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Phil Vassar

Phil Vassar Tempers Passion with Experience
By Bob Doerschuk

© 2008 CMA Close Up® News Service; Country Music Association®, Inc.

Phil Vassar doesn't act like a star. Sure, nine songs that bear his credit as a writer have topped the Country charts. As a performer as well as writer, he lofted his first single, "Just Another Day in Paradise," to No. 1 in 2000 - a few weeks before Tim McGraw took its place at the top with another Vassar-penned song, "My Next Thirty Years." ASCAP has named him Songwriter of the Year twice. Billboard has hailed him as Top New Country Artist and Country Songwriter of the Year.

All that is true, but whether seen from a seat in an arena he's sold out on his recent "acoustic tour" or up close in conversation, Vassar comes across like an old college roommate, the friendly bartender who remembers your drink as you walk through the door, or one of the guys you call for a pickup baseball game when the weather warms up.

These are all roles that he has played or continues to play, though they have to now fit into his schedule as a world-class performer, an expressive singer, one of the best songwriters in the business and the hottest piano player in the Country Music spotlight. Still, it's the Regular Guy who opened the door to his rambling home and led the way past original artworks and handsome furnishings toward a seat near his Yamaha grand and the picture windows that overlook the play area he built for his daughters, Haley, 9, and Presley, 4.

When complimented on his digs, he laughed disarmingly. "Actually," he added, "I keep wondering when the real owner will come back and kick me out."

The Virginia native has come a long way since arriving in Nashville 21 years ago, with a degree from James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va., a few songs to sell and a determination to succeed. Within eight years he had saved enough to buy the restaurant that had booked him as its entertainment. A customer there took one of Vassar's demos to play for his father, the velvet-voiced crooner Engelbert Humperdinck, who cut one of those early songs, "Once in a While," for his 1996 release, After Dark.

Music Row took note. Signed to EMI Music Publishing, Vassar wrote hits for Alan Jackson ("Right on the Money"), Jo Dee Messina ("Bye Bye," "I'm Alright"), Collin Raye ("Little Red Rodeo") and others. In 2000 he emerged as an artist in his own right, issuing three studio albums and one greatest hits package on the Arista Nashville imprint before transferring to Universal Records South, who on April 22 will release Prayer of a Common Man.

From the politically charged "This is My Life" to "Love is a Beautiful Thing," which transforms the familiarities of marriage into something close to poetry, each track on this album confirms Vassar's mastery of Country Music, especially its sometimes tricky mix of musical sophistication and down-home credibility. "Three and a half years have passed since my last studio record," he explained. "That's a lot of water under the bridge. As you evolve as a human being, it changes your writing style. It changes what's important to you and what you want to write about. I really like where it's going, and I love where I'm going as a writer."

"This Is My Life" is a good indicator of where Vassar feels he's headed. "It's real life," he insisted. "When I didn't have kids or a care in the world, a lot of this stuff went right past me. It was more important to hang out with my friends, have fun with girls and stuff like that. But then you send your kids off to school, and you see [the massacres at] Columbine and Virginia Tech, and that sticks in your head. The world is a little shaky now, and that's going to come through in an artist's writing."

Vassar's recent work doesn't just echo what's in the news. His perspective has widened, taking him away from lighter romantic themes toward subtler insights into life. "I've experienced a lot of things, especially in the past few years," he explained. "I try to get them off my chest when I write. But I love the curveballs that get thrown at you all the time. They keep me on my toes. They're real. What isn't real now would be to write about going to a dance club or something like that; I wouldn't know where to start."

One good place might be "Baby Rocks," which proves that Vassar can in fact still pump plenty of dance-floor testosterone into his words, hooks and grooves. But this song, and his infectious romp with Los Lonely Boys through "Why Don't Ya," share space on Prayer of a Common Man with perspectives formed more from experience than youthful exuberance: nostalgia ("My Chevrolet"), the loss and rediscovery of passion ("Around Here Somewhere"), the despair and determination that come from facing daily challenges ("Prayer of a Common Man") and the realization that when you add it all up, all you can do is laugh it off and enjoy the ride ("The World is a Mess") and then embrace it, warts and all ("Crazy Life").

"Something I thought about when I was in the process of making this record was a conversation that Bob Dylan had with John Lennon," Vassar said. " He said, 'Man, you guys are on this platform! You need to say something in your songs!' And then Rubber Soul came out. That conversation changed them - it changed me. I kept thinking about how it's great to have hits and write songs that are fluffy. But you've got to really dig deep, get real and write about something. That's what I felt I needed to do with this album."

