Friday, July 30, 2010

Nothing Like This Album Cover and New Single Released


Together with their latest single Why Wait, Rascal Flatts have released the album cover of their upcoming album, Nothing Like This, set to be released on the 16th of November I've probably heard the song about 50 times (it's set on repeat) but hey, I'm not tired of it at all. Seriously, the song is that nice! Well, maybe not as good as Bless the Broken Road, an old favorite, but it sure brings a new sound to the Flatts. Fans have been hearing this track since their tour, which incidentally shares the name of the album, began earlier this month.I'm trying to post a copy here, but it seems that Youtube has deleted every single track uploaded. So I guess you'll just have to find it yourselves. Or just contact me on FB and I'll provide you with the download link.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Sugarland - Country Weekly - Cover Feature


 Watching Sugarland's road crew assemble the band's stage prior to a recent performance at the Susquehanna Bank Center in Camden, N.J., it becomes obvious why the group christened its current trek The Incredible Machine Tour. With more than 250 lights, an assortment of decorative sprockets and cogs and a computerized video screen that would make Apple CEO Steve Jobs jealous, the mechanically elaborate set is truly an incredible sight to behold. 

    But the tour's name also doubles as the title of the country-pop duo's forthcoming album. Though the disc isn't due until Oct. 19, the group decided to hit the road this summer to build buzz for its new single ("Stuck Like Glue" will ship to radio July 26) and give fans a glimpse of its well-oiled machine. 

    "In country music, we tend to tour all the time, regardless of the record cycle. We thought, what if we couch this record's release in between two touring cycles and use the tour to introduce this aesthetic and visual?" says Sugarland's powerful voice, Jennifer Nettles, looking cozy and casual yet still radiant while curled up on a sofa in her dressing room before the sold-out gig. "It's a way to not only familiarize the fans with the new music, but to get them excited about what's to come. When they see this tour and the set and they say, "Wow, this is really different, really exciting and it's way better than what we've seen before,' hopefully they'll get ready to expect that from the music, too."

    Fans have already come to expect quite a bit from Sugarland. Jennifer and her songwriting partner-in-rhyme Kristian Bush have established themselves as dynamic performers, one of country music's must-see live acts. With Jennifer's roof-raising voice and Kristian's manic guitar and mandolin strumming, the pair generates enough energy to power a small town- or at least their Incredible Machine set. 

    But despite the bells and whistles, Jennifer says the tour is more about flesh and blood. "We're very organic in Sugarland. I think a lot of times in modern country, pop and rock, things tend to be a bit modernist and sleek, where everything is metal. We wanted to break it down and make it a little more theatrical," she explains, citing their five-piece band's whimsical costumes as one example. "Because I feel that is what we do and how we make our connection. It's not just, 'Let's make it bigger and louder and put up a big screen,' where everyone is watching a television. Rather, it's, 'How can we draw fans into the music on the stage and what's happening?' We've put a lot of energy into trying to welcome people into another world." 

    And judging by the diverse New Jersey crowd's enthusiastic response to old faves such as "Want To" and new numbers such as "Find the Beat" and The Incredible Machine's title track- fans are happy to be whisked away to Sugarland. As Jennifer belts out "Settlin'," a rough-and-tumble fellow with a shaved head, his young son by his side, is spied singing along. During a stripped-down "Baby Girl," male voices can be clearly heard in the audience. 

    "I love it!" Jennifer exclaims, when asked about the band's inexplicable ability to win over “manly men” and country boys in concert, a fan base that may not be commonly associated with Sugarland. “As writers, we try to speak to the human condition, to hit the core of what it is in the human heart. ‘Baby Girl’ is not the story of a baby girl necessarily as much as it is emotionally the story of a kid who has dreams and wants to go out and make good. Or, for example, ‘Stay’ is the story of a mistress, but at the same time, it’s a story of self-redemption and of turning things around for oneself. And people love that turnaround. It’s not a gender thing.”

    In fact, Jennifer's first experience with gender bending was actually years before she took to the stage as a performer. As a fan, she was mesmerized by all the high hair and makeup at her very first concert: a double bill featuring '80s hitmakers Poison and Tesla. "It was in Albany, Georgia, the first big arena I had ever been to. There were men in eyeliner and I was totally in love," says the south Georgia native. 

    By Jennifer's own admission, it's likely those made-up men spent more time on their manes and mascara than she does before a performance. 

