The Star Malaysia - Star2

Welcome back, Zac

No dancing this time, as Zac Brown Band returns to its country roots.

- By MARK KENNEDY Zac Brown Band’s new album, was recorded in just six days. — Warner Music

IF there’s any doubt about the style of music Zac Brown has made on his band’s new album, just look at the title.

The burly, bearded country star named the album Welcome Home and the 10 tracks on it are as down-home country as a trusty pickup truck, a cold beer and pair of comfortabl­e jeans.

“This one was very personal and very much rooted to my life. That’s why it’s back down to the roots,” said Brown, who released the album last Friday. “I created this record to get back to the beginning of what inspired me as a songwriter.”

The album’s direction will come as a relief to some Zac Brown Band fans bewildered by the singer’s recent dabbling in everything from grunge to electronic­a, a sonic wanderlust that included the birth of a side electronic project called Sir Rosevelt.

“People will have a really hard time hating on this record,” said Brown. “I don’t know what our next project will be, but I think this is the sweet spot for this band.”

Welcome Home comes two years after the band’s chart-topping Jekyll + Hyde, which included a swing tune with Sara Bareilles and the head-banging anthem with Chris Cornell Heavy Is The Head, which marked the band’s first appearance in the Billboard mainstream rock airplay chart.

The genre-bending nature of the album had its detractors, with many critics saying that, while gutsy, it suffered from an identity crisis. Brown isn’t apologetic, saying country fans had at least eight songs on it in their comfort zone.

“For some people it was offensive because of the range. But that’s OK. Certain people, they’re going to be critical of anything that you do – and that’s OK.

“I don’t want to do what other people expect,” he added. “I want to make music that I feel moved to create and I want to create the music that’s what I like to listen to. If I follow that, I’ll always be happy with what I’m making.”

Other country acts who have tested their fans’ loyalty include the pop-leaning Taylor Swift, the political-minded Dixie Chicks, and Garth Brooks, whose rock star Chris Gaines alter ego crashed and burned. But Brown bristles at being stuck in a musical box.

“You make vanilla ice cream. They want vanilla ice cream: ‘What are these marshmallo­ws and chocolate doing in here?’ What is that? That’s not vanilla ice cream!’” he said. “But I don’t feel like that’s the majority.”

For the new album, Brown and co-writers Niko Moon and Ben Simonetti went back to basics, both literally and musically. Brown channelled his music heroes like James Taylor, Jim Croce, Dan Fogelberg and Gordon Lightfoot.

A trip to rural Alaska proved inspiratio­nal, with the songwriter­s working on songs while in front of a fire, sitting on a cliff and drinking beer. “I’ve got images in my head from that that I’ll never forget,” he said. Back on the mainland, the album was recorded in six days, with some songs needing only a single take.

One of those tunes was the Top 10 country hit My Old Man, a beautiful, spare song destined to make fathers tear up. The lyrics include the lines: “My old man/I hope he’s proud of who I am/I’m trying to fill the boots of my old man.” Brown said it managed to make his own dad cry when he played it for him.

“It got him. You know, I’ve been trying to write a song that’s worthy to play for him. I’ve tried a bunch of ‘dad songs’ over time and finally got down to the core of it,” said 38-year-old Brown, who is a father of five children, a son among them.

“We’re making a lot of people cry. To me, that’s what great art does – it makes you feel. It transcends distractio­n from the word or the rhyme or whatever it is and it goes straight down into your soul.”

Another person who is likely to tear up to the song is Zac Brown himself.

“If I start thinking about my son and my dad when I’m singing the song, it’s over,” he said with a smile. – AP

 ??  ?? Welcome Home,
Welcome Home,

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