rsmatto
6x Platinum Member
Joined: December 2008
Posts: 6,528
|
Post by rsmatto on Jul 21, 2014 16:50:58 GMT -5
The single likely WON'T be on his website. The old stuff All the old albums, will be sold at a package deal or regular price. But they WILL be "Album Only." Which I should have guessed, with it being Garth. Wish he'd do prices on an individual basis. So buy "The Ultimate Hits" as a '2 disc' collection of songs. Then you'll have his major hits.
|
|
Kat5Kind
Gold Member
Joined: May 2014
Posts: 768
|
Post by Kat5Kind on Jul 21, 2014 17:00:00 GMT -5
Which I should have guessed, with it being Garth. Wish he'd do prices on an individual basis. So buy "The Ultimate Hits" as a '2 disc' collection of songs. Then you'll have his major hits. Good idea, one that I didn't think of! Haha, blonde moment. Thanks!
|
|
|
Post by countrymusic20 on Jul 21, 2014 17:13:35 GMT -5
I have no money on iTunes so it's a good thing it's only available through his website for me. I only want certain singles, not an entire album. The single likely WON'T be on his website. The old stuff All the old albums, will be sold at a package deal or regular price. But they WILL be "Album Only." That's a valid point about Buddy Cannon ... But when was the last time you saw Mark Miller's name on the credits of a top 40 song or album? More Than A Memory was the last time I saw it. Correct me if I'm wrong. Audio engineering is changing every day with new versions of pro tools, and all the new programs available. No, all engineers don't keep up with the technology, especially ones that haven't been working hardly at all in the last 10 years. Why would Mark Miller NOT keep up with the technology. How do you know he's not been busy and why would only credits on a "top 40 song or album" mean he's a good engineer/producer. Garth CLEARLY chose him because the man knows how to work with Garth and what Garth wants. That cannot be understated enough here. Just because YOU think that an engineer who hasn't had credits on mainstream stuff isn't qualified to produce Garth's music or have it be 'current' doesn't mean that he's not qualified or going to be good at it. Do you think a producer with a 'name' would've done anything for Garth at all? I doubt it. Besides, he'd likely have picked someone like Don Was or Rick Rubin to work with if not his core group of guys. The musicians on the record are all the same guys he's worked with in years past too. I researched it. Couldn't find his name on hardly anything in the last 7 years. So Garth is using the same engineer who is now the "producer" who hasn't really been working much. And the same musicians he used back in the 90's ... many of whom haven't been working much. The Garth records over the years weren't exactly the best sounding records in town, so I'm almost scare to think about what they'll sound like now.
|
|
rsmatto
6x Platinum Member
Joined: December 2008
Posts: 6,528
|
Post by rsmatto on Jul 21, 2014 17:21:44 GMT -5
The single likely WON'T be on his website. The old stuff All the old albums, will be sold at a package deal or regular price. But they WILL be "Album Only." Why would Mark Miller NOT keep up with the technology. How do you know he's not been busy and why would only credits on a "top 40 song or album" mean he's a good engineer/producer. Garth CLEARLY chose him because the man knows how to work with Garth and what Garth wants. That cannot be understated enough here. Just because YOU think that an engineer who hasn't had credits on mainstream stuff isn't qualified to produce Garth's music or have it be 'current' doesn't mean that he's not qualified or going to be good at it. Do you think a producer with a 'name' would've done anything for Garth at all? I doubt it. Besides, he'd likely have picked someone like Don Was or Rick Rubin to work with if not his core group of guys. The musicians on the record are all the same guys he's worked with in years past too. I researched it. Couldn't find his name on hardly anything in the last 7 years. So Garth is using the same engineer who is now the "producer" who hasn't really been working much. And the same musicians he used back in the 90's ... many of whom haven't been working much. The Garth records over the years weren't exactly the best sounding records in town, so I'm almost scare to think about what they'll sound like now. If you used things like Allmusic, that doesn't hold the indie producer, engineer credits at all unless the albums actually get some sort of bigger retail push. You do realize that MOST of those musicians he uses have worked enough to maintain their Union memerships, right? You do know that MANY of them tour with artists, right? You Do know that many of them -- because of their work with Garth -- haven't NEEDED to work, right? Mark Miller will be fine in the producers chair. It's really GARTH producing anyway (always has been).