    "I do my own hair and makeup. I don't travel around with anybody, because it's just like, please. I keep it too real for that," she laughs, raising her hand for emphasis. Along with a series of vocal exercises, it's an hourlong private process that helps soft-spoken Jennifer make the transformation into an arena-ready queen. She keeps a humidifier running in her dressing room and speaks primarily in a whisper for the first part of the day to preserve her voice. 

    Still, she believes there isn't much difference between reserved Jennifer and rockin' Jennifer. "I definitely feel like what I am right now is what I am onstage," she says, "That's just much more adrenalized. It's very hyped-up and 'on.'"

    Fortunately, for Kristian, his tireless frontwoman is also able to turn it off- the pair travels on the same bus. "We try to keep a strong communication going. We see each other more than most couples do, so you'd kill each other if you didn't know how to communicate!" Jennifer says. "We have a healthy respect for each other and it feels very familial. At this point, he feels much like a brother would."

    That siblinglike bond is evident when the duo performs, especially during their seemingly effortless choreography. Like sparring boxers, Kristian knows exactly when to bob when Jennifer weaves. He'll spin and she'll pivot. It's impressive and entertaining to observe, a commanding stage presence that may be tailor-made for-look out, Kenny Chesney-stadiums. 

    "Our job is to get out there, do the best that we can and dream big. And I look at it as, why not us? Somebody's got to do it. Somebody's got to be the next ones out there that do well for country music. Somebody's got to take country music to other listeners and bring them in. Somebody else has got to play stadiums. Why not us?" Jennifer asks, perhaps offering a glimpse of Sugarland's future. "We want it, we want to give it to the fans and we want to get out there and have fun." 

    Which is certainly what the band is doing this summer, on both its Incredible Machine Tour and during a handful of special Lilith Fair appearances. 

    Interestingly enough, this won't be Jennifer's first performance at the female-focused festival. "back in the '90s, the first time the Lilith Fair came around, I had a band and we played the side stage at their Atlanta date. At the end of the evening, [the headliners] invited us all up for the finale and we did 'Put a Little Love in Your Hear.' It was my first time standing on an amphitheater stage of that kind," she recalls, eager to bring some country sensibility to this year's festival. And Kristian? "I think he's excited to represent the Y chromosome," she adds, laughing. 

    It's that keep-'em-guessing mindset- like playing Lilith Fair or throwing a Pearl Jam or Kings of Leon cover into their set list- that defines Sugarland as artists. 

    "We're really lucky in that our fans not only respect our artistic growth and evolution, but they've come to anticipate it and demand it," Jennifer says. "There are some artists within each genre that classically stay the course and hold a certain line. And they're great and we need them in every genre. But there are others who push and pull and stretch and kick, and I think that's where we come in. We have a lot of people who come up to us and say, 'I don't like country music, but I love what you do.' And we say, 'You are who we write records for. Come on in. Jump in, the water's fine. It's all good.'"

    And the band just might welcome more new fans to the party with its upcoming release, an album that Jennifer says may be even more anthemic than Love on the Inside, the 2008 album that mixed playful country tunes such as "It Happens" with soaring pop-inspired fare such as "Love" and "Joey."

    The new singles, "Stuck Like Glue," 'is just plain, unshamed, Sugar-fun!" Jennifer enthuses. "It sticks in your brain, no pun intended. To me it feels young and hip and, of course, sassy! I can't wait for it to get out there so we can play it live in our show. We've been sitting on our hands to not play it live 'til it was released!" The song was written by Jennifer, Kristian, Kevin Griffin and Shy Carter. 

    "On the last record, everything was about love, but this one is more specifically about what I would call 'the heart.' What is it that creates all of this love on the inside that we talked about last time?" she says, eager for fans to hear the growth on The Incredible Machine this fall. "I think for me as a vocalist, it was superfun to be able to stretch. Kristian and I have so many diverse influences between the two of us. You can't help but pull from what you've been steeped in. Those things creep out. So you'll get to hear some of that on this record. You'll hear some Chrissie Hynde and some Blondie, as far as vocal styling." 

    As it turns out, fans didn't have to wait until October to hear Jennifer channel Blondie's Deborah Harry. As the stage's circular video screen-cryptically adorned with the words "then, now, now, now" around its diameter- depicts the Sugarland twosome in an '80s music-video special effect, Jennifer breaks into Blondies's 1979 new-wave hit "Heart of Glass." The enthusiastic crowd clearly doesn't mind that it's not a country song. 

