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Brooks
& Dunn
The
inspiration for the title of Brooks & Dunn's new album,
Tight Rope, came from the rodeo, not the circus. "To
a cowboy, a 'tight rope' is real tension," Kix Brooks explains.
"It's a dangerous kind of thing when horses get on either
side of a steer and somebody's fixin' to get his hand tore off"
"But really," Ronnie Dunn says, "tight rope has
lots of meanings." "Right," Brooks agrees.
Taken
literally, "tight rope" could evoke the image of two
exciting performers attempting a dangerous high wire crossing
together as the crowd below holds its collective breath. Taken
figuratively, "tight rope" could make us think of
artists taking a bold chance and ultimately finding beauty and
balance. Did Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn have all these images
in mind when they named their new record? Maybe. But mostly,
we suspect, it was a cowboy thing.
Recording
their 6th studio album may not have been as dangerous as bulldogging
or bull riding. Nonetheless, Brooks & Dunn, the top-selling
country duo of all-time, took a risk with Tight Rope.
Without abandoning their trademark sound, they've experimented
by making their most progressive record yet. "It's something
completely different than what we've done in the past,"
says Dunn. "I'm totally pumped about it."
No
doubt, Brooks & Dunn's confidence to expand musically on
Tight Rope grew out of their repeated chart successes
over the course of their career. The studio sessions for the
new record followed an especially inspiring year when the duo
added several new chart-toppers from their If You See Her
disc to their string of hits: "If You See Him/If You
See Her," the duet with Reba (#1), "How Long Gone,"
(#I), "Husbands & Wives," (#1) and "I Can't
Get Over You" (Top 5).
Success,
though, can be a mixed blessing. With it comes a high expectation
from fans and critics to top your latest effort. But Brooks
& Dunn say they'll take that kind of pressure over the anxiety
they felt as a new duo bursting onto the country scene almost
a decade ago.
"All
the pressures that we'd worried about coming up, we don't feel
as chained to these days," Dunn says. "Our touring
schedule is not as rough by choice and it gives us a little
more time. We've been working on writing this record as hard
as any one we've been involved in. We kind of just rekindled
the fire. But we've been doing it long enough we're starting
to relax and have fun with it. Which is good...you have to."
"Cutting tracks is really fun," Brooks adds. "but
songwriting can be so tedious. It's very gratifying when you're
finished. But I dread the process. It's like a big exam hanging
over your head. To me, the real joy is when you finish writing
a song. THAT is where the excitement is."
"I
think the fun part is watching the songs that you write come
to life in the studio," Dunn says. "We wrote every
song but one. Watching them come to life...that's a blast! You
work two years on a record. Finally getting it down is like
taking off in a plane and heading for the moon."
After
Tight Rope was finished, he couldn't wait to hear the first
single on the radio. "I wanted to see how the songs sounded
technically," Dunn says. "To see how they held up."
Part of his excitement about the technical aspect of the songs
on Tight Rope is the addition to the production team
of producer Byron Gallimore, who has lately distinguished himself
for his work with Tim McGraw, Faith Hill and Jo Dee Messina.
Dunn thought bringing Gallimore aboard would "stir up the
pot a bit."
"I went to Byron to get a more progressive, technical edge,"
Dunn says. "Kind of like stepping into a little bit of
a faster car. He brings an edge to what he does, but more than
anything, he brings a new-sounding instrumentation to the songs."
In addition to Gallimore, Brooks & Dunn assembled a crew
of their most inspiring songwriting partners and producers to
create the new record. Don Cook, who has been a Brooks &
Dunn producer, co-songwriter and vital collaborator since the
beginning, returned to his place at the board. As co-producers
themselves, Brooks & Dunn oversaw the details of every cut.
Of
the 13 songs on the album, six bear Brooks' imprint and six
Dunn's. Their co-writers are Terry McBride, Bob DiPiero, Tom
Shapiro, Chris Waters, Lewis Anderson and Don Cook. The odd
song out is a soulful country remake of "Missing You,"
John Waite's 1984 hit. Including that song was Dunn's idea,
who says, "It's always been one of my favorites."
Work on this album - Brooks & Dunn's sixth (seventh including
The Greatest Hits Collection), began in March and concluded
in July.
Most
of the songs were written on the road during their two-year
joint tour with Reba. The two partners routinely invite fellow
writers to join them on their buses for work sessions. "It's
pretty much the productive way for me to go-and Ronnie too,
I think," says Brooks. "When we're home, our families
have missed us and we've missed them. After you've been out
working all week on the road, it's hard to come home just to
start working again."
Both
Brooks & Dunn frequently work on songs after performing
shows. They often work long into the night. "Hurt Train,"
co-written by Ronnie Dunn and Terry McBride, was written after
the tour bus passed a train traveling through California at
3:30 in the morning. "When the inspiration hits,"
Dunn says, "you've got to roll with it."
Kix Brooks says he not only works after shows, he often works
during the shows. "On the last tour with Reba," he
says, "we'd have a break while she was performing, then
come back and do the encore. If we'd come off stage, I'd go
work on a song before we went back out. You're kind of geared
up. You've got to sit there for an hour and do something."
