I realized I could sing Randy Travis songs. It worked out well

Chris  Young  has  accomplished  more  by  29  than  some  artists  do  in  a  lifetime.  Already  a  Grammy-­‐ nominated   recording   artist,   he’s...
Author: Byron Melton
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Chris  Young  has  accomplished  more  by  29  than  some  artists  do  in  a  lifetime.  Already  a  Grammy-­‐ nominated   recording   artist,   he’s   also   a   dynamic   live   performer   consistently   in   demand,   an   international   ambassador  for  his  genre,  a  talented  songwriter  with  six  Number  Ones  to  his  name  –  by  the  way,  he  wrote   four  of  them  –  and  a  handsome  charmer  to  boot.  Now,  with  the  release  of  his  fourth  album,  A.M.,  the  man   known  for  his  classic  baritone  and  melt-­‐your-­‐heart  ballads  knows  how  to  have  a  good  time,  too.     Still,  when  all  is  said  and  done,  it  only  takes  two  words  to  sum  up  the  career  of  Chris  Young:  Definitely   country.   “I’ve  always  loved  country  music,  and  I  really  liked  singing  it  as  a  kid,”  Young  remembers.  “So  I  was  like,   ‘That’s   what   I   want   to   do.’   I   just   kind   of   always   knew.”   His   first   record   purchase   was   Keith   Whitley’s  L.A.   to   Miami,  followed  by  the  likes  of  Randy  Travis,  Tracy  Lawrence  and  Brooks  &  Dunn.  He  sang  so  much  around   the  house  that  he  jokes  his  parents  “blocked  him  out.”  But  as  puberty  approached,  the  young  tenor  found   himself  facing  adversity  for  the  first  time.  “I  was  singing  all  of  Vince  Gill’s  stuff,  and  then  my  voice  changed,”   Young  laughs.  “For  about  a  year  there,  I  thought,  ‘Oh  my  God,  I’m  ruined.  It’s  the  end  of  the  world!’  And  then   I  realized  I  could  sing  Randy  Travis  songs.  It  worked  out  well.”   That’s  something  of  an  understatement  for  the  Murfreesboro,  TN  native.  Blessed  with  parents  who   encouraged  his  art,  Young  soon  found  his  way  into  musical  theater,  jazz  training,  and  six  years  of  classical  

voice,  which  honed  his  emerging  baritone  into  something  truly  special.  In  his  early  teens,  Young  convinced  his   mom  to  drive  him  into  Nashville  so  he  could  sit  in  with  bands  and  work  with  local  songwriters;  by  16,  he’d   formed   a   band   with   some   older   guys   from   Middle   Tennessee   State   University,   and   they   started   playing   George  Strait  and  Garth  Brooks  covers  in  whatever  clubs  would  have  them.  “I  was  entirely  too  young  to  be   playing  in  bars,”  Young  says.  “I  would  have  these  big  Xs  in  chunky  black  marker  on  my  hands.  I  can’t  imagine   we  were  that  good,  but  really,  that  was  me  enjoying  the  heck  out  of  what  I  did.”   Everyone  starts  somewhere,  and  Young  was  starting  to  hone  his  craft.  “People  were  telling  me  to   learn  to  write  songs,”  he  says.  “I’d  written  poems  and  stuff,  but  I  didn’t  really  know  how.  Which  is  funny,   because  you  don’t  necessarily  have  to  know  how  to  write  a  song.  You  just  sit  down  and  create  something.   You  make  it  up.”  He  cut  his  first  independent  record  after  high  school,  using  his  own  money  to  fund  500  or  so   CDs  and  take  himself  on  a  short  tour  of  Florida,  where  he  played  mostly  Borders  bookstores.  “One  day,  I   played  to  three  people,”  Young  remembers.  “Two  were  playing  chess,  and  the  other  person  was  reading  a   book.  When  I  said,  ‘Well,  this  will  be  my  last  song,’  the  lady  reading  the  book  clapped.”     If  you’re  starting  to  think,  Wow,  this  kid  has  a  work  ethic,  you’re  getting  the  idea.  Three  semesters  at   Nashville’s  Belmont  University  and  a  short  stint  at  MTSU  taught  him  he  wasn’t  cut  out  for  college  life.  Instead,   he  picked  up  more  than  a  diploma  interning  for  a  song  publishing  company  owned  by  Laura  Stroud,  the  wife   of  his  future  producer,  James  Stroud.    Soon  after,  he  scored  an  offer  for  a  regular  weekly  gig  as  the  frontman   for  the  house  band  at  Cowboys  Dancehall  in  Arlington,  one  of  the  biggest  country  clubs  in  Texas.  He  dropped   out  of  college,  and  began  earning  an  equivalent  of  a  Ph.D  in  the  honky  tonks  of  Texas,  where  he  played  more   than  150  dates  a  year.  He  was  20.  “We  would  open  for  anybody  who  came  through  –  Lonestar,  Dwight   Yoakam.  That’s  where  I  got  real  experience  working  with  a  band,  lights,  in-­‐ear  monitors,  everything.  I’m  pretty  