    And for the umpteenth time that night, Sugarland attains its Holy Grail: a palpable audience-band connection.

    "I enjoy making record, but to me, the live show is where it's at," Jennifer says, a few hours before the show-stopping "Heart of Glass" finale. "I want to keep connecting with people. I want to help people get more in touch with themselves by hearing a song and thinking, 'Yeah, that's me, that's how I feel.' And by doing so, they'll look around them and see 20,000 other people feeling the same way. Maybe they're not so alone in this world. That's the thing about music. It can bring people together, not only through its message, but ina moment in time, when we're out there onstage. I think there is something really beautiful about that- and I hope to keep doing it." CW

Sugarland's 'Stuck Like Glue' video features an Awesome 'Chuck' star


Entertainment Weekly: Twitter tells me you shot the “Stuck Like Glue” video with Ryan McPartlin, better known as Awesome from Chuck. I’ve since heard the video’s plot has you stalking him. What made Awesome a good candidate for stalking?
Jennifer Nettles: When you see his character that he plays on Chuck, you know, he is Captain Awesome. He’s the perfect guy. He’s the perfect boyfriend, he’s the perfect athlete. We thought that would be a funny twist. He fits the profile. Very handsome. And he’s a good actor as well, and also a nice guy.

The song is very cheerful. How does the stalking play in?
Well. It’s about a relationship, and it has a lot of levity in it, but it’s the concept of being attached to one person. Sometimes you have good days, sometimes you have bad days. The twist on the video is it’s in this world in this crazy woman’s head where she thinks she is in this type of relationship with this person, and is stuck with him, and stuck on him, and in her mind, they are inseparable. In his mind, she is a crazy lunatic. You know what she reminds me of? A sexy Dolores Umbridge, from Harry Potter. You know how she was, like, pink, and puppies, and kittens n’ s—? And then she made him scratch out all that stuff on his hand that was really awful and evil? Yeah. She’s like a sexy Dolores Umbridge. I hope I pulled it off.

You shot in LA?
Yes. In a neighborhood somewhere, and then also in a warehouse, which was my lair.

While you’re busy stalking, what’s Kristian doing?
He was my henchman. Totally my accomplice. With very important responsibilities like bagging the object of my obsessive affections. Bagging him for the kidnapping. Literally bagging him, over the head. Driving the getaway car. He had a lot of responsibilities so that I could be crazy, which is kind of like our lives. [laughs]

What’s the closest you’ve personally come to stalking someone?
I’m not big on that.

Are you a Chuck fan, and is this ploy to get on the show real?
I would love to be on the show! But it wasn’t a strategic thing, like, “Okay, we’re gonna pick Awesome so that we can then be on the show.” It wasn’t any scratch-my-back-I’ll-scratch-yours kind of showbiz thing. It was just funny. And yes, of course, we would love to be on the show. Kristian is a huge fan. I haven’t seen it since the first season. Now I feel energized to go check out what’s going on.



Thursday, July 22, 2010

Love Like Crazy - Lee Brice (Music Video)

ICM Awards Nominees



The ICM Awards is proud to announce the Top 10 category nominees for the 16th Annual Inspirational Country Music Awards Show (ICM Awards) will be held on Thursday, October 14, 2010, at 7 PM CST at the Trinity Music City USA Auditorium located in Hendersonville, Tennessee. 

The following 2010 Top 10 nominees are listed in alphabetical order within each category:

Entertainer
Austins Bridge 
Andrew Heller 
Barry McGee 
Del Way 
Dennis Agajanian 
Jason Crabb 
Point of Grace 
Steve Richard 
The Akins 
Tommy Brandt

Male Vocalist
Greg McDougal 
Guy Penrod 
James Payne 
Jason Crabb 
Mike Rimmey 
Philip Dain Powell 
Russ Murphy 
Russ Watson 
Steve Richard 
Tommy Brandt 

Female Vocalist
Amanda Fessant 
Chelley Odle 
Cindy Hughlett 
Denean Workman 
Emma Jacob 
Kali Rose 
Kathy Joy Bell 
Mary James 
Nicole Hope 
Sandra Dee 

