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Garth
Brooks
Double Live
It's
the Collaboration of a Decade: Garth Brooks and Five Million
Fans.
It's
also the deal of the decade. For a suggested retail price of
$13.99 you get 100 minutes of music, 25 songs recorded over
seven years selected from 347 shows in 99 cities, three new
songs and the closest you'll ever come to attending a Garth
Brooks concert without really being there. And if you have been
to one of these record-breaking concerts: listen carefully,
'cause the voice you hear on Garth Double Live just might
be your own.'
You
not only get a lot of music, you'll have a choice of packages,
too, for each million released has a different cover accompanied
by a different mini-tour book, featuring various events and
tours: Central Park, Ireland, Reunion Arena, Texas Stadium,
the World Tour II. The first million released carry a special
limited edition stamp. Garth includes his reflections on the
specific events, that time in his life, and shares the feelings
and transitions he went through thus far in his career. Reading
through the packages is like traveling through time with the
best selling solo artist and the biggest concert tour in music
history. And that's even before you listen to the music. That's
when the real trip begins.
For
Garth, what the tour has been about is simple - people. Perhaps
no entertainer has ever connected as completely with his audience
as has Garth Brooks. He loves them and they love him; together
they form a circle of power and energy the likes of which you've
never seen. To understand it, you have to go back in time. Back
to when Garth Brooks was a teenager, sitting in the nose-bleed
sections of arenas and wanting to feel part of the show, to
feel the excitement those performers felt, not just look at
it. To this day, when Garth arrives at a venue, he moves through
the empty arena, sitting in first one section and then another,
picturing himself a part of the audience.
That's
why, when he's down there on the stage, nobody is forgotten.
That's
why he was able to retain an intimacy with his audience as it
changed from the honky tonks of Texas and Oklahoma to the world's
stage.
That's
why, when Capitol sent the kid from Oklahoma out on a 1989 tour
of Western clubs, the ads they ran were prophetic:
"Garth Brooks & Stillwater."
Bring
'em to your town & watch 'em burn it down!"
Whoa doggies. Did they ever. And somewhere on the road from
honky tonks to arenas, Garth broke down the boundaries of country
music and redefined the genre. As the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
said in a 1996 concert review: "Brooks has utterly transformed
the stage values of country music." Or in the words of
a Palm Beach Post critic, the show is "wall-to-wall entertainment."
The overwhelming dynamic of the individual performances occurs
in part because they are not choreographed. The element of surprise
is what keeps every show fresh. For Garth, the surprise is the
audience, different on any given night. And for the band, the
surprise is very often Garth himself. Take the final night of
a Canadian run a couple of years back. It had been a long, exhausting
tour and the band was starting to wear down. They knew it. Garth
knew it and decided to fix it. Prior to show time he called
the band together for a pre-game huddle.
"I'll
pay five hundred dollars in cash to anybody who can knock me
down on stage tonight," Garth announced. "Impress
you with a guitar lick or what?" someone asked. "No,
I mean physically knock me flat on my butt," he said. That
got 'em jump-started. And all through the night they took their
best body slam's much to the delight of the Canadians who witnessed
it. When Garth was still standing by the final number, somebody
gave the signal and they rushed to center stage, toppling him
into a pile of laughing band members. (They split the cash.)
It was too close to call as to who loved it best: the audience,
the band, or Garth Brooks.
Stillwater
is an important part of Garth's show and career, and that is
by his design. He's never wanted to simply be the frontman,
and therein lies part of his genius as a showman. Each member
plays a big role.
It's
Mike Palmer's eleventh year with Garth, having started playing
drums for the band in 1987. On the entire Garth Double Live
package, Palmer never missed a beat. "He's always been
a great drummer," Garth says " But when we were in
Ireland three years ago, I passed on some advice Alien Reynolds
had given me and told Mike to try playing on the back side of
the beat for that big fat sound. After a couple of shows he
came over and said, 'Man, I wish you'd told me that seven years
ago!'"
James
Gaiver is on lead electric guitar as well as percussion, banjo
and acoustic guitar. " I just love it when James heads
into one of his solos and all the guys out there in the audience
are on their feet playing air guitar with him.--'cause that's
what his playing makes me feel like doing, too," Garth
laughs. James is also one of Garth's original band, as is steel
player Steve McClure. James and Steve started playing music
together back in their native Kansas, and when the two made
the move to Nashville James started p]aying with Stillwater
and brought Steve with him.
Most
of the bass on Double Live is provided by Mark Greenwood.
