Edmonton Journal

Hunt is staying true to himself

- EMILY YAHR

For the first time, Sam Hunt — country music’s biggest pop crossover hope since Taylor Swift — finally got a chance to talk.

Not in the form of a media interview to plug a new single, or a bit of “is everybody having a good night?” banter between party songs.

Instead, he sat down onstage on June 1, acoustic guitar in hand, before the thousands flocking to the kickoff concert of his first major headlining tour, to explain who he is and what he wants to be.

“I never get a chance to really sit down and kick it with y’all,” Hunt told the screaming fans who chose him over watching the hometown Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

“I want to get to know you a little bit. I want y’all to get to know me.”

In a nearly 10-minute monologue, he defended his signature (and polarizing), blend of country and R&B, and turned it into a call for tolerance.

This kind of politicall­y tinged commentary is rare among young Nashville artists.

And it perfectly captured why Hunt, 32, remains an outlier even throughout his meteoric rise over the past three years.

Strumming his guitar, he talked about growing up in Georgia on a steady diet of Alan Jackson and Travis Tritt — and later, Bone Thugs-n-Harmony and Juvenile. So the country and R&B influences always mixed naturally for him, even as mentors warned, “These songs aren’t going to work for country.”

Five No. 1 hits and a Grammynomi­nated debut album later (Montevallo, 2014), Hunt’s early triumphs have allowed him to dismiss the haters and make his own rules in an otherwise regimented genre.

He dropped a surprise track at midnight on New Year’s Eve, and he launched a massive headlining tour with no sophomore album yet in sight.

And he’s talking onstage like this:

“No generation has ever been as culturally integrated as you guys are,” Hunt told the Blossom Music Center audience, which was largely millennial (and, yes, as overwhelmi­ngly white as most country shows).

“Y’all don’t pay attention to genres of music. You don’t pay attention to genres of people.

“You listen to what makes (you) feel good, and you hang out with people you like, not people who look like you.”

He added: “This generation, when y’all take over — and it’s already happening — y’all are gonna tear down some of the walls that have divided people in this country for a long time.”

Unlike most stars, he is not plugging a new album with this tour.

“It’s usually not how it’s done in country music; country is still kind of one of the most album-focused genres,” said Dave Brooks, Billboard’s senior correspond­ent for touring.

Hunt, he said, is “upending what we thought of as ‘the country trajectory.’ There’s a tipping point where you’re like, ‘Oh — what just happened?’ And I think this tour is going to do it.”

He marvelled at finally being the headliner: “I’m not used to playing this late!”

This generation, when y’all take over — and it’s already happening — y’all are gonna tear down some of the walls that have divided people in this country for a long time.

 ?? ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Sam Hunt is enjoying success by refusing to adhere to the convention­al career trajectory of most country singers.
ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES Sam Hunt is enjoying success by refusing to adhere to the convention­al career trajectory of most country singers.

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