Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

Kenny Wayne Shepherd is enjoying the ride

Reissues put ‘Blue on Black’ on the charts again

- BY BARRY COURTER STAFF WRITER Contact Barry Courter at bcourter@timesfree press.com or 423-757-6354.

Kenny Wayne Shepherd believes he knows a hit song when he hears one. So it was no surprise to him when “Blue on Black” climbed up the charts for him in 1998. It reached No. 1 six times and stayed on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks charts for 42 weeks.

What did surprise him was that it took nearly 10 years for someone else to cover it as Five Finger Death Punch did last year. Earlier this year, they recorded a version with Shepherd, country artist Brantley Gilbert and Queen guitarist Brian May.

“I believe it has longevity and crosses boundaries. A rock artist could do it. A blues rock artist or a country artist could cover it,” Shepherd said.

That’s why both cover versions have worked, he said. Proceeds from the collaborat­ive effort are going to the Gary Sinise Foundation benefiting first responders.

“It has a really cool multigenre thing about it, all coming together doing this amazing song for an amazing purpose and it blew up again,” Shepherd said.

Five Finger Death Punch’s Zoltan Bathory told Billboard that the collaborat­ion was a “unificatio­n” project in the music world.

“We feel like it’s a multidimen­sional, multilevel effort unifying the different genres,” he said. “There was a time when music was always a unifying element, when the genre didn’t matter — a good song was a good song. This segregatio­n in musical genres came later, and it’s still pretty segregated. I think music has to regain this place where it’s unificatio­n. So for us, it’s an honor to have this record with these people and have hard rock, classic rock, country all together on a song. It’s not too far from each other, but still far enough so it’s definitely a representa­tion of different genres coming together.”

Shepherd, 41, is the headliner for this weekend’s new Big Foot Blues Festival in Tracy City, Tennessee, on Monteagle Mountain.

Shepherd has a new record out called “The Traveler,” and it features him on some of the vocals. Longtime friend and lead singer Noah Hunt is still very much part of the band, and Shepherd said the addition of his voice gives them “more talent in the band and two lead singers.”

Hunt has been the group’s singer to Shepherd’s

guitar licks since

1997.

“We get along really well,” Shepherd said of Hunt.

“We are like the brothers each never had. We’ve always related to each other. We’ve been on the road for so long, and thankfully we haven’t had any real issues.”

 ?? WATERHOUSE PUBLIC RELATIONS CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Kenny Wayne Shepherd headlines the first Big Foot Blues Festival in Tracy City, Tennessee, this weekend.
WATERHOUSE PUBLIC RELATIONS CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Kenny Wayne Shepherd headlines the first Big Foot Blues Festival in Tracy City, Tennessee, this weekend.

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