(Garth's sister, Betsy Smittle plays bass on "If Tomorrow
Never Comes" and "Much Too Young," the two cuts
gleaned from the Reunion Arena show.) "Listen to Mark playing
that kickin' bass on 'Papa Loved Mama," Garth notes. "It's
flawless. And the performance is all the more impressive when
you see us play the song, with Mark running around the stage
like a wild man, all of us joking with each other.
"One
of the things I'm proudest about on this album is the tight
rhythm tracks. Our keyboard player, Dave Gant, started out as
our fiddle player. But when rye added Jimmy Mattingly on fiddle,
Dave could settle in on the keys. So between his keys, Mark's
bass, Mike's drums and Debbie Nims's rhythm guitar, our rhythm
section was locked up tight. Debbie is also a stand-up bass
player, and her rhythm guitar is as good as anybody out there.
"Bela Fleck came in and added some banjo on 'Callin' Baton
Rouge,' and he even mentioned how the live music swelled and
surged with emotion. That's where the rhythm section made for
a great, solid track."
The
band is integral. That goes double for the audience.
"I've
never known an artist who loves what he does any more than Garth
Brooks," says producer Alien Reynolds with a smile and
a shake of his head. "Nor an artist who loved his audience
more."
The Baltimore Sun echoed that thought last year: "There
aren't many singers who connect with their fans as completely
as he did. Every corner of the crowd had the sense of being
completely connected...his fans felt like part of the family."
It's
evident as you listen to Double Live. On the credits,
background singers listed include Trisha Yearwood, Susan Ashton,
Steve Wariner, Donna McElroy, Victoria Shaw, Stephanie Davis
and more. There are five million more names that could have
been added if space permitted. Just listen to the audience sing
on "Unanswered Prayers," "The River" and
"The Dance." And check out how the crowds feed the
manic energy of songs like " Papa Loved Mama," "Ain't
Goin' Down 'Til The Sun Comes Up," "Two Pina Coladas,"
"American Honky Tonk Bar Association." "The Fever"
and -- of course - " Friends In Low Places."
That
kind of high octane fuel makes this the quintessential road
record, something to keep you alert in the middle of the night
through miles of lonely highway. And who better than Garth when
it comes to road records? In fact, Exxon conducted a recent
survey of American drivers and discovered that most would prefer
to take a road trip with a celebrity if given the choice. More
of those surveyed wanted their road companion to be Garth Brooks
than John Travolta, Leonardo DiCaprio and the cast of Seinfeld.
So if you're one of those folks who think Garth would be great
to have along on a road trip - here's your chance: Garth Double
Live.
The recordings date back to the record-setting 1991 Reunion
Arena event in Dallas, a decision Garth made at the urging of
Reynolds. " I'm really glad that Alien convinced me to
use songs from the Reunion Arena show," Garth says. "My
first thought was that the audience energy had changed so much
we should leave them out. But Alien thought that to accurately
represent the show and the audience through the decade, 'Much
Too Young (To Feel This Damn Old)' and 'If Tomorrow Never Comes'
should be pulled from that time period. He was right, because
you can really hear how the crowd has gotten wilder as time
has gone by. They know they are an integral part of the show
and people who wouldn't have been jumping up and down and screaming
ten years ago are doing it now."
Those
crowds had to be recorded carefully, with hanging microphones
positioned differently in each venue. "Allen Reynolds was
my ears for these recordings," Garth says. "He could
be out in the audience and hear above the roar that we hear
on the stage. He also had to sort through the hundreds of recordings
to find the best ones. And Allen convinced me to do some studio
work, things like replacing an out-of-tune guitar, add the choir
to 'We Shall Be Free' -that sort of thing. We put the studio
touches on when we felt to do otherwise compromised the music."
Reynolds
and engineer Mark Miller worked carefully with sound crews from
Nashville as well as others from throughout the world. The first
obstacle to face at each venue was finding a place to park the
semi housing the recording equipment, laughs Miller.
One
of the most interesting recording behind-the-scenes stories
in the seven year making of Garth DoubIe Live involves the three
new songs. When Garth decided to include the new material, he
first recorded the songs in the studio. Stillwater then learned
the songs for inclusion in the live show. After the road band
had added its own special brand of energy, Allen Reynolds brought
the studio band back in, played them the live versions and asked
them to re-record the songs as close to live as possible. Therefore,
two versions of the songs will be available for radio, one from
the live show (the version included on Double Live) and
one recorded in the studio.
