Kenny Chesney

While other artists have streaked momentarily across the musical landscape only to fade back into obscurity, Kenny Chesney has built his 
career the old-fashioned way: one step, one hit, one gold record at a time ­ "like a slow burning fuse on the way to a big explosion" is how 
Billboard described Chesney's gradual yet steady ascension in the nearly four years since his major label debut. "It has been a slow build," says the 29-year-old East Tennessee-born singer, whose first single release ­ aptly titled Whatever It Takes ­ 
came out in November, 1993. "All along I've just tried to learn everything I can and take small, little-bitty steps, no matter what they were, just knowing that one day I'd be able to look back and see I've covered a lot of ground. And it's worked ­ especially in the past couple of years. We've really established a fan base, and it's continuing to grow." 

Building on the foundation of a pair of 1995 Top Five singles ­ (Don't That Make You Want To) Fall In Love and All I Need To Know (the title tune from his second BNA album) ­ Chesney literally struck gold in recent months. Sales of his 1996 album, Me And You, spurred by the Number One hit, When I Close My Eyes, have surpassed the coveted half-million mark. 

Though the progression of Chesney's early recording career may have been measured off in small increments, he's taken a giant step with I Will Stand, his third and most recent BNA album. Musically speaking, he has never sounded so confident, mature, soulful and rooted in his bedrock influences. 

"I did a lot of writing for this project and spent about four months just looking for songs," says Chesney, who co-wrote three of I Will Stand's 11 tracks. "My producers, Norro Wilson and Buddy Cannon (George Jones, Sammy Kershaw, etc.) and I spent another four months in the studio. We really worked hard on production; we went back in and re-cut some of the tracks three or four times. The worst thing I felt could 
happen was to rush the process, because this is such a crucial album for me." 

I Will Stand, emotionally, thematically, and career-wise, is very much a sheer labor of love from a man who will tell you with utter, unflinching convincing: "I love country music." Chesney is quick to point out it's no coincidence that love, along with 
faith and reassurance, are themes that recur in many of the songs on I Will Stand. Such as the yearning Lonely Needin' Lovin' (penned by Chesney, Buddy Brock, and Donny Kees); the powerful title track (co-written by Mark Germino and Casey Beathard); the tender, understanding She Gets That Way (When I'm Gone) (Roger Brown/Adam Hughes); the profoundly sad, Dean Dillon/Royce Porter-penned A Chance; and the heart-wrenching, lost-in-love ballad, She Always Says It First, 
which Chesney co-wrote with Dean Dillon. 

"Conway Twitty was always one of my favorite performers, and he always 
said that he tried to record songs that the women loved, and which said things that the men always wanted to say to the women but couldn't. Well, if I can do that too, then that's definitely what I wanta do." 

Other musical dimensions and ambitions are also fleshed out here by this versatile, seasoned young artist who grew up in Luttrell, Tennessee (the birthplace of Chet Atkins) surrounded by country music, but listening to "everything from old Keith Whitley and Ricky Skaggs bluegrass records and George Jones to Lynyrd Skynyrd and James Taylor." 

Chesney gets to showcase a previously untapped side of his musical temperament on his sensuous, simmering rendition of Tony Joe White's Steamy Windows. He also takes a sharp, heartfelt rightward turn down the dirt road leading to his country roots on the gut bucket From Hillbilly Heaven To Honky Tonk Hell. He's joined on this pathos-drenched cut by his pals and musical heroes Tracy Lawrence and George Jones. On the moving confessional That's Why I'm Here Chesney also delves into mature thematic territory that he's never visited before. 

"No matter how good a song is, I just can't make it believable if my heart's not a hundred percent into it, and ultimately that's what I have to go on," he explains of his arduous song-screening process. "I've passed on songs that I knew would be hits and later were big hits by other artists. But that's okay, because I know they wouldn't have been hits for me, because my heart wouldn't have been in them." 

If Chesney's career has unfolded a little differently than others, it should be no surprise that his personal history, as it pertains to his musical development, has a few unique twists, as well. "I'm not one of these guys who can sit here and tell you that since I was four years old I knew I wanted to be a country singer," Chesney laughs. "I think it's often b.s. when people say that anyway. To be honest, I never dreamed about being a singer as a kid. Never once gave it a thought. I was mainly just growing up and playing sports. I didn't know what I wanted to do until I was in college at East Tennessee State in Johnson City. "Even then," he adds, "it wasn't like I just woke up one day and decided, I'm gonna be a country singer!' It just happened, just evolved into what I do. I was in college, I got a guitar, I learned a lot about it. Then all the sudden I'd written a few songs, then I was out playing clubs and making a little money here and there. And ya know, about another year after that I was doing it all the time. It wasn't till I got out in the clubs that anyone ever said to me, Man, you really oughta try to do something with this.'" 

