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Spotlight On Reba McEntire and Keep On
Loving You Photos by Glenda S.
Paradee
Reba's McEntire's Keep On
Loving You In Stores!
Superstar Reba McEntire released her
highly-anticipated first solo studio album in 6 years was released
on August 18, 2009, becoming the #1 most-downloaded country album on
iTunes in a matter of
hours.
As Reba embarks on an exciting new chapter
of her career with the much-anticipated release of Keep On Loving
You, her debut album with The Valory Music Co., it is readily
apparent that she’s not your typical
icon.
Sure, she’s amassed the sort of career
statistics that ensures legendary status in popular music– more than
55 million in album sales, 33 No. 1 hits, 2 Grammys, seven Country
Music Association Awards (CMAs), 12 Academy of Country Music Awards
(ACMs), nine People’s Choice Awards and 15 American Music Awards.
The Oklahoma quadruple threat has also found success in television,
where her self-titled primetime TV series was a top-rated sitcom for
six seasons, on Broadway, where she received rave reviews for her
irresistible performance in Annie Get Your Gun, and in film. (And
there’s a best-selling autobiography, as well as the popular Reba
collection at Dillard’s featuring women’s clothing and footwear and
bed and bath specialty
items.)
But what separates Reba from other cultural
trailblazers with decades-long careers is that she is hotter than
ever. Her name remains a familiar sight atop the charts, now nestled
among a generation of artists who have been strongly influenced by
her music and career path. “Strange,” the sassy debut single from
Keep on Loving You, is the fastest-rising solo single and highest
solo chart debut of her 33-year career. The new album is the
follow-up to Reba Duets, which hit No. 1 on both pop and country
album charts. Her last 13 studio albums have each received platinum
status for reaching 1 million in
sales.
She releases her 31st album to the largest
fan base that she’s ever had. “Going on TV, I got out in front of so
many millions of people not only in the U.S., Canada and Mexico, but
all over the world, so that just broadened,” she says. “Now wherever
I go, everybody recognizes me far more than they ever did when I
just had a singing career. I was coming from Mexico and there was a
plane from China going through immigration about the same time we
were. A lot of Chinese people were looking over at me and saying,
‘You are Reba McEntire. We see you all the time on
TV.’”
While proud of her accomplishments, Reba has
little interest in looking back; she’s too focused on what lies
ahead in her relentless quest to find a better song, deliver a
better performance and create a more entertaining show. “It’s harder
to maintain than it is to get there, so to maintain is one thing,
but to kick it in the butt again and go on forward is another,” she
says. “I am very competitive; that is the driving force behind my
career – curiosity and competitiveness. Kenny Rogers always told me,
‘I don’t have to be No. 1, but I sure like running with the Top 10.’
We’re always looking ahead, seeing what more we can
do.”
This forward thinking led her to leave her
longtime label and sign with The Valory Music Co., a move that
reunited Reba with Scott Borchetta, the president/CEO of Valory and
sister label Big Machine Records, who formerly worked with Reba at
MCA Nashville Records. Borchetta, one of the industry’s great record
men, helped Reba earn 14 No. 1 singles and sell more than 22 million
albums during his tenure at MCA. More recently, he launched the
career of Big Machine’s Taylor Swift and signed Jewel, Jimmy Wayne
and Justin Moore to
Valory.
“I think it’s a new chapter, I really do,”
Reba says of her entertainment career. “I’m back to only my music.
In the last 10 years, I’ve either had TV shows, Broadway or
something else going on. Basically this is a time when I can really
concentrate and focus on my music. This being the first solo album
in six years is very exciting to me, as is the new chapter with the
record label and new excitement in the music
again.
“It’s a big milestone for me to be on a
different label for the first time in my career,” says Reba, who had
been with the same record company (the merged PolyGram/Mercury/MCA)
since 1976 before signing with Valory in November 2008. “Just being
with Scott Borchetta again is very exciting because of his
enthusiasm and his great team. It’s like a family
reunion.
“Scott is very creative and innovative,”
says Reba, who is managed by her husband, Narvel Blackstock. “He
sure makes you work hard, that’s for sure. I work harder when I am
with him than with anyone else. He and Narvel make a great team of
finding things for me to do. If you want to succeed and want your
music out there, that is what you have to do because it’s very
competitive out
there.”
Borchetta says, “Reba has attacked this new
album with a renewed energy brought on in part by this new
beginning. There is a huge excitement and hunger for new Reba music,
which is apparent with her lead-off single, ‘Strange,’ which is the
fastest-moving single of her career. Even though she has nothing to
prove, don’t tell Reba! The gleam in her eye and the kick in her
step can only mean one thing: The queen still rules. And she rules
by
example.”
Keep on Loving You is a collection of 13
songs that is quintessential Reba. It’s a sound that is
contemporary, fresh and relevant, yet still true to her traditional
country roots . “I still go with the same formula I always have,”
she says. “When a song moves me, I will sing it and hopefully it
will move you. I just like to sing different songs. I think it goes
back to that attention-span thing for me. Mama always said I had the
attention span of a 2-year-old. I like to sing an up-tempo kick-butt
song and then a ballad. ‘I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry’ is one of my
favorite songs, and then go into ‘Respect’ or something like
‘Strange’ or “Just When I Thought I’d Stopped Loving
You.’”
