Watch the video of Nashville Country Club's interview with Dierks Bentley, as he celebrated his #1 song (Am I The Only One) with writers Jim Beavers & Jon Randall at the bar Loser's in Nashville.
So, how does the DB Congress get invited to the next #1 party?
Showing posts with label Jon Randall Stewart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jon Randall Stewart. Show all posts
Monday, October 3, 2011
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Dierks Bentley: Behind The Song in Country Weekly
In the September 19, 2011 issue of Country Weekly, Dierks Bentley is featured in a 2-page 'behind the song' article, applauding his latest number one single, "Am I The Only One?"
Co-written with Jon Randall Stewart and Jim Beavers, Dierks said, "We came up with the story line and injected some of my actual real friends' names into the song."
Get the CW issue today, which includes the song's lyrics and chords!
Co-written with Jon Randall Stewart and Jim Beavers, Dierks said, "We came up with the story line and injected some of my actual real friends' names into the song."
Get the CW issue today, which includes the song's lyrics and chords!
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Am I The Only One? - Story Behind the Lyrics written by Dierks Bentley, Jim Beavers and Jon Randall
From Taste of Country...
Dierks Bentley has given fans a taste of what’s to come from his upcoming album this week with the release of its first single, ‘Am I the Only One.’ The fun party tune will have you ready for summer, but that was the furthest weather condition when the songwriters — Bentley, Jim Beavers and Jon Randall — penned the song.
“We wrote this tune one day out at some land Dierks has in Leiper’s Fork, Tennessee,” Beavers tells Taste of Country. “All that is out there is a tent-like structure on top of a hill. We call it ‘Up on the Ridge’ [same name as Dierks' last album] for obvious reasons. It was cold that day, and we huddled around this little space heater, trying to keep our hands warm and guitars in tune. Although we are all buddies, this was the first time Dierks, Jon and I had all written together.”
Beavers entered the writing session with an idea already in his head: “Am I the only one who wants to have fun tonight?”
“I had no idea what it meant or what it could be about,” Beavers says, who is also a co-writer on Bentley’s ‘Sideways.’ “The guys quickly jumped on it, and we decided to try to write a modern day ‘All My Rowdy Friends Have Settled Down’ tune.”
The song’s chorus does just that as Bentley sings:
“Am I the only one who wants to have fun tonight? / Is there anybody out there wants to have a cold beer and kick it to the morning light? / If I have to raise hell all by myself, I will, but y’all, that ain’t right / Yeah it’s time to get it on / Am I the only one that wants to have fun tonight?”
“Everything from there just kind of flowed out so easily,” Bentley says. “We came up with the storyline and injected some of my actual real friends’ names into the song.”
“We had a lot of fun coming up with what names to use in the first verse,” adds Beavers. “We quickly learned that not all names necessarily rhyme with radio-friendly lyrics.”
“Well Wildman Willie said, ‘I’d like to really,’ but ‘Idol’ was on TV / And Ray had a date with his wife / And Nate quit drinking, but he didn’t tell me,” Bentley sings in the opening verse.
“This song really helps get the party started as soon as we hit the stage,” Bentley says. “It’s been fun to play live, and I can’t wait to hear what the fans think when they hear the record.”
SOURCE: Dierks Bentley, ‘Am I the Only One’ – Lyrics Uncovered
Dierks Bentley has given fans a taste of what’s to come from his upcoming album this week with the release of its first single, ‘Am I the Only One.’ The fun party tune will have you ready for summer, but that was the furthest weather condition when the songwriters — Bentley, Jim Beavers and Jon Randall — penned the song.
“We wrote this tune one day out at some land Dierks has in Leiper’s Fork, Tennessee,” Beavers tells Taste of Country. “All that is out there is a tent-like structure on top of a hill. We call it ‘Up on the Ridge’ [same name as Dierks' last album] for obvious reasons. It was cold that day, and we huddled around this little space heater, trying to keep our hands warm and guitars in tune. Although we are all buddies, this was the first time Dierks, Jon and I had all written together.”
Beavers entered the writing session with an idea already in his head: “Am I the only one who wants to have fun tonight?”
“I had no idea what it meant or what it could be about,” Beavers says, who is also a co-writer on Bentley’s ‘Sideways.’ “The guys quickly jumped on it, and we decided to try to write a modern day ‘All My Rowdy Friends Have Settled Down’ tune.”
The song’s chorus does just that as Bentley sings:
“Am I the only one who wants to have fun tonight? / Is there anybody out there wants to have a cold beer and kick it to the morning light? / If I have to raise hell all by myself, I will, but y’all, that ain’t right / Yeah it’s time to get it on / Am I the only one that wants to have fun tonight?”
“Everything from there just kind of flowed out so easily,” Bentley says. “We came up with the storyline and injected some of my actual real friends’ names into the song.”
“We had a lot of fun coming up with what names to use in the first verse,” adds Beavers. “We quickly learned that not all names necessarily rhyme with radio-friendly lyrics.”
“Well Wildman Willie said, ‘I’d like to really,’ but ‘Idol’ was on TV / And Ray had a date with his wife / And Nate quit drinking, but he didn’t tell me,” Bentley sings in the opening verse.
