As Father’s Day Approaches, Garth Brooks Credits His “Dreamer” Mom and “Realist” Dad for Helping Him Succeed

As Father’s Day Approaches, Garth Brooks Credits His “Dreamer” Mom and “Realist” Dad for Helping Him Succeed

As Father’s Day approaches on Sunday, June 18, Garth Brooks took time to reflect on the values his parents instilled in him as a youngster growing up in Oklahoma.

“They were pretty real people,” says Garth. “Mom believed you could fly. Dad would pull you over and go, ‘Ok, if you’re going to fly, it’s going to take a helluva lot of work.’ So he was the realist . . . she was the dreamer . . . and they worked really, really good together. Dad would tell you things, man. My dad, he was sweet, full of love . . . but he’s going to be a realist.”

The reigning CMA Entertainer of the Year’s career is still flying high thanks, in part, to Mom and Dad’s advice. Garth pulled in $60 million over the last year, according to Forbes, making him the highest-grossing country star in the world. But that hasn’t stopped Garth from trying to be a loving super-dad to his three daughters, Taylor, August and Allie.

“You kind of figure out what true love is, don’t you?” says Garth. “And true love is simply this: when she’s sad, you’re sadder than she is. And when she’s happy, you’re happier than she is. That’s true love, right there.”

photo by Jason Simanek

Shania Twain Says New Album, “Now,” Is About “Exercising Independence” & “Scaring the Hell Out of Myself”

Shania Twain Says New Album, “Now,” Is About “Exercising Independence” & “Scaring the Hell Out of Myself”

Today (June 15), the best-selling female artist in the history of country music—Shania Twain—announced the upcoming release of 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.

Her new single, “Life’s About to Get Good,” premieres on country radio today (listen below).

“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 not only served as the album’s co-producer but she also wrote every song . . . by herself.

“I wrote it alone,” says Shania. “I wanted to exercise independence, and I think that’s really where the power of this album is. Everyone talks about the female power with my music in the past . . . and the whole attitude there, but this one is even more about just personal power and exercising independence and putting myself forward and scaring the hell out of myself by taking on that challenge of saying, ‘Ok, I take full responsibility for the songwriting and if it sucks, then I take responsibility for that.’ But I needed to try to do this, not try, ‘I’m going to do this by myself.’ I was determined to do it alone. Because I had been in a co-writing scenario for all those years, and this was going to be the first time after all that time that I’ve written solely alone, so it’s all about independence, and I needed to learn that about myself, I needed to rediscover that about myself.”

Shania will perform “Life’s About to Get Good” as part of Today’s Summer Concert Series on June 16. In addition, Shania’s Country Music Hall of Fame exhibit will open on June 27 and run through mid-2018.

Shania remains the first and only female artist in history to have three consecutive albums certified diamond by the RIAA for sales of more than 10 million units each. “The Queen of Country Pop,” a title she definitely deserved to call her own, earned five Grammys, four ACMs and two CMAs, as well as a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Listen to “Life’s About to Get Good” on Spotify below.

Academy of Country Music Announces Studio Recording Award Nominees for 52nd ACM Awards

Academy of Country Music Announces Studio Recording Award Nominees for 52nd ACM Awards

The Academy of Country Music announced the Studio Recording Award nominees for the 52nd ACM Awards.

Winners will be announced during the 11th annual ACM Honors, an evening dedicated to recognizing the special honorees and off-camera category winners from the 52nd ACM Awards. The 11th annual ACM Honors will take place on Wednesday, August 23, 2017, at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville and will be broadcast at a later date on CBS.

52nd ACM Awards Studio Recording Nominees

Producer of the Year

  • Ross Copperman
  • Byron Gallimore
  • Scott Hendricks
  • Dann Huff
  • Jay Joyce

Bass Player of the Year

  • Mike Brignardello
  • Mark Hill
  • Tony Lucido
  • Jimmie Lee Sloas
  • Glenn Worf

Drummer of the Year

  • Chad Cromwell
  • Fred Eltringham
  • Miles McPherson
  • Greg Morrow
  • Nir “Z” Zidkyahu

Guitar Player of the Year

  • Tom Bukovac
  • Kenny Greenberg
  • Rob McNelly
  • Danny Rader
  • Ilya Toshinskiy

Piano/Keyboard Player of the Year

  • Dave Cohen
  • Tony Harrell
  • Charlie Judge
  • Gordon Mote
  • Michael Rojas

Specialty Instrument Player of the Year 

  • Dan Dugmore
  • Stuart Duncan
  • Carl Miner
  • Bryan Sutton
  • Ilya Toshinskiy

Steel Guitar Player of the Year

  • Dan Dugmore
  • Steve Hinson
  • Mike Johnson
  • Russ Pahl
  • Justin Schipper

Audio Engineer of the Year

  • Chuck Ainlay
  • Jeff Balding
  • Joe Baldridge
  • Steve Marcantonio
  • Reid Shippen
Jimmy’s blog: Serrano says `mindset’ is to return to Tennessee

Jimmy’s blog: Serrano says `mindset’ is to return to Tennessee

By Jimmy Hyams

Tennessee pitcher Kyle Serrano said his “mindset’’ is to return to Tennessee rather than go pro.

