Uncle Kracker Blog

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  • Posted by Happy Hour Crew
    June 30, 2010

    Below is an interview with Uncle Kracker talking to CMT.com about his recently-released EP, 'Happy Hour: The South River Road Sessions' and why his chart-topping hit "Smile" is so upbeat.

    CMT: You got your start as a DJ for Kid Rock. Has your musical taste really changed over the years?

    UK: I think being a DJ broadened my musical taste, but I think it takes a certain type of person to be a DJ first. I had a general appreciation for most types of music, and I think to be a DJ, you have to.

    CMT: Do you think that makes you a better writer?

    UK: Absolutely. I think being open to different things will make you a better writer and a better person. I think everyone needs to be a little bit more open.

    CMT: Can you kind of tell when you're writing a song if it's likely to result in a country mix?

    UK: I don't know. I mean, you know what instrument fits on it and what doesn't. If it's not working after a couple of minutes, it's not gonna work. I try not to spend too much time trying to make it sound one way or the other. ...There's just some songs that you can't pull off in that way. It feels like a lot of people say, "Oh, we're gonna make a country version of that. We're gonna put some pedal steel on it." It doesn't work like that. And so I use the song. I just think that you can't make a song into a country song. It's either going to be there when you write it or it's not going to be there. CMT: Can you tell me a little bit about South River Road Sessions?

    UK: I grew up on South River Road. This was more or less like the country version of "Smile." We went in and redid some things that should have been on it the first time around. ... Originally, you go in to record an album and basically record just about everything. So there's banjos and pedal steel and a whole bunch of fun stuff happening, but it didn't all make the final mixes of the record. "Smile" started doing OK and we went back in and we recalled back up a bunch of the older mixes -- stuff that I liked and the record label didn't like and vice versa. And we just picked six [songs]. ... I dug up a song that I wrote with David Allan Coe about eight years ago that was actually on my second album [called] "Letter to My Daughters."
    CMT: How did you and Coe meet?
    UK: I met David Allan probably, I'd say 10, 11 years ago when I was on tour with Kid Rock. David Allan Coe read an article -- it was a Kid Rock interview. Kid Rock was talking about listening to David Allan Coe songs. Well, David Allan's son was about 14 or 15 at the time. His son actually thought that was really cool that Kid Rock listened to his dad, so David Allan reached out to Kid Rock. I remember we went down to Texas, and he and I just hit it off really well. We just became great friends. He's actually one of my better friends these days.

    CMT: I hear "Smile" everywhere, and it just sounds so happy. I was wondering if you could tell me who the inspiration was for that?

    UK: There's no one particular thing behind the song. I wrote that with Blair Daly and J.T. Harding. We were up in my cottage in northern Michigan and we woke up one morning and we'd been writing the same shit over and over and over, and I was like, "Let's do something happy. Let's do something positive, something out of the ordinary." ... We were making fun songs, like a fun record, but "Smile" was a conscious decision to just write something positive -- like over-the-top positive. I feel like there are not enough of those songs anymore. ... A lot of those '70s songs that you could go back to, they weren't afraid to be like, "Aww, you're awesome." Nowadays, people don't do that. They're not as positive.

    CMT: Kid Rock sings with you on "Good to Be Me," and that's another one with a "happy to be alive" feel. Is that how you're feeling about life right now?

    UK: Absolutely. Yeah, I am happy to be here ... I guess it is.

    CMT: "Me Again" features Jesse Lee, who is a very country singer. How did that collaboration come around?

    UK: When I turned that song into the record label they thought it would sell better as a duet. And Jesse Lee is on the same record label, [so] they suggested maybe Jesse Lee. I made them send me some Jesse Lee stuff because I wasn't hip at the time. But when I listened to her, she just reminded me of a young Dolly Parton. Like a 17-year-old year old Dolly Parton. She came in and rewrote her verse so it sounded more like from a girl's perspective. So she ended up being more of an asset than anything else. She really did the song justice. And I'm happy because in the beginning I was like, "I don't need this to be duet. I have this all figured out." I thought the label was just trying to use one of their artists or whatever, but she sold me fast.

