For Immediate Release
6 January 2005
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People Catches Back Up With Kenny
Chesney
For January 10 Issue, CMA Entertainer of the Year Heads To The Islands
Somewhere In The Caribbean: So far, he's romped in the Hamptons, got cozy in
Nashville and now reigning CMA Entertainer of the Year Kenny Chesney heads to
the Virgin Islands for his latest encounter with celebrity news weekly People.
In the January 10th issue, which hits newsstands Friday, the man who sold more
concert tickets in 2004 than anyone except Prince gets philosophical about the
islands' impact on his life, music and current success.
Confessing to falling asleep in an old blue wicker chair on New Year's Eve
four years ago, Chesney tells People, "The next morning the sun came up
over the hill, and that's when I realized I was going to have to make myself
happy. I came back with a whole new outlook. Now I feel much more control."
Indeed, Chesney played to 1.2 million fans last year -- his second year of
touring to over a million country music lovers -- and his CMA Album of the Year
When The Sun Goes Down has sold in excess of 3 million units making it
the best selling country album released last year, right behind Usher and Norah
Jones in all genres. Chesney has also enjoyed two multiple week #1s -- the 8
week "There Goes My Life" and 7 week "When The Sun Goes Down" with Uncle Kracker"
-- and spent a demi-lifetime behind good friend Tim McGraw's career chart-topper
and CMA Song of the Year "Live Like You Were Dying" with his solely self-penned
"I Go Back."
"When I look at the year, I can't really believe it," Chesney says shyly.
"And talking about it makes it even more like 'Are you talking to me?!' When
we're onstage and everybody's rocking -- me, the crowd, the band - you don't
think about what it all adds up to, you just know it feels right! Then
suddenly, you're sitting in the islands talking to a reporter from People
magazine, and it just becomes surreal -- answering all these questions about the
year and the tour and the awards and stuff."
People's feature hits on the brink of Chesney's completely
self-penned Be As You Are: Songs From An Old Blue Chair, due to hit
streets Jan. 25. A more acoustic-leaning recording, the 13 song rumination on
the people, places and insights that the islands have offered him takes the man
known for his turbo-charged live shows into the decidedly more introspective
realm of the singer/songwriter.
With an appearance scheduled for NBC's "Tsunami Aid: A Concert for Hope,"
broadcast live on January 15, and a performance on "The Tonight Show with Jay
Leno" Feb. 1, the man voted Favorite Artist over Usher, Outkast, Evanescence and
Norah Jones at last year's American Music Awards is gearing up to be seemingly
everywhere. With When The Sun Goes Down's "Anything But Mine" scaling the
charts at country radio -- and the decidedly intimate "Old Blue Chair" video
(from both albums) arriving at CMT in power rotation, there's more than enough
Kenny Chesney to go around.
"It may not be the conventional way, but I think it works," says the affable
Luttrell, Tennessean. "Be As You Are is a different view of who I am,
certainly more personal. If you want to really understand who I am and what my
world beyond the tour bus is all about, it's all you really need."
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