That’s because the 10th-round pick by Houston doesn’t think the Astros will meet his asking price: $300,000.

The slotted position for a player taken in the third round is about $130,000.

“I’m not going to set a deadline (for making a decision) if the money doesn’t go up,’’ Serrano said in an exclusive interview on Sports Talk WNML radio Wednesday afternoon. “My mindset has to be, `I’m coming back to school.’’’

Serrano said it was “pretty shocking’’ to get picked by Houston considering his asking price, but he also called it an “honor.’’

Serrano said there is a “good shot’’ he remains in college and that new coach Tony Vitello has been “very welcoming and made it real clear he would love to have me back.’’

Asked if he’d like to have a banner senior season, Serrano said: “Yes, definitely. I feel like I owe the University of Tennessee more. I didn’t come to Tennessee to get drafted real high after my junior year. I came to Tennessee because I wanted to help Tennessee win and get back on the map.’’

Serrano acknowledged that the “deal with my dad’’ as Tennessee’s baseball coach “didn’t work out.’’

Coach Dave Serrano was allowed to resign recently after six unsuccessful seasons in which UT never made the NCAA Tournament.

Kyle Serrano, a right-hander with a solid fastball and nasty curve, has not lived up to his potential. Drafted out of high school and again after three years at UT, Serrano has a college career record of 8-10. He played just over half this season before leaving the team and dropping out of school for undisclosed reasons.

The rising senior has talked several times to Vitello about returning to the team. Serrano said he will be academically eligible.

He seems eager to shed a tag that apparently was an albatross throughout his Tennessee career.

“I told him (Vitello) I’m actually really looking forward to playing in college and finally being just Kyle Serrano, the baseball player, and not the coaches’ son,’’ Serrano said, “That’s been something that’s really been tough for me over the past few years. … I just want to be a baseball player. That’s what I feel like I can finally be with Coach Vitello.’’

Kyle said he’s also excited about playing with the young talent UT has assembled and that the pitching staff could be “pretty dynamic’’ and “pretty dominant’’ on the mound.

Kyle said his time away from the team and school has made him “tougher, more mature, I feel more like a man.’’

He said he’s a better pitcher now than he was when he came out of high school because he has a better feel for the strike zone and his fastball has improved. And he wants to display his talent that, to date, hasn’t surfaced much on the mound.

“There’s a really, really big part of me that wants to come back and help the program get back to where it should be and give Tennessee what Kyle Serrano was supposed to have been the whole time,’’ Kyle said.

Serrano said he felt pressure coming out of high school to produce. That pressure waned with age, but he hinted that playing for his father was not a good match.

“I took advantage of lot of situations,’’ Kyle said. “I made a lot of mistakes in my career with my dad as my coach, mistakes that wouldn’t have been allowed at a lot of other places.

“I had my dad as my coach. I wasn’t looking at him as my coach and I wasn’t respecting him as my coach a lot of times and I kind of got a little payback for it.

“I’m really looking forward to maybe possibly having the opportunity to play for coach Vitello and being held to a higher standard. And I think it’s going to work out really good if I got back to Tennessee.’’

Meanwhile, Serrano plans to pitch this summer in the Cape Cod League, and wait on a final offer from Houston.

If it’s not $300,000, he hopes to have that “banner’’ season at Tennessee.


Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all

Jeff Moberg selected in 30th round of MLB Draft by the Rockies

Jeff Moberg selected in 30th round of MLB Draft by the Rockies

Jeff Moberg – UT / Credit: UT Athletics

University of Tennessee infielder Jeff Moberg was selected by Colorado Rockies in the 30th round (896th overall) of the 2017 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft.

With his selection, Moberg joins Jordan Rodgers (sixth round — Atlanta), Kyle Serrano (10th round — Houston), Zach Warren (14th round — Philadelphia) and Hunter Martin (20th round – Houston) as Tennessee’s 2017 Major League Draft picks through the first 30 rounds.