“This song really helps get the party started as soon as we hit the stage,” Bentley says. “It’s been fun to play live, and I can’t wait to hear what the fans think when they hear the record.”
SOURCE: Dierks Bentley, ‘Am I the Only One’ – Lyrics Uncovered
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Dierks Heads To Asheville, NC To Record New Studio Album
Hey Dierks Bentley fans, a new album is in the horizon! Dierks is planning on making his way to Asheville, North Carolina next week to begin recording his 6th studio album. Dierks has spent the last four months writing hundreds of songs, and has once again teamed up with award winning producer Jon Randall Stewart and recording engineer Gary Paczosa. You can expect a brand new single from Dierks in the Spring with the album following closely behind.
While you're waiting for the new album, just visit the newly designed Dierks.com on Sunday, January 30th to watch the live 24 hour video feed from inside the studio. See what a typical day is like in the recording studio with Dierks!
While you're waiting for the new album, just visit the newly designed Dierks.com on Sunday, January 30th to watch the live 24 hour video feed from inside the studio. See what a typical day is like in the recording studio with Dierks!
“I’ve been writing and re-writing and tweaking songs for the past four months to get ready for the studio,” says Dierks. “I usually come home from the road and go right into the studio, so I’ve never put this much time into prepping and doing pre-production on songs. I learned from my experience recording Ridge that getting out of Nashville and away from the business side of things can be really inspiring. I’ve got the best musicians in the world, and we’re going to go hunker down for a few weeks and live and breathe this record. I thought it would be cool to let the fans be part of the whole experience, so we’re going to let them watch as it all goes down.”
I know DB Congress reps in North Carolina are doing the Dierks bounce right about now! And how cool is it that we're getting a live video feed from inside the studio!?
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Bluegrass Unlimited Journals Bentley's Bluegrass Journey

By Larry Nager
Dierks Bentley’s bluegrass journey began when he arrived at the Station Inn. He was a 19-year-old country-loving Arizona kid when he wandered into Nashville’s legendary bluegrass hole in the wall. He’d come to town to attend Vanderbilt University (at least that’s what he told his parents), but the reluctant sophomore found his real education—and future career—at the Sidemen’s weekly gigs at the Station Inn.
Dierks Bentley
“I moved to Nashville in 1994,” says Bentley. “I knew at 17, I wanted to do country music. I’d fallen in love with Hank, Jr., and there was something in my body that told me country music was what I was supposed to be playing. And a few years later, I finally moved down here. Nashville was such a big city. I knew about the music, but I’d never been exposed to the business and I was like, ‘Wow, this is totally not what I expected.’ There were just a lot of people trying to follow in Garth Brooks’ wake. I was a huge Garth fan, but it wasn’t really my thing and I wasn’t sure how I fit in.”
So when he walked through the Station Inn’s beat-up front door and paid his $5, he remembers, “I was looking to learn. I wasn’t trying to draw attention. I was as green as could be. I was trying to find someone or something just to latch on to so I could try to better myself, find my path.”
The Sidemen grew out of a jam session at Bean Blossom’s bluegrass festival in 1989 by young musicians including Terry Smith, Terry Eldredge, Steve Thomas, and Billy Rose who were backing the Grand Ole Opry’s first generation bluegrass artists Bill Monroe, Jim & Jesse, and the Osborne Brothers. It was an occasional thing, with a floating cast of pickers until Ronnie McCoury relocated to Nashville in advance of his dad moving there and joined the group. According to former Sidemen member Mike Bub, “When Ronnie came down in ’92, the band started playing Tuesday nights at the Station Inn. When we initially started the Sidemen, nobody knew who we were. Not long after that was when Dierks came to town to go to Vandy, and he stumbled in there one night with his buddies.”
“The second I walked in the door I felt like I’d been transported into a totally different part of Nashville, watching these guys onstage and seeing how much fun they were having and how young they were,” Bentley remembers. It was a life-changing experience, he says. “I’d never been exposed to bluegrass before. I thought it was like Hee Haw!, which I love. I knew Roy Clark played the banjo on Hee Haw! and I thought that was bluegrass. But I didn’t realize how relevant and how cool and how powerful that music was until I walked in there. It wasn’t just the Sidemen; it wasn’t just those guys; it was the whole room, the whole community, the whole vibe. It was just so much fun—great songs, great musicians. I became a fixture, a regular from that day on. For about seven years I was there every Tuesday night.”
In retrospect, it was an all-star band featuring many of that generation’s best young players. Resonator guitar player Gene Wooten and fiddler Jimmy Campbell have passed on, but the other Sidemen all went on to play major roles in shaping today’s bluegrass music.
Bluegrass Apprenticeship
It was exactly what Bentley was looking for. “I fell right into that community. And I knew what I’d found. It wasn’t like I was giving up country music, but I was just trying to find something to latch onto to find my path. And I felt I did when I saw those guys, ’cause they were singing old country songs as well as bluegrass songs. They were singing songs I recognized and songs I didn’t, and they were just having so much fun. That’s how it started for me.”