|
|
slowmo
Platinum Member
Joined: December 2003
Posts: 1,466
|
Post by slowmo on Jul 21, 2014 19:29:30 GMT -5
Kenny Jay - BUZ'N @kennyjayradio New music from #GarthBrooks scheduled to debut Wednesday has been postponed. A new date/time hasn't been announced yet. #StayTuned
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 21, 2014 21:37:44 GMT -5
The single likely WON'T be on his website. The old stuff All the old albums, will be sold at a package deal or regular price. But they WILL be "Album Only." Which I should have guessed, with it being Garth. Wish he'd do prices on an individual basis. From everything I heard the first single would be available individually on his website.
|
|
SoMuchToSay
3x Platinum Member
Joined: August 2010
Posts: 3,497
|
Post by SoMuchToSay on Jul 21, 2014 22:04:21 GMT -5
I'm very upset about them potentially pushing the release back a week! I've been so excited about this all weekend! Also, I can see from a $$$$ stand point why they would only sell it on their site, but how are you NOT gonna sell your single on iTunes at the minimum which makes up like 70% of sales?! I feel like it could maybe help the album sales, but at the end of the day is not effective because it doesn't give the visibility that it could be getting. I'm not going to go to someones website to buy 1 song... that's just stupid.
|
|
McCreerian
9x Platinum Member
Joined: June 2010
Posts: 9,056
|
Post by McCreerian on Jul 21, 2014 22:07:51 GMT -5
Maybe Garth's people doesn't want him to go against Aldean and share the big "first spins." Garth's people probably want him to have a week all to himself with no other major artists sharing the spotlight. Makes sense!
|
|
|
Post by countrymusic20 on Jul 22, 2014 0:37:37 GMT -5
I researched it. Couldn't find his name on hardly anything in the last 7 years. So Garth is using the same engineer who is now the "producer" who hasn't really been working much. And the same musicians he used back in the 90's ... many of whom haven't been working much. The Garth records over the years weren't exactly the best sounding records in town, so I'm almost scare to think about what they'll sound like now. If you used things like Allmusic, that doesn't hold the indie producer, engineer credits at all unless the albums actually get some sort of bigger retail push. You do realize that MOST of those musicians he uses have worked enough to maintain their Union memerships, right? You do know that MANY of them tour with artists, right? You Do know that many of them -- because of their work with Garth -- haven't NEEDED to work, right? Mark Miller will be fine in the producers chair. It's really GARTH producing anyway (always has been). Obviously you have no idea how the session player game works. First off - all you have to do to be in the union is pay their membership dues. Second - the players get paid a certain scale - then repaid when the record sales crosses certain sales points ... Trust me, it's not enough for them to not need to work for 1 year - much less the last 10. Third - while there are a few session players that still go on the road cuz they love it, most stay in town full time if they have the chance. The session players that can't get enough work in town to make a decent living are the ones going on the road to make ends meet. And - session playing and road playing are 2 completely different things - apples and oranges. All great road players aren't great session players and vice versa. Session playing involves being creative and making up new parts on the spot - road playing is playing the same songs over and over every night exactly the same way.
