Publishers: none listed, BMI/ASCAP; Amerimonte
– The album version, reviewed a couple of weeks back, is a guitar-vocal performance. The single has a full-band backing track, which makes it more commercial sounding and gives it a lot more emotional resonance. Play this version.
CODY JINKS/No Words
Writer: Cody Jinks; Producer: Joshua Thompson; Publishers: none listed; Cody Jinks (CDX)
– Sluggish. The tempo drags along listlessly, and his dull vocal doesn’t help matters much.
ALEX WILLIAMS/Old Tattoo
Writer: Alex Williams; Producer: Julian Raymond; Publishers: Big Machine/Freak Flag, BMI; Big Machine (track)
– His lived-in baritone is very, very charismatic. The song meanders a bit, but the dobro-and-harmonica atmosphere keeps you hanging on his compelling delivery. Extremely promising.
NIGHT OWL COUNTRY BAND/Cool Gentle Wind
Writer: Matt Lee; Producer: Gene Higgins; Publisher: none listed, ASCAP; Stanley Music
– They have a sound akin to vintage Alabama. The song is rather generic. Pass.
Chambers USA 2017 Rankings Honors Milom Horsnell Crow Rose Kelley
/by Sherod RobertsonIn the recently-released Chambers USA rankings for 2017, Milom Horsnell Crow Rose Kelley PLC has been recognized as the only Band 1 Media & Entertainment law firm in Tennessee. In addition to the firm being ranked in the top tier, all five partners of the firm, Mike Milom, Chris Horsnell, David Crow, Natalya Rose, and Page Kelley have been ranked individually.
Additional Nashville music industry firms listed and highlighted in the rankings include Adams and Reese, Loeb & Loeb, and Keller Turner Ruth Andrews & Ghanem.
Ranked lawyers also included, among others, Nashville industry members Jim Zumwalt (Shackelford, Bowen, Zumwalt & Hayes), Orville Almon (Almon & McPike), Linda Edell Howard (Adams and Reese), Russell A. Jones, Lynn Morrow (Adams and Reese), Denise M. Stevens (Loeb & Loeb), Derek Crownover (Dickinson Wright) and Jason Turner (Keller Turner Ruth Andrews & Ghanem).
Chambers USA has been published annually since 1990, and identifies and ranks the most outstanding law firms and lawyers in over 185 jurisdictions throughout the world, based on the investigation of more than 170 researchers.
Lee Ann Womack, Chris Stapleton To Pay Tribute To Jerry Lee Lewis On Special ‘Skyville Live’ Taping
/by Lorie Hollabaugh“Jerry Lee Lewis is an American treasure and we’re beyond thrilled to welcome him to Skyville Live,” commented Wally Wilson, creator of Skyville Live. “We have some truly amazing artists lined up to play alongside and salute this living legend.”
The show is known for its unique pairings, from Lady Antebellum, Jason Isbell, Jewel, Brandy Clark and Amanda Shires bringing down the house with Kris Kristofferson on his classic “Me and Bobby McGee” to a fiery take on “Come to My Window” with Cam joining Melissa Etheridge onstage, to the impassioned performance of Steve Earle on “Pilgrim” with Emmylou Harris, Brothers Osborne, Margo Price and Colter Wall.
Jamboree In The Hills Wraps Successful 41st Year
/by Lorie HollabaughPhoto Credit: Ryan Pavlov / Jamboree In The Hills
Jamboree In The Hills celebrated its 41st year with a bevy of superstars and up-and-comers last Thursday through Sunday (7/13-16). Huge crowds turned out at the Morristown Ohio event to hear headliners Thomas Rhett (Thursday), Jason Aldean (Friday), Lady Antebellum (Saturday), and Sawyer Brown (Sunday), alongside red-hot performers like Kelsea Ballerini, Chris Young, RaeLynn, Kane Brown, and Brett Young.
There were plenty of memorable moments at Jamboree, which is one of the longest-running Country festivals in the world, including Chris Young (alongside Shane Owens) stopping by the campground to surprise an estimated 1,000 guests during the festival’s first year of their “Jambo After Dark” after-party, and legend Tanya Tucker returning to the JITH stage after making her first appearance in 1983.
From decked out campers to personal pools, JITH’s campsite of trailers even housed enclosed “Jambo Glam” lodging for the first time this year, offering powered “glamping tents” equipped with a hospitality staff and exclusive access to air-conditioned restrooms, showers, a well-stocked lounge area with snacks and morning coffee, and a community gas grill.