Chesney became a fixture at prestigious Johnson City area venues ­ a Mexican restaurant called Chuckie's Trading Post and Quarterback's Barbecue. "The scene up there then was mostly blues, rock, and folk," he recalls. "I was about the only one doing George Jones and Hank, Jr. I got to where I had a pretty good following." 

An awakening of sorts came when he went into the Classic Recording Studio in Bristol, Virginia. Backed by several musicians he knew from college who are now the core of Alison Krauss's band, he recorded an album's worth of songs he'd written. When he pressed up a thousand copies and sold them all at his shows and made enough to buy a new Martin guitar, he realized he was onto something. 

A month after graduating college with a degree in advertising he headed down I-40 West to Nashville in early 1991 where, "I dug my feet in, took a deep breath, and went for it." 

The going was slow the first couple years. He made the rounds of the publishing companies without much success. He went to see the only person he knew in the business, producer Kyle Lehning, who told him, "You've definitely got something, but it ain't there yet." The only steady gig he could find playing music was in a down and dirty honky-tonk called the Turf. This was on Lower Broadway before the area's 
recent re-gentrification. 

"Once the tourist season was over the majority of people in there were drunks and prostitutes, a lot of 'em really living in the street," Chesney recalls with something approaching nostalgia. "These ol' boys would be sitting there double-fisting Milwaukee's Best Lite and wanting to hear every Vern Gosdin song ever recorded, and I'd sit there and play every one of' em. It was tough, but I always felt safe down there. People treated me good, and a lot of those street people became my friends. 
Some nights I'd walk out with twenty dollars, some nights with two hundred. 

"The only problem," he adds, "was after eight months I began to realize that nobody was gonna come walkin' into the Turf and discover ol' Kenny Chesney. So I quit and took a job parking cars." 

Setting out to meet as many people in the business as he could, Chesney 
made one steadfast ally: Clay Bradley, head of publisher/writer relations at BMI. After countless turndowns by publishers, Bradley, in 1992, set up an audition with Acuff-Rose, one of Music City's oldest and most venerated song mills. Chesney came out of the audition with a songwriter's contract. A year or so later an appearance one night at a songwriter's showcase led to a recording contract with Capricorn 
Records, which had recently started a country division. "The whole Capricorn deal was a very big emotional roller coaster ride," Chesney remembers. "Of course, for that matter, the whole music business is the biggest roller coaster ride in the world." 

Ultimately, Capricorn had neither the clout or the staying power to get much done with Chesney's impressive debut album. He'd had only a couple of modest chart singles when the label closed its Nashville office. But one of his 1994 singles, a song he wrote called The Tin Man, stirred considerable interest up and down the Row, despite only making it to Number 70. 

Almost immediately there was interest from several majors. RCA's Joe Galante put in a call and not only offered Chesney a contract, but also offered to buy the masters of his Capricorn album. 

That's when the long, slow climb began in earnest. Though his Capricorn LP sold only about 100,000 units, All I Need To Know, his debut 1995 BNA disc, more than tripled that figure, setting the stage for his gold-certified second BNA album, Me And You. 

"I'd be lying if I told you there wasn't a lot of frustration at first because I wasn't getting much airplay and was kind of perceived as an independent artist," Chesney acknowledges. "But my real goal in this business is to treat people good and build the kind of relationships so I can stay around a long time. Ten or even twenty years from now, if I'm still lucky enough to be having hits, or even if I'm not, I still would 
like to be able to go out and tour all year long. 

"But I also made a resolution last New Year's Eve to have as much fun as 
I can with all this," he adds with a satisfied grin. "I have a friend who was a very, very successful major league baseball player, but he told me one day his only regret was that he was so stressed out all the time that he didn't enjoy one minute of it, didn't have an ounce of fun. 


"Well, I don't know how long the good Lord's gonna let me be in this music business, or even be this successful at it," he adds with a warm, measured smile. "So while I'm here I want to enjoy every minute of it."

Discography:

 

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