We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Wild West Festival Spotlight 2018: Sara Evans

Wild West Festival Spotlight 2018 is made possible by support from: State Glass, Paul’s Lawn & Tree Service, Coldwell Banker Executive Realty, Hays Convention and Visitors Bureau, Patty Baconrind Appraising, and Diamond R Jewelry.

Headline Sara Evans takes the Wild West Festival stage at 9 p.m. Friday, July 6.

She’s had five #1 singles, sold millions of records, won the Academy of Country Music’s Top Female Vocalist Award and claimed a Country Music Association trophy for her signature song, “Born To Fly.” It’s tough to imagine many accomplishments Sara Evans hasn’t already checked off her bucket list.

And yet, with the release of her eighth studio album, Words demonstrates that she’s still willing to leap into the unknown, taking greater control of her career and calling the shots in a way that’s unusual in country music – particularly unusual for a woman in the genre.

Words is the first project on Evans’ own label: Born To Fly Records, appropriately named after that CMA-winning signature song, which celebrated risk and adventure. Much is familiar about Words. Evans’ voice is warm and strong, the songs are authentic and memorable, and the actual words themselves resonate with the realities of everyday life.

But the album was an eye-opening experience for Evans as a creative force. As the head of her own small, flexible company, she was able to take a streamlined approach to building it. Instead of subjecting the music to multiple departments, each with their own view of one part of her career, Evans approached it with an instinctual, gut-level focus on making a project that represents the 2017 version of Sara Evans.

“The only thing I had on my mind with this album is just Grammy-level songs and the coolest music that I can find,” she says. “I didn’t really go about it in any other way. I wasn’t catering to any part of the business. There was never a thought in my head of ‘Will this work on country radio?’ So what has happened with the music is that it is still very much Sara Evans music. It’s just a little bit deeper than I’ve gone in the past.”

There’s an irony there – part of the reason that Sara Evans is one of country’s iconic modern singers is that her music has worked so well on country radio, at concert halls and amphitheaters, and in fans’ personal playlists. And the music she’s made to date is authentically her. But where Born To Fly narrowed the crowd of voices around her, Words is distinctively Sara Evans. For a woman who always tackled the music her own way, the new album is 100% her own.

It’s a big reason that the album is titled Words. The songs generate a number of words – flexible, commanding, sassy, daring, loving, hopeful, resilient – that all embody parts of Evans’ inimitable persona.

“Songs are a combination of words and melodies, and it’s the words that matter most to me,” she says. “When we go into these pitch meetings, people always ask, ‘What are you looking for? Are you OK with doing something that’s a little more pop?’ I always tell them, ‘Just play me great lyrics.’ That’s what I’m looking for.”

Evans co-wrote three of the album’s 14 songs, instinctively picking material along the way that matches her world view. Thirteen additional females racked up writing credits on the project, including Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott, Pistol Annies’ Ashley Monroe, The Isaacs’ Sonya Isaacs, Hillary Lindsey (“Blue Ain’t Your Color”), Caitlyn Smith (“Wasting All These Tears”), Heather Morgan (“Beat Of The Music”) and Liz Hengber (“For My Broken Heart”).

“A Little Bit Stronger,” Evans’ pensive, heartbreak anthem that spent two weeks at #1 represents a look at the journey thus far, one that’s kept her firmly in the forefront of country music for a solid 20 years. Born and raised in Boonville, Missouri, Sara grew up listening – like much of her audience – to a mix of country, pop and rock on the radio. She began singing with the family band when she was five and made her first attempts at recording as a teenager, committing to a creative path with her move to Nashville in 1991.

Smitten with country’s legacy, her version of Buck Owens’ “I’ve Got A Tiger By The Tail” won the approval of songwriter Harlan Howard – a Country Music Hall of Fame member who authored Patsy Cline’s “I Fall To Pieces” and The Judds’ “Why Not Me” – and of George Jones, who personally invited her to open for him at the historic Ryman Auditorium on the strength of her first album.

That project – Three Chords and the Truth, produced by Dwight Yoakam’s then-guitarist, Pete Anderson – arrived in 1997 to critical acclaim. It accurately represented a key piece of Evans’ musical personality, yet it missed other elements that were likewise influential.