|
|
rsmatto
6x Platinum Member
Joined: December 2008
Posts: 6,528
|
Post by rsmatto on Jul 22, 2014 8:56:09 GMT -5
If you used things like Allmusic, that doesn't hold the indie producer, engineer credits at all unless the albums actually get some sort of bigger retail push. You do realize that MOST of those musicians he uses have worked enough to maintain their Union memerships, right? You do know that MANY of them tour with artists, right? You Do know that many of them -- because of their work with Garth -- haven't NEEDED to work, right? Mark Miller will be fine in the producers chair. It's really GARTH producing anyway (always has been). Obviously you have no idea how the session player game works. First off - all you have to do to be in the union is pay their membership dues. Second - the players get paid a certain scale - then repaid when the record sales crosses certain sales points ... Trust me, it's not enough for them to not need to work for 1 year - much less the last 10. Third - while there are a few session players that still go on the road cuz they love it, most stay in town full time if they have the chance. The session players that can't get enough work in town to make a decent living are the ones going on the road to make ends meet. And - session playing and road playing are 2 completely different things - apples and oranges. All great road players aren't great session players and vice versa. Session playing involves being creative and making up new parts on the spot - road playing is playing the same songs over and over every night exactly the same way. Unless you're related to a Garth session guy, how do you know if he paid them above and beyond to record to record with him so that he can always have the same team. Just because a musician has 'scale' doesn't mean they can't get paid more than that scale, right? I mean that's how Hollywood's union works. Otherwise all the star actors would only get 'scale' every time with a little 'back end' negotiated if they're big enough stars (honestly film stars get one or the other or both in their contracts). It sounds like you know or are a musician that knows the union stuff, and that's fine. But Garth has sold over 100 million albums, if the session guys got even one cent for every million album sold, that'd be 1,000,000 dollars in their pockets (over time) and unless they're extravagent spenders, that's enough money for most people to comfortably live off of for a whole lifetime. Chances are they've gotten more than that just for working with Garth (even if they haven't gotten above scale per session). Add that money to any other sessions they worked on would just be added onto that. So, like I said, these cats probably haven't needed to work, even if they're getting scale and just getting repaid at certain sales points, just by virtue of working with Garth.
|
|
ant
Platinum Member
Banned
Joined: September 2013
Posts: 1,360
|
Post by ant on Jul 22, 2014 9:05:21 GMT -5
Which I should have guessed, with it being Garth. Wish he'd do prices on an individual basis. So buy "The Ultimate Hits" as a '2 disc' collection of songs. Then you'll have his major hits. That's what I did. I literally got that 2 disc album brand new for like less than $10.00 at an FYE store.
|
|
|
Post by countrymusic20 on Jul 22, 2014 9:38:27 GMT -5
So buy "The Ultimate Hits" as a '2 disc' collection of songs. Then you'll have his major hits. That's what I did. I literally got that 2 disc album brand new for like less than $10.00 at an FYE store. They get paid per session - a set union scale. They don't make any royalties off it. Trust me - I know guys that played on the Garth records that have been begging for work in the past 10 years.
|
|
jferstler
New Member
Joined: April 2014
Posts: 225
|
Post by jferstler on Jul 22, 2014 10:16:40 GMT -5
That's what I did. I literally got that 2 disc album brand new for like less than $10.00 at an FYE store. They get paid per session - a set union scale. They don't make any royalties off it. Trust me - I know guys that played on the Garth records that have been begging for work in the past 10 years. Can you clarify what your saying? This new Garth record won't be received well because the session players haven't recorded in a few years?
|
|
rsmatto
6x Platinum Member
Joined: December 2008
Posts: 6,528
|
Post by rsmatto on Jul 22, 2014 10:46:08 GMT -5
They get paid per session - a set union scale. They don't make any royalties off it. Trust me - I know guys that played on the Garth records that have been begging for work in the past 10 years. Can you clarify what your saying? This new Garth record won't be received well because the session players haven't recorded in a few years? They seem to think that because these guys have been 'begging for work' or that the engineer who was 'out of work' have had time basically pass them by that Garth's music won't be well-received because they don't know the new ways to make records, which is rediculous to me, no matter what a session player gets paid or who produces the record. You can make a great current sounding record pretty easily these days. It just takes the right ear to make it sound great, something that doesn't take budget into account at all.
|
|
|
Post by countrymusic20 on Jul 22, 2014 10:53:15 GMT -5
They get paid per session - a set union scale. They don't make any royalties off it. Trust me - I know guys that played on the Garth records that have been begging for work in the past 10 years. Can you clarify what your saying? This new Garth record won't be received well because the session players haven't recorded in a few years? All I'm saying is i'm predicting that it will sound dated. I'm predicting the production will sound like a 90's record. I'm sure Garth doesn't really care and thinks his retro sound will sound better anyway. I'll also predict most of PMB will agree with Garth and welcome a record that is not so "overproduced" - whatever that means. I'll comment further when the single comes out. Apparently it's been pushed back a week cuz he didn't wanna go head to head with Jason Aldean. Smart move by Garth.