He was soon spreading the word at Vanderbilt, says Bub. “Every week he would bring friends or tell girls, ‘Hey, meet us down at the Station Inn.’ And all of a sudden, it just mushroomed from just people in the know and bluegrass fans to all these college kids. And back then you could smoke at the Station, so it was a beer in one hand and a cigarette in the other and all the Vandy kids came to party down there. We had a big college following and I attribute it to Dierks and his friends. We had several generations of Vanderbilt kids; the next group that came in would learn about it and start coming. We had a really good run of about five or six years there.”
It wasn’t long before Bentley wanted in on the stage action. “He was there to spectate, but secretly he was learning how to play,” claims Bub. Bentley wasn’t alone. Future Grascal Jamie Johnson had also come to Nashville to become a country star when he too found his way to the Station Inn. They became friends. “We were both nobodies, but we were nobodies together,” recalls Johnson. “We’d sit there and wait for them to call us up. We just enjoyed watching those guys, some of the most talented people anywhere.”
The club added its own magic and “sweat-soaked terror,” adds Johnson. “Like the Bluebird Café for a songwriter, this stage, for a bluegrass or a country singer, is the same intimidation. I thought I was seeing stadium lights shining on me when I stood on the stage of the Station Inn for the first time.”
“It was jut a fertile training ground and an inspiration for them,” says Bub. “We were crazy and you never knew who would show up to see the Sidemen. I mean Doc Watson came in one night…George Clooney…Vince Gill would come and sit in with us. Bill Monroe came in one night. Everybody knew about it. People would plan their vacations so they could be here on a Tuesday night and come see us. We had this thing where anything could happen after 11 o’clock. We would play ‘The Dobro Rhumba’ and it would be chaos after that.”
Johnson and Bentley became honorary Sidemen. “Terry would call us up, and it was pretty rough. We’d talk about it after, ‘Oh, I didn’t do so well.’” Jamie’s feature was Ernest Tubb’s “Driving Nails In My Coffin,” which his idols the Osborne Brothers also recorded. Bentley, who would eventually have a number one hit with “Lot Of Leavin’ Left To Do,” often sang another “leavin” song, “Leavin’s Heavy On My Mind.” A friendly competition developed, says Sidemen fan Ann Soyars.
“There was a bunch of college kids that loved the Sidemen and loved Jamie Johnson and they had T-shirts made, ‘Jamie Johnson Fan Club.’ Dierks saw that one night,” Ann recalls. “And he said, ‘Look at that. He’s got T-shirts. I don’t have T-shirts.’” Soyars took the hint and made T-Shirts with his picture on the front and printed on the back was: “No. 1 Fan of Dierks Bentley, Future CMA Winner.” She also made one for his mother: “Mom of Future CMA Winner.” Later, after he won the 2005 CMA Horizon Award, Soyars says Bentley’s mom asked how she’d predicted it. “I told her I just knew. I saw it in him.”
Country Curriculum
Bentley first heard country music on his family’s car radio in Phoenix. “My dad loved Hank Williams. He loved George Strait and Randy Travis. But then I got into electric guitar at 13.” A few years later, hearing Hank, Jr., shifted him from rock back to country music. When the young “hat acts” (Alan Jackson, Clint Black, Dwight Yoakam, and Garth Brooks) hit in the early ’90s, Bentley was a fan.
“I was hooked. I was way into modern country music back in ’91-’92. I was buying CD after CD of country stuff and that kind of burned out on me when I got to town. And then through bluegrass I kind of rediscovered real country music, ’cause the Sidemen were playing Osborne Brothers songs. Is it bluegrass or country? I don’t know. Those guys were working when there wasn’t such a big gap between the two. And Terry Eldredge singing those George Jones songs, and Haggard songs, Faron Young, Ray Price. I listened to those guys, and I went back and got way into that music.”
“I didn’t even know he played or sang,” says Ronnie McCoury. “Next thing you know, he’s playing guitar and singing, and then he started getting some gigs. He was playing regularly at Market Street Brewery on Second Avenue. He’s a real hard worker.” Bentley was gigging all over town, solo or with his banjo-playing cousin from Colorado, Avery Ogden, and hiring his Sidemen buddies when gigs paid well enough. He was also moving into more commercial country. He took over Wednesdays at Wolfy’s on Lower Broadway after Jamie Hartford, another major Bentley influence, ended his residency there. Bentley also had a day job at The Nashville Network (TNN), archiving vintage performances and studying them like training films.
Instead of college, he applied himself to his new curriculum, sitting in with the Sidemen, playing his own gigs, studying old films and recordings, writing songs, and even taking mandolin lessons from Vanderbilt faculty member Butch Baldassari. His hard work paid off. Bentley signed a publishing deal, the country industry’s typical first step in getting a record deal. In 2001, he released an independent CD, Don’t Leave Me In Love, and in 2003, he signed with Capitol Records.