lucky,”  he  admits.  “When  I  dropped  out  of  college  and  moved  to  Texas,  my  parents  didn’t  disown  me.”  He   soon  returned  to  Tennessee  and  landed  a  recording  contract  with  RCA  Nashville.  “I  loved  that  label,”  Young   says.   “It   was   a   heritage   label   that   some   of   my   favorite   artists   had   been   on.   Keith   Whitley.   John   Anderson.   I   think  it’s  where  I  was  supposed  to  be.”     Four   albums  and  seven  years  later,  Young  looks  back  with  some  amazement.  “It’s  wild  to  think  that   I’ve  been  around  that  long,”  he  says.  “People  always  told  me,  ‘Hey,  the  record  deal  isn’t  the  finish  line.’  It’s  the   beginning  of  the  work,”  he  says.  “I  probably  did  four  full  radio  tours  starting  out,  just  going  around  saying,   ‘Hey,  still  here…  not  going  away…’  I  think  RCA  saw  my  work  ethic.  They  kept  me  around.”  Ask  Young  today   how  it  felt  as  the  momentum  began  to  turn,  and  he’ll  say,  with  typical  humility,  “After  the  first  hit  [“Getting   You  Home  (The  Little  Black  Dress  Song)”],  it  was  like,  ‘Okay,  thank  God  I  made  enough  money  that  I  can  buy  a   really  small  place  to  live.’  After  the  second  hit  [“The  Man  I  Want  To  Be”],  it  was  a  mixture  of  validation  and  just   relief.    ‘Okay,  I’m  not  a  one  hit  wonder.’”     Far   from   it:   He   would   chart   five   consecutive   Number   One   singles,   co-­‐writing   four   of   them,   and   receiving   plenty   of   Grammy,   ACM,   and   CMA   nominations   along   the   way.   With   A.M.,   this   self-­‐professed   “studio  nerd”  is  ready  to  launch  phase  two  of  a  plan  he  cooked  up  years  ago  with  longtime  producer  James   Stroud.  “When  we  started  making  The  Man  I  Want  To  Be,  we  talked  it  out,”  Young  says.  “He  told  me,  ‘Man,  I   had  this  vision  that  we  would  do  this  record  and  the  next  to  really  establish  what  your  sound  is.  After  that,   you  get  to  grow  and  stretch  and  play.’  That’s  what  we  did  with  A.M.  I  could  kind  of  do  whatever  I  wanted.”     Young  co-­‐wrote  six  of  the  eleven  tracks  on  the  record,  including  the  Top  5  hit  “Aw  Naw,”  which  sets  the   tone  immediately.  An  irreverent  story  about  what  Young  calls  “an  accidental  party  –  ‘Hey,  I  just  came  to  have   one,  and  ended  up  staying  all  night,’”  it’s  got  an  addictive  four-­‐on-­‐the-­‐floor  vibe  that’s  tailor  made  for  live  sing-­‐

