RE: Tracy Byrd leaves MCA
> Does he have a song about Watermelon in Georgia? Yeah, that was probably his biggest hit to date, "Watermelon Crawl." An HNC-ish band I worked in for a while did it, and like Lester says, I kindly learned to love it. It's a spiffy little country-rocker of the sort I think I like a lot more than a lot of other P2ers . Anyhow, he's also hit twice with Johnny Paycheck remakes ("Don't Take Her She's All I Got" and another one I disremember at the moment), and some other fine stuff, including a solid version of "You Lied To Me," written by Bill "I Get The Fever" Anderson (there's another 2 days for Wm. Western). Even Roy Kasten allowed as how there were some good cuts on his Big Love album. Note that Byrd is from the same background (musical and geographical) as Mark Chesnutt, and, with the closure of the latter's Decca, a label-mate as well. Maybe this will encourage Chesnutt to make the same kind of stylistic move, and then we'll never have to hear him sing those friggin' Diane Warren ballads again. Another intersting aspect to this is that Byrd's producer was Tony Brown. I've been as big a defender of Brown as anyone - make that far and away the biggest defender - here, but it looks to me as though the time is rapidly coming when he's going to have to decide which way he wants to go - more stuff like The Key (or like Byrd presumably wanted to cut) or more stuff like that friggin' Diane Warren ballad. Jon Weisberger Kenton County, KY [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://home.fuse.net/jonweisberger/
RE: Tracy Byrd leaves MCA
Does he have a song about Watermelon in Georgia?
Tracy Byrd leaves MCA
Very interesting... If Byrd's going to cut a more "traditional" album, odds are it's going to be very good. >From Country Standard Time: Multi-platinum selling artist Tracy Byrd announced Tuesday he split with MCA over a desire to return to his traditional roots.. In a press release, Byrd's publicist said, "After a successful six-year stint, Tracy Byrd and MCA Records Nashville believed it was time to make a change and infuse new energy into his career. The departure is amicable." Byrd released "Keepers: Greatest Hits" in late February. "I've never been as excited about my career as I am right now," Byrd said. MCA Records could not be reached for comment. ""We've just kind of looked at where we've been going and decided we needed some new energy," said Byrd's publicist Jackie Marushka in a telephone interview. "His camp is the one who initiated this. We were not dropped. He's a traditional country music singer. He was really wanting to get into that. He was going away form that instead of getting deeper into that which is where he wanted to go. That is really it." "The product you hear on the radio - 'Mamma Ain't Happy' - that sort of the product of what we're trying not to go with. If you listen to his earlier stuff, he is definitely a traditional country singer. That is the material he is really true to. That is where his heart is. He's very excited about all that might be able to happen to him in the future. Change is good. Change is always good. It was a very friendly, very amicable separation." Marushka said Byrd and MCA had talked about direction for the past year. As for the future, "There are a few labels who have approached him. Right now, that is being handled in the management area. We feel confident that Tracy is going to wind up in a positive place for him...People are aggressively seeking working with him." She refused to name any labels. Byrd could be in the studio "by late spring, early summer," she said. This will not affect Byrd's "Outdoor Obsession" tour. "Byrd's "Not Ordinary Man" from 1995 was his best selling album, going double platinum. Three other albums have gone gold.