"For
a studio dog like me, hearing these live performances is like
coming full circle," says Reynolds. "We work on a
song in the studio, then Garth takes it out on the road and
breathes a different life into it. Between the audience and
Garth, a whole new dimension is added to the music."
"Tearin'
It Up (And Burnin' It Down)" is a song Garth wrote with
Kent Blazy and Kim Williams specifically for the Ireland tour.
It's got a great big '7Os arena feel -- which aptly describes
much of this live album. "When I think of the live albums
I've loved through the years several immediately come to mind,"
Garth reflects. "Frampton Comes Alive. Bob Seger and The
Silver Bullet Band, KISS Alive. I love that big arena sound.
And while I'd never put myself in the same category of those
artists, I'll take the crowds on Double Live every time."
"Wild As The Wind" is a remarkable duet with Trisha
Yearwood, penned by Pete Wasner and C.J. Quarto. When the magic
quality of this Brooks/Yearwood collaboration is mentioned,
Garth just laughs: " Trisha Yearwood would sound magical
with anybody!"
The
third new song, and first single from Garth Double Live
has special meaning for the artist. "I've been looking
for the right song to sing for my mother [Colleen Brooks] ever
since I started making music," Garth says. " Somehow
I could never write it myself. Then one day Benita Hill played
me a song she'd written with Pam Wolfe, titled 'It's Your Song.'
Benita's mother had been ill - as had my mother. I sat down
and listened to it and tears started falling. When I recorded
it I almost broke down. I told Benita that the sentiment expressed
in that song was what I'd wanted to say to my mother all this
time and just never found the words."
Perhaps
that offers another clue to Garth's popularity. He records no
song before its time. Nothing goes on an album or gets into
a show by default. Every song, every album, every show is reflective
of where he is at the time. Honesty tells.
With
the Reunion Arena event Garth Brooks began to redefine music
television just as he had done with country music. Three sold-out
concerts at Texas Stadium were filmed by NBC and resulted in
This Is Garth Brooks, which gave NBC its highest-rated
Friday night in more than two years (17.3 rating/28 share).
NBC's Senior Vice President, Specials, Variety Programs &
Late Night Programming, Rick Ludwin said: " When you're
working with Garth Brooks you throw out the rule book. Whether
it's his concerts, his albums or his television specials, he
breaks all the rules and then breaks all the records."
More
television specials followed, sewing up their time slots with
each airing: This Is Garth Brooks, Too! was filmed over
the course of three sold- out shows at Texas Stadium in Dallas
in 1993. The Hits aired in January of 1995. The behind-the-scenes
documentary, Tryin ' To Rope The World, featured never-before
seen footage of Garth's first European/Australian tour in 1994.
In December of 1996, VH1 premiered Garth Brooks: Storytellers.
as part of its critically acclaimed singer/songwriter series.
This intimate look into Garth and his music doubled the ratings
of shows featuring rock stars including Sting, Jackson Browne,
Elvis Costello and Melissa Etheridge. In March of '98, Garth
Brooks: Ireland and Back, aired on NBC to an average audience
of 15.7 million persons.
And
then came the concert in Central Park Has there ever been one
to top it? It was the largest crowd ever to attend a concert
in New York's Central Park. Approximately a million people by
official estimates. Garth - Live From Central Park first
aired on August 7th, 1997. The spectacular was the most watched
and highest rated original program on HBO in 1997, beating all
broadcast competition in the time period as well as 3 of the
4 networks combined! New York ratings were an amazing 51.7,
according to Nielsen. The 1997 Super Bowl did not do as well.
Ratings continued to rise throughout the evening of the concert,
peaking at a 19.1/29 in the last 15 minutes of the concert.
Based on HBO average ratings, Garth - Live From Central Park
was the most watched special on cable television in 1997.
In
September of 1998, Garth Brooks was named the Country Music
Association's Entertainer of the Year. Earlier in the year he'd
taken home honors including the Academy of Country Music's Entertainer
of the Year, an ACM Special Achievement Award, and a Grammy
for Best Vocal Collaboration, with Trisha Yearwood for "In
Another's Eyes." Those are, of course, just a few of the
hundreds, the thousands of awards he's won.
Eighty-two
million albums later, and the songs are still as fresh as when
he started. When asked how he does it, he thinks about it a
while.
"The
audience keeps me fresh," he says. "But there's another
factor. When I step out on stage each night, there's a thought
running around in my head. What if something happened to me?
What if this was the last show I ever played? Is it the one
I'd want to be remembered for?"
What
that means is that every night on stage, Garth Brooks is giving
the performance of his life.
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