It
seems Brooks & Dunn have found a way to be productive while
challenging themselves and each other musically. "I just
take it one song at a time," says Dunn.'Yeah, I do too,"
says Brooks. "But after we've gotten a good batch of songs
together, we always comment on each other's material. We try
to be honest without hurting each other's feelings. We've been
together long enough and there's enough at stake that we try
to let each other know how we feel."
The
product of their labor, Tight Rope, is a remarkably broad
and unified collection of songs about love in all its phases.
Laments for relationships gone wrong - "Goin' Under Gettin'
Over You," "Hurt Train," "Can't Stop My
Heart," "Too Far This Time," "All Out Of
Love" and "The Trouble With Angels" - find their
emotional antidote in such high-spirited party-time roars as
"Temptation #9" and "Beer Thirty." "You'll
Always Be Loved By Me" is a towering proclamation of devotion,
while "I Love You More" is an alternately subdued
and intense pitch for constancy over momentary passion. "Don't
Look Back Now" gently but firmly encouraged the facing
of hard reality. "Texas and Norma Jean" is a tender
story of how a chance encounter changes everything that follows.
"We
are a little older," says Dunn, "and the emotional
well to draw from is deeper. But we still can't resist adding
a kick-ass song here and there."
During
Fan Fair week this past July, Brooks & Dunn held a fan club
party at the Ryman Auditorium. From the stage, Dunn told a story
about sharing a dressing room with Glen Campbell during an awards
show a few years ago. "I was so nervous," Dunn said.
"There he was - Glen Campbell, bigger than life. We got
to talking about songs. He said, 'I like all your songs except
that one thing...that Boot...whatever Scoot.' He said,'Can you
imagine singing that in your 40's?"
The
fans at the party roared with laughter as the forty-something
Dunn slapped his knee while his equally forty-something partner
chuckled and shook his head. Brooks & Dunn's ability to
laugh at themselves and, yes, still sing "Boot Scootin'
Boogie," along with a new party song, "Beer Thirty,"
coupled with mature songs such as "Don't Look Back Now"
and "All Out of Love," shines the spotlight on a vibrant
duo with true staying power.
The
Arista/Nashville due's landmark career achievements include
"Entertainer of the Year" for both the Country Music
Association (1996) and the Academy of Country Music (1995 and
1996). They have received "Due of the Year" honors
from the CMA for the past 8 consecutive years, and duo nods
from the ACM for 7 consecutive years. Collectively, the Brooks
& Dunn discography accounts for just under 21 million records
sold. With 1 Quintuple-Platinum, 2 Quadruple-Platinum, 3 Triple-Platinum,
5 Double-Platinum and 6 Platinum RIAA Certified albums to their
credit, the due's debut album entitled "Brand New Man"
is just shy of 6 million units sold. Their trail of hits includes
17 Number 1's and 26 Top 10's.
Brooks
& Dunn are consistently among the top draws on the concert
circuit; in fact, their 1997 tour, which they co-headlined with
Reba, broke all previous highest-grossing country tour records.
The duo is currently in the threes of their Coors Light Tailgate
Tour, which is taking them away from arenas and back outside
to fairs and festivals. "l'm having such a good time playing
music right now," says Brooks. "The band's playing
good. The crowds have been really rocking. It's good to get
back outdoors and raise a little hell." The only drawback
of playing outdoor venues: Both guys suffer from allergies.
They both adapt by washing down antihistamines with Coke before
going onstage. "A poor man's speedball," jokes Dunn.
During
breaks in the tour, the duo returns to Nashville and embraces
their lives at home.
Brooks,
along with his wife Barbara, is heavily involved in horse breeding
and showing horses. He is also a dad who keeps his promises.
Recently, after returning home late after a show in upstate
New York, he rose early to take his 13-year-old daughter Molly
to her first day of school...on the back of his Harley-Davidson.
"It was important for her to be cool on the first day of
school," he says.
Dunn,
who along with his wife Janine, has been renovating a Nashville
home for two years now, often spends his time at home updating
his collection of art. Dunn may be filling up the space of a
partially empty nest - his oldest daughter Whitney just left
home to start college. Their home is currently filled with a
new sampling of colorful, contemporary Russian art. Complementing
the Russian paintings is an enormous moose head and big horn
sheep Dunn found this summer in Ft. Worth, Texas and couldn't
resist bringing home in the luggage compartment of his bus.
It's never long before Brooks & Dunn are back on the road
again. This month they will add the new single from Tight
Rope, "Missing You" to their concert set list.
"I can't wait to start playing it," Brooks says. "To
me, it's fun to play stuff when people recognize it. To look
out there and see them singing along...there's nothing like
it."
The
record flows like a concert, kicking off with high-energy, then
dipping into one soulful ballad after another. With this record,
the duo who gave us "Rock My World" and "Boot
Scootin' Boogie" may become as well known for their heart-tugging
tunes as for those that make folks get up and dance.
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