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John Anderson shoots again for charts
04/09/2007 2:51 AM, Reuters Phyllis Stark
After a 30-year career on the
fringe of Music Row, singer/songwriter John Anderson is gearing
up for an improbable third run at mainstream success.
"Easy Money" (Warner Bros.), his 27th album, counting
repackages, comes out May 15. It marks his first release since
2000's overlooked "Nobody's Got It All" (Sony).
The new disc was propelled by an energetic infusion from
one of Nashville's hottest players, John Rich of country duo
Big & Rich, who produced the album and co-wrote many of the
songs with Anderson. An unabashed Anderson disciple, Rich
turned what started out as a songwriting collaboration into a
full-blown album project, with all the considerable juice
behind it Rich can muster.
"What inspired me to work on this project is the mere fact
that John Anderson is one of the greatest country singers in
the history of country music, and he has been absent from radio
for several years," Rich says. "I wanted to hear him singing
again, simple as that. He's as good, or maybe better, than he
ever was, and many of my artist friends consider him a major
influence on their music, as do I."
The irony of returning to Warner Bros. with a hot-shot
producer is not lost on Anderson, who was once the label's
young gun himself. "We did a lot of good business with Warner
in the early days," he says. "Not only did I get hits, but back
then I got paid for most of them, I believe."
PREMIER HITMAKER
The Apopka, Fla., native first came to Nashville in the
late '70s with little more than a dream and a voice that Mark Knopfler described as sounding "like he's singing through a
volume pedal."
"Actually, when I first came to Nashville, I just wanted to
sing and play for a living," Anderson, 52, says over the
country ham special at a local diner. "I always said if I could
just pay rent, anything above that would be a bonus."
Within two weeks, Anderson was singing and playing at the
city's Lower Broadway honky-tonks, developing one of country's
most distinct vocal deliveries. He signed to Warner Bros. in
1979, where a lengthy string of hits (20 Billboard top-10
singles) followed, beginning with "1959" in 1981.
Anderson became one of country's premier hitmakers of the
'80s with such staples as "Your Lyin' Blue Eyes," the
gold-certified "Wild and Blue" (his first chart-topper in 1982)
and the 1983 mega-hit "Swingin'," recently named No. 30 on the
list of top jukebox hits of all time by the Amusement and Music
Operators Assn.
"I catch myself sometimes emulating his voice when I'm
writing a new song," Rich says. "His voice has been in my head
since I started listening to music. He is the George Jones of
my generation. Period."
After a dry spell, Anderson stormed back to the airwaves in
the early '90s with hits like "Straight Tequila Night," "I Wish
I Could Have Been There" and the Florida Everglades anthem
"Seminole Wind"; the album of the same name has sold
double-platinum. He last cracked the top 10 of the country
singles charts in 1995 with "Bend It Until It Breaks."
Anderson's handlers estimate he's sold more than 10 million
records. Along the way, he has also recorded for MCA, Capitol,
BNA and Mercury.
NO USE CRYING
Back on the road, driving his Chevy Silverado through the
winding backroads of Smithville, Tenn., 50 miles east of
Nashville, where Anderson has lived for nearly three decades,
this master of twang seems to take his oscillating career all
in stride.
"You can get as frustrated as you want, and you can rant
and rave and stomp around the living room in front of your wife
and kids and make them miserable. Or you can cuss everybody
down on Music Row all you want to, it still don't do any good,"
he says.
Now, it seems, the Row is appreciating Anderson again,
thanks to Rich and his Big & Rich partner Big Kenny, who have
also worked with Gretchen Wilson and Cowboy Troy.
With Rich at the helm on "Easy Money," Anderson betrays his
roadhouse rocker roots on the title cut, "Funky Country,"
"Brown Liquor" and "If Her Lovin' Don't Kill Me." Such sounds
have rarely been heard on Anderson albums, but Anderson says he
started his musical journey as a Florida rocker, distorted
guitars and all.
As stone country as his vocal is, Anderson has never seen
many barriers in music, having confidently covered acts ranging
from Bruce Springsteen to the Georgia Satellites. "I always
said I can sing 'Thriller' just as good as Michael Jackson can
sing 'Lyin' Blue Eyes,"' he says with a grin.
His audience has been just as varied. "Even back in the old
days, in the early 1980s, we'd play places on the West Coast,
we'd have a great mix," Anderson says. "Everything from punk
rockers to bluegrass hippies."
Anderson says his live shows have always rocked pretty
hard, even after he defined himself as a "country" artist. "The
band, when we played 'Black Sheep' and 'Chicken Truck,' we were
rocking that hard anyway, we just didn't get away with it a lot
in the studio," he says.
For "Easy Money" there were no such restrictions with Rich
at the board, and though Anderson has co-produced most of his
albums, he felt comfortable handing the wheel over to Rich.
Rich's influence is undeniable on the record, but it's
still pure Anderson, and the country ballads and signature
vocal would have fit nicely in any of his previous heydays.
Whether "Easy Money" blows up or not -- country radio
programmers seem reluctant to add anyone over 40 unless their
name is Reba or Strait -- Anderson will continue to work the
touring circuit, as he has from the beginning. This unrepentant
road dog has missed only two shows (due to a heart attack and a
kidney stone) of thousands booked through the years.
"A big part of the last six years that's about all we had
to go on, touring and writing new songs," Anderson says. "What
keeps us going and always will keep us going is getting out on
the road. That ol' bus window and me are real good friends
after 30 years."
Reuters/Billboard
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