“The best part of Jamboree In The Hills is the fans,”said Kelly Tucker-Jones, General Manager/Jamboree In The Hills. “Their deep-rooted love of this historic festival shines through in every aspect of its traditions. This festival is more than country music, Jamboree In The Hills is family and friends from the staff to the fans – we all feel like we are one unit that gets to spend the best weekend of the year together year after year!”
Kelsea Ballerini. Photo: Ryan Pavlov / Jamboree In The Hills
Brett Young. Photo: Ryan Pavlov / Jamboree In The Hills
Kane Brown. Photo: Ryan Pavlov / Jamboree In The Hills
RaeLynn. Photo: Ryan Pavlov / Jamboree In The Hills
UK To Get Outdoor Country, Americana Music Festival In 2018
/by Jessica NicholsonIn 2018, country music and Americana artists will have a new outdoor UK festival destination, when Black Deer Festival takes place in East Sussex, England, from July 20-22.
The three-day festival will take place on the grounds of one of Britain’s oldest deer parks, Eridge Park in East Sussex. The 3,000-acre estate is surrounded by woodlands, open lakes, rolling hills, and is conveniently located a mere 50 minutes from London by train.
Entertee Events, led by Gill Tee and Deborah Shilling, producers of the 100,000-capacity Party In The Park at London’s Hyde Park as well as the Hop Farm Festival in Kent, England, will oversee the Black Deer Festival. Entertee clients include Live Nation and AEG. Tee and Shilling, along with Colin Lloyd, who oversees financing for the endeavor, are in Nashville this week, talking up the festival with agents, organizations and managers, and are continuing to book artists for the event. They have been working on the festival for the past year.
“To give proper homage to Nashville, we had to come here,” Lloyd tells MusicRow.
The Black Deer Festival will host nearly 50 artist performances across five stages, offering a mix of country, Americana, and UK-based country artists. Headliners will be announced at a later date.
Lloyd estimates 10,000 attendees for Black Deer’s first year, though he says there is room to grow the festival up to 30,000 attendees.
“Everyone is getting exciting about it,” Lloyd says. “The whole country genre is right on the cusp of making a huge breakthrough in the UK market.”
He also took inspiration from the success of the Country Music Association’s C2C: Country 2 Country Festival, though he notes a key difference between the two: While C2C is an arena festival, Black Deer will be an outdoor festival. Other major country music draws in the area include the recently-announced Country Music Week, a series of indoor concerts slated for October 2017, from the same organizers as the C2C: Country 2 Country Festival.
Food will also be an important part of the festival. Lloyd says there are plans to include custom fare from UK chefs. “We want to bring interesting food, not the normal fried and packaged foods. We want it to be more genuine.”
The five stages will include a songwriter’s stage and a children’s stage. “While here in Nashville, we hope to experience the Bluebird Café and we visited Whiskey Jam. I love the idea of bringing those ideas to our festival,” Lloyd says.
“It will be a family-friendly event, we think family is very important as well, with camping and ‘glamping’ and all the things that go with it. But we want to make it a bit edgy. It’s not just country music, but a bit edgier country as well which is where we think the UK market is at.”
Data shows the UK market is ripe for more country music performances. Country music is one of the fastest-growing genres in the UK. 30 million concertgoers attended a music festival in the UK in 2015. There are more than 1,000 annual commercial music festivals held in the UK annually.
“There’s just a wonderful array of fantastic talent in [Nashville] and we hope to encourage some of them to come to the UK and enjoy one of the most beautiful parts of the world,” Lloyd says. “We want to give the artists the best time of their lives. We want them to go home and say, ‘That was fantastic. Let’s go back.’”
Sara Evans Highlights Power And Strength Of ‘Words’ On Upcoming Album
/by Jessica NicholsonWith her upcoming eighth studio release, Sara Evans wants listeners to refocus on the power and strength of Words.
For the 14-track album, set to release July 21, Evans turned to a stable of 30 of Nashville’s top songwriters, among them 14 female tunesmiths, including Ashley Monroe, Caitlyn Smith, Hillary Lindsey, Sonya Isaacs, and Evans herself.
Evans says she didn’t realize female writers made up approximately half of contributors to the album until A&R executive Tracy Gershon brought it to her attention.