|
|
Uncle Lumpy
3x Platinum Member
The poster formerly known as Lumpster
Joined: September 2005
Posts: 3,425
|
Post by Uncle Lumpy on Jul 22, 2014 10:55:37 GMT -5
That's what I did. I literally got that 2 disc album brand new for like less than $10.00 at an FYE store. They get paid per session - a set union scale. They don't make any royalties off it. Trust me - I know guys that played on the Garth records that have been begging for work in the past 10 years. This is true. I passed Garth's guitarist Chris Leuzinger panhandling on a street corner on my way to work this morning. He was holding a Stratocaster in one hand and "I will play for food" sign in the other. Alot of negative things can be said about Garth , but he takes care is his people. This is common knowledge around town. I have no idea who the "guys that played on Garth's records" you are referring to are. But the only band member I could remember off the top of my head was Leuzinger & a quick google search shows hes been playing the three-year residency at the Wynn Las Vegas with Garth along with other studio work. Even if these musicians aren't on any recent major Nashville projects , there's a ton of money made in this town on demos alone every single day of the week. I hardly believe any of these guys are starving for work. But by all means , carry on with vague references to support your argument....
|
|
|
Post by countrymusic20 on Jul 22, 2014 11:21:46 GMT -5
They get paid per session - a set union scale. They don't make any royalties off it. Trust me - I know guys that played on the Garth records that have been begging for work in the past 10 years. This is true. I passed Garth's guitarist Chris Leuzinger panhandling on a street corner on my way to work this morning. He was holding a Stratocaster in one hand and "I will play for food" sign in the other. Alot of negative things can be said about Garth , but he takes care is his people. This is common knowledge around town. I have no idea who the "guys that played on Garth's records" you are referring to are. But the only band member I could remember off the top of my head was Leuzinger & a quick google search shows hes been playing the three-year residency at the Wynn Las Vegas with Garth along with other studio work. Even if these musicians aren't on any recent major Nashville projects , there's a ton of money made in this town on demos alone every single day of the week. I hardly believe any of these guys are starving for work. But by all means , carry on with vague references to support your argument.... Well, I guess I stand corrected because you guys say so - All the guys that ever played on Garth's records are RICH and are turning down work in Nashville every day - cuz they don't need the work - cuz they are RICH.
|
|
rsmatto
6x Platinum Member
Joined: December 2008
Posts: 6,528
|
Post by rsmatto on Jul 22, 2014 11:33:56 GMT -5
They get paid per session - a set union scale. They don't make any royalties off it. Trust me - I know guys that played on the Garth records that have been begging for work in the past 10 years. This is true. I passed Garth's guitarist Chris Leuzinger panhandling on a street corner on my way to work this morning. He was holding a Stratocaster in one hand and "I will play for food" sign in the other. Alot of negative things can be said about Garth , but he takes care is his people. This is common knowledge around town. I have no idea who the "guys that played on Garth's records" you are referring to are. But the only band member I could remember off the top of my head was Leuzinger & a quick google search shows he's been playing the three-year residency at the Wynn Las Vegas with Garth along with other studio work. Even if these musicians aren't on any recent major Nashville projects , there's a ton of money made in this town on demos alone every single day of the week. I hardly believe any of these guys are starving for work. But by all means , carry on with vague references to support your argument.... That was the complete basis of my discussion against their 'argument.' Through the years, his core musicians have been Milton Sledge (Drums), Mike Chapman (bass), Chris Leuzinger (electric guitar), Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar), Bobby Wood (Keyboards), Bruce Bouton (steel guitar) and Rob Hajacos (fiddle). Leuzinger, Sledge, Hajacos. All of these guys have played on each of his records. Leuzinger has consistently played on albums, Casstevens played consistently until 2009 when he 'retired' from active gigs. Hajacos is the most prolific of the A group, playing on many records (and his fiddle is pretty distinctive when he's allowed to have solos or fills). Then you add the other guys Garth has on his records, Sam Bacco, Kenny Malone, Edger Meyer, Jimmy Lee Sloas, Tom Bukovac, Gordon Kennedy, Jimmy Mattingly, and Jerry Douglas among others (especially the NEW recordings from the box set). The point being that these guys haven't been starving, they have been playing and like Uncle Lumpy said, countrymusic20, there's other ways to play studio gigs and other gigs (like showcases) and make a living and being around the 'current' sound. This is true. I passed Garth's guitarist Chris Leuzinger panhandling on a street corner on my way to work this morning. He was holding a Stratocaster in one hand and "I will play for food" sign in the other. -- Well, I guess I stand corrected because you guys say so - All the guys that ever played on Garth's records are RICH and are turning down work in Nashville every day - cuz they don't need the work - cuz they are RICH. Neither of us said they were rich. I just said they didn't necessarily have to work all the time to be comfortable. Uncle Lumpy just said it is also about Garth taking care of his team around him, which he has more often than not.