“If I could go back and whisper in my ear, I probably would have advised myself to go a little bit broader with the music and not make such a hillbilly record,” she says. “I was in this mindset that I was gonna be a female version of Dwight Yoakam. That’s a part of who I am, but it’s not all of who I am. I also grew up listening to Stevie Nicks and Phil Collins and so I wish I would have rounded myself out a little more on that first project.”
She clearly learned from the experience. Her resume now includes 14 Top 20 country hits, ranging from her reassuring first #1 – “No Place That Far,” featuring background vocals by Vince Gill – to the neo-traditional “Suds In The Bucket” to the elegant, spiky pop feel of “Slow Me Down.”

But Evans has been expansive in other parts of her public life, too. She’s co-authored a trio of books for Thomas Nelson; advocated on behalf of the Red Cross; became an active contributor to the community in Birmingham, Alabama, where she’s lived with husband Jay Barker for nearly a decade; and established a lifestyle blog — A Real Fine Place —that captures her flare for fashion, beauty and cooking. That blog also demonstrates that she understands, and lives, the solid, practical American work ethic that’s alive and well in her fan base.

“Kim Kardashian will post, ‘Oh my gosh, you guys, look at this new Dolce Gabbana thing that I got,’ but everything is so high-end,” Evans says. “My fans are in middle America – you know, country music listeners, small town, exactly what I come from – and so I’m like, ‘Well, I totally found this incredible belt in Target and I put it with this nice shirt.’ Mine is completely relatable. I feel like the All-American girl-next-door that you could be a friend and go have coffee with.”

Evans is such a sign post for women in country that when the producers of the Nashville TV series wanted to ensure its realism, they sought out Evans as a consultant to help them understand firsthand the dynamics of operating as a touring country singer and a mom, specifically informing Connie Britton’s character, Rayna Jaymes. With the formation of Born To Fly Records, Evans now has a life-meets-art moment, with her real life embodying the label-owner role that Jaymes took on with the fictional Highway 65 Records. Not that Evans has any intention of copying the on-screen character.

“I’m not trying to be Rayna Jaymes and I certainly don’t want to die in a car wreck,” Evans says with a laugh.
What Evans does want to do is represent the full panorama of her artistic vision. By handpicking the team around her and making self-expression the priority of her work, she’s found songs that continue to connect her to the emotional core of her audience, and to adhere to that Born To Fly embrace of risk and adventure.

“I don’t use that word a lot, resilient, but I would say that’s the best way to define me as a person,” Evans says. “I feel so blessed, but at the same time, there’s blood, sweat and tears in every single thing that I’ve gotten in this life. I have gone out and just really, really sold it, and I’m still doing that to this day.”
Doing it her way. As a mom. As a record company entrepreneur. And, mostly, as a distinct artist still excited about her unique journey.

HPD Activity Log June 20

The Hays Police Department responded to 7 animal calls and conducted 16 traffic stops Wed., June 20, 2018, according to the HPD Activity Log.

 

Disturbance – General–500 block E 16th St, Hays; 12:30 AM; 1 AM
Disorderly Conduct–700 block Elm St, Hays; 1:56 AM; 2 AM
Suspicious Activity–1800 block Milner St, Hays; 6:14 AM
Mental Health Call–2200 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 7:17 AM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–3700 block Vine St, Hays; 7:32 AM
Dead Animal Call–7th and Vine St, Hays; 9:07 AM
Disturbance – Noise–1300 block Haney Dr, Hays; 9:39 AM
Assist – Other (not MV)–2700 block Augusta Ln, Hays; 9:53 AM
Juvenile Complaint–300 block W 12th St, Hays; 9:56 AM
Animal At Large–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 10:22 AM
Death by Natural Causes–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 11:34 AM
MV Accident-Private Property–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 11:50 AM
Animal At Large–Hays; 1:17 PM
MV Accident-Private Property; 3600 block Vine St, Hays; 1:32 PM

Public health warnings for Sebelius, Webster Lakes

KDHE

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE), in conjunction with the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT), has issued public health warnings for Sebelius (Norton) Lake and Webster Lake for the upcoming weekend and week.

If a lake is under a public health warning for blue-green algae, activities such as boating and fishing may be safe. However, direct contact with water (i.e., wading, skiing and swimming) is strongly discouraged for people, pets and livestock. The lakes currently under a public health advisory:

Warning: Sebelius (Norton) Lake, Norton County
Warning and Beach Closed: Webster Lake, Rooks County

Watch: Colwich City Lake, Sedgwick County

The warning for Topeka’s Central Park Lake (Pond) has been lifted.

