For Immediate Release
8 December 2005
For More Information:
Holly Gleason for Joe's Garage
Allen Brown for Arista Nashville
Brooks & Dunn Get Two Grammy Nominations --4-Time Entertainers of the Year Score
Best Country Duo/Group + Collaboration Nods
New York/Los Angeles/Nashville: Having just won Favorite Country
Duo or Group at the American Music Awards and picked up their 13th Country Music
Association Duo of the Year trophy, the kudos keep following Ronnie Dunn and Kix
Brooks who received a pair of Grammy nominations this morning. Along with their
#1 "Play Something Country" garnering a Best Country Performance By A Duo or
Group nod, "Building Bridges," a track from their nearly platinum Hillbilly
Deluxe that features Sheryl Crow and Vince Gill, scored in the Best Country
Vocal Collaboration.
"Because they're voted on by artists in all genres, it's always
cool hearing your name called out for the Grammy Awards," says Brooks, the
high-energy, low-flying guitarslinger/songwriter. "Knowing 'Play Something
Country,' which is pretty hardcore and revved up, struck a nerve makes me smile
'cause that's some full-tilt stuff now. It's great, too, that something that was
such a treat to record,that let us team up with Sheryl and Vince, got this kind
of recognition. It's like winning the lottery, buying another ticket with the
money -- and winning again!"
"Building Bridges" is the Larry Willoughy/Hank DeVito classic that
first appeared on Willoughby's Atlantic album of the same name -- and was a song
Dunn sang in the honky tonks of Tulsa, while waiting on his dream. For the Tony
Brown-produced Hillbilly Deluxe, the obvious sentimental favorite got a very
special updating as the two-time Grammy winners enlisted mutual favorites Crow
and Gill.
"I'm a Sheryl Crow fanatic. I think she's the best
singer/songwriter there is," enthuses Dunn. "Vince Gill's voice works with
anything. He's flawless. Nothing could be cooler to me than to hear those two
voices, with mine, on 'Building Bridges'."
Dunn, who cut his juke joint teeth behind chicken wire, continues.
"Anything and everything Rodney did back then, I was all about it; and at first,
I thought this was a Rodney Crowell song! Then I came to find out it was by his
cousin, but it didn't matter; the song was so good, if we did 4 sets on a
Saturday night, I'd find a way to sneak it into 3."
With their second hosting stint at the "39th Annual Country Music
Association Awards" -- broadcast live from Madison Square Garden on CBS, along
with a standing room only play at iconic New York City rock venue Irving Plaza
and a midday streets of Manhattan play on the marquis of Madison Square Garden
behind them and a show Saturday night at the Coliseum at Caesar's Palace ahead,
Brooks & Dunn have been keeping plenty busy as 2005 winds down.
"Believe," which was debuted on "The CMA Awards" telecast with an
all-star cast of musicians, is being called "Brooks & Dunn's most reactive
single" by radio insiders. The Dunn/Craig Wiseman song of faith transcending
generations, lifestyles and even reason is an incredibly powerful vocal
performance about life lived and the faith that carries people through the here
and everafter from the man Entertainment Weekly called "arguably country music's
finest male vocalist."
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