Moberg becomes the first Rockies draftee out of Rocky Top since former Vol outfielder John Czarniecki was selected in the 25th round of the June 2003 Draft. He is also the 132nd all-time player drafted out of Tennessee since 1965.

As a redshirt senior in 2017, Moberg hit .311 with 10 doubles, three triples, nine home runs and 33 RBIs over 51 games at second base. He ranked second on the Vols’ squad in batting average and tied for first with nine homers, while his 108 total bases on the year were the most for Tennessee’s offense.

Among his team-leading nine home runs, the California native belted UT’s first homer of the season with a solo blast in the first inning of the Vols’ season opener at Memphis. Later, he would homer in UT’s regular season finale against Missouri with a leadoff homer to left field at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

The previous season, Moberg began a then-career best campaign over his first 16 games in 2016, leading the NCAA and SEC with 28 runs scored, 1.75 runs scored per game, and ranking tied for second with nine doubles before suffering a knee injury. His .415 average ranked tied for fourth in the SEC.

Over the course of his five seasons with the Orange and White, Moberg hit at a career .296 clip with 10 homers, 77 runs scored and 124 hits in 133 games (102 starts).

Following the 2016 season, Moberg was one of eight graduating seniors for Tennessee, earning his degree in Sociology – Criminal Justice before pursuing a graduate degree in Agriculture, Leadership, Education and Communication in 2017. 

-UT Athletics

Hunter Martin 20th round pick in MLB Draft by Astros

Hunter Martin 20th round pick in MLB Draft by Astros

Hunter Martin – UT / Credit: UT Athletics

University of Tennessee right-handed pitcher Hunter Martin was selected by the Houston Astros in the 20th round (601st overall) of the 2017 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft.

With his selection, Martin joins third baseman Jordan Rodgers (sixth round — Atlanta), righty Kyle Serrano (10th round — Houston) and lefthander Zach Warren (14th round — Philadelphia) as Tennessee’s 2017 Major League Draft picks through the first 20 rounds.

Martin is the second Volunteer selected by Houston in the 2017 Draft (10th round — Kyle Serrano), as well as the 131st all-time draft selection for Tennessee since 1965.

After claiming Tennessee’s Friday night starter role in 2017, Martin finished the season ranking ninth in NCAA Division I baseball and tied for first in the SEC with four complete games. He ranked fourth in the league with a 5.56 strikeout-to-walk ratio, as well as second among SEC pitchers with just 1.55 walks allowed per nine innings.

This season, Martin started a career-high 14 games, posting a 5-7 record with a 3.59 ERA with a career-best four complete games and 89 strikeouts in 92.2 innings of work. He led the Vols’ staff in multiple pitching categories, including innings pitched and strikeouts.

With his four complete games for the Volunteers as a senior, the Murfreesboro, Tenn., native also became the first UT pitcher to record multiple complete games in a single season since VFL and Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Zack Godley did so in 2013 (6).

As a freshman on UT’s staff in 2014, Martin made an immediate impact as his 12 starts marked the second-most by a Volunteer that season. That year, he maintained a 3.25 ERA over 63.2 innings, marking the fourth-best ERA by a first-year Volunteer in school history.

Martin finished his UT career with a 13-17 overall record, 3.50 ERA and 181 strikeouts over 63 games (37 starts), spanning 231.2 innings pitched. His 63 appearances are now the 10th-most by a Vol in school history. 

-UT Athletics

Watch Scotty McCreery Get Personal in New “Five More Minutes” Video

Watch Scotty McCreery Get Personal in New “Five More Minutes” Video

Scotty McCreery released a new video for his current single, “Five More Minutes,” a deeply personal tune he co-wrote with Frank Rogers and Monty Criswell two weeks after the death of his grandfather in 2015. The new clip features Scotty singing the song against a dark backdrop, as home video footage of various experiences from Scotty’s life are interspersed, including singing in choir, playing baseball, vacationing, performing onstage and spending time with his family.

“I wrote this song in early 2015, and the day that I wrote it, I tweeted that I thought I just wrote my favorite song I’ve ever written, and that still holds true today,” says Scotty to Nash Country Daily. “It was just a couple weeks after I lost my Granddaddy Bill, so I was just talking to [co-writers Frank and Monty] about that and where I was in my head space. Anytime you lose somebody, everybody thinks about things you wish you could’ve said to them before they passed or something you wish you could do again. For me, it would’ve been golfing with him. Just chatting about that and Monty had the idea for ‘Five More Minutes,’ and we rolled with it.

