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Chris Hillman

Interview: Chris Hillman – High Flying Byrd

On his first album in 10 years, ex-Byrds man Chris Hillman marries old Byrds classics with new songs built around his love of bluegrass and classic country harmonies. As he tells Country Music, “This album’s like a history of everything I’ve ever done.” If Chris Hillman had “only” been bassist and co-vocalist for The Byrds, he’d be an icon: that’s what got him in the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame, after all. But Hillman is, of course, much more than that. The most fervent follower of bluegrass in the legendary 60s group, Hillman was instrumental in turning The Byrds into pioneering country rockers on the album Sweetheart Of The Rodeo. He was largely behind the recruitment of Telecaster wizard Clarence White to The Byrds, and also Gram Parsons. When The Byrds fell to ground, Hillman co-founded The Flying Burrito Brothers with the mercurial Parsons, and went on to star in the Desert Rose Band, who brought sheen to country-pop in the 70s and 80s. Along that road, Hillman has honed his love of trad country, his mastery of mandolin, plus his fine voice and songwriting to the extent that he’s now considered something of an elder-statesman of country traditionalism. Whoulda thunk he once got booed at the Opry? After 10 years without releasing anything at all, Hillman’s now back with the aptly named Bidin’ My Time – a wonderful album that pulls all the strings of his art together. At 72, Hillman’s still sharp as a tack: when Country Music calls him at his California home the day after Glen Campbell’s passing, he’s keen to emphasise: “I’m in good shape, and it’s a beautiful California morning!” But Hillman makes sure he offers genuinely fond memories of Campbell. “I knew him well back in the 60s,” he begins, “he was a phenomenal artist around LA. Man, what a talent. Wichita Lineman is still to me, one of the greatest songs ever written, one of the greatest performances ever from Glen, too. But he had so many. We’re losing all our heroes. That’s the world we’re in now, right?” Thankfully, Hillman is still very much with us, and he’s delighted. “In all honesty, I never thought I’d release another record. And nor did I care!” But his long-time collaborator Herb Pederson (also of the Desert Rose Band) and Byrds fanatic Tom Petty had other ideas. “They got together and kinda said, ‘We’ve got you a record deal, so do you want to make a record?’” Hillman explains. “I said, ‘Well, yeah… but you haven’t heard any of my songs.’ Tom just said, ‘I’ll tell you if I don’t like ‘em. But Chris, I’m honestly not worried about that.’” Petty was right not to fret. Bidin’ My Time mixes some of those Hillman originals – “just layin’ around, really” – with reworked Byrds songs and a shot of covers (the Everly Brothers’ Walk Right Back and Petty’s own Wildflowers) in an enchanting country-fied set. “I’ve had a wonderful time making this,” he says, and why wouldn’t he? Back to bluegrass Hillman’s love of bluegrass and country shines brightly on Bidin’ My Time, even if – as you’d expect from an ex-Byrd and Burrito Brother – it’s refracted by its own “Cosmic American Music” lens. But, at heart, Hillman’s a traditionalist. “Growing up in the 1950s was probably the greatest time in the States,” he remembers. “I lived in a lovely small town, we had a horse, it was idyllic. You couldn’t duplicate that now. I was a third-generation Californian, my great-grandfather came out from Massachusetts in the 1880s by train, wagon and horse. “Why did I fall in love with bluegrass? Well, rock’n’roll went to sleep around 1959! It was all Fabian, Frankie Avalon, and all that. Elvis was in the Army by then. So I, and all my peers in The Byrds, got into folk music. But I was also into bluegrass… definitely the odd man out. There was one or two in my school out of 500 who liked bluegrass. The first man to take me under his wing was my High School custodian, the janitor. He was from Arkansas, and sang at the weekends. He had the first Buck Owens album on Capitol, this would be 1961. It just struck a chord. Just listen to those old Flatt and Scruggs records.” Byrds fans will delight in Bidin’ My Time for a number of reasons. A major one is its Byrds reunion of sorts, with both David Crosby and Roger McGuinn guesting. Hillman says of the new take here of the Pete Seeger-written Byrds classic Bells Of Rhymney: “I just wanted to get Herb Pederson and David Crosby to sing together. “It’s still my favourite song that we ever recorded in The Byrds.” Then, there is also an update on one of The Byrds’ first country songs, Old John Robertson [originally on 1968’s The Notorious Byrd Brothers]. Hillman has updated the song he co-wrote with Roger McGuinn as New Old John Robertson, after discovering more about its subject. The song itself is another insight to Hillman’s childhood. “John Robertson was a silent film director and actor in 1920s Hollywood, and the last movie he ever did was a talking movie in the 30s with Shirley Temple. But I just knew him as this retired man in the small town I grew up in. He’d always stop and talk to you. He was a wonderful looking man – big moustache, a Stetson hat, a beautiful tweed jacket and riding jodhpurs. He would just escort his old wife around town, y’know? When I was six or so, he rode his horse into the Post Office – a wonderful guy, and so kind. You’d always find a dollar on the ground. ‘Excuse me sir, I think you dropped a dollar?’ He knew. He’d dropped it for us kids.” In keeping with its nostalgic theme, Hillman also revisits his beloved Everly Brothers. “Bye Bye Love was the first single I think I ever

