Luke Combs’ Secret to Success? The Internet & College Kids Played a Big Part

Luke Combs’ Secret to Success? The Internet & College Kids Played a Big Part

Luke Combs hit the top of the charts with his debut single, “Hurricane,” and now he’s hoping his second weather-related single, “When It Rains It Pours,” will do the same.

Written by Luke, Ray Fulcher and Jordan Walker, the fun-loving single is currently No. 8 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart after 14 weeks.

With two Top 10 singles right out of the gate for the 27-year-old, Kix Brooks of American Country Countdown wanted to know Luke’s secret to success, which turned out to be a two-pronged approach by the North Carolina native.

“I learned guitar when I was 21, I’m 27 now, and so it’s only been about six years, but the second I could play at all—I mean, enough to play a show—I was playing shows, and we had people coming to shows five or six years ago that are still coming to shows now,” said Luke to Kix. “The way I looked at it the other day was someone was asking me this question and said, ‘How do these people know your music in Portland?’ Or, ‘How do they know it in Delaware and you’re from North Carolina?’ One, it’s the power of the internet. Two, when I started, my fan base was in a college town [Boone, N.C.]. I got that fan base and then everyone just went out everywhere else [after they graduated]. They moved to Florida or they moved to New York and said to their buddies, ‘Hey, I know this dude. He’s pretty good,’ and so I think that’s kind of how it blossomed on top of us staying busy and playing a 150 dates a year.”

Shania Twain Talks New Album, Past Health Problems, Finding Love & More in “Sunday Morning” Profile [Watch]

Shania Twain Talks New Album, Past Health Problems, Finding Love & More in “Sunday Morning” Profile [Watch]

The best-selling female artist in the history of country music—Shania Twain—will release her fifth studio album, Now, on Sept. 29.

Now, which is Shania’s first album since 2002’s Up!, will be offered as both a 12-track standard album and 16-track deluxe album.

“The new music is more celebratory, more inspirational, more about coming from somewhere bad and going somewhere good, dark to light, and that whole transition emotionally,” says Shania to NCD. “So, it’s a little deeper emotionally, for sure, this new album. There’s a lot of optimism, like ‘Life’s About to Get Good.’ The words are quite melancholy, but it’s just a happy song. It makes me feel happy when it comes on.”

Shania was the focus of a CBS Sunday Morning profile on Sept. 24, where she talked about the new album, her divorce from Mutt Lange, past health problems, finding love again and more.

Watch the profile below.

Scotty McCreery Has “Bucket-List Night” Performing Surprise Opening Gig for Garth Brooks

Scotty McCreery Has “Bucket-List Night” Performing Surprise Opening Gig for Garth Brooks

Scotty McCreery fulfilled a lifelong dream with a surprise performance before Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood’s sold-out show at the Denny Sanford Premier Center in Sioux Falls, S.D., on Sept. 22.

Scotty treated the 13,000 fans to an unannounced 30-minute set that included “See You Tonight,” “Five More Minutes” and more.

photo courtesy Triple 8 Management

“It was a really incredible moment just being out there on that stage in front of a Garth crowd,” said Scotty. “I was about as nervous as I’ve been before a show, probably ever, but as soon as they introduced me, the crowd went nuts and that kind of eased my nerves.”

After his opening gig, Scotty found his seat in the crowd and watched Garth and Trisha’s headlining set.

“We got out there and did our thing, and then we got out there and watched Garth Brooks,” said Scotty. “What better night could you ask for? Can’t thank him enough and Trisha enough for having me out. That was definitely a bucket list night for me!”

Apparently, the G-Man was impressed with Scotty’s performance.

Loretta Lynn Confirms First Post-Stroke Public Appearance at Upcoming Festival

Loretta Lynn Confirms First Post-Stroke Public Appearance at Upcoming Festival

Five months after suffering a stroke, Loretta Lynn, 85, has confirmed that her first public appearance will be at the Tennessee Motorcycle and Music Revival, which takes place Sept. 28–Oct.1.

“I’m gonna be there . . . I’m gonna ride in on a motorcycle, [of] course I’m not gonna be driving,” said Loretta with a laugh to WSM Radio’s Nashville Today. “I’m feeling good. I feel better than I should, really. I’ve taken a lot of time off, and I know everybody’s hollering about me being off so much, but, ya know, I just got lazy, quit singing for a little while.”

Loretta will be present at the Tennessee Motorcycle and Music Revival, a four-day event held at Loretta Lynn Ranch in Hurricane Mills, Tenn. (about 60 miles west of Nashville). The Motorcycles and Music Revival will celebrate music, motorcycles, food, art, entertainment and Southern hospitality as 4,500 on-site campers enjoy 400 acres.

Tickets are on sale now.

After suffering a stroke in May, Loretta canceled all tour dates in 2017 and pushed back the release of her upcoming album, Wouldn’t It Be Great, to 2018.

SEC Nation Heads To Rocky Top For Tennessee’s Clash With #11 Georgia

SEC Nation Heads To Rocky Top For Tennessee’s Clash With #11 Georgia

SEC Network crew / Credit: UT Athletics

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The SEC Network’s traveling pregame show, SEC NationPresented by Pilot Flying J, will be in Knoxville when the Vols host No. 11 Georgia for a 3:30 p.m. ET matchup this Saturday, Sept. 30, at Neyland Stadium.