Lakes under a warning are not closed. Marinas, lakeside businesses and park camping facilities are open for business. If swim beaches are closed, it will be specifically noted. Drinking water and showers at parks are safe and not affected by algae blooms. Boating and fishing are safe on lakes under a warning, but contact with the water should be avoided. It is safe to eat fish caught during a harmful blue-green algae outbreak, if the fish are rinsed with clean water. Only the fillet portion should be consumed, and all other parts should be discarded. Hands should also be washed with clean water after handling fish taken from an affected lake. Zoned lakes may have portions fully open for all recreation even if other portions are under a warning.

Kansans should be aware that blooms are unpredictable. They can develop rapidly and may float around the lake, requiring visitors to exercise their best judgment. If there is scum, a paint-like surface or the water is bright green, avoid contact and keep pets away. These are indications that a harmful bloom may be present. Pet owners should be aware that animals that swim in or drink water affected by a harmful algal bloom or eat dried algae along the shore may become seriously ill or die.

When a warning is issued, KDHE recommends the following precautions be taken:

  • Lake water is not safe to drink for pets or livestock.
  • Lake water, regardless of blue-green algae status, should never be consumed by humans.
  • Water contact should be avoided.
  • Fish may be eaten if they are rinsed with clean water and only the fillet portion is consumed, while all other parts are discarded.
  • Do not allow pets to eat dried algae.
  • If lake water contacts skin, wash with clean water as soon as possible.
  • Avoid areas of visible algae accumulation.

KDHE samples publicly-accessible bodies of water for blue-green algae when the agency receives reports of potential algae blooms in Kansas lakes. Based on sampling results, KDHE reports on potentially harmful conditions.

For information on blue-green algae and reporting potential harmful algal blooms, please visit www.kdheks.gov/algae-illness/index.htm.

FHSU’s Olliff recognized for exemplary leadership

Dr. Kenton Olliff

FHSU University Relations

Dr. Kenton Olliff, assistant vice president for student affairs at Fort Hays State University, recently received the Chamberlain-Rapp Exemplary Leadership Award.

The award, presented by the Kansas Consumer Advisory Council for Adult Mental Health Inc., is given annually to a Kansas mental health provider who exhibits outstanding leadership skills on behalf of the state’s consumers and recovery movement.

Olliff accepted the award earlier this month at the Kansas Recovery Conference-Moving Forward Through Change in Park City.

Sunny, warm Friday with a chance for thunderstorms

Today Mostly sunny, with a high near 86. North northwest wind 5 to 8 mph becoming east in the afternoon.

Tonight Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 11pm. Some of the storms could be severe. Increasing clouds, with a low around 61. East wind 5 to 11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Saturday Mostly sunny, with a high near 88. Northwest wind around 6 mph becoming west southwest in the morning.
Saturday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 65. Southwest wind around 7 mph becoming east southeast in the evening.

Sunday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 88. Southeast wind 6 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 24 mph.

Sunday Night Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 1am. Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 65. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New rainfall amounts between 1 and 2 inches possible.

FHSU alum honored for work with the KBI as polygraphist

Roger Butler (center) accepting the 2018 Life Membership Award. Pictured with Jim Wardell (AAPP Chairman) and Derek Piasecki (AAPP President).

By COLE REIF
Great Bend Post

Roger Butler grew up in Claflin and worked in law enforcement between schooling at Barton Community College and Fort Hays State University. After serving as Police Chief in Claflin and as a member of the Great Bend Police Department, Butler decided to go to polygraph school near Los Angeles, California.

Barton instructor Gary Pedigo encouraged Butler to take polygraph training, and 38 years later it has turned into a good decision and career with the Kansas Bureau of Investigation for the Great Bend resident.

Roger Butler Audio

The modern polygraph, or lie detector, was invented in 1921 and Butler says the technology in his more than three decades with the KBI has taken the original analog systems to more detailed computerized charts.

Butler was recognized with the 2018 William J. Taylor Life Membership Award at the recent American Association of Police Polygraphists convention June 3 – 8 in Louisville, Kentucky. The award is for “outstanding and extraordinary service to the AAPP.”

Roger Butler Audio

The Life Membership Award is given to one member annually that is nominated by a two-thirds majority of the Board of Directors and approved by a majority vote of the memberships at the annual meeting.

The AAPP was created in 1977 to promote ethics, training, and professionalism in the area of law enforcement polygraphs. Polygraphs are used heavily in preliminary investigations to help investigators determine who good suspects are and helps resolve the case if a good polygraph can result in a confession to a crime.