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70s country star Donna Fargo still recovering

Donna Fargo is yet to be released from a rehabilitation hospital after suffering a stroke earlier this month. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMXAMR28nq0 The North Carolina-born, Grammy Award winner is most remembered for hit ‘Happiest Girl In The Whole USA’, which rocketed to the top of the country music and pop music charts in 1972. Song ‘Funny Face’ also scored highly in the charts – just some of the songs that saw Donna total more than a dozen Top Ten hits on the country charts. According to Donna’s official website, the country icon is in a rehabilitation hospital receiving speech therapy and undergoing occupational and physical therapy. Donna Fargo suffered a stroke on December 4th. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMXAMR28nq0

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Thomas Rhett films music video in Helena

Thomas Rhett’s latest music video “Marry Me” was filmed in Helena, reports Shelby County Reporter. Rhett who is known throughout the world of country music released his fourteen-track, third studio album “Life Changes” on Sept. 8, which contained the hit song. The four-minute long official music video was released on December 17th and contains one scene depicting a high school football game, which was filmed at Helena High School’s Husky Stadium featuring HHS football and cheerleading uniforms, T-shirts and more. As the video progresses, Gus’s Hot Dogs – a well-known Helena restaurant – is shown. The song tells the story of a man who fails to reveal his true feelings for a woman who eventually marries someone else. Youtube.com/watch?v=p_IwENcMPOA.

