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Originally from Phoenix, Dierks (who was given a family name as a
first name) grew up listening to George Strait and Hank Williams with his dad.
He moved fromlistener to player when he picked up an electric guitar at 13.
'When I first discovered the electric guitar it wasn’t about ‘play the guitar
and get girls,’ it was just this instrument where you could go from a moment
when you’re feeling down, then pick up the guitar and all of a sudden you
transfer yourself to a different place.'
He started out
playing the music his classmates listened to – mostly rock. Then came the moment
in high school that changed his focus. 'A friend of mine gave me a cold beer and
played me a song called ‘Man to Man’ by Hank Jr.,' he recalls 'Everything inside
just lined up and I knew exactly what I wanted to do.' He moved to Nashville at
19 and immediately immersed himself in the local music scene. 'I don’t have a
storybook tale to tell, as many entertainers do, about growing up in a musical
family,' he says. 'I wasn’t singing harmonies in the church by age five and I
wasn’t fronting the family band by age ten. Everything I learned musically, I
had to learn on my own. My country music education has consisted of listening to
a lot of records and spending a lot of time listening and playing in Nashville
bars and clubs.' 'Most people who don’t live in Nashville probably associate the
music scene here with what they hear on their radio, but there is so much more
going on. There’s a lot of great live music that doesn’t get a whole lot of
recognition outside of the city.' Dierks discovered that side of the city at a
point when he was getting discouraged with the Nashville music business. It was
a time of one cowboy-hatted, starched jeans-wearing singer after another, and
Dierks figured he just didn’t fit that mold. Call it fate or luck, but at that
low point, he stumbled on the Station Inn, a club that is in many ways a 'mecca'
for bluegrass fans worldwide. 'I discovered a whole community of musicians and
singers who played music for all the right reasons,' he says. 'They didn’t play
because they wanted to be stars or be in music videos, they played because they
loved the music. Being there made such an impression on me that for five years I
spent just about every Tuesday night there absorbing all I could take in.' The
environment completely revived him. 'The harmony singing, the level of
musicianship and the realness of it just changed my whole perspective on music
and on why I was in Nashville. I moved here to be a star, then I discovered this
place and started playing music for music alone – I play and sing just to play
and sing.' He took some of what he learned from bluegrass and applied it to the
country music that was in his bones. He began to dig deeper into the music, to
learn more about the artists who came before him. It didn’t hurt that his day
job at The Nashville Network (TNN) involved digging through old footage of
country performances past. 'Getting paid to look at old footage, to go through
Faron Young’s entire video footage catalog, and all the Porter Wagoner shows,
the Johnny Cash shows, the Grand Ole Opry shows…it was the ideal job,' Dierks
says. 'I was a big George Jones fan when I moved to Nashville. But after I got
into bluegrass, instead of just
listening
to his music, I started to
hear
it and understand every bend and
break in his voice.' Taking what he learned, Dierks played all sorts of places –
the hushed writer’s nights around town, where a musically savvy audience waits
for you to prove your chops, the beer-soaked backyard parties and barbecues, and
an ever-revolving lineup of local bars. But the first place he played regularly
was a legendary Nashville dive of a music venue called Springwater. 'I remember
playing there one rainy night and water was pouring on to the stage from cracks
in the ceiling. We were all trying to find a place on the stage that was dry…I
thought for sure I was going to be electrocuted,' he remembers. 'By the end of
the night, me and my guitar were soaked. But it was my first place to have a
regular gig and I didn’t care. I was just happy to be playing music in Music
City.' Market Street Brewery, a bar/restaurant in downtown Nashville, had a
different vibe. 'It’s out of the limelight, and I was still developing what I
was trying to do,' he says. 'I didn’t have to play 'Rocky Top' and 'Free Bird,'
so playing there was a way to keep it fresh for me.'
One night Dierks
was playing at Market Street when Vince Gill and Amy Grant walked through the
door. Vince had his mandolin with him and he sat down at the bar about five feet
away from the stage. Dierks asked Vince if he would come up and sing a few songs
and without hesitation, Vince nodded yes. 'I thought he would sing a song or two
and sit back down but he ended up picking with us for almost an hour and half.
‘Truly unbelievable’ is the only way I can describe it. I thought that if my
music dreams never went any further, that would be alright because I got to
share the stage (albeit a very small one!) with Vince Gill.' One of the
musicians he met as he settled deeper into the Nashville scene was Mike Ward.
They had the same attitude toward country music and began writing songs together
for the pure joy of creating songs that they liked. Mike believed in Dierks as
an artist, and encouraged him to make a record.
Don’t Leave Me In Love,
produced by Mike and Dierks, was a small budget affair with a big heart. When it
reached the ears of some key folks on Music Row, Dierks finally achieved one of
his biggest goals: attaining a publishing deal. He became a full time songwriter
for Sony/Tree Publishing, which has a history of great writers like Hank
Cochran, Harlan Howard, and Bill Anderson. After years of working on the fringes
and figuring things out for himself, now Dierks was surrounded by a team of
people who believed in him and what he wanted to do musically. One of those
people was Sony/Tree song-plugger Arthur Buenahora, who teamed Dierks up with
another Tree writer, Brett Beavers. 'I knew right away that Brett and I were
going to get along. The fact that he’s a musician, and has been out on the road
with various acts for the last eleven years, means a lot to me because they are
the people I respect most in this town. He loves traditional country music and
as a writer, he understands the importance of keepin’ it country and keepin’ it
real, but also of rying to take the music somewhere new.' It wasn’t long after
they began collaborating that a few of their demos were heard by a couple of
record labels, both expressing serious interest. Dierks decided to sign with
Capitol and immediately got to work on his album, with Brett coming on as a
first-time producer. Though his Capitol album had a bit more in the budget than
his independent record, Dierks took the same approach to making it. He wrote or
co-wrote 11 of the 13 songs and brought in some of the up and coming musicians
he’d worked with in those dive bars and honky tonks. 'In today’s politically
correct world, it often isn’t appropriate to talk about drinking, but I wanted
to make a record you can drink a couple of beers to,' Dierks jokes. ‘What Was I
Thinkin’, ‘How Am I Doin’, ‘Forget About You,’ and obviously, ‘Bartenders, etc…’
are all up-tempo songs that make you want to get up on your feet…great
tailgating songs. The first single, 'What Was I Thinkin’' took off like
lightning. Fast-paced and fun, it tells the story of a wild date, complete with
gun-toting daddy, jealous ex-boyfriend and a girl in an irresistible white tank
top. 'I think we’re getting that response because we made music the right way,'
Dierks says. 'We made a record for ourselves, something that we liked, figuring
that there’s probably a lot of other people who like the same thing.' Of course
any real country record has a healthy collection of heartbreak songs.
'Songs like ‘Whiskey
Tears,’ ‘I Bought The Shoes,’ ‘Distant Shore’ and ‘Wish It Would Break,’ might
make you want to sip on a beer and get lonesome for a little bit,' says Dierks,
'but that’s what country music to me is all about…the good and the bad.' 'I feel
like I represent a side of Nashville that a lot of people outside of the city
don’t know about. All the guys and girls that play downtown on Lower Broadway
and have such a depth of knowledge of country music and play those bars night
after night, for four hour shifts. All the bluegrassers that get together for 'pickin’
parties,' where everyone brings an instrument and their favorite beverage, and
stays up 'til dawn picking and singing. That’s the Nashville I know and the
Nashville I hope to bring attention to through my music.'
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