Regina Leader-Post

Paparazzi both blessing and curse for country star Aldean

- EMILY YAHR

It’s not often that country music singers and TMZ intersect. But where they meet, sometimes, there’s Jason Aldean.

That was the case in 2012 when the site posted pictures of Aldean, 38, getting cosy at a bar with a woman who wasn’t his wife. Aldean later got divorced and then married the woman in the photos, Brittany Kerr, and found himself making headlines in the tabloids. Years later, after everyone’s moved on, Aldean still struggles with the idea that — as one of the top-selling stars in Nashville — he’s the target of paparazzi interest.

“The tabloid thing to me is a love-hate relationsh­ip, you know?” he says by phone. “I feel like, obviously, a lot of them are very much disrespect­ful ... but on the other side of it? We’ve done some things with them that are cool.”

In other words, Aldean and Kerr agreed to sell exclusive photos of their Caribbean wedding to Us Weekly in hopes that the paparazzi would leave them alone. (It didn’t really work — a photograph­er tried to sneak on the beach by boat.) “It’s the always trying to catch somebody with their hand in the cookie jar ... that, to me, is the part that just becomes a really shady thing,” he said. “It makes it really hard to be nice and play ball with these guys sometimes.”

An unusual amount of attention on his personal life is just one of the things that frustrates Aldean about the industry these days, particular­ly as he’s an artist with a very sharp focus on the business side. He pulled his music off Spotify last year, and became the Nashville representa­tive as a founding partner in Jay Z’s Tidal streaming service in March. He’s changed his lyrics to reflect an endorsemen­t deal. He hasn’t written a track on his latest albums, preferring to cull hits from songwriter­s who served him in the past.

“We’ve had some guys over the years that have sort of been proven hit makers. Guys that always seem to rise to the occasion when it’s time to cut an album,” said Aldean, currently in the studio working on his seventh album. He added: “I honestly don’t really care where the song comes from — I’m looking at the best songs possible. But at the same time, if you’ve had guys that have proven over and over again that they’re gonna write you a hit, you’re gonna give those guys an opportunit­y to bring you some songs.”

These decisions have literally paid off: Forbes recently named him No. 3 on the list of highest-earning country stars, worth about $43.5 million.

Since launching onto the scene in 2005, the Georgiabre­d singer racked up the hits: Amarillo Sky, She’s Country, Big Green Tractor, The Truth.

In 2010, he had smashes with My Kinda Party and the rap-infused Dirt Road Anthem, becoming one of the first artists to have massive success with countryroc­k party anthems. Since then, he’s gone on to have a slew of No. 1 hits, including three from his latest album Old Boots, New Dirt; platinum-selling albums; and sold-out football stadiums on his tours.

While at the top of his game with fans of all demographi­cs, Aldean isn’t thrilled with the criticism of the now-exhausted topic of “bro-country” — like when a Billboard cover story called him the King of the Bros.

Aldean has been vocal about his dislike of being grouped together with other male artists. He feels that the detractors are dismissing some of his songs that deal with deeper subjects, as opposed to the “girl with long tan legs riding shotgun in my truck” hit tunes that flooded country radio.

 ?? WAYDE PAYNE/The Associated Press ?? Jason Aldean, pictured with Brittany Kerr, is unique among country stars for his popularity­with the TMZ crowd.
WAYDE PAYNE/The Associated Press Jason Aldean, pictured with Brittany Kerr, is unique among country stars for his popularity­with the TMZ crowd.

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