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shania twain

Shania Twain – Then & Now

Losing her husband and co-writer. Losing her voice. Fifteen years away. Can Shania Twain now reclaim her throne as the Queen of pop-country? Shania Twain is back to prove she is still the one we want after a lengthy break from the music industry. It has been an epic 15 years since the biggest-selling female country artist of all time released the mega-selling Up!, but what has kept her? The answer is that Canadian queen of pop-country has been dealing with real life. Big, unpleasant dollops of it, like divorce, infectious disease and career-threatening vocal problems. She doesn’t want you to think she’s been ignoring for all this time us on purpose. “I’ve been very busy raising my son [Eja, recently turned 16] and I’ve been very productive as well,” she says as she sits down to meet Country Music in the plush setting of an elegant London hotel. “I just wasn’t productive in making an album project, because of my voice. So I never collected my writing. I was writing all the time, but I wasn’t writing for an album. So it took a little while to organise all of that. “I wrote a book [the 2011 extraordinary autobiography From This Moment On], I did Vegas things for two years, and my voice did very well in a controlled environment. Then I did a tour, and that gave me more encouragement, then I built up to making the album.” Getting back in the studio, she admits, was when push came to shove, “the most scary statement to make, vocally, because it’s so permanent.” “It’s not like a live show, where it comes and goes,” she explains further, “once you put it out there, that’s it.” Twain is very much out there again with Now, a huge-sounding, hook-laden return to everything that ever made Shania sell by the multi-million in the first place. Its pop confections may reopen the time-honoured debate about how country she is. But such semantics would have been way down the list of priorities when she decided, after recovering from Lyme’s disease and the loss of not just her voice but also of producer, co-writer and former muse ‘Mutt’ Lange, that she was going to write the whole thing on her own. Remembering that painful period, she recalls: “Now I’m going to have to produce the whole project, because nobody knows me, and I wouldn’t even have known who to trust. Who would I write with? Would anybody want to write with me? I’d been quiet for so long, I just wasn’t sure where I would fit in that. So I thought, the more independent I can be with this, the better. It puts me to the test. And I committed myself to writing the whole album by myself. “Once I got past that point of just getting started, it’s like going to the gym. The hardest part is getting there, right? Getting yourself dressed and out the door, and then once you’re there, it all starts happening. Of course it’s painful, you’re going to be sore the next day and go through some ups and downs. But you’ve taken that initial step. Once I dived in, I was committed, and then it really just got easier from there, to be honest.” Twain and Lange split in 2008, after she discovered that he had been having an affair with her best friend, Marie-Anne Thiébaud. As if that wasn’t high-profile enough, she went on to marry Thiébaud’s estranged husband, Frédéric, and she knew the tabloids would be like pigs in the proverbial. “Of course!” she laughs heartily. “I thought to myself, well, there are just some things you can’t keep from the press. So on that hand I’m thinking, ‘The best thing to do is just get it out there so that they stop asking me things that they already know.’ Instead of leaving people digging, it was just so much easier to say yup, this is the way it is, and now there’s nothing to dig for. “I’m not ashamed, I don’t need to apologise for what I’ve been through. It’s just what it is. I think transparency is sometimes just the best way to go. We all have the right to preserve our privacy without being called dishonest. That’s not a question of ‘true or false, it’s a question of: ‘Do I want to share that or not?’ There’s a level of transparency that I think does disarm a lot of unnecessary conversation, and it’s a relief for me.” Now is an album in which Twain disarmingly lays bare her raw emotions, sometimes musing in the first person about how she can’t believe her longtime partner would leave her. But more often, she’s in pugnacious form, “swinging with her eyes closed” and later announcing, nay demanding, that “more fun is what we need.” These are probably the most personal songs Twain has ever recorded, and there’s been something cathartic for her in laying things on the line. “I don’t just do it for entertainment, although we all love to be entertained and I want to be entertaining,” she says. “But I’m always just myself anyway. I’m not acting when I’m on stage. I’m singing my own truth, I’m not even interpreting. I’m not just presenting the song as the performer, I am the song and I’m extending my story by singing it to people.” In any case, if you know anything about Twain’s upbringing, you know she’s been through worse than this. After her parents split when she was just two, she started to sing in nightclubs when she was just eight, to help the family’s threadbare finances. “Those clubs were my performing arts school,” she laughs. “There was a detriment, because I developed stage fright there. I think it was just being forced into an environment that was so uncomfortable for an eight-year-old. It was very smoky in those days, I could barely breath, and it was dark and quite sinister. Everybody was

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Brothers Osborne & CMA honour truck drivers with holiday concert

In the U.S. truck drivers deliver more than 10.5 billion tons of freight every year, covering 279.1 billion miles, making them a mission-critical component in the movement of goods and services across the nation. Driver turnover is at a staggering 80 percent, which has made hiring and retaining truck drivers a tough prospect for private and for-hire fleets, especially at the holidays when volumes and consumer expectations increase. To honor their ongoing hard work and surprise truckers crossing the California/Nevada border outside of Las Vegas, Verizon Telematics hosted a pop-up event last night at the Whiskey Pete’s Truck Stop in Primm, Nev. featuring a free holiday meal and a concert from GRAMMY-nominated country duo, Brothers Osborne. The accomplished and well-loved two showed their compassion and solidarity with truck drivers, attending the event to sing as attendees attended the dinner. “Being out on the road and away from your family – especially at this time of year– can be really hard, so we wanted to show our appreciation in a fun and unexpected way,” said Jay Jaffin, chief marketing officer at Verizon Telematics. “We also want drivers to know we can offer the easiest path to ELD compliance, allowing them to focus on what’s important: getting home to their families safely.”

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Chris Stapleton praised for his humility

Chris Stapleton has attracted praise for his humility after claiming he was “lost for words” after being nominated for the 60th Grammy Awards. Stapleton’s three Grammy nominations top a year that also includes two chart-topping album releases (From A Room: Volume 1 and “rom A Room: Volume 2”, a sold-out arena tour and trophies from the Country Music Association for Album and Male Vocalist of the Year.   Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney, Thomas Rhett, Adele and George Strait are among the numerous country singer who have recorded songs written by Stapleton.   Stapleton said: “I lack the mental capacity to properly describe how unlikely and altogether unbelievable things are.”