Vocal Duo
Austins Bridge
Branded
Bruce & Betsy Mullen 
Den & Bobbie West
Jack & Deb Stone
Jeff & Sheri Easter
Jen & Jes
Joey & Rory 
The Roys 
Wayne & Gina Stewart

Vocal Group
Corey Brooks Band
CrossCountry The Band 
Katalyst 
Last Light Band
Point of Grace 
Southern Brothers
Sunday Drive
The Akins 
The Isaacs
The Springs

Mainstream Inspirational Country Song
My Best Days – Danny Gokey
Muddy Water – Trace Adkins
Love Like Crazy – Lee Brice
That’s A Man – Jack Ingram
That’s God – Jo Dee Messina
The House That Built Me - Miranda Lambert
The Man I Want To Be – Chris Young
There Is A God – Lee Ann Womack
This Ain’t Nothing – Craig Morgan 
Temporary Home – Carrie Underwood

Mainstream Country Artist
Carrie Underwood
Chris Young
Craig Morgan
Danny Gokey
Jeff Bates
Josh Turner
Martina McBride
Oak Ridge Boys
Ricky Skaggs
Rodney Atkins

Christian Country Song
Beautiful – The Roys
Come To The Well-Mary James
Cowboys Love Jesus Too – Russ Murphy
Eighty Acre Church – Steve Richard
Faith In God-Tommy Brandt 
God Don’t Make Mistakes – Denean Workman
I Want My Stage To Be An Altar - The Akins 
I’m Just A Nobody – Allen Frizzell 
Jesus Saves –James Payne
Said One Mother – Nicole Hope

Songwriter
Del Way
Dianna Paul
Glen Shelton
Greg McDougal
James Payne
Jamie Coulter
Kris Miller
Mike Rimmey
Philip Dain Powell
Russ Murphy

Legend/Pioneer Award
Barry McGee
Bruce Haynes
Chuck Day
Dan Cowart with Last Light Band
David Patillo
Leo Johnston with CrossCountry The Band
Lisa Daggs
LuLu Roman
Melanie Walker
Ricky Skaggs

Video
All I Ask For Anymore –Trace Adkins Label: Capitol Nashville Director: Deaton-Flanigen 
American Honey – Lady Antebellum Label: Capitol Nashville Director: Trey Fanjoy 
Dancing In Circles-Love and Theft Label: Carolwood Director: Kristin Barlowe 
Love Like Crazy – Lee Brice – Curb –Director Eric Welch
Outside My Window – Sarah Buxton Label: Lyric Street Records Director: Mark Hudson 
Temporary Home – Carrie Underwood Label: Arista Nashville Director: Deaton-Flanigen 
The House That Build Me – Miranda Lambert Label: Columbia Nashville Director: Trey Fanjoy 
The Man I Want To Be – Chris Young Label: RCA Nashville Director: David McClister 
This Ain’t Nothing – Craig Morgan Label: BNA Nashville Director: Steven L. Weaver 
Unstoppable – Rascal Flatts Label: Lyric Street Records Director: Shawn Robbins 

New Artist
Chip Willmore
Cindy Hughlett
Dianna Paul
Emma Jacob
Judahseed
Laura Dodd
Russell Dean
Sharon Parks
Tanner Laughlin
Will Peppers

Musican
Brent Mason
Casey Morton
Dennis Agajanian
Dick McVey
Doug Hudson
Gordon Mote
Greg McDougal
Lawrence Bishop
Ricky Skaggs
Tim Atwood

Comedy Act
Barry McGee
Chonda Pierce
Cuzin Gus
David Ferrell
Jeff Treece
Johnny Lee Cook
LuLu Roman
Roy Fox
Steve McGranahan
Tim Steed

Radio Personality
BJ Fessant
Gary Richardson
J.R. Pitsenbarger
Jim Tucker
Leon Joplin
Linda O'Brian
Rich Miller
Robby Lynn
Scott Perkins
Dick Johnson

Radio Station
Inspirational Country Radio Network
WBFC- Stanton, KY
WCWV-Summersville, WV
WFLI- Chattanooga, TN
WJCR - Upton, KY
WLRC- Walnut, MS
WMDR-Oakland, ME
WSM AM 650 – Nashville, TN
WTYS- Marianna, FL
WYEA- Sylacauga, AL

