Jason Aldean Rides His Night Train


Jason Aldean Rides His Night Train

By Tom Roland

© 2013 CMA Close Up® News Service / Country Music Association®, Inc.

Jason Aldean’s My Kinda Party won CMA’s Album of the Year Award
in 2011, amassing more sales than any other Country album in that calendar year.
And if anyone still harbored doubts about his stature, the 2012 nominations list
pretty much put them to rest. Aldean nabbed three nominations, including his second
straight for Entertainer of the Year. But he also had a hand in the successes
of some other acts that populated the finalists list.

Eric Church, whose
five nominations led the field, is one of Aldean’s former opening acts. Double-nominee
Luke Bryan, who announced 2012’s nominees with Aldean on ABC’s “Good Morning
America,” is one of Aldean’s best friends as well as an opener at his shows.
Double-nominee Thompson Square claims several of Aldean’s band members among
its production team. Kelly Clarkson shared the 2011 Vocal Event Award with Aldean
for “Don’t You Wanna Stay.” New Artist nominee Brantley Gilbert wrote two
Aldean hits, “My Kinda Party” and “Dirt Road Anthem,” before he started
scaling the singles charts as an artist in 2011.

Aldean downplays his role
in their careers. “I’m not going to sit there and take credit for those things,”
he said. “I think those guys were great artists before.”

Even so, these
artists and many others as well have benefited from Aldean’s efforts. He helped
to change the sound of Country Music by opening a stylistic door. When “Hicktown”
(written by Big Kenny, Vicky McGehee and John Rich) debuted on the national charts
in April 2005, Toby Keith and Montgomery Gentry arguably led the Country pack
with edgy, testosterone-driven energy. But “Hicktown” took it further by melding
a decidedly Country, small-town theme with the crunchy guitar chords and sonic assault of hard rock.

“When we shipped that first single,” remembered Jon Loba, EVP, Broken Bow
Music Group, “the initial resistance out there was that ‘this isn’t Country,
this is rock,’ ‘this is too hard,’ ‘this is not something that P1s (core
Country listeners) can relate to.’ It was a daily battle. I can’t remember
how many times we almost lost that record, so to go from that to mass acceptance
and influence is definitely very gratifying to see.”

In the process,
Aldean became a central figure in the “baseball cap Country crowd,” as described
by Don Gosselin, Operations Manager, Clear Channel/New Orleans and Program Director, WNOE-FM/New Orleans.

Gosselin singles out Aldean, Eric Church and Brantley Gilbert, all of whom employ
baseball caps extensively in their imaging, as acts that draw large numbers of
20-something male fans to their concerts. It’s similar to the impact of the
Outlaw movement in the late 1970s, when a core Country audience found commonality
with non-Country fans who related to the blue-collar rebellion signified by those artists’ music.

“Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson were the outlaws of the day,” Hart observed.
“They had a similar image and drew those (mixed) crowds. Jason Aldean has appeal
to a lot of people outside of our format, particularly males, because of the attitude
he brings to his music. People want to raise hell, drink or whatever.”

“There’s
more of a harder edge, more attitude-driven sort of stuff,” Aldean agreed, comparing
his music, and that of Church and Gilbert, with Country’s mainstream. “If
you listen to all of our records, they sound completely different. But I think
it’s pretty obvious that we grew up probably listening to a lot of the same music.”

While that grittier side of Aldean’s art played a big role in carving a space
for him in Country’s sonic landscape, a key to his rise lies in his insistence
on counter-balancing his rock edge. He followed “Hicktown” with “Why”
(Rodney Clawson, McGehee and Rich), a power ballad that appealed to female fans.
Over time, he’s widened his creative circle by trying other types of material
that defied his history, particularly by rapping in “Dirt Road Anthem” (Colt
Ford and Gilbert) and with the power ballad “Don’t You Wanna Stay” (Andy
Gibson, Paul Jenkins and Jason Sellers), which crossed onto the Adult Contemporary
charts and attracted a whole new segment of non-Country female fans.

“As
an artist, that’s what you want,” Aldean reflected. “You don’t want to
back yourself up into a corner and play to one demographic or the other. We want
everybody listening. We can go out and do one of those big tempos, but if you
start putting four or five of those on every record, that’ll get boring. Just
be able to change it up with a ballad here or there, or something off the wall
now and then. That’s really the thing that makes it work.”