“It wasn’t intentional,” Evans said during an interview with MusicRow. “I tell people not to tell me who wrote songs because I don’t want any preconceived notion about it. I don’t want to know when they were written or whom they were pitched to. When we were done, Mark Bright, Tracy Gershon, Craig Dunn and I were sitting and having wine at the very end of tracking on the third day. Tracy said, ‘Do you realize there are 14 female writers on this album including you?’ I think that makes it cooler.”
Helmed by producer Mark Bright, the album begins with Evans’ smooth voice covering the plucky bluegrass track “Long Way Down,” a stark reminder of Evans’ deeply-held country and bluegrass roots. Her versatile voice easily navigates the varied rhythms on Claude Kelley and Charles Harmon’s “Rain and Fire,” and is perhaps at its best on her new single, the cautionary “Marquee Sign,” which she co-wrote with Jimmy Robbins and Heather Morgan.
“Words,” the album’s title track, serves as a potent, yet never preachy, reminder of the building and destroying influence even the smallest utterances can have on relationships. For Evans, it is also a one-term charge for a song’s lyrical substance to resonate as much as its hooks.
“I’m trying to make a point that we need better lyrics. Not everybody can be a prolific writer. I don’t even call myself some genius writer; I’m no Jason Isbell or Patty Griffin. But as soon as I sit down to write with somebody I can tell whether or not they are going to just rhyme or if they are really going to think about it.”
Earlier this year, Evans announced that Words would be released on her own label, Born To Fly Records. The singer, songwriter and businesswoman’s vision for the new venture includes plans for a publishing company and development program for new artists.
The move to launch her own independent label follows a former deal with Sugar Hill Records.
“We were totally going to go with Sugar Hill, then everything changed and Tracy Gershon left, so that was when we were like, ‘Lets just dive into it and start our own label.’”
Similarly, Evans has immersed herself into every aspect of the new album, inviting fellow songwriters to her home just outside of Birmingham, Alabama, where Evans relocated after marrying Jay Barker in 2008.
Bringing writers to her home turf was an apt choice, given that much of Words is a family affair for Evans.
Evans teamed with Victoria Banks and Emily Shackelton to pen “Letting You Go,” an ode to her 17-year-old son Avery, who will begin his senior year of high school this year.
“It was so overwhelmingly sad, we were sobbing,” Evans says of the writing session. “I had a hard time doing a work tape for it because I was crying. I loved that I could pay tribute to Avery since it will be another couple of years before I make another record.”
The track comes full circle for Evans, who notes that Avery’s voice can be heard on “I Keep Looking,” a track from her 2000 project Born To Fly, which was recorded soon after Avery was born.
Evans’ 14-year-old daughter Olivia contributed vocals to “Marquee Sign,” while Evans’ siblings, who have spent years touring with their sister, lent harmonies to “Night Light.”
“I told Olivia, ‘Just sing how you sing.’ She’s much more like Beyoncé/Ariana Grande. She will end up being a better singer than me, and she wants to do that—not country, though. We didn’t fix her vocals at all. She was very adamant about not having anyone fix her vocals. Avery is a musician also and they are so concerned about being legit.”
That passion and desire for authenticity and respect is one their mother shares and still fervently pursues, even within an industry where she has co-written two of her five No. 1 singles and notched three platinum and two gold albums. Still, Evans has had to fight to have her voice as an artist heard—sometimes even in her own co-writing sessions.
“I’ve always wanted to prove myself. Even when I started writing as an artist, I was like, ‘I will not sit in here and have you two write and only sort of include me.’ I even had an experience like that writing for Words. These two really young, although successful writers who write together all the time literally came down and kind of ignored me. One said, ‘Seriously though, the song should be like this…’ It’s amazing that so many people still have that idea that the singer doesn’t really do anything and isn’t legit.”
Evans took control of the project, overseeing every detail from writing, recording, sequencing, and musicianship. It was a deeply hands-on process that rendered some of her most commercially successful albums including Restless and Born To Fly.
“I literally lived in the studio on those albums,” she says. “I didn’t let any detail go without being there [in the studio]. There have been times in my career where I haven’t been as careful or particular with the albums. More than ever, I have to prove myself over and over. There is something weird about turning 40. All of a sudden people start questioning your abilities. I’m better now than I’ve ever been and I know myself better. With this album, I remembered the respect that I have for my music.”