|
|
Uncle Lumpy
3x Platinum Member
The poster formerly known as Lumpster
Joined: September 2005
Posts: 3,425
|
Post by Uncle Lumpy on Jul 22, 2014 11:38:24 GMT -5
I don't believe anyone has said that at all. But just out of curiosity, which musicians have told you they are "begging for work"?
|
|
|
Post by countrymusic20 on Jul 22, 2014 11:45:55 GMT -5
This is true. I passed Garth's guitarist Chris Leuzinger panhandling on a street corner on my way to work this morning. He was holding a Stratocaster in one hand and "I will play for food" sign in the other. Alot of negative things can be said about Garth , but he takes care is his people. This is common knowledge around town. I have no idea who the "guys that played on Garth's records" you are referring to are. But the only band member I could remember off the top of my head was Leuzinger & a quick google search shows he's been playing the three-year residency at the Wynn Las Vegas with Garth along with other studio work. Even if these musicians aren't on any recent major Nashville projects , there's a ton of money made in this town on demos alone every single day of the week. I hardly believe any of these guys are starving for work. But by all means , carry on with vague references to support your argument.... That was the complete basis of my discussion against their 'argument.' Through the years, his core musicians have been Milton Sledge (Drums), Mike Chapman (bass), Chris Leuzinger (electric guitar), Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar), Bobby Wood (Keyboards), Bruce Bouton (steel guitar) and Rob Hajacos (fiddle). Leuzinger, Sledge, Hajacos. All of these guys have played on each of his records. Leuzinger has consistently played on albums, Casstevens played consistently until 2009 when he 'retired' from active gigs. Hajacos is the most prolific of the A group, playing on many records (and his fiddle is pretty distinctive when he's allowed to have solos or fills). Then you add the other guys Garth has on his records, Sam Bacco, Kenny Malone, Edger Meyer, Jimmy Lee Sloas, Tom Bukovac, Gordon Kennedy, Jimmy Mattingly, and Jerry Douglas among others (especially the NEW recordings from the box set). The point being that these guys haven't been starving, they have been playing and like Uncle Lumpy said, countrymusic20, there's other ways to play studio gigs and other gigs (like showcases) and make a living and being around the 'current' sound. Neither of us said they were rich. I just said they didn't necessarily have to work all the time to be comfortable. Uncle Lumpy just said it is also about Garth taking care of his team around him, which he has more often than not. The box set guys don't count - we're talking guys he used from Scarecrow back. But that helps make my point. Bukovac and Sloas are current first call guys. If you know ANYONE in the recording industry in Nashville that has worked on any current projects - have them make up a top 10 list of players by instrument. Probably not gonna see any of those guys you listed off besides Bukovac, Sloas, and Jerry Douglas on any top 10 players in town. .