Inspirational Bluegrass Artist
Cathy-Anne McClintock
Cherryholmes
Gibson Brothers
Lawrence Bishop
New Gospel Travelers
New Jerusalem 
Rhonda Vincent
Ricky Skaggs 
The Grascals
The Isaacs

Youth In Music
Abbey Gregory
Amanda Jones
Calina Boggs
Candy Boggs
Hannah Faith
Matthew Wacaster
Renee Spencer
The McDougal Kids
Tommy Brandt II 

Music Evangelist
Amanda Fessant
Corey Brooks
Del Way
Greg McDougal
Harvey Perdue
James Payne
Jamie Coulter
Leo Johnston
Russ Murphy
Tommy Brandt

Faith, Family & Country Movie
Fantastic Mr. Fox
Flicka 2
Letters To God 
Preacher’s Kid
The Blind Side
The Perfect Game 
The Secrets of Jonathan Sperry
UP
What Would Jesus Do

Television Network
Daystar
Family Friendly TV
GAC
Gospel Music Channel
Hallmark
INSP
Sky Angel
TBN
TCT Networks
Total Living Network

Sneak Peeks of Tim McGraw's New Movie, Country Strong






Taylor Swift Announces New Album Speak Now For Release October 25th


Taylor Swift’s highly-anticipated third studio album will be released worldwide on October 25th, Taylor herself announced yesterday afternoon during a web chat with her fans. The video above is the first ten minutes of that web chat.

Entitled Speak Now, the album will be released on Big Machine Records and contains 14 tracks, all written solely by Taylor. Taylor co-produced the project with Nathan Chapman, and the first single from the new record, “Mine,” will be released on August 16th.

“Saying the right thing at the right moment is so crucial that most of us start to hesitate, for fear of saying the wrong thing at the wrong time. But lately what I've begun to fear more than that is letting the moment pass without saying anything,” Taylor says of the very personal collection that is Speak Now. “These songs are made up of words I didn't say when the moment was right in front of me. These songs are open letters. Each is written with a specific person in mind, telling them what I meant to tell them in person.”

Monday, July 19, 2010

2010 Emmy's : Best Actor Nominees


Here are the episodes the actors — and supporting actors — have offered up for consideration. The Emmy's will air Aug. 29 on NBC. See the selections after the jump:
 
OUTSTANDING ACTOR IN A DRAMA
 
Hamm: “The Gypsy & The Hobo” (Don Draper admits to his wife that he stole Dick Whitman’s identity)

Chandler: “East of Dillon” (Coach unites his team)

Cranston: “Full Measure” (Walt completes his journey to the dark side in this season finale)

Laurie: “Broken” (The season premiere that was set in a psychiatric hospital)

Fox: “The End” (Jack reunites with his friends in the series finale)

Hall: “The Getaway” (Dexter catches up with Trinity and kills him in this season finale)

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA

John Slattery (Mad Men): “The Gypsy & The Hobo” (An old flame re-enters Roger’s life)

Aaron Paul (Breaking Bad): “Half Measures” (Jesse seeks revenge for his fallen friend)

Martin Short (Damages): “You Haven’t Replaced Me” (Lenny learns about his mother’s fate)

Terry O’Quinn (Lost): “The Substitute”  (Locke becomes a substitute teacher)

Michael Emerson (Lost): “Dr. Linus” (Ben goes above and beyond to help a high school student named Alex)

Andre Braugher (Men of a Certain Age): “Powerless” (Owen goes head-to-head with the city’s permit office)

Zac Brown Band's 'You Get What You Give' Out September 21


Atlantic Records/Southern Ground Artists, Inc. will release You Get What You Give, the much-anticipated studio album from Best New Artist GRAMMY winners Zac Brown Band, on September 21.

The album features a genre-defying collection of songs that the band has been testing on the road over the past year. Stand out tracks include: the somber piano-driven early fan favorite "Colder Weather," the reggae-leaning, jam-inducing "Who Knows," and a harmony-laced lesson on the merits of chasing after love "As She's Walking Away."

Praised for the ability to blend "down-home country with bits of reggae, bluegrass and rock to create a high-quality musical stew" (USA Today), front man Zac Brown notes that the new album "is representative of where we are right now. It combines elements of our southern rock and country roots, but also stays true to our jam-band style musicianship from the live show."

You Get What You Give is the follow up to the band's double platinum-certified, major label debut 'The Foundation' (Atlantic), which is one of Billboard's Top 20 albums of 2009 and features the band's first four #1 singles.