“We hear
that all the time from the female consumers and core fans. They love Jason because
he rocks but he also sings songs that a lot of rockers resist,” said Rick Shedd,
Senior VP/GM, Broken Bow Label Group. “He allows himself to be vulnerable.”

Aldean does all of those things on his current album, Night Train.
“Take a Little Ride” (Dylan Altman, Clawson and Jim McCormick), “Wheels
Rollin’” (Neil Thrasher, Wendell Mobley and Hillary Lindsey) and “This Nothin’
Town” (Thrasher, Mobley and busbee) embrace his energetic, rockin’ edge. “Talk”
(Thrasher and Mobley), “Walking Away” (David Lee Murphy and Clawson) and “Black
Tears” (Canaan Smith and Tyler Hubbard) employ sounds and storylines that show a balladeer’s sensitivity.

Then there’s “1994” (Thomas Rhett, Luke Laird and Barry Dean), the album’s
off-the-wall entry that picks through hit titles from Joe Diffie’s singles discography
while holding Diffie up in a rapping, nostalgic ride down memory lane.

Night
Train
was clearly made with an eye toward reaching out to the disparate demographics
of Aldean’s audience. Still, his strategy didn’t involve cloning his previous
work. The sales and CMA Album of the Year recognition for My Kinda Party created
a new and somewhat unfamiliar context for Night Train, so Aldean did
his best to forget about past successes as he rolled up his sleeves to tackle the present.

“I knew there were going to be a lot of people that have high expectations
of this album and that there would probably be a lot of people that want to compare
records,” he said. “But it’s a completely different album. I’m a couple
of years older now, so it’s going to reflect a different point of view of where
you are. I don’t think it’s fair to compare them. But I will say this: I think
Night Train is an unbelievable record. I’m very proud of it. Do I hope
Night Train tops Party? Of course I do! Was that the mindset
when I went in and cut it? No, not at all.”

One aspect that’s consistent
on all of Aldean’s albums is the makeup of the studio team. Each one was recorded
under the guidance of producer Michael Knox and the aid of the singer’s road
band, including guitarist Kurt Allison, bass player Tully Kennedy and drummer
Rich Redmond. Using the touring band was a bit unusual when Aldean did it on his
debut album, though it’s since become more commonplace. In fact, three of the
five finalists for CMA’s Single of the Year in 2012 — Aldean’s “Dirt Road
Anthem,” Church’s “Springsteen” and Little Big Town’s “Pontoon”
— featured at least two members of the artist’s road band.

Historically,
Nashville has used a handful of musicians to handle much of Country’s session
work, believing that the skills required to get a good sound in the technical
confines of a studio are different than those required to support an artist onstage.
Jennings and Nelson got much of their outlaw reputations by fighting that assumption.
Aldean, by contrast, faced little resistance at Broken Bow when he decided to use his own players.

As Aldean remembered it, “I went in and basically said, ‘This is what you
guys signed me for. You signed me because you liked these demos that I cut and
you liked the way that my record sounds. So if that’s what you like, then let
me keep doing it the way I’ve done it. If you don’t, it’s not going to sound
like that.’ It was actually never a really big deal.”

Maybe not. But
by building an audience that blends core Country fans with new, young and non-traditional
converts, Aldean has become a bona fide big deal. All of his shows in 2012 were
sellouts, many within minutes or hours of tickets going on sale. He headlined
a stadium for the first time in August and, in true Country fashion, was determined
to make hay while the sun shines. Aldean packed his schedule so tight that in
one stretch he was at home in Tennessee for only a couple of nights over a couple of months.

This hard-driving pace echoes the relentless “full-throttle, wide-open”
theme of Aldean’s single, “The Only Way I Know” (Murphy and Ben Hayslip),
which teams him with two of his former opening acts, Luke Bryan and Eric Church.
Its energetic stance certainly connects to the 20-something guys who are a key part of his audience.

“The bottom line is I love what I do,” Aldean insisted. “I’m living
out a dream that most people would never get to experience. That would be crazy
not to want to take advantage of that and take it in as much as I could while
it’s here. At some point, you know it’s going to kind of level off. Every
artist’s career does at some point. And I figure I can rest when that happens.”

On the Web: JasonAldean.com

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