So far, that’s the typical Nashville success story. But this is where things are different. Ordinarily, for that all-important first album, country artists with bluegrass pedigrees distance themselves from their pasts, diving head first into the mainstream. They rationalize that, once they’re securely established, then they’ ll bring out the banjos. But his 2003 Capitol debut album, Dierks Bentley, was filled with bluegrass touches by Nashville pickers Glen Duncan and Shad Cobb on fiddles, Randy Kohrs on resonator guitar, and Bryan Sutton on guitar, mandolin, and banjo. One of the album’s singles was “My Last Name,” co-written with bluegrass-rooted singer/songwriter Harley Allen. Guaranteeing he got his point across, Bentley closed the album with the pure bluegrass of the Del McCoury Band backing him on his original “Train Travelin.” That gutsy move didn’t surprise his friends.
“That’s something I just love about that guy. He has kind of a no-fear grasp on life,” says Jon Randall Stewart, longtime buddy and producer of Dierk’s new album, Up On The Ridge. “I’ve always kind of made decisions that way, just on my gut, on what I love,” says Bentley. “I’m not too good at planning. I’m not a mad scientist, as far as like over-thinking stuff. I just did what l love to do.”
His mainstream career was up and running, but he continued to fly his bluegrass colors on side projects such as the Grammy-winning Livin’ Lovin’ Losin: Songs Of The Louvin Brothers, an all-star tribute on which he duets with Harley Allen on “I Don’t Believe You’ve Met My Baby.” He hired the Sidemen to play his first fan club party at Fan Fair in 2003, and when his Dierks Bentley album sold a million copies, he gave a platinum album to Station Inn owner J.T. Gray. The follow-up, 2005’s Modern Day Drifter, featured more bluegrass touches and another full-tilt finale with Del and the boys, “Good Man Like Me.” It too went platinum. That same year, he fulfilled a lifelong dream, becoming a member of the Opry. Through it all, success never went to his head. He could still be found sitting in with friends at the Station Inn, Bluebird Café, and the honky-tonks of Lower Broadway and Second Avenue. “He hasn’t changed, personally,” says Soyars, who along with Lin Barber, now books bands at the Station Inn. “He was nice and kind to me from the day I met him and still is.”
Back to Bluegrass
But after the platinum records, sold-out tours, and seven number-one singles, there remained the unfinished business of that bluegrass project he’d wanted to make since his Station Inn days. Following his sixth Capitol album, Feel That Fire (which true to form, ended with the pure bluegrass of “Last Call,” co-written with Ronnie McCoury), Bentley began to think more seriously about his bluegrass album. But he discovered that once you get the clout to do whatever you want in Nashville, you’re usually too busy keeping your massive organization up and running to actually get it done.
“I knew it was something I was always going to do, but it was just waiting for the moment to feel right. It’s tough when you’re out here and you’ve got to constantly try to keep this thing rolling and you’ve got dates planned years in advance and it’s a big machine, a big operation. You’ve got bandmembers and crew involved, so it’s hard to find the right time to step away from it, take a break from the road and make a record that you know is also going to lead to a tour that’s going to be a different kind of tour for a year, where you might be playing with different players. It’s hard to find the right time.” But after an especially busy 2009 touring season, he figured he owed it to himself. “I was on the road last year playing amphitheater after amphitheater and I was thinking, ‘You know, it’s time to make this record.’”
For most artists, the hardest part of that decision would be convincing your record label to let you do it. That’s why those side projects often wind up on smaller, bluegrass labels. But he gives credit to Capitol Records Nashville president/CEO Mike Dungan for immediately “getting it.”
“Mike Dungan is like the greatest label head you could have,” Bentley states. “For better or worse, he lets you hang yourself by your own rope. I never, ever, was questioned about it. Now, if I was a label head, I’d probably go, ‘Wait a second. You sure you want to do that Dierks? You sure our format’s gonna get that?’ But I never, ever, got that from Mike.”
There was still one missing piece of the puzzle. Bentley needed the right producer. He found him, literally, right in his own backyard. “We were sitting around having a couple of drinks,” recalls Jon Randall Stewart. “Our little girls are about the same age (the Bentley’s are expecting their second child around Christmas), so we have family nights. And he and I were sitting on the back porch having an after-dinner drink and he just brought it up. As we started talking about it, we just got more and more excited about it and my brain started going and his brain started going.
“The ironic thing is the very first idea we came up with was just so off the charts. It was the Punch Brothers with Del McCoury doing (U2’s) ‘Pride (In The Name Of Love),’” Stewart says, breaking into laughter. “O.K., that’s as far left as we can go, what can we do to pull it back to the center? And what do we do that’s right down the middle?’ And it was really exciting for both us to us to go over and write a song with Tim O’Brien (‘You’re Dead To Me’) and to come up with a bluegrass song that sounds like it’s a hundred years old. So that’s how it came about.”
Bentley and Stewart also wrote the set’s most powerful song, “Down In The Mine”—as lonesome an Eastern Kentucky ballad as two guys from Arizona and Texas could write. Stewart’s wide-ranging experiences in bluegrass and mainstream country enabled him to make Bentley’s wildest ideas real, while keeping it all firmly in the realm of bluegrass and, at the same time, creating something that still sounds like a Dierks Bentley album. “This record wouldn’t have been the record it is without Jon Randall’s participation,” states Dierks. “It probably would have been more of a straight-ahead bluegrass record. It would have been more of me just calling up Larry Cordle and Alison Krauss and Sam Bush and Tim O’Brien and saying, ‘Hey, I’m making this record,’ and picking some standards and trying to write some songs. If I’d have made it seven years ago, it would have been one hundred percent ’grass, but now it’s just become a cool mixture of everything.”