  • Posted by Happy Hour Crew
    June 29, 2010

    Below is a video of Uncle Kracker performing Kenny Rogers' "The Gambler" live at the Alameda Country Fair in Pleasanton, CA on Friday, June 25, 2010.

  • Posted by Happy Hour Crew
    June 28, 2010

  • Posted by Happy Hour Crew
    June 24, 2010

    Interview by Sarah Wyland from GAC.com.

    Uncle Kracker is no stranger to country music. His collaboration with Kenny Chesney, “When The Sun Goes Down,” spent five weeks atop the country charts and he co-wrote Kid Rock’s smash hit “All Summer Long.” He has also toured with Kenny as both a supporting act and special guest. Now, Uncle Kracker is releasing his own country project, an EP titled Happy Hour: The South River Road Session.

    Available in stores and online now, Happy Hour: The South River Road Session features six songs, five of which were reworked from last year’s Happy Hour release. Among those six tracks is a country version of “Smile” which was certified platinum in April by the RIAA. Watch an exclusive acoustic performance of “Smile” taped in the GAC Studios.

    “I’ve always had a genuine passion for country. I think that audiences appreciate that, and that’s why they’re giving me a chance,” Uncle Kracker said. “Country music was one of the types of music I grew up with, so elements of it naturally come out in my songwriting. Listening to a lot of my songs – all the way back to ‘Follow Me’ – I feel like I’ve been making country music for years.”

    The EP also features collaborations. Kid Rock is heard on “Good To Be Me” and new artist Jesse Lee, who Uncle Kracker likens to a young Dolly Parton, is heard on “Me Again.” Listeners may also recognize a sample of White Snake’s “Here I Go Again” on “Livin’ The Dream.” 

    Uncle Kracker recently sat down with GAC’s Suzanne Alexander to talk about his new project. Watch the full interview here.

  • Posted by Happy Hour Crew
    June 23, 2010

    Want a free copy of "Happy Hour: The South River Road Sessions"? Then participate in this contest!

  • Posted by Happy Hour Crew
    June 22, 2010

    After a five year hiatus, Uncle Kracker returned to the scene late last year with a monster hit, 'Smile,' from his new album 'Happy Hour' ... and he's pretty much been grinning ever since. 'Smile' instantly became a huge pop hit, and quickly proved it had crossover power, as well, when it began to catch fire at country radio. No stranger to the country scene from his duet success with buddy Kenny Chesney, Uncle Kracker decided to take some previously-recorded alternate versions of the tunes from 'Happy Hour' and pour them out into a country "six pak" EP, 'Happy Hour: The South River Road Sessions,' for country fans who might just enjoy the down-home side of this D-town rocker.

    And though he's Detroit born and raised, Uncle Kracker is finding he feels just as at home in Nashville and in the country genre these days as he does back in Kid Rock territory ... in fact, we may be seeing a lot more of him on the country charts in the near future. The Boot sat down with him during a mega-busy CMA Music Festival week to talk about the country metamorphosis of the new album, the pitfalls of the business and why he doesn't want his daughters following in his musical footsteps.

    Why do you think so many artists are migrating into the country genre these days?

    I hadn't seen it that much until I did that duet with Kenny Chesney ('When the Sun Goes Down') and it did so great and everybody was like, 'You should think about a country record.' And I had always thought about country, but it's a very tricky thing. Everybody and their brother was trying to come into Nashville and do a country thing. After the duet, it almost became like this fad, that all these pop artists were gonna come into Nashville and do this country thing. When you get to Tennessee, Nashville people are nice, and there are a lot of snakes, and they take that niceness and mistake it for being naive. So a lot of these people think they're gonna come out from L.A. and they're gonna take Nashville by storm ... and they're just fools! And I remember entertaining the idea of dabbling around with the country stuff after the Chesney thing and I thought, you know what, I've seen so many guys come through and try to do country records and just jump on the country bandwagon without giving it the respect it deserves. And I said to myself if I ever did something like that, you always have to pay respect to the people you need to pay respect to, not just in country music but in life. And I've always been a firm believer that with just the right idea, maybe further down the road I'll get there the right way.

    Read the article here. Buy the record here.

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