“The verses were all real experiences. You’ve got to craft them in to how they work in a song, like the verse when he’s 16 years old and on the porch with Katie. I never had a girlfriend named Katie, but her name fit well in a song. I’ve been on the porch before with parents watching, the awkward moment. The sports lyrics, too, that verse about the football field, for me, it was baseball, but it was the same kind of deal. I remember like it was yesterday my last pitch that I threw, and I walked back to the mound and dusted off the mound with my cleat one last time and just looked around, took it in and walked back. It was kind of a tough moment. Everything in there is autobiographical. We just pieced it together to fit the song.”

Watch Scotty’s new video below.

Zach Warren selected in 14th round of MLB Draft by Phillies

Zach Warren selected in 14th round of MLB Draft by Phillies

Zach Warren – UT / Credit: UT Athletics

University of Tennessee pitcher Zach Warren was selected by the Philadelphia Phillies in the 14th round (413th overall) of the 2017 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft.

With his selection, Warren joins third baseman Jordan Rodgers (sixth round — Atlanta) and pitcher Kyle Serrano (10th round – Houston) as Tennessee’s 2017 Major League Draft picks through the first 14 rounds.

Previously drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates (23rd round — 2014) out of high school, Warren is the 130th all-time draft selection for the Volunteers since 1965 and is the first pick by Philadelphia out of Rocky Top since fellow lefty VFL Bryan Morgado was taken in the fourth round of the 2010 MLB Draft.

Warren claimed Tennessee’s Saturday starter role to begin 2017 before transitioning into one of Tennessee’s go-to relievers. He started 11 of 18 games, posting a 2-5 record with one save and 6.31 ERA while collecting 34 strikeouts over 51.1 innings of work.

Prior to the 2017 season, Warren was tabbed a Top 100 Draft Prospect (No. 64) by Baseball America and earned a position on USA Baseball’s Collegiate National Team. The Vineland, New Jersey native was the 20th Tennessee player to join Team USA and just the third Volunteer pitcher to make the roster in school history. He was first Vol to represent the United States on the hill since VFL and Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Zack Godley served as an alternate on the 2012 squad.

Warren maintained a 4.04 ERA over a career-high 75.2 innings pitched during his sophomore campaign. He fired 58 strikeouts and allowed 34 earned runs en route to earning five wins that season.

As a freshman on UT’s staff in 2015, Warren saw action in eight games, making five starts. He totaled 23.0 innings of work and threw 16 strikeouts to earn two wins.

Over 40 career appearances (30 starts) for the Orange and White, Warren is 9-10 with a 4.98 ERA and 108 strikeouts in 150.0 innings pitched. 

-UT Athletics

Watch Lady Antebellum Push Cinematic Boundaries in New Album Teaser Video, “Heart Break Hotel”

Watch Lady Antebellum Push Cinematic Boundaries in New Album Teaser Video, “Heart Break Hotel”

On the heels of the June 9 release of their new album, Heart Break, Lady Antebellum teamed with director Hodges Ursy for a very unique album teaser.

Snippets of the album’s 13 tracks are woven into a video that was shot at Madonna Inn on California’s Central Coast. Throughout the video, the camera travels seamlessly from room to room in the hotel, where the various occupants experience one of the album’s tracks in their own way.

Props to the team behind this, because it’s a damn clever album teaser.

In Honor of Flag Day, Listen to Aaron Lewis’ New Song, “Folded Flag”

In Honor of Flag Day, Listen to Aaron Lewis’ New Song, “Folded Flag”

Flag Day on June 14 pays tribute to the Stars and Stripes by serving as a reminder of the resolution by the Second Continental Congress on June 14, 1777, that established an official U.S. flag.

In honor of Flag Day, Aaron Lewis—who, if you’ve ever been to one of his shows, you know, is a staunch supporter of our military—released a new song, “Folded Flag,” to digital retailers. Written by Marty Morgan, Luc Nyhus and Yasmine Van Wilt, the song takes the perspective of a Serviceman who was killed in action and is speaking to his widow via a letter he wrote her. “Two men with starch white gloves / Fold the ’til they touch / It’s probably more than I deserve / But I’m proud to get this much / Sendin’ all the love I ever had / Inside this folded flag,” Aaron sings in the chorus.

“In today’s world, the ultimate sacrifice that our servicemen and women give selflessly in protection of the American Dream is often overlooked,” says Aaron. “The first time I heard this song, I watched three battle-hardened special forces soldiers cry after hearing it. I knew it hit home and I knew it deserved to be heard.”

Listen to “Folded Flag” on Spotify below, as well as a live performance of the tune from the Hard Rock in Hollywood, Fla.

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