alongs,  and  a  tongue-­‐in-­‐cheek  title  that’s  both  ridiculous  and  ridiculously  inescapable.  “It’s  just  a  slang  way  of   saying,  ‘Oh,  hell  no,’”  Young  explains.  “The  guy  that  brought  it  up  was  [co-­‐writer]  Ashley  Gorley.  He  goes,  ‘Aw   naw!’  And  it  was  like,  ‘How  do  you  spell  that?’”     Combined  with  the  album’s  equally  raucous  title  track,  one  might  expect  A.M.  to  be  something  of  a   concept   album   about   things   getting   crazy   after   midnight.   Instead,   “It’s   things   that   you   wouldn’t   necessarily   expect,”  says  Young,  citing  tracks  like  the  albums  second  single,  “Who  I  Am  With  You,”  which  reached  the  top   of  the  singles  charts  and  sold  more  than  500,000  copies.  The  tender,  traditional  love  song  called  “Goodbye”  is   further  evidence  that  there’s  something  deeper  going  on  in  the  hours  before  the  dawn.  “’Lighters  in  the  Air’  is   about  meeting  someone  and  falling  in  love  at  a  concert,  losing  yourself  in  that  night  with  the  band  playing  in   the  background,”  he  says.  “And  ‘Goodbye’  –  when  you  look  at  the  title,  you  might  assume  it’s  a  breakup  song.   But  it’s  about  a  relationship  worth  fighting  for,  showing  up  at  somebody’s  house  in  the  middle  of  the  night   and  trying  to  work  it  out.”   More  than  anything,  A.M.  is  defiantly,  definitely  country.  “Everybody’s  got  a  definition  of  what  country   music  is,”  Young  says.  “Never  before  has  it  been  so  broad  as  to  what  can  be  on  a  country  radio  station,  and   what  country  music  can  be.  It  really  just  has  to  be  what  you  feel  as  an  artist.”  With  its  double  guitars  and   occasional  moments  of  arena-­‐rock  glory,  A.M.  sounds  unlike  any  album  Young  has  ever  made  –  but  that   doesn’t  change  what  he  calls  the  “core  principle”  of  his  music:  “I’m  never  going  to  lose  the  acoustic  guitar  and   the   steel   and   the   story   in   the   song,”   he   says.   “When   I   open   my   mouth,   I   sound   country.   No   one’s   going   to   confuse   my   records   with   being   outside   of   the   genre.   Will   I   push   some   boundaries   for   some   people?   Hopefully.  But  I’m  a  country  singer.”  

And  for  anyone  who  knows  the  real  Chris  Young,  the  party  anthems  on  A.M.  won’t  come  as  that   much  of  a  surprise.  Though  he’s  made  his  name  on  mature,  sensitive,  heartfelt  hits  like  “Tomorrow,”  “You,”   and  “Voices,”  he  is,  at  heart,  just  like  any  other  29  –year-­‐old  guy.  “If  I  wanted  my  friends  to  describe  me  any   way  possible,”  Young  says,  “it  would  be  ‘He’s  fun  to  hang  out  with.’”  On  his  rare  days  off  from  the  road  or  the   studio,  you’ll  find  him  fishing  with  his  dad,  geeking  out  on  music  from  old-­‐school  Nashville  to  early  ‘90s  New   Jack   Swing,   sitting   in   with   a   band   at   a   hole-­‐in-­‐the-­‐wall   club,   or   simply   closing   down   the   bars   on   Lower   Broadway  with  his  buddies,  ordering  pizza  and  playing  song  wars  on  the  jukebox  until  dawn.  “I’m  a  normal   dude,”  says  Young.  “I  just  happen  to  have  a  really  freakin’  cool  job.”   Recently  named  one  of  the  summer’s  top  tour  openers  by  Entertainment  Weekly,  Young  is  on  the   road  with  Dierks  Bentley  on  the  “Riser  Tour”  –  the  latest  in  a  string  of  high-­‐profile  supporting  slots  including   tours   with   Jason   Aldean,   Miranda   Lambert,   Brad   Paisley   and   George   Strait.   He’s   also   plotting   his   next   headlining  run,  with  an  eye  on  playing  a  stadium  someday.  And  with  the  release  of  A.M.  he  says,  “I’m  happy.  I   think  this  is  probably  the  happiest  I’ve  been  in  my  life.  I  love  the  record  that  I  made,  I’m  happy  that  it’s   different,  that  I’m  stretching  a  little  bit  –  and  that  people  seem  to  be  liking  it.  And  I’m  on  a  great  tour.  It’s  just  a   really,  really  good  time  right  now.  Maybe  that’s  why  I  felt  so  compelled  to  put  party  songs  on  this  record.   ‘Cause  that’s  kind  of  how  I  feel.”     # # # Updated:  7/14