Stewart credits Bentley’s status in both the bluegrass and country music communities for bringing in Alison Krauss, Vince Gill, Kris Kristofferson, Jamey Johnson, and Miranda Lambert (the latter two on Verlon Thompson’s “Bad Angel”). “I thought, ‘You know, we could do this with a couple of country artists and make it really cool.’ And it was Dierks idea: ‘You know what would make it really cool? Have a girl singing on it.’ And in about ten minutes, he had Miranda on the phone, ‘Hey, you wanna come sing on this record?’”
Jon Randall acknowledges that Up On The Ridge hasn’t been as readily accepted by program directors as a mainstream Bentley project. “Everybody just plays it so terribly safe that the bar just gets lower every day and it just makes me crazy. We knew it was going to be a struggle at radio, anytime you attach the word ‘bluegrass,’ as you well know. I made country records, but just having bluegrass in my world was a battle out there for me for years as an artist. But the fact that we got into the top twenty with a song (‘Up On the Ridge’) that Sam Bush was playing slide mandolin on is something to be proud of.” The album also garnered three CMA nominations: Album, Event (for “Bad Angel” with Lambert and Johnson), and Male Vocalist Of The Year.
Pick it Forward
Bentley is quick to credit his producer. “Having Jon Randall, he’s the reason why it really opened itself up to being like totally bluegrass, but also with country elements and everything else. He’s all about breaking rules. ‘Let’s just make a record we love and not worry about having to label it one thing or the other.’”
In that, the two old friends are of one mind, says Stewart. “Here’s a guy from Phoenix, Arizona, who decided, ‘I want to play hockey.’ So, he just puts on some ice skates and joins a team here and starts playing,” says Jon. “And that’s how he does everything. I don’t know any artist in the world who, after their seventh number one, would have taken on a bluegrass project like this. But he decided, ‘This is something I want to do. You only live once. I’m gonna do it.’”
Bentley’s love of physical challenges was part of the attraction to bluegrass. After Up On The Ridge was completed, but before its release, Bentley took the Travelin’ McCourys on a sold-out 25-show tour, augmented by Bentley’s drummer Steve Misamore and steel player Tim Sergent.
“We went coast to coast, Portland to Portland, in a month and a half,” says Ronnie McCoury. The tour’s last show at the Ryman Auditorium was filmed by cable TV’s GAC channel and continues to air in reruns. For Bentley, the tour meant serious woodshedding on bluegrass rhythm guitar. “It’s like a high school or college hockey player suddenly getting a chance to play with the pros, playing with the best of the best,” he says. “You got to have your three Ts—Tune, Timing, and Tone—ready to go when you’ re playing with those guys.”
Bentley went deep into the roots at the 2010 IBMA Awards, opening the show with an all-star bluegrass band doing “Fiddlin’ Around” from Up On The Ridge (released too late for IBMA Awards eligibility this year). He and Jon Randall also performed with Earl, Randy, and Gary Scruggs in the Hall Of Fame tribute to Louise Scruggs, singing “You Are My Flower.”
He’s also brought his campaign for bluegrass and real country music back to where he first heard the music—on the radio. Bentley currently hosts The Thread, a sixty-minute show on Nashville’s WSM radio.
“You can tell he’s genuine, and bluegrass really means something to him,” says Ronnie McCoury. “There’s only one platinum record on the Station Inn walls, and that’s his. He knows where his roots are.”
Bentley sees it all—Up On The Ridge, his radio show, his work with the Travelin’ McCourys, Stewart and the rest of his bluegrass pals—as a way to share what he discovered at the Station Inn so long ago.” It’s so fun for me to get out there, learning so much and introducing my fans to some really kick-ass music, and I love being the host, the ambassador for that. That’s what it took for me to get into bluegrass. I had to go down to the Station Inn and see the Sidemen. It introduced a whole new world to me, and that’s what I’m hoping to do.”
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Dierks in NYC Day 3: Joe's Pub - Oct 20

Songwriter's showcases are always interesting to go to. I was really excited to hear that one of these would be part of Dierks Bentley's NYC residency! For this one, Dierks invited Jon Randall Stewart, Jessi Alexander and Jim Beavers.
Joe's Pub was the perfect setting for this show. The building is so small and intimate that you almost miss it walking by outside. Inside there are tiny tables set up all around the stage, some couches and then a bar area behind that. The lighting is pretty low and like most small venues made for songwriter's showcases, the biggest rule is no talking while the artists are performing.
