For Immediate Release
22 October 2004
For More Information
Holly Gleason for Joe's Garage
Wes Vause for BNA Nashville
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Be As You Are: Songs From An Old Blue Chair
Kenny Chesney Opens His Heart, His Life, His Notebook Jan. 25
Intimate Collection Offers A Look at the Other Side of Superstar's World
Somewhere in the Caribbean: When Kenny Chesney went to the islands, he was
looking to get away; what he found was a lot like coming home. He may not have
realized what an imprint the various islands in that turquoise water were
making on his soul -- but over the years, the tides have pulled him back, set
him at ease and have cast a pretty strong undertow to his personal brand of
power-country, whether it's the kickin' back ease of "No Shoes, No Shirt, No
Problems," the yearning "The Coast of Somewhere Beautiful" or the calyptic
Uncle Kracker duet "When The Sun Goes Down."
For the man who's sold almost 17 million records -- including 3 million
copies of When The Sun Goes Down, 4 million No Shoes, No Shirt, No
Problems and 3 million Greatest Hits -- the islands was a place to
go and get away from being an emerging bold-faced name. As he exhales on the
title track, "You can be a tourist, a beach bum or a star…" -- and it's that
ability to just live life on its own terms that appealed to the
soon-to-be-superstar.
To that end, there's Be As You Are: Songs From An Old Blue Chair,
which will arrive in stores on January 25. An intimate singer/songwriter
record, it's a 12-song rumination on the people, places, feelings and
sensations that've made up the last 6 years of the man who's sold close to 1.2
million concert tickets this year alone's life.
"I don't know what I was looking for when I went down there -- or what I
was hoping to find," says Chesney about the pull of the islands. "But I don't
think I could have ever expected the feeling of peace, of easiness, of
belonging that I did find. It was an amazing place at a very difficult time --
and I think I built a life down there, just being.
"And I've certainly shared pieces of that with the fans over the last
couple records, but I don't think people really understand how the islands
have affected me. This record is kind of about that; what it means, who these
people are. It's not just a party place, or drinks with umbrellas and coconut
milk. That's part of it, absolutely, but it's just a different rhythm a
different way of looking at the world - and it has a lot to do with me being
able to do what I do out there on the road."
Opening with "Old Blue Chair," which closes his Country Music Association
Album of the Year and American Music Awards Top Country Album When The Sun
Goes Down, this much quieter, more hushed Kenny Chesney project moves
through story songs -- "Island Boy," "She Came From Boston," "Sherrie's Living
In Paradise" -- to frolicsome moments - "Guitars, Tiki Bars," "Key Lime Pie"
and the old school cocktail-esque "Magic"-- to the in-the-moment real life
tales -- "Be As You Are," "Something Sexy About The Rain."
With "Somewhere In The Sun," written quite literally in the shadow of a
snow cancelled show on his Margaritas'& Senoritas Tour, that opens with the
truthful "Stuck here in a Holiday Inn in Austin, Texas," Chesney juxtaposes
the empty hours of the road with the soul-filling quietness of the water. Then
in another Polaroid snatched from his daily being "French Kissing Life" -- "I
don't really know what day it is/ I've been rockin' 9 days in a row/I know I
could use a shave and I need some rest/ And people are worried about me" --
captures his re-entry to life after the cheering crowds and the exhilaration
of just the feel of breathing.
"It's so easy to make the islands all about fun or some kind of escape,
but it runs much deeper for me," admits the Luttrell, Tennessean. "This is my
heart, and it's a record that came out of that. I didn't set out to 'WRITE THE
ISLAND RECORD' . I wrote songs about people I met, moments that stood out over
the last few years, things I realized. When I went back and looked at my
notebook, I saw this collection emerge. Given how much this place and this
time in my life has meant to me, I wanted to share it with the fans; and it's
not what people think of when they think of a 'Kenny Chesney Record.' This
isn't that; it's like looking over my shoulder, seeing me when I'm being quiet
-- and I'm just glad there are people I can share this part of me with."
When The Sun Goes Down continues its march across the charts.
Sitting at #7 with a bullet on this week's Billboard chart, plans are
for singles from his full-tilt studio record to continue well into 2005.
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