SEC Nation will broadcast live from the Ayres Hall lawn from 10 a.m. to noon ET. Laura Rutledge hosts the morning show alongside analysts Tim Tebow, Marcus Spears and Paul Finebaum. Lauren Sisler will provide live reports of the sights and sounds of UT’s pregame, on-campus scene.

This will be the Volunteers’ 11th appearance on the show and fifth time hosting the SEC Nation crew in Knoxville

The Paul Finebaum Show, which airs from 2-3 p.m. ET on ESPN2 and 3-7 p.m. ETon SEC Networkwill also broadcast from Ayres Hall on Friday. Fans are invited to catch all five hours of #FinebaumFriday from the Ayres Hall set.

Led by the SEC’s leading rusher, junior running back John Kelly (450 yards, six touchdowns), Tennessee is 3-1 in 2017.

CBS will air Saturday’s contest between the Vols and the Bulldogs with Brad Nessler, Gary Danielson and Allie LaForce on the call.

Fans are encouraged attend the SEC Nation broadcast and to arrive early to join in the festivities.

-UT Athletics

 

Jimmy’s blog: Vols slumper through closer-than-expected win over UMass

Jimmy’s blog: Vols slumper through closer-than-expected win over UMass

 

By Jimmy Hyams

Often times, fans watch their team’s performance, then project to the future.

That can be a dangerous and futile exercise.

For example, based on the previous week’s games, you might thought Vanderbilt could compete with Alabama, or Mississippi State might upset Georgia, or Auburn couldn’t score 51 points against any team that calls itself the Tigers.

That’s why forecasting a Georgia rout over Tennessee isn’t necessarily a wise thing to do, Vol Nation.

Georgia was dominant in a 31-3 mauling of Mississippi State, holding explosive quarterback Nick Fitzgerald to 130 total yards, 93 passing, and yielding a mere 273 total yards to Dan Mullen’s team.

But Georgia didn’t look like world-beaters when it escaped against Notre Dame, 20-19.

Tennessee was often times anemic in a lethargic 17-13 victory over winless and 28-point underdog UMass. The Minutemen weren’t just 0-4 entering the UT contest, they had lost to Hawaii, Coastal Carolina, Old Dominion and Temple.

As it has done from time to time, Tennessee played down to the competition before fewer than 80,000 in actual attendance. That number dwindled to about 50,000 at the start of the third quarter and less than that in the fourth quarter.

If not for a second-half injury to starting quarterback Andrew Ford and the absence of NFL-caliber tight end Adam Breneman, the Minutemen might have pulled this one out.

“Unacceptable,’’ was the word Tennessee coach Butch Jones used at least three times in his post-game press conference that started about 35 minutes after the game ended.

Jones pointed to a lack of consistency in practice the week before.

“What happened today was a byproduct of practice,’’ Jones said.

Practice? We talkin’ about practice?

Don’t tell Allen Iverson, but Jones is right.

And while Jones didn’t admit it directly, he had to know his team was suffering from a Gator Hangover.

Despite the week-long talk otherwise, Tennessee didn’t put behind its devastating, last-play 26-20 loss at Florida the week before.

But Vols offensive lineman Brett Kendrick wasn’t buying it.

“I don’t think that had any effect on us,’’ said Kendrick. “There’s no excuse for us to come out and play the way we did.’’

Kendrick is right, there is no excuse for the way UT played. But I beg to differ on the Florida influence.

Since 2009, I charted what I considered eight “devastating’’ losses for Tennessee. The record in games the next week: 2-6, with wins over FCS teams Western Carolina and Tennessee Tech.

It’s tough to bounce back from gut-wrenching defeats, especially to rivals.

UMass made Tennessee look like a sub .500 team. In a how-did-that-happen stat, UMass outrushed the Vols 144 yards to 135. Its offensive line got a better push than UT’s O-line.

Tennessee had 18 runs of 2 or fewer yards, 8 of which were tackles for loss.

And I don’t want to hear the response: Those guys are on scholarship, too.

UMass gave UT trouble with his shifts, movement and stems.

“There’s no reason we shouldn’t pick that up,’’ Kendrick said.

Tennessee John Kelly had 101 hard-earned yards on 25 carries, but he also had just 21 yards on 11 second-half runs.

After scoring 14 points in the last five minutes of the first half, Tennessee managed just three points in the second half and punted on seven of eight possessions. UT gained just 68 yards in the second half

“It was frustrating not scoring points,’’ Kendrick said. “We finished the first half with two touchdowns so obviously we felt we had momentum in the second half. But we didn’t execute.’’

The execution was so poor, Jones benched Dormady (17 of 27 for 187 yards) in favor of Jarrett Guarantano (2 of 5 for -3 yards) who was totally ineffective.

“We were looking for a spark and some energy,’’ Jones said.

Instead, he invited a controversy.

At least Tennessee’s defense rose to the occasion, forcing three consecutive punts and a fourth-down stop to put the game away. UT’s defense had seven sacks, forced 10 punts and limited UMass to 281 total yards.

While Tennessee’s defense wasn’t bad, the team’s overall performance won’t cut it against Georgia.

But as we all should know by now, you can’t project future performance based on last week’s result.

Just ask Vanderbilt.


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