Zac Brown Band is: singer/guitarist Zac Brown, violinist/singer Jimmy De Martini, bassist/singer John Hopkins, guitarist/organist Coy Bowles, multi-instrumentalist/singer Clay Cook and drummer Chris Fryar.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Up to Him - Tracy Lawrence (Music Video)

Hell On the Heart - Eric Church (Music Video)

Darius Rucker's Sophomore Country Album Rolls Out October 12th


Darius Rucker will release the follow up to his platinum selling album debut country album on October 12th. The album, titled Charleston, SC 1966, will feature 12 brand new tracks- selected out of a total of 77 songs he wrote for the album.

One would think it would be tough to choose just 12 songs out of 77, but Rucker says it was simple.

“We just listened to them and saw what was rising to the top,” Rucker said. “When I say that, people say to me, ‘Man, that must be a hard decision.’ No, not really. The best songs really rise to the top.”

The album’s title plays homage to Rucker’s hometown and birth-year and is also a tribute to Radney Foster’s first solo album, Del Rio, TX 1959. Rucker credits Foster’s music for helping him realize he could sing country music.

“It was his voice,” Rucker said. “It was really the first time where I had heard country music where I thought, ‘Man, I could sing that.’ I always liked it, but it was always, I never really knew I could play it. But then I heard Radney and it was like, ‘Wow, that guy’s amazing.’”

“I don’t think it’s going to be light-years different [from Learn To Live],” Rucker said. “I don’t think we set out to reinvent the wheel or do a new sound. I think this record is more of an expansion of the last record than anything else. It’s like picking up where the last record left off.”

Rucker says some really good songs didn't make the cut because they didn't fit what he was looking for on the album. He has begun offering them to others, something he didn't do with the first album.

"I think it was one of those things where I think the last record it would've been hard to have somebody cut a song that we wrote," Rucker said. "I was just so new. It was like, 'Who wants a Darius Rucker castoff?' They might want one now."

Just Another Trip Home...WTF!?


One memory shall always remain clear in my mind of last night. It wasn't the moment we heard the explosion. It wasn't even the moment we were shrouded in a thick cloud of smoke. Instead, it was the moment when a rag-tag group of people were running helter-skelter across the highway, in the middle of the night, with cars whizzing past at a hundred kilometres an hour. Yes, that is a moment I will never, EVER forget.

The trip began normally, with the four of us settling into our seats in the bus, waiting for the long, arduous journey to begin. I reclined mine and leaned back, plugging my ears with the country-gospel blend of music by Tracy Lawrence. It didn't take me long to fall asleep. When I finally regained consciousness, it was pitch black. Night had fallen, and the stars must've failed to put up an appearance. Yawning, I took a swig of water, squinting at my watch to see what time it was, but in vain. The other choice was to check my phone, and I was feeling a little lazy for that. So I settled back down, hoping that the journey's end would come soon.

Well, it did, and a little faster than I expected. For suddenly, in the silence of the night, an explosion shattered the lull of slumber in the bus. Everyone instantly jerked awake. Our eyes roved wildly to find the cause of the commotion, but it soon became apparent when the bus started drawing to the side of the road, before finally stopping. The driver left his post while the rest of us were peeking out the windows, trying to see what was happening. A trail of liquid, originating from our vehicle, was slowly snaking its way across the highway. Whether it was water, or oil, none could tell.

Then, without any warning, the bus was shrouded in a thick cloud of white smoke. Some of the more nervous passengers left the bus, maybe fearing that it would explode and send them to heaven. I stayed put, trying to figure out what could be going on. when the bus' engine spluttered and died. Slowly, the smoke cleared, adnwe could see again. But it wasn't a pleasant sight. For all of us were suddenly stranded in the middle of the North-South Highway, with no way of making it to our destination.

For me, it was the first time I faced such a situation, so I was totally blank in the area of what to do if such a thing happens. Godd thing a friend of mine on the bus had face a similar situation before, and when a second bus pulled up in front of ours, she urged us to run for it. However, as we were located in the middle of the bus, by the time we finally got out, the available seats were already taken. Disappointed, we joined the tiny groups of people scattered at the side of the road.