The show was pretty casual straight from the beginning. When you get Dierks and Jim Beavers in the same room, there are guaranteed to be some laughs. They have a great banter between them on stage. Up On The Ridge producer, Jon Randall Stewart and Jessi Alexander seemed to anchor down the more serious part of the evening...probably a good thing they were between Dierks and Jim! Each songwriter took a turn telling the story behind each song and then giving their rendition of it. The songs ranged from unreleased originals to ones made famous on radio by artists such as Billy Currington, Gary Allan, Reba and even Miley Cyrus (Jessi co-wrote Miley's country crossover, 'The Climb' and performed an amazing version of it).

My favorite part was when Jim did his song 'Diamonds Make Babies,' a really funny song about how getting married leads to having children. He did a little poking fun at Dierks before that one since he has baby #2 on the way. Now that I think of it, there were quite a few songs about babies/children/married life. Another highlight was hearing Dierks and Jon perform 'Draw Me a Map' together...so good acoustically!
Once the show was over, the tailgaters were gathered outside and continuing the party. Low and behold, out of the venue comes Dierks to join in on the party and get his picture with "Will Ferrell." Before it got really crazy, he hopped in a cab (with a random fan trying to join him...bad idea) and left the crowd to dance to his biggest hits. A little bit later the party was shut down by the NYPD...only to be continued the next night in Brooklyn!
~Stephanie
DBC Missouri rep and Historian
Thanks for sharing your in-person experience, Steph! Later, Dierks tweeted the following:
"will ferrell @funnyordie is following me around.. tailgating and playing my songs outside Joe's pub!"

*Edit: Just found this video clip on YouTube:
One more blog to come in this series...Day 4: Brooklyn's South Paw with The Punch Brothers!
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Draw Me A Map - Story Behind the Dierks Bentley Song
Dierks Bentley, 'Draw Me a Map' -- Story Behind the Lyrics
Posted Oct 14th 2010 9:00AM by Lorie Hollabaugh (theboot.com)
Dierks Bentley and Jon Randall Stewart have been buddies for almost 15 years. They write songs together, hang out together with their families, and share a strong, mutual love of bluegrass, which led to their latest collaboration, Dierks' acclaimed CD 'Up on the Ridge.' The Boot caught up with Jon Randall, the producer of 'Up on the Ridge' and co-writer of several tunes on the album, to find out the inspiration behind Dierks' latest single, 'Draw Me a Map.'
We were just throwing around some ideas and I can't remember how we came up with the words "draw me a map that leads me back to you" at first ... maybe we were talking about traveling, I don't know. But we approached it from this groove that we both really love, it's by that band the Shins ... it's almost a bluegrass groove, but it's the way that that acoustic drives that whole track, and we started playing around with that. We needed something in that slot on this record, we didn't have anything like it. So we just started playing with these melody ideas, and Dierks threw out the first line and, there you go, you just start writing. It's kind of like we wrote ourselves into that chorus. And it sounds like Dierks.
That line could be funny, really, but when you put it in a serious context and make a love song out of it, it's pretty strong. I think it works from both sides, too. I think guys really relate to that, that, "Hey, what did I do? I don't even know what I just said?" But I think women want to hear that, too. They want to know that you're trying. What I like about it is most ideas have already been written. But I hadn't necessarily heard this idea before. Maybe it has been done before, and I'm sure someone's approached it, but I thought it was a really different angle for a song.
Posted Oct 14th 2010 9:00AM by Lorie Hollabaugh (theboot.com)
Dierks Bentley and Jon Randall Stewart have been buddies for almost 15 years. They write songs together, hang out together with their families, and share a strong, mutual love of bluegrass, which led to their latest collaboration, Dierks' acclaimed CD 'Up on the Ridge.' The Boot caught up with Jon Randall, the producer of 'Up on the Ridge' and co-writer of several tunes on the album, to find out the inspiration behind Dierks' latest single, 'Draw Me a Map.'
We were just throwing around some ideas and I can't remember how we came up with the words "draw me a map that leads me back to you" at first ... maybe we were talking about traveling, I don't know. But we approached it from this groove that we both really love, it's by that band the Shins ... it's almost a bluegrass groove, but it's the way that that acoustic drives that whole track, and we started playing around with that. We needed something in that slot on this record, we didn't have anything like it. So we just started playing with these melody ideas, and Dierks threw out the first line and, there you go, you just start writing. It's kind of like we wrote ourselves into that chorus. And it sounds like Dierks.
That line could be funny, really, but when you put it in a serious context and make a love song out of it, it's pretty strong. I think it works from both sides, too. I think guys really relate to that, that, "Hey, what did I do? I don't even know what I just said?" But I think women want to hear that, too. They want to know that you're trying. What I like about it is most ideas have already been written. But I hadn't necessarily heard this idea before. Maybe it has been done before, and I'm sure someone's approached it, but I thought it was a really different angle for a song.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Cannery Gets Crowd Closer to Bentley for Americana Music Fest
Strum Magazine's Rick Amburgey says the best ever Dierks Bentley performance for him was the September 10 Americana Music Festival at Nashville's Cannery Ballroom. News of the surprise event leaked out just one day before, but that didn't stop the crowd from coming a little closer. Check out Rick's review here.
