Hartford Courant

Brittney Spencer ‘so new the tag is still on me’

Rising country star credits veteran Black women in industry

- By Dan Deluca

Brittney Spencer has yet to release her debut album, but the singer has already establishe­d herself as a rising country music star.

“I’m really new,” Spencer says. “Like, I’m so new the tag is still on me.”

Spencer’s In a Perfect World tour — her first as a headliner — recently kicked off in New York.

When Spencer speaks about her newness, she’s referring to the speed of her arrival in the spotlight. Although she moved to Nashville, Tennessee, in 2013, she didn’t release her first original song, “Compassion,” until July 2020.

And she got her first measure of fame in October of that year, when her cover of The Highwomen’s “Crowded Table” was amplified online by the group’s Amanda Shires, and Maren Morris gave Spencer a shout out at the Country Music Associatio­n Awards later that month.

But Spencer, who USA Today cited as one of “12 Black artists shaping country music’s future” and who Nashville’s Music Row magazine recently named as a 2022 Next Big Thing, also means that she’s a new arrival compared to many fellow Black country and Americana artists who are getting deserved attention at the forefront of a genre of which Black artists have often been shut out.

“My feeling is that we’ve always been here,” Spencer says.

Along with contempora­ry country stars like Jimmie Allen, who is a best new artist Grammy nominee, and Kane Brown, she credits veteran Black women who are finally gaining a measure of music industry acceptance.

Such as Allison Russell, who earned three Grammy nomination­s, and her good

friend Mickey Guyton, who last year became the first Black woman ever nominated for solo country performanc­e for “Black Like Me.” And also Rissi Palmer, the country singer who centers “the Black, Indigenous, and Latinx histories of country music” on her Apple Music radio show Color Me Country.

“There are so many artists who have been out here and doing this for a while,” Spencer says.

Country has been a genre dominated by white artists, but Black performers have played key roles going back to original Grand Ole Opry member Deford Bailey on to Ray Charles’ Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music in the early 1960s and the long career

of Charley Pride and recent success of Darius Rucker.

But a new examinatio­n of country’s past and future started taking place last year as part of the racial reckoning taking place in all aspects of American society.

“I think race became the number one talking point during the pandemic ... and George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery were at the forefront,” Spencer says. “It just became so prevalent in music and specifical­ly country music. And then Mickey put out ‘Black Like Me’ and that shattered a ceiling.”

Growing up in Baltimore, Spencer sang in church and studied opera.

“I struggled with anxiety most of my life,” she

says. “Music was my saving grace, my little refuge. As a teenager I was listening to Maria Callas and Ray Charles and the … Chicks and Britney Spears and John Mayer and Beyonce and Diana Ross.

“I wanted to learn as much as I could. I would just dive into everything, and I found a home in country music because I started writing songs and writing poetry, and I loved it.”

Two key artists opened a door to country, Spencer says. Taylor Swift “was so poetic and from Pennsylvan­ia and didn’t have a twang. Something about that piqued my curiosity.” ALT-R&B singer India.arie “was the closest thing I had of someone who was

remotely country or folkish who looked like me. When you don’t have representa­tion, you find bits and pieces in a million different places.”

Spencer quit her job working at a Baltimore health care company and moved to Nashville after watching documentar­ies about Swift and Reba Mcentire.

The long road to overnight success followed.

She worked in customer service and coffee shops, and concentrat­ed on guitar playing and songwritin­g. She sang backups on tour with R&B singer Carl Thomas and Carrie Underwood at awards shows.

She came into her own during the pandemic.

“I’m a quarantine artist,” she says. “Being an artist at this time is just so unconventi­onal for everybody. But I’m like, ‘Dude this is all I know.’ It’s the norm for me.”

Her “Compassion” EP includes a rumination on gun violence called “Thoughts and Prayers,” and she has generated buzz with “Sober & Skinny,” which inspired the title of her tour. “In a perfect world, you get sober and I get skinny,” she sings.

And she also shone in numerous recent star turns. Last month, she brought the house down at the Country Music Hall of Fame in a tribute to songwriter Dean Dillon with a soaring performanc­e of “Tennessee Whiskey.” Country legend Brenda Lee shouted out from the audience: “Let’s all go home. I give up. I quit!”

She’ll sign a record deal soon, and with a stockpile of songs, plans to put out new music in 2022.

She’s got dates early next year opening for Mcentire.

“Now my heroes have my phone number,” she says, with pinch-me enthusiasm.

Spencer’s upcoming shows have a lot to live up to in order to top the CMA Awards last month. She joined Guyton and Madeline Edwards for Guyton’s “Love My Hair,” in a primetime performanc­e. The trio were introduced by Faith Fennidy, the Louisiana girl who inspired Guyton to write the song after being sent home from school for her braided hair extensions.

“We’ve all experience­d things that have invalidate­d our presence, our existence in this space,” Spencer says. “This is our story. It was a beautiful moment. I’ll never forget the significan­ce. Being on the CMA awards, considerin­g the history of country music.

“We’re part of the future. I’m new, and it’s an honor to be able to establish my presence on a song that says, ‘Hey, I’m a Black woman, and I love that about me, and I love country music.’ ”

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/AP ?? Madeline Edwards, from left, Mickey Guyton and Brittney Spencer perform Nov. 10 at the CMA Awards in Nashville, Tennessee. Spencer was cited by USA Today as one of “12 Black artists shaping country music’s future.”
MARK HUMPHREY/AP Madeline Edwards, from left, Mickey Guyton and Brittney Spencer perform Nov. 10 at the CMA Awards in Nashville, Tennessee. Spencer was cited by USA Today as one of “12 Black artists shaping country music’s future.”

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