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Book by Wanda Jackson tells-all on relationship with Elvis Presley

Country singer Wanda Jackson has spoken out about her adventures on the country music scene alongside Elvis Presley in an interview with Fox news about her memoir, “Every Night is a Saturday Night.” Now 80 years old, the once-girlfriend of Elvis Presley was famed for seducing audiences with her charm and charisma and was rapidly discovered by country singer Hank Thompson. In the interview with Fox News, Wanda outlines her difficulties in seeing Elvis regularly owing to the distance (he lived in Tennessee) and her father’s reluctance to allow her to date. Together up until the first part of 1957, Wanda is reported to have said to Elvis when speaking about country music: “I can’t do that…I’m just a country singer!” Wanda refused to return to the Grand Ole Opry for 50 years after she was refused admittance on stage owing to her sultry clothing, which included high heels and tight skirts (a novelty at the time.) A fan of Elizabeth Taylor and Marilyn Monroe. Wanda’s full story is captured in ‘Every Night Is Saturday Night: A Country Girl’s Journey To The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’ published this year by BMG Books.

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New duets album by Tommy Emmanuel set for release

Esteemed Grammy-nominated guitarist, composer and performer Tommy Emmanuel has announced the release of a duets album, Accomplice One. The 16-track collaborative album features guest artists such as Jason Isbell, Mark Knopfler, Rodney Crowell, Jerry Douglas, Amanda Shires, Ricky Skaggs, David Grisman and more with a release date set for Friday, January 19.   Produced by Emmanuel – whom is distinguished as one of only five musicians handpicked by his mentor, Chet Atkins, as a Certified Guitar Player (CGP)—Accomplice One is a testament to Emmanuel’s musical diversity, the range of expression that stretches from authentic country-blues to face-melting rock shredding, by way of tender and devastating pure song playing. The songs are a mix of new takes on indelible classics and brand new originals from Tommy and his collaborators.   Tommy’s subtlety and tastefulness blends with Amanda Shires’ gorgeous vocal and fiddle playing to transform Madonna’s “Borderline” and Rodney Crowell’s “Looking Forward to the Past” could’ve topped the country charts in another era, with Tommy’s propulsive rhythm supporting Crowell’s sly lyrics while his tasty lead playing weave in and out.   Definitely something to look forward to in the new year!

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Very special guests Sugarland announced to join C2C 2018

Following their special appearance at the CMA Awards last month, Sugarland is confirmed to perform at Country to Country 2018. This will be the multi CMA Award and Grammy Award winner’s first full-band live performance together in 5 years and their first UK set since 2009. Friends of C2C, Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush have sold in excess of 15 million records worldwide and have had incredible solo careers since their hiatus in 2012. Known for such hits as “Stuck Like Glue”, “Baby Girl,” “Stay” and “All I Want to Do,” Sugarland’s last album was 2010’s The Incredible Machine. The duo is currently back in the studio; for more information visit www.sugarlandmusic.com. Country to Country Festival will take place on 9-11th March 2018 at The O2 in London, The SSE Hydro Glasgow and the 3Arena in Dublin. Sugarland join what is already an outstanding line up including Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, Little Big Town, Kacey Musgraves, Emmylou Harris, Kip Moore, Kelsea Ballerini, Ashley Campbell, Brett Young, Luke Combs, Old Dominion, Margo Price and Midland. The C2C Spotlight Stage will return with performances from Ashley McBryde, Jillian Jacqueline, Lindsay Ell, Lukas Nelson, Morgan Evans, Russell Dickerson and Walker Hayes. Tickets are onsale now via www.axs.com/c2c  / 08448 24 48 24 and www.gigsandtours.com / 0844 811 0051. Tickets for Dublin will be available at www.ticketmaster.ie  and Glasgow www.gigsinscotland.com  / 08444 999 990. The festival brings three days of the best in country music and programming that fans have come to love and expect with performances from the world’s best country stars as well as emerging talent from Nashville, UK and Europe. For further information: www.c2c-countrytocountry.com Facebook Twitter Instagram @C2CFestival

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Garth Brooks achieves first Country Airplay No. 1 in a decade

Garth Brooks has been awarded his 19th No.1 hit and the first since “More Than a Memory” in 2007. Superstar Garth Brooks tops Billboard’s Country Airplay chart for the first time since 2007, as “Ask Me How I Know” ascends 2-1 on the chart, increasing 8 percent to 43.3 million audience impressions in the week ending Dec. 3, according to Nielsen Music. Brooks, who won his record sixth entertainer of the year award at the Country Music Association Awards this year and reigns as the top-selling album artist (72 million) since Nielsen Music began tracking U.S. sales in 1991, is one of eight artists with Country Airplay leaders in the 1990s, 2000s and 10s, joining Trace Adkins, Kenny Chesney, Alan Jackson, Toby Keith, Reba McEntire, Tim McGraw and Brad Paisley.

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