Dierks Bentley and Sam Bush perform "Gold Heart Locket" Sept. 10:
Dierks Bentley and Sam Bush perform "Gold Heart Locket" Sept. 10:
Monday, July 26, 2010
THE THREAD FEATURES THE RIDGE

Dierks's Bentley said his radio show, 'The Thread' was special this week, "since I'm gonna be talking about ME--the whole hour! So if you don't like "me" you might want to tune out."
The radio show is called the thread and this album is called up on the ridge but it might as well be called the thread too because this album really goes back and connects me with the roots of my education in Nashville and the music that really got me excited about being in Nashville and that would be bluegrass acoustic and country music and that's what this record's is all about.
Dierks kicked off the show with the produce of the Up On The Ridge - Jon Randall Stewart. Some know him as Randy or Whispers. One of Dierks' best friends, "nobody knows more about bluegrass music, country music or whiskey and he's one of the great singers and songwriters in this town," Dierks says matter-of-factly.
The first song of the show, "Are You Teasing Me, featured Jon Randall and Patty Loveless.
I'm humbled to have my songs played this entire hour. I hope you hear something you like. He played all the songs from Up On The Ridge in the order they were recorded on the album. Dierks invited listeners to call in if they had any suggestions.
~Up On The Ridge - this song has gotten some airplay - means a lot to me, to hear Sam Bush's slide mandolin and Stuart Duncan's fiddle on the radio
~Fallin' For You - Gave it all I had to try and keep up with Chris Stapleton's powerful voice
~Senor' - I'm a Bob Dylan fan because of Tim O'Brien, and sang it with him at Telluride and recorded with Chris Thile and The Punch Brothers (along with the next song 'Rovin' Gambler'); I think we found a way to make it our own
~Draw Me A Map - one of my 12 favorite songs on this album, Alison Krauss in the background
~Bad Angel - Miranda Lambert and Jamey Johnson helped me on this Verlon Thompson Suzi Ragsdale tune
~Fiddlin' Around - written by Shawn Camp
~You're Dead To Me - really wanted to have a chance to write with Tim O'Brien on this record - it's a good murder ballad theme
~Pride - special song for me by U2 - only did it once live at The Ryman - hard to replicate live - picking cover songs is hard - bold and brave to take on but bringing in the musicianship of The Punch brothers and Del's voice - so much fun. Del nailed it! I'm really proud of that song.
~Love Grows Wild - One of my favorite singer/songwriters is Buddy Miller - I cut one of his songs on my first album, My Love Will Follow You; I wanted to get back to cut one of his on this album.
~Bottle To The Bottom - I am always amazed I had a chance to sing with Kris Kristofferson; hearing him sing some lines on his own song is one of the coolest thing that ever happened in my career. The song won a Grammy in 1970.
~Down In The Mine - If you're driving your car, you might want to pull over. This is a sad song. Special folks, amazing lifestyle, brave people - we'll send this song out to anyone who's lost a loved one down in the mine tragedies recently.
The podcast is available at wsmonline.com.
The radio show is called the thread and this album is called up on the ridge but it might as well be called the thread too because this album really goes back and connects me with the roots of my education in Nashville and the music that really got me excited about being in Nashville and that would be bluegrass acoustic and country music and that's what this record's is all about.
Dierks kicked off the show with the produce of the Up On The Ridge - Jon Randall Stewart. Some know him as Randy or Whispers. One of Dierks' best friends, "nobody knows more about bluegrass music, country music or whiskey and he's one of the great singers and songwriters in this town," Dierks says matter-of-factly.
The first song of the show, "Are You Teasing Me, featured Jon Randall and Patty Loveless.
I'm humbled to have my songs played this entire hour. I hope you hear something you like. He played all the songs from Up On The Ridge in the order they were recorded on the album. Dierks invited listeners to call in if they had any suggestions.
~Up On The Ridge - this song has gotten some airplay - means a lot to me, to hear Sam Bush's slide mandolin and Stuart Duncan's fiddle on the radio
~Fallin' For You - Gave it all I had to try and keep up with Chris Stapleton's powerful voice
~Senor' - I'm a Bob Dylan fan because of Tim O'Brien, and sang it with him at Telluride and recorded with Chris Thile and The Punch Brothers (along with the next song 'Rovin' Gambler'); I think we found a way to make it our own
~Draw Me A Map - one of my 12 favorite songs on this album, Alison Krauss in the background
~Bad Angel - Miranda Lambert and Jamey Johnson helped me on this Verlon Thompson Suzi Ragsdale tune
~Fiddlin' Around - written by Shawn Camp
~You're Dead To Me - really wanted to have a chance to write with Tim O'Brien on this record - it's a good murder ballad theme
~Pride - special song for me by U2 - only did it once live at The Ryman - hard to replicate live - picking cover songs is hard - bold and brave to take on but bringing in the musicianship of The Punch brothers and Del's voice - so much fun. Del nailed it! I'm really proud of that song.
~Love Grows Wild - One of my favorite singer/songwriters is Buddy Miller - I cut one of his songs on my first album, My Love Will Follow You; I wanted to get back to cut one of his on this album.
~Bottle To The Bottom - I am always amazed I had a chance to sing with Kris Kristofferson; hearing him sing some lines on his own song is one of the coolest thing that ever happened in my career. The song won a Grammy in 1970.
