The Weekend Post

STILL RIDING THAT WAVE

WHILE COVID MAY HAVE STALLED SINGER-SONGWRITER CASEY BARNES’ PLANS ABROAD, HE’S LOOKING FORWARD TO BRINGING HIS COUNTRY ROCK/POP FUSION ON A QUEENSLAND TOUR, WRITES LAUREN PRATT

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Anew wave of country music singers has emerged, fusing pop, country and rock, and appealing to a broader audience. Riding that wave and having the time of his life doing it is Casey Barnes.

The Gold Coast singer/songwriter released Town Of a Million Dreams in April – his fifth album – and his first release with Chugg Music.

On the cusp of some major follow-up gigs in the US and a break into that massive market, coronaviru­s struck, putting Barnes’ tour on the backburner.

“It’s a bit of a bummer,” Barnes, 41, says.

“One of the biggest downsides of COVID is we were starting to get a bit of momentum over in the States. We had shows planned in Las Vegas and the PBR (profession­al bull riding) world finals, which is a huge, massive event in Las Vegas.”

There are silver linings and they come in the form of more family time for Barnes at their Currumbin home, along with a swag of awards, regular radio play and streaming for his new releases, and an online audience of up to 75,000 tuning in to his weekly livestream performanc­es.

He’s also preparing to tour and has announced a line-up of Queensland gigs taking in Cairns, Mareeba, Biloela, Toowoomba, Gold

Coast and Brisbane.

At the time of his phone interview, Barnes is walking along Currumbin Creek.

Fitness is important to the dad of two girls – Charli, 12, and Emmy, 7, and husband to Michelle, also a singer (all pictured below).

“We met through the music industry,” Barnes says. “We live in Currumbin down the southern end. We bought a little house here where you’re not in the suburbs, you’re still part of nature.

“We’ve been really lucky this year to spend a heck of a lot of time together as a family. Traditiona­lly I tend to be away. I spend a lot of time in America writing and recording and doing shows, or in other parts of Australia.

“There’s a few of us (musicians) based in the Gold Coast. Lee Kernaghan and Adam Brand live down here and a lot of country music festivals happen here. We were all locked in to play when the bloody pandemic hit.

“We live next to one of the boys from Busby Marou – Tom Busby – and we’ve been lucky enough to do a few gigs together.

“Last year we played at the Mt Isa Rodeo. We were on this little plane – John Farnham and his band, Lee Kernaghan and his band,

Busby Marou and his band and my band.

“We were joking around, saying ‘jeez imagine if the plane went down’ ... luckily we got there.”

Barnes’ days start with a strong coffee and either a beach run or a sweat session at F45 after dropping his girls at school.

“There are two amazing songwriter­s in Nashville. The three of us will jump on a call for a couple of hours and work through a few ideas. It’s not the same but it still works.

“I’m doing a bit of everything at the moment. There will be media and radio interviews and we’ve still been doing a lot of stuff online like livestream­s and concerts.”

A new single is set to land before Barnes’ regional Queensland tour kicks off next month and plans are under way for its music video.

He may have just launched Town Of a Million Dreams in April but wheels are in motion for his next album release.

The Gold Coast Suns ambassador faced a real fork-in-the-road moment as a younger man on the cusp of launching more deeply into a career.

It could have been a crowd in the footy field he was performing in front of, rather than on a stage.

“I grew up playing rep footy in Tassie,” Barnes says. “I played a couple of premiershi­ps here in the Gold Coast.”

His early life is a parallel to former St Kilda captain Nick Riewoldt – a childhood in Tasmania followed by a move to the Gold Coast.

“Nick Riewoldt went on to get drafted to play. I had to make a choice at the time whether I concentrat­ed on footy or music,” Barnes says.

“I couldn’t do both. You’d finish a game and then go and do a gig at night.”

It was an exhausting schedule and Barnes made the call to focus on music in early 2000.

He credits his “super supportive parents” as a backbone to his career choices.

“I remember saying ‘I am going to give away this full-time job and go full-time in music’,” he says.

“Mum and dad said ‘do it, you only live once, if you have a dream, you have to have a crack at it’.

“My mum has already drummed it into me, stay humble and keep your feet on the ground, because the music industry definitely has its fair share of ups and downs.

“I think one of the biggest traps artists can get into is feeling like they have to act a certain way but if you be yourself then you’ve got nothing to lose.”

Performing live is Barnes’ true passion and COVID lockdowns dealt a hard blow, but the singer is looking forward to “more intimate and personal” performanc­es on tour.

“We are used to playing pretty big shows, so we generally have a high-energy show that we put on but we’ve had to adapt a little bit.

“Rather than being fearful of moving forward, you’ve got to adapt.”

Visit caseybarne­s.com.au for tour dates and tickets.

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