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DIERKS BENTLEY
Not so many years ago, he was singing for tips in Second Avenue bars and
soaking up country music history at his day job as a tape librarian at the late,
great Nashville Network.
Today he's among the most successful and relevant country singers in the
business. They say Nashville doesn't work like this anymore - that talented
strivers with no connections don't stand a chance. But Dierks Bentley proved
that Music City's engine still runs and that as a place for education,
inspiration and validation, it has no parallel. Critics find him credible. Fans
pack his shows. There are precious few new artists recording hits today about
whom that can be said.
Bentley's kind of country has never been straight-up-the-middle. Instead, the
Arizona-native grew up on a potent hybrid of honky-tonk, bluegrass,
singer/songwriters, classic country and modern rock & roll, forging his own
sound along the way.
"I love the feeling of combining the best older stuff with the edginess of
newer, more progressive sounds," says the prestigious CMA Horizon Award winner.
"I try to take the real life connectedness of the stories and songs of Hank
Williams and Buck Owens, and then try to put a fresh modern sound to it."
After selling almost 5 million copies of his previous three studio albums, which
included 10 top-10 singles and five No. 1 hits - most country artists with
comparable achievements would be reluctant to veer off a proven hit-making path.
Bentley is the exception. He shuns the comfort zone and welcomes the risk of
what he refers to as "almost bringing the element of failure back into the mix."
"I'm not the kind of guy, who wants to go into the studio every two years and
just keep putting out more of the same because it has worked so far," says
Bentley. "I really wanted to change our initial approach to the recording
process... do it in more of a rock and roll, or an old outlaw kind of country way.
Use your guys; go in the studio; take the clock off the wall."
After spending more than two years writing, road testing and recording new
material, Bentley is ready for the next phase: the Feb. 3 release of Feel That
Fire, a 12-song serving of rockers and ballads with a dash of honky tonk and
bluegrass.
It is all fire and passion that Bentley and co-producers Brett Beavers and Luke
Wooten claim has driven the entire process from the moment the first song was
conceived to the sleepless nights spent imagining creative ways to perfect the
on-stage delivery.
As an avid music fan himself, Bentley understands that to connect with a lot of
people, the instrumentation must be as diverse as the people packing the arena.
And with Feel That Fire, Bentley continues to engage all types of fans with
sounds ranging from arena-sized electric guitars to upright bass and banjos on
steroids.
From the opening slide guitar rampage that channels a Harley hauling ass in the
outlaw lament "Life on the Run" to the closing-time camaraderie of the duet and
bluegrass jam with bluegrass great Ronnie McCoury "Last Call," Feel That Fire
has the pulsing energy, passion and dynamic sensibility of his praised live
show.
Bentley's vintage free 'n easy spirit is still present in abundance, but now
it's tempered with a more thoughtful take on the vastness of life and love. The
title track and first single, Bentley's 11th top 10, came out of a writing
session with fellow tunesmiths Beavers and brothers Brett and Brad Warren. The
foursome combined their experiences to extol the virtues of a woman's innate
quirkiness and thrill-seeking nature as defined by the man who loves her.
On the wild side, the gravel-flying, good-timing Saturday night special
"Sideways" pays tribute to a guy's occasional need to cut loose. Similarly, the
infectious "Here She Comes" and "Little Heartwrecker" are classic Bentley and
showcase stellar instrumental jams from Nashville's finest. "I feel a
responsibility to other guys like me, who just want to cut loose, drink beer and
hear some great picking."
The Conway-esque "I Wanna Make You Close Your Eyes" is a song that Bentley says
"can't be more intimate, more one-on-one, man-to-one woman if you tried."
Bentley adds, "One of the best compliments I can get is when a guy comes up to
me and says that one of my songs helped him out at home, maybe helped him smooth
something over, with his girlfriend or wife. That's the goal with this one."
In a similar fashion, Bentley takes a modern approach to "I Can't Forget Her,"
delivering a sultry Spanish groove, mixed with The Edge-esque guitar sounds,
transporting the listener to the scenic landscapes of the Old Southwest.
"Beautiful World" teams Bentley with one of his favorite singers, Americana icon
Patty Griffin. The poignant song about recognizing there are two ways to look at
your reality and appreciating life despite the daily delivery of bad news is a
simplistic yet powerful ballad. "It's a fine line to walk because you don't want
to act like everything is great when it's not, but the point is that if you
choose to believe in something, hopefully your beliefs will lead to action.
Patty's voice adds so much depth that I can't even remember what it sounded like
without her."
"You Hold Me Together," an uplifting mid-tempo rocker, has Bentley offering
appreciation to the one who watches over him. "It's a love song, but also a
spiritual song. I try and write songs that break that boundary and can mean
different things to different people."
In a similar vein, "Better Believer" takes stock of life's blessings and
recognizes the need to be more grateful. "It's the truth," Bentley says of the
song he co-wrote with Rivers Rutherford. "It's exactly the way I feel. It is as
honest as I've ever been in a song."
Continuing the introspective theme, Bentley draws on personal experience for the
Rodney Crowell collaboration "Pray," where forgiveness and hope are extended to
a former love. "Rodney's the kind of guy that you can go to his house, bare your
soul and craft a really meaningful song that will stand the test of time."
For Bentley, Feel That Fire is about the passion of the moment. "As a
songwriter and a human being, I want to experience all that I can in this one
life we are given. You can't know good times unless you've known heartache and
sadness, and the best music is made in the journey."
On Feb. 3, Bentley will strike a match and invite fans to live for what is:
life; love; passion and possibility... Feel That Fire.
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