~Down In The Mine - If you're driving your car, you might want to pull over. This is a sad song. Special folks, amazing lifestyle, brave people - we'll send this song out to anyone who's lost a loved one down in the mine tragedies recently.
The podcast is available at wsmonline.com.
Sunday, July 25, 2010
COUNTRY WEEKLY INCLUDES DIERKS WEEKLY
Country Weekly magazine know Dierks Bentley is hot right now. So hot they've included him in three consecutive issues throughout their pages of popular and up-and-coming artists.
The July 19th issue, with George, Reba and Toby on the cover, has Dierks doing double duty, with a full page "Hot Shots" page of his appearance on the Today show, serenading Kathie Lee and Hoda with "Draw Me a Map." Then on the Letters page, two DB Congress reps (Linda, IN and David, KY) who sent in thank yous for the cover artice (June 21 issue) got published! A feature story, "Musical Schizophrenia" highlights Jon Randall Stewart and his latest record producer project, Dierks Bentley's masterful new Up On The Ridge album.


The following week,--July 26th, Dierks lands on the Hot Shots pages again, this time picturing "the closest to couch time" episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live where DB and the band performed acoustically into Jimmy's lap top due to a power shortage. Skip to the Scoop page and you'll find Dierks lending a hand for Nashville Flood Relief on NBC's Today show. And don't miss the pic of Dierks at the piano on The Pro File page, featuring WUSN Chicago's Lisa Dent and Ramblin' Ray. Read what she had to say about Dierks.


August 2nd--More Dierks in the letters, our very own Molly, DBC rep in New York! Miranda and Blake threw an engagement party for themselves, and Dierks was mentioned as being on the guest list.

Thanks, Country Weekly, for always including a little DB in your magazine! We are extremely grateful and that's why we're loyal CW readers, and most of us subscribe!
~Ronna
DB Congress Chair
The July 19th issue, with George, Reba and Toby on the cover, has Dierks doing double duty, with a full page "Hot Shots" page of his appearance on the Today show, serenading Kathie Lee and Hoda with "Draw Me a Map." Then on the Letters page, two DB Congress reps (Linda, IN and David, KY) who sent in thank yous for the cover artice (June 21 issue) got published! A feature story, "Musical Schizophrenia" highlights Jon Randall Stewart and his latest record producer project, Dierks Bentley's masterful new Up On The Ridge album.





August 2nd--More Dierks in the letters, our very own Molly, DBC rep in New York! Miranda and Blake threw an engagement party for themselves, and Dierks was mentioned as being on the guest list.

Thanks, Country Weekly, for always including a little DB in your magazine! We are extremely grateful and that's why we're loyal CW readers, and most of us subscribe!
~Ronna
DB Congress Chair
Saturday, June 5, 2010
WATCH DIERKS' 'DOWN IN THE MINE'
Dierks Bentley was inspired by his wife's grandfathers. Watch as he "keeps it loneseome" in recording his new song written with Jon Randall. "Down In The Mine" is included on the Up On The Ridge album, due out June 8.
Thursday, April 1, 2010
DIERKS BENTLEY'S UP ON THE RIDGE PREVIEW LISTENING PARTY
CMT.com has the scoop!
Dierks and his producer, Jon Randall Stewart, previewed tracks from Bentley's impending country-bluegrass album, Up on the Ridge, during a Tuesday afternoon (March 30) listening party at engineer Gary Paczosa's studio in Nashville. Although the instrumentation and sensibility of the 12-song album are solidly bluegrass, the project ventures well beyond the traditional sounds of that genre. The title cut, for example, is a rap-flavored, banjo-inflected paean to rural living, which Bentley co-wrote with songwriter-producer Angelo Petraglia, best known for his works with Kings of Leon.
Besides marking a return to the music that influenced Bentley early in his career, the album features guest appearances from such bluegrass luminaries as Del McCoury (one of the artist's regular picking and recording buddies), Alison Krauss, Sam Bush, Sonya Isaacs, the Punch Brothers (mandolinist Chris Thile's current group) and the SteelDrivers' Chris Stapleton.
Stewart has a distinguished bluegrass pedigree, as well, having toured and recorded as the lead guitarist in Emmylou Harris' fabled Nash Ramblers band.
Miranda Lambert and Jamey Johnson contribute stellar vocal performances on a lyrical exorcism called "Bad Angel," a Verlon Thompson-Suzi Ragsdale tune. Aided by McCoury and the Punch Brothers, Bentley also takes on U2's throbbing and incantatory "Pride (In the Name of Love)."
He resurrects "Rovin' Gambler," the old folk song, and creates a new one with the ancient-sounding coalfields lament, "Down in the Mine," a co-write with Stewart.
According to Esquire Magazine, the album is scheduled for release in May. That's a whole 30 days from now!
What I wouldn't give to have been a fly up on the ridge, uh, wall of that listening party! Congrats to all the DB fans who will get to see him and the Travelin' McCoury's live on the April-May bluegrass tour! Sadly, nothing is scheduled close to me. Guess I'll just have to wait for the album!
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