Reba’s music poignantly captures the routine
details and crushing disappointments of American women’s lives,
where a red-carpet moment is the result of a Kool-Aid spill, not a
star-studded movie premiere. It’s the sound of babies crying and
dryers humming, the silence of unappreciated sacrifices and ignored
dreams. There’s a secret afternoon hotel stay in “Eight Crazy Hours
(In the Story of Love),” but this woman’s temporary comfort comes
from solitude, not illicit love. She uses the few unclaimed hours to
cry out her frustrations in Room 5’s bathtub before returning home
to serve her family dinner. “She was smoothin’ the sheet with the
palm of her hand/When the thought struck home I don’t know who I
am,” the song
says.
“It is real life with me,” Reba says. “I am
not the glamorous person people may think I am. People who know me
know I’m not. I’m the same person I was growing up in Southeastern
Oklahoma. I go back home and see how hard my sister Alice works with
four kids, one of them handicapped, and with her grandkids. I’ve got
lots of great memories of being at home and the way we were raised,
and you never forget that. I love to sing songs people can relate
to. One of the reasons my music has lasted as long as it has is
because I am a person that they can relate to and my music is what
they can relate
to.”
As she did in “Is There Life Out There,”
Reba continues to offer hope and encouragement to the women of
Middle America, letting them know they aren’t alone as they face
life’s changing roles. She proves in “She’s Turning 50 Today,” which
she co-wrote, that it’s never too late to begin leading the life
you’ve always wanted to
have.
“There’s not many good songs for women
around 50,” she says of the song about a woman who starts a new life
after being left for a woman half her age. “I’m 54, so I thought it
was a good song to sing for my generation. Men go through a mid-life
crisis and get a younger woman. Instead of that woman being left
behind falling to pieces, she considers it a new opportunity to find
fun and adventure in her
life.”
Reba loves the story-telling in songs such
as “Fancy” and “The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia,” and
continues that tradition with the swampy “Maggie Creek Road,” a tale
of a pistol-packing mother’s retribution against a man who harmed
her daughter. A strong female theme with a side dish of saucy
attitude is another Reba musical stamp, one that delightfully flows
through “Strange” and “Consider Me Gone,” while the heartache is
palpable in “Nothing to Lose” and “Over You.” The fun “I Want a
Cowboy,” “Pink Guitar” and “I”ll Have What She’s Having” provide the
perfect backdrop for a girls’ night
out.
While Reba has always remained true to
herself on her previous albums, she presents her most authentic self
to date (as Oprah might say) on Keep On Loving You, which she
co-produced with Tony Brown and Mark Bright. “I have scaled down,”
she says of her musical productions. “I always thought bigger was
better, but I like the intimacy of staying out there onstage with my
fans instead of going back and changing clothes 15 times. I like
that fourth wall being
broken.
“I like what I’m wearing and how I’m wearing
my hair. I wear my cowboy boots and they are more me than any other
look I’ve ever had in my 33-year career. Everything that we’re doing
now is more Reba than it was in the past. The things I did in the
past were things I wanted to do to entertain me. After getting to do
movies and TV, I realized the real me was just the simple Reba. That
is the same Reba, the Reba that is on the Reba TV
show.”
She developed a new recording philosophy
during the six-year span between solo projects. “Back when I was
touring and doing 80 to 120 dates a year and coming in and doing two
or three albums a year, I’d get in there and sing and start
entertaining myself by doing vocal trills and little acrobatic
things,” says Reba. “But when you haven’t sung for awhile on an
album, you really get into the music and the song. And I’ve matured;
I’m growing up. You think about things differently and you aren’t
trying to impress anybody. You are just trying to pay homage to this
song. I mean, I’m trying to impress the musicians while we are
performing, but I’m not trying to do outlandish things like the
vocal trills I used to do 10 years
ago.”
Fortunately, the results have garnered
impressive reviews from some of her toughest critics. “Narvel summed
it up for me,” she says. “He listened to it over and over and he
said, ‘I think this is one of the best albums you’ve ever
recorded.’”
Reba is ecstatic about the album’s early and
strong reception by country radio programmers (and her husband) and
is eager to share her new music with her fans. “I wanted to name the
album Keep on Loving You because it’s a tribute to my fans: You’ve
always been there for me and I’m going to keep on loving you,” says
Reba.
“I’m excited about being with the new record
label,” she says. “I’m excited about this new album. I’m excited
where I am in my life, my age, that radio is still playing my music
and that fans still want to hear my music and see me perform. I’m
very grateful, appreciative and blessed.” APPEARANCES:
Oregon State Fair September 7, 2009 Salem, OR On
Sale June 26 @ 10 AM. Click here for more information. http://www.oregonstatefair.org/things-to-do/concerts-and-shows/big-shows
Thanks For The Music!
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