Lt. Gov. Mann in Hays Friday morning

Kansas Lt. Gov. Tracey Mann (R)

OFFICE OF GOV. COLYER

TOPEKA –  Kansas Lt. Governor Tracey Mann will be touring northwest Kansas, including Hays, Friday, June 22.  The schedule of stops is listed below.

 8:00-8:45 a.m.

 K-State Agriculture Research Center

 1232 240th Ave, Hays

11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.

Meet and Greet at the Sheridan County Public Library

801 Royal Ave, Hoxie

1:30-2:00 p.m.

Tour Midwest Energy

Veterans Memorial Dr., Colby

 

Regents approves tuition hikes for the 6 state universities

The Kansas Board of Regents (KBOR) approved tuition rates for each of the six state universities in Kansas for the 2018-2019 academic year.

According to a media release, tuition increases for resident and non-resident undergraduates ranged from 1.1 percent to 2.8 percent, apart from Kansas State University Polytechnic, which had no tuition increase. Tuition increases for resident and non-resident graduate students also ranged from 1.1 percent to 2.8 percent, excluding Kansas State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine, which had no tuition increase.

“Raising tuition is always a difficult decision that the Regents deliberate carefully,” said KBOR Chair David Murfin. “We will continue to work with the Governor and the Legislature, as well our institutions, to keep higher education as affordable as possible for Kansans.”

In 2018, state universities received a partial restoration of the $31 million reduction in state funding that occurred in 2016. This allowed universities to propose tuition increases that were among the lowest in recent years.

One of the primary responsibilities of the Board of Regents, as defined in state law, is to set tuition and fees at state universities. Based on the tuition rates approved today, it is projected that approximately $743 million will be raised from tuition revenues this upcoming year.

The tuition proposals that were approved by the Board Wednesday may be accessed through the June 2018 agenda here.

INSIGHT KANSAS: ‘Come gather ‘round children …’

Despite the great success of female candidates across the country this year, 2018 may become, even more, the political year of youth. This rosy possibility confronts the hard historical reality of low interest, low voting turnout, and general cynicism toward politics among the young.

But there are signs, in Kansas and across the country, that this year may be different.

A few days ago, a BBC crew came to Kansas to do a major story on the teenagers running for governor. These individuals received a spate of publicity early on, but that soon dissipated. Still, Republicans Tyler Ruzich and Joe Tutera and Democrat Jack Bergeson will be on major party ballots in the August primary.

Burdett Loomis, Professor, Political Science, College of Liberal Arts and Science, University of Kansas

More importantly, if you haven’t heard these candidates debate the issues, you should. They are well spoken, coherent, passionate, and brave enough to risk criticism from various quarters.

Then there are the Parkland, Florida, students, who in the wake of their mass-murder school tragedy have bravely, aggressively, and effectively turned their grief and anger into a powerful campaign, both on social media and in large-scale events, to encourage far more youth voting and to force gun violence onto the nation’s political agenda. Indeed, many of them brought their message to Kansas this past weekend.

Bob Dylan wrote, more than 50 years ago in a different context, “Your sons and your daughters are beyond your command” and “your old road is rapidly agin’.” The voices of the Parkland students, amplified hundreds of times across the country, constitute a powerful political force in 2018.

Still, this isn’t the 1960s. What is remarkable about this year’s politics is how conventional it has become. To be sure, there is great passion, but it flows through our political institutions: record numbers of primary candidacies among Democrats; a great influx of youthful volunteers in campaigns; and powerful efforts to register new voters, often in the face of unreasonable barriers.

For thirty-five years, I have run internship programs in D.C. and Topeka; 1500 or so students have participated, almost always learning far more than they would in a classroom. This spring, the level of interest may have stood at an all-time high, with 25 interns in Washington and 25 in Topeka. These are students who want to work within the system, regardless of their diverse ideologies and interests. It is beyond heartening to see them grow over the course of four months of intensive work.

Equally significant this year is the level of interest in working on campaigns, perhaps the single best way to get your feet wet in American politics. Given the prevailing political winds and the number of candidates (six in the KS3 Democratic primary), somewhat larger numbers of students are working for Democrats, but many diligently provide their time and effort to Republicans. Nothing could be healthier for democracy than such on-the-ground endeavors.

As much as I’d like to believe that younger people will work hard and change the system, the political scientist in me is skeptical, while the small-d democrat remains hopeful.

Moreover, some data offer clues for the future. Most notably, in 2