One thing i noticed was that most of us pulled out handphones, and started making calls. I wondered what they could possibly be doing. Calling a cab? Informing their family that they would be late? Or even trying to get someone to drive all the way to the middle of nowhere we were stranded in to pick them up? I was the only one who neglected my phone, knowing full well that it would be pontless, because we didn't even know where we were. That was when another bus pulled up, but this time on the other side of the highway.

(At this point, I feel a need to explainthe layout of the area, for those of you who have not been there before. There were two separate highways going north, one was headed exclusively to Ipoh, while the other was the normal one. these two run side by side, separated by a divider made of stone. Our bus was on the latter, and the this newcomer bus stopped on the Ipoh one.)

We watched anxiously as our bus driver clambered over the divider and ran across the highway towards the other bus, where he apparently told his coworker of our predicament. then he looked back towards us, lifted up his hand and showed seven fingers. Seven seats. For almost twenty of us. And this time I never hesitated, knowing full well that if I missed this one, I might end up stuck there for the rest of the night.

Immediately, I swung myself over the divider (thank God I was tall enough!) and simply ran towards the other bus, completely ignoring the incoming cars. All around me, I could see some of the other passengers following suit. It was then that I witnessed human nature at its worst. For at that very moment, a man tripped and fell onto the highway. I am not proud to say that I hesitated, then raced on. The others didn't even pause. Up to now, I'm still haunted by the thought of what would've happened if a car roared past. Had he gotten killed there, would I ever be able to forgive myself? For my selfishness? For simply blocking out the plight of a fellow human being? For racing by while another man could have died, and not offered help?

When I arrived at the bus, 3 people had gone up before me (most probably because I hesitated halfway). I looked back, and breathed a sigh of relief to see the fallen man right behind two of my friends. God is merciful, both to him, and me. Then I stood there, waiting for the final member of my group to catch up before ascending the steps together. There were only 4 empty spaces on the bus, and the man who fell gave it up to us, so that the 4 of us could remain together. Which made me feel even worse. He had graciously performed a completely selfless act, and I wondered if I would have done the same thing in his place. Probably not. I'm definitely flawed, aren't I? But aren't we all?

As I settled down into the seat of this new bus. I realised that I was rather shaken up. My knees were quivering slightly, and I couldn't do anything to stop them. That's what happens to you after a traumatic occurence, and I know because I've felt the exact same feelng before, though I will not recount that experience here. Anyway, when I finally arrived in my hometown, it was past midnight and we were two hours ahead of schedule. The bus had gradually emptied itself until only the seven of us were left (it was actually bound for somewhere else, before Taiping) when we pulled in to the bus station. Our ordeal was over, but it was not something any of us would forget in a hurry.

That night, a completely unknown stranger taught me two important lessons. But I won't mention them here, and risk sounding like some corny fairy tale. You can work them out for yourselves.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Inspirational Songs (Part 11)


I'm Done
Tracy Lawrence

Life hit me when I wasn't looking
It dealt me a hard hand to play

I felt betrayed and forsaken
But I been makin' the wrong people pay

I'm Done... I'm Done...

I've spent my last night in that prison
Where anger and pride were the bars

Hey I'm here to tell ya' I'm makin peace with the past
And I'm not ashamed of my scars,

But I'm done...

I'm done harbouring grudges and nursing old wounds
done clinging to grudges and singing the blues
I'm done pointing fingers at everyone else
I'm taking a long hard look at myself

A new day has begun ... And I'm done

I called up somebody who'd hurt me
We finally settled the score

I had a right to be bitter
Revenge would've been sweet
But foregiveness is what ended that war

I'm starting to see the big picture
These days i'm gettin' high off of that

No more killin' my pain with a three day binge
That train has run out of track

I'm done...

I'm done harbouring grudges and nursing old wounds
done clinging to grudges and singing the blues

I'm done pointing fingers at everyone else
I'm taking a long hard look at myself

I'm spending more time with the people I love
The ones that will cry at my funeral

And i'm done fellin' hopeless no I'm not going there
I'm greeting each morning with a smile and a prayer

A new day has begun ... A new day has begun ... A new day has begun

Voices - Chris Young (Music Video)

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Upcoming Album Releases

The following is a list of albums tat will be released starting from next month. The dates have been confirmed by the artistes themselves on their websites/FB/Twitter. There are more but I wont post them until I know the exact date.