On the Web: www.philvassar.com

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Phil Vassar; "Prayer of a Common Man;" Universal Records South
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Phil Vassar; Universal Records South; photo: Jim Wright
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Phil Vassar; Universal Records South; photo: Jim Wright
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Phil Vassar; Universal Records South; photo: Rob Shanahan
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NEW ARTIST SPOTLIGHT: Zane Lewis
By Bob Doerschuk

© 2008 CMA Close Up® News Service; Country Music Association®, Inc.

Texas roots feed the wide-open textures, swaggering beat and rugged baritone vocals of Zane Lewis' self-titled, nationally-released debut album. Though it sounds like he was born with a rowdy song in his heart, he didn't strum his first chord until he got to Texas Tech in Lubbock, while earning an advertising degree on a diet of "Blue Spoon" margaritas and Dr Peppers and singing the best of Garth Brooks, Merle Haggard and George Strait whenever he hit the shower.

Lewis narrowly dodged a career in journalism, going so far as to join with a partner in launching Western & English Today, a magazine for equestrians. Luckily for lovers of raw-boned rockin' Country, after having his first taste of performing in 2000, at the Garland Opry in Texas, he shut down his laptop, tuned up his guitar, sold the publication and invested his earnings into This Town, which he self-released throughout Texas in 2006. With LeAnn Rimes' road band providing the backup, this album whipped up a Lone Star storm that blew Lewis directly to his deal with Slant Records.

Co-produced by Brett James and Lex Lipsitz, Zane Lewis includes two tunes co-written by Lewis, a hymn to the traveling life ("Fly") and a low-down, fiddle-sawed foot stomper whose title could function as his calling card ("Bad Ass Country Band"). His personality rings loud and clear on every song, which he delivers with a sound that mirrors myriad influences, from Brooks to Lynyrd Skynyrd and all the way back to his father's fiddle playing and beyond, through five generations of Lewis family history in Texas. Lewis achieves an especially appealing blend of bravado and sensitivity on the album's first single, "Come with Me," whose simple invitation to "hang out" promises a world of adventure and romantic possibility

IN HIS OWN WORDS

MUSICAL BACKGROUND OR FIRST START IN MUSIC "My first live performance was at the acclaimed Garland Opry in Garland, Texas, in the summer of 2000. The Texas Opry circuit is a terrific training ground for new singers.  I learned how to feel comfortable with audiences at the Garland Opry, which is where LeAnn Rimes got her start.  I was one of their regular guests, and I hosted on several occasions.  It wasn't until 2003 that I rounded up my first band and hit the Texas bars and dancehalls to promote my first self-produced album, This Town."

MUSICAL HERO "Hands down, Waylon Jennings."

INFLUENCES "I grew up listening to my dad play western swing on his fiddle. But it was his 8-tracks of Waylon and the Eagles that hooked me. Merle Haggard, George Strait, Garth Brooks, Elvis, Charlie Daniels, U2, Van Halen and Lynyrd Skynyrd all influenced me in many ways."

DREAM DUET PARTNER "Merle Haggard."

HOMETOWN "I was born in Lubbock, Texas, raised in Round Rock and now live in Allen."

CD ON YOUR STEREO "Jack Ingram's 'Electric.' A 2002 release, but it still sits in my regular rotation with the new ones. I've been wearing out George Strait's 'It Just Comes Natural,' too."

PET PEEVE "People who can't drive, which is pretty much anyone who's in front of me!"

MODE OF TRANSPORTATION YOU PREFER "Driving when it comes to travel. You see more of the country and it's a great opportunity to free your mind up to think."

SONG YOU WISH YOU'D WRITTEN "'Believe.' The song has incredibly powerful words. I get goose bumps every time I hear the emotion in Ronnie Dunn's vocals."

MOMENT IN YOUR LIFE YOU'D RELIVE IF YOU COULD "The whole enchilada. I've loved every minute of it."

TITLE OF YOUR AUTOBIOGRAPHY "Determined - and Too Ignorant to Know Any Better."

WHAT YOU HOPE PEOPLE SAY, LOOKING BACK ON YOUR LIFE IN 50 YEARS "Encore!"

ACTOR TO PORTRAY YOU IN YOUR BIOPIC   "If it's an ill-fated attempt to project my life as 'cool' it would be Brad Pitt. Otherwise, Will Ferrell's probably the best man for the job. I smell an Oscar!"
 
On the Web: www.zanelewismusic.com

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Zane Lewis; Slant Records; photo: Steve Thornton
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