21 November 2017

Keith Urban

Keith Urban dominates country scene at the American Music Awards 2017

The country music awards at the 2017 AMAs were mopped up by Keith Urban, with the Australian artist having to ask the help of his wife Nicole Kidman to carry some of them. Urban took home gongs for ‘Favourite Country Male Artist’, ‘Favourite Country Album’ and ‘Favourite Country Song’, with 2017 album ‘Ripcord’ and single ‘Blue Ain’t Your Colour’  winning the latter two respectively. While receiving his awards, Urban dedicated the wins to Kidman, as well as to their daughters, Sunday Rose and Faith Margaret. The only person on the night to win more individual AMAs than Urban was Bruno Mars, who won a whopping seven awards. Elsewhere on the night at the Microsoft Theatre in Los Angeles, Lady Gaga, P!nk, Diana Ross, Imagine Dragons and Shawn Mendes all performed, while P!nk also teamed up with Kelly Clarkson to cover R.E.M.’s classic ‘Everybody Hurts’ as a tribute to the first responders who risked their lives to assist people struck by the numerous disasters in America this year. Urban had previously been nominated for ‘Favourite Country New Artist’ in 2001 and ‘Favourite Country Male Artist’ in 2006, before finally winning ‘Favourite Country Male Artist’ in 2009.        

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Country star Jake Owen accepts invitation to play at Nashville Golf Open

Popular country music star Jake Owen will be performing on a slightly different stage, after he accepted an invitation to tee off at the upcoming Nashville Golf Open. Owen, a keen golfer who came close to turning professional before his country music career took off, is currently an amateur golfer, but despite accepting the invitation to play, he will keep that status and compete on an ‘unrestricted sponsor exemption.’ Speaking about the invitation, Owen was delighted to receive it, and said that he was very honoured to have the opportunity. “It’s so cool to have been awarded a sponsor exemption to play in the Nashville Golf Open,” Owen said to PGA Tour’s official website. “I am truly honoured to have this opportunity to play golf with guys whose work ethic I admire so much, like my buddy Brandt Snedeker. “I know how hard everyone works to get to play in these PGA TOUR tournaments. I’m really grateful, and I can’t wait for this week in May 2018 to get here.” In regards to country music, the 36-year-old has recently released a ‘Greatest Hits’ compilation, which features tracks from all five of his albums.

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white buffalo

Interview: The White Buffalo – Ahead Of The Herd

Jake Smith – better known as The White Buffalo – was raised on country, but his own unique music also blends in punk, folk and rock. Country Music meets the acclaimed singer-songwriter to talk brooding balladry and outlaw country. You can take a boy out of country music, but you can’t take the country music out of the boy. Before he’d even learned to play guitar, as a school kid in the late-80s, Jake Smith was a veteran country consumer. “My parents were country music freaks,” he recalls. “Growing up in southern California, it wasn’t a huge hub for country music but we’d go on camping trips and go to shows. Randy Travis, Waylon Jennings, George Jones… I saw pretty near everyone who was touring in country music in the late-80s. “I hit my teens and got into punk almost exclusively – everything on the radio I thought was bullshit. And the country music that was around at the time just seemed a little too polished and corny for me. I wanted something a little more real.” The raging energy and visceral punch of hardcore punk and grunge stepped into the breach, and young Jake underwent a Damascene conversion. Thirty years later he’s continuing to carve out a highly acclaimed singer-songwriting career now known as The White Buffalo. His new album, Darkest Darks, Lightest Lights hints at the influence of everyone from Springsteen to Thin Lizzy to Tom Waits and Pearl Jam, yet while he steadfastly resists any kind of generic labelling, even he can’t deny the broad streak of country DNA weaving through his music. The resonant rumble of Johnny Cash in his booming baritone; the fascination with outlaws, outcasts and the self-made myth of America; and above all, the way he takes the storytelling, lyric-focused tradition of the country songbook, and runs with it. Yet it was a passion for songwriters such as John Prine and Townes Van Zandt that led him to pick up an acoustic guitar at the relatively late age of 19. “I was just blindly optimistic. I told myself. ‘If the songs are there, it’ll work.” He gigged infrequently around the start of the Noughties, but kept making home-made cassettes, “to send out to people for Christmas, birthdays and stuff”, which began circulating among California’s surfing community. Meanwhile, friends suggested the White Buffalo stage name for the thick-set six-footer and a decade and a half of slow ascendancy began. “People duplicated them tape-to-tape,” he says. “Then someone called me out of the blue and asked to use a song in a surf film, and that reached Bob Hurley (from surfing apparel label Hurley) who helped finance my very first album.” How The West Was Won The resulting long-player, Hogtied Like A Rodeo, blended country-blues with rough-hewn folk textures and punk rawness, but it wasn’t until the best part of a decade later, and his Once Upon A Time In The West album, when The White Buffalo really found his natural musical habitat. He also found his voice, a booming, charismatic delivery that remains the defining characteristic of his sound. “I think my strength is I’m able to be tender,” he says, “but also growl and be scary if I need to be.” The record also showcased Smith’s ability to convincingly inhabit the lives of characters he created in song, and explore gritty and sometimes controversial subject matter, to the point where many listeners assumed there was a quite different backstory that got The White Buffalo to where he was at that point. Wish It Was True is a searing confessional from the point of view of a man laid low by a mixture of guilt, fury and regret, the result of betraying and betrayal, which culminates in the assertion: “Country, I was a soldier for you, I did what you asked me to, it was wrong and you knew… The home of the brave and the free, the red, white and blue? I wish it was true.” Such is the conviction of his vocal, that this writer for one wondered if Smith had spent time in the military. It seems I wasn’t alone. “Yeah, I get a lot of veterans and military coming up to me thanking me, because I wrote a whole album with that theme (Shadows, Greys And Evil Ways) and when I tell them I wasn’t they still thank me for channelling those feelings that some of them seem to feel. “It’s always interested me, the idea of men going off to war on someone else’s agenda, feeling kinda disillusioned and getting their lives turned upside down – that’s always been fascinating to me.” Once again we’re reminded of a very country-ish trope – the outlaw troubadour that identifies with those whom life has wronged and who have wronged others in return. It’s this recurring theme that made The White Buffalo a natural fit for the TV show his songs are most closely associated with. By 2010, Sons Of Anarchy was becoming a big hit for HBO, and the show’s producers recognised that The White Buffalo’s music perfectly evoked the conflicts, struggles, hedonism, hubris and heartbreak that make the show so compelling. “I hadn’t even seen the show when they first used my music. But it’s a great marriage. A lot of my songs are about conflicted emotions felt by people doing terrible things, but who have this human element – he’s a murderer but you root for him, that kind of thing.” Smith contributed numerous songs to the last five of the seven series, highlights including the brooding, forbidding ballads The Whistler and Matador, and the outlaw country confessional Oh Darling, What Have I Done. He would eventually collaborate with the show’s creator Kurt Sutter and music supervisor Bob Thiele Jr to perform the final episode’s epic swansong, Come Join The Murder. “I write songs about characters in character,” Smith admits, “but sometimes it’s based on real personal experiences, even if it’s kind of a skewed version of that

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