August/10
Blake Shelton - All About Tonight

August/24
JOE DIFFIE - Homecoming:The Bluegrass Album
TRACE ADKINS - Cowboy's Back In Town
TRACE ADKINS - Cowboy's Back In Town [Deluxe Version]
MARTY STUART - Ghost Train (The Studio B Sessions)
LITTLE BIG TOWN - The Reason Why

September/14
Jamey Johnson - The Guitar Song (2CD Set)
Randy Houser - They Call Me Cadillac 
 
September/21
Steel Magnolia - Steel Magnolia

October/5
Lee Ann Rimes - Lady And Gentlemen
 
October/19
Sugarland - The Incredible Machine

Monday, July 12, 2010

New Self-Titled Album from Steel Magnolia


The album includes Steel Magnolia’s smash hit, “Keep On Lovin’ You,” as well as their brand new single, the sweeping power ballad, “Just By Being You (Halos and Wings),” which is currently a Top 5 highest-streamed video on CMT.com and rises to #41 this week on the Billboard Top Country Songs Chart.

2010 has been a whirlwind year for Meghan Linsey and Joshua Scott Jones, the duo that comprise Steel Magnolia. So far the rising stars have broken a decades-long Billboard record and earned a million downloads of their Top 5 break-out hit, “Keep On Lovin’ You.”

Despite all of Steel Magnolia’s recent successes, getting to this point hasn’t been an easy road for the duo.

“There's a Queen song called, ‘We are the Champions,’ “ says Steel Magnolia’s Joshua Scott Jones. “There's a line in the song that says.. "It's been no bed of roses, no pleasure cruise, I consider it a challenge before the whole human race, and I ain't gonna lose". It's true - it hasn't been a bed of roses for me. I grew up dirt poor in Illinois. I don't think you always have to know how you're going to do something, you just have to have the determination to do it.”

“I knew at a very young age, exactly what I wanted to do,” echoes Meghan Linsey. “I started coming to Nashville when I was 14 and moved when I turned 18. I found my ‘niche’ working in karaoke bars in downtown Nashville. I didn't have money or connections or much of anything, I had no idea how all of this was going to work out, I just always believed that it would.”

The duo showcase their blues and soul-infused Country Rock as well as sassy attitude on album tracks, including the Keith Urban-penned “Homespun Love,” and the bickering break-up ballad, “Edge of Goodbye,” – the first song that Linsey and Jones ever wrote together.

“Bulletproof” allows Linsey’s gritty, soulful vocals to soar while the island-rhythm infused, “Rainbow” (co-written by Chioma Eze, the writer of American Idol finalist Allison Iraheta’s “Still Breathing”), is an uplifting, somewhat autobiographical narrative, about living your dreams no matter what the world throws at you.

Steel Magnolia wrote 7 of the 12 tracks on their upcoming album debut, including the haunting ballad, “Glass Houses,” penned solely by Joshua Scott Jones.

With national media performances and profiles ranging from Lopez Tonight to CBS Early Show to USA Weekend to People to the Associated Press, Steel Magnolia has earned acclaim from fans and critics alike for their unique vocal blend and passionate performances. In fact, Steel Magnolia was honored with two 2010 Academy of Country Music Nominations for both Vocal Duo of the Year and New Vocal Duo of the Year. Additionally, Steel Magnolia was nominated for two 2010 CMT Music Awards for their hit video, “Keep On Lovin’ You.”


STEEL MAGNOLIA official track listing:

1. Ooh La La (Joshua Scott Jones, Meghan Linsey)
2. Keep On Lovin’ You (Chris Stapleton, Trent Willmon)
3. Just By Being You (Halos and Wings) (Britton Cameron, Patricia Conroy)
4. Edge Of Goodbye (Joshua Scott Jones, Meghan Linsey Julie Moriva)
5. Bulletproof (Lori McKenna, Chris Tompkins)
6. Not Tonight (Shane Stevens, Hillary Lindsey, Matthew West)
7. Last Night Again (Joshua Scott Jones, Meghan Linsey, Hillary Lindsey)
8. Without You (Joshua Scott Jones, Meghan Linsey, Van Asa Preston)
9. Rainbow (Joshua Scott Jones, Meghan Linsey, Tommy Henriksen, Chioma Eze)
10. Eggs Over Easy ( Joshua Scott Jones, Meghan Linsey, Steffon Hamulak)
11. Homespun Love (Keith Urban, Vernon Rust)
12. Glass Houses (Joshua Scott Jones)