28 November 2025

Brooks & Dunn - maverick-country.com

Brooks & Dunn – The Long Game

They didn’t arrive as revolutionaries. But Brooks & Dunn redrew the borderlines of country music just the same — blending honky tonk, arena rock, and emotional clarity into a sound that still echoes through the genre’s bloodstream. When Brooks & Dunn reunited in 2015 after a five-year hiatus, it wasn’t out of necessity. They had nothing left to prove. Already Country Music Hall of Famers, with more CMA Awards than any other duo in history, they could’ve stayed gone — proud, platinum, and preserved. But Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn were never interested in legacy as museum piece. Their return wasn’t nostalgic. It was purposeful. A reminder that the sharpest tools in country’s box were far from relics, they still had an edge. Three decades after their 1991 debut, Brooks & Dunn remain a blueprint: for duos, for crossover acts, for anyone trying to make traditional country sound contemporary without losing its roots. And for all the numbers — the chart-toppers, the tour grosses, the awards — their real achievement might be that no one’s ever done it quite like them since. Their origin story is tidy on paper, but jagged in reality. Both men had solo ambitions. Dunn was a powerhouse vocalist from Texas with a gospel background. Brooks was a sharper-edged songwriter from Louisiana with industry connections and an ear for momentum. Arista Records head Tim DuBois suggested they try working together, and they did, somewhat reluctantly. The pairing didn’t immediately make sense. Their writing styles clashed. Their personalities diverged. But the tension became fuel. In interviews, Brooks has often said the act only worked because they were so different. Dunn, more reserved and vocally dominant, brought the ache. Brooks, gregarious and guitar-forward, brought the grit. That tension gave them range. It let them pivot between floor-fillers like “Boot Scootin’ Boogie” and ballads like “Believe.” They weren’t trying to split the difference, they were doubling the spectrum. By the time their debut album Brand New Man dropped in 1991, the balance had clicked. Four No.1 hits later, Brooks & Dunn weren’t a gamble. They were the new standard. Throughout the 1990s, Brooks & Dunn became country’s most bankable act, not by chasing trends, but by setting them. Albums like Hard Workin’ Man and Waitin’ on Sundown fused dancehall energy with emotional storytelling. Their music lived on jukeboxes and in stadiums. It worked as well in boots as it did in headphones. They built an aesthetic as much as a catalogue. Cowboy hats and designer jeans, Telecasters and pyrotechnics. They didn’t play small, they scaled country up. And they did it without sacrificing the fundamentals: story, heart, and voice. Radio embraced them, but so did fans outside the usual orbit. Their sound, stitched with blues, rock, honky tonk, and even gospel, made them accessible without sanding off their roots. Dunn’s vocals soared; Brooks kept the rhythm grounded. And they just kept winning. By the end of the decade, they’d earned Entertainer of the Year, dozens of chart-toppers, and a place on the Mount Rushmore of modern country. To read the full article, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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HuneyFire Release Festive Christmas Single

Afro/Latina country duo HuneyFire are embracing the holiday season with the release of their new single, “My Christmas Wish”, a warm and romantic track celebrating love in December. The song is described as a light-hearted tribute to spending the festive period with someone special, wrapped in harmonies and seasonal glow. “My Christmas Wish is a sweet and playful holiday single about the joy of being in love at Christmas and wanting nothing more than to spend the season with the one you love,” the duo said. HuneyFire added that the track captures “the simple and tender desire to make memories together under the glow of Christmas lights.” Written and produced by Cheaza Figueroa, the song features Figueroa and daughter Marri Nevarez-Barlow sharing lead vocals and harmonies, bringing a soft, familial touch to the arrangement. The recording also features Caitlin Evanson on fiddle, Eddie Dunlap on dobro, and Hugo Castillo contributing drums, bass guitar, organ, piano and synth. The single was recorded at Mir Records USA. “My Christmas Wish” adds a festive chapter to the duo’s catalogue, blending country instrumentation with soulful, honey-toned delivery, and positions HuneyFire as emerging seasonal voices within the genre. HuneyFire continue to build momentum as a mother-daughter pairing distinctly placed within country music – blending cultural heritage, harmony-led songwriting and a modern Americana sensibility. Their work has drawn attention for its warmth, sincerity and genre-spanning influences, marking them as artists to watch as they move into the new year.

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