|
|
rsmatto
6x Platinum Member
Joined: December 2008
Posts: 6,528
|
Post by rsmatto on Jul 22, 2014 11:52:48 GMT -5
That was the complete basis of my discussion against their 'argument.' Through the years, his core musicians have been Milton Sledge (Drums), Mike Chapman (bass), Chris Leuzinger (electric guitar), Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar), Bobby Wood (Keyboards), Bruce Bouton (steel guitar) and Rob Hajacos (fiddle). Leuzinger, Sledge, Hajacos. All of these guys have played on each of his records. Leuzinger has consistently played on albums, Casstevens played consistently until 2009 when he 'retired' from active gigs. Hajacos is the most prolific of the A group, playing on many records (and his fiddle is pretty distinctive when he's allowed to have solos or fills). Then you add the other guys Garth has on his records, Sam Bacco, Kenny Malone, Edger Meyer, Jimmy Lee Sloas, Tom Bukovac, Gordon Kennedy, Jimmy Mattingly, and Jerry Douglas among others (especially the NEW recordings from the box set). The point being that these guys haven't been starving, they have been playing and like Uncle Lumpy said, countrymusic20, there's other ways to play studio gigs and other gigs (like showcases) and make a living and being around the 'current' sound. Neither of us said they were rich. I just said they didn't necessarily have to work all the time to be comfortable. Uncle Lumpy just said it is also about Garth taking care of his team around him, which he has more often than not. The box set guys don't count - we're talking guys he used from Scarecrow back. But that helps make my point. Bukovac and Sloas are current first call guys. If you know ANYONE in the recording industry in Nashville that has worked on any current projects - have them make up a top 10 list of players by instrument. Probably not gonna see any of those guys you listed off besides Bukovac, Sloas, and Jerry Douglas on any top 10 players in town. . Bobby Wood is 70 something years old, of course he's not gonna play one everyone's records anymore. You can't discount the new guys added to recording on the Box Set or the Greatest Hits project as guys who won't join the core guys in the studio. Bouton plays on records and tours with artists. Mattingly tours with artists like Garth, Steve Wariner, Dolly, etc., Jerry Douglas, well he's very well known, Kennedy plays Country Christian and pop records and is an oft-recorded songwriter ("Change The World"). Meyer is a well-known bassist. Are you gonna discount everything these guys have ever done to suggest they cannot make a record that'll sound current enough to get radio airplay? "More Than A Memory" was very current for that time. Garth only needs 4 'current' singles on his album to get consistent hits with radio. He'll be fine, he'll do well and radio will eat it up. George Strait's records have largely sounded the same through the past 20-30 years but he still has enough radio airplay. I just think the 'these guys don't know how to play anymore or currently produce stuff' argument is pretty weak.
|
|
|
Post by countrymusic20 on Jul 22, 2014 12:20:39 GMT -5
The box set guys don't count - we're talking guys he used from Scarecrow back. But that helps make my point. Bukovac and Sloas are current first call guys. If you know ANYONE in the recording industry in Nashville that has worked on any current projects - have them make up a top 10 list of players by instrument. Probably not gonna see any of those guys you listed off besides Bukovac, Sloas, and Jerry Douglas on any top 10 players in town. . Bobby Wood is 70 something years old, of course he's not gonna play one everyone's records anymore. You can't discount the new guys added to recording on the Box Set or the Greatest Hits project as guys who won't join the core guys in the studio. Bouton plays on records and tours with artists. Mattingly tours with artists like Garth, Steve Wariner, Dolly, etc., Jerry Douglas, well he's very well known, Kennedy plays Country Christian and pop records and is an oft-recorded songwriter ("Change The World"). Meyer is a well-known bassist. Are you gonna discount everything these guys have ever done to suggest they cannot make a record that'll sound current enough to get radio airplay? "More Than A Memory" was very current for that time. Garth only needs 4 'current' singles on his album to get consistent hits with radio. He'll be fine, he'll do well and radio will eat it up. George Strait's records have largely sounded the same through the past 20-30 years but he still has enough radio airplay. I just think the 'these guys don't know how to play anymore or currently produce stuff' argument is pretty weak. I'm sure it'll sound fine. It'll sound like an old Garth record.
|
|
rsmatto
6x Platinum Member
Joined: December 2008
Posts: 6,528
|
Post by rsmatto on Jul 22, 2014 12:38:54 GMT -5
Bobby Wood is 70 something years old, of course he's not gonna play one everyone's records anymore. You can't discount the new guys added to recording on the Box Set or the Greatest Hits project as guys who won't join the core guys in the studio. Bouton plays on records and tours with artists. Mattingly tours with artists like Garth, Steve Wariner, Dolly, etc., Jerry Douglas, well he's very well known, Kennedy plays Country Christian and pop records and is an oft-recorded songwriter ("Change The World"). Meyer is a well-known bassist. Are you gonna discount everything these guys have ever done to suggest they cannot make a record that'll sound current enough to get radio airplay? "More Than A Memory" was very current for that time. Garth only needs 4 'current' singles on his album to get consistent hits with radio. He'll be fine, he'll do well and radio will eat it up. George Strait's records have largely sounded the same through the past 20-30 years but he still has enough radio airplay. I just think the 'these guys don't know how to play anymore or currently produce stuff' argument is pretty weak. I'm sure it'll sound fine. It'll sound like an old Garth record. Maybe it will, maybe it won't. From a sonic stand point you have no idea. From a vocal standpoint, of course it would, it's GARTH singing it.
|
|
carriekins
5x Platinum Member
With my mouth wide open in a whiskey rain, I could stand here 24 hours a day...
Joined: November 2011
Posts: 5,323
|
Post by carriekins on Jul 22, 2014 14:48:03 GMT -5
Monday at 6 am.
From @kennyjayradio @windmillsmusic @polscifi Garth update -- hits radio Monday 7/28 at 6am!
|
|
McCreerian
9x Platinum Member
Joined: June 2010
Posts: 9,056
|
Post by McCreerian on Jul 22, 2014 22:58:58 GMT -5
Windmills Country @windmillsmusic · 16m ·
What the???? RT@TheAntMan No #Garth music until September now! More details soon...
Wow!!
|
|
14887fan
Diamond Member
Joined: November 2013
Posts: 11,254
|
Post by 14887fan on Jul 23, 2014 2:32:25 GMT -5
Ah, Sony Music Nashville. Please, change.
|
|
Markus Meyer
Platinum Member
Favorite Single of 2020 So Far: “betty” by Taylor Swift
Joined: August 2013
Posts: 1,625
|
Post by Markus Meyer on Jul 23, 2014 2:41:55 GMT -5
Seriously, wtf. This isn't good marketing anymore, this is just gonna piss people off.
|
|
hosssulpizio
Gold Member
Banned
Joined: July 2014
Posts: 718
|
Post by hosssulpizio on Jul 23, 2014 6:27:03 GMT -5
I'm super excited about new Garth Brooks music! I don't know why people are hating on him and I'm getting very tired of the criticism. I think RCA will truly support him. You gotta remember that Elvis Presley was signed to RCA, so I'm sure they can bring Garth Brooks some more hits and a top-selling album. As for the music on his website, I think he will do well with that too. One thing I'm hoping for is that he will allow his music on Spotify. Since people can't buy music on Spotify, I think it would be a good way to make sure people know his name and what he's all about. For the opening acts on his tour: We already know Trisha will be on the tour, but I'm hoping he brings along some other guys. Maybe Country newcomers such as Dustin Lynch. He could bring along Lee Brice (songwriter of "More Than a Memory") or maybe Jerrod Niemann, who helped write Good Ride Cowboy. Keith Anderson could be another possibility. With this comeback, the way I see it: anything can happen.
|
|
ant
Platinum Member
Banned
Joined: September 2013
Posts: 1,360
|
Post by ant on Jul 23, 2014 9:18:54 GMT -5
Yeah, this is getting ridiculous. WTF is with all of these delays with him lately?
|
|
onebuffalo
Diamond Member
#LiteralLegender
I am One Buffalo.
Joined: June 2009
Posts: 26,588
|
Post by onebuffalo on Jul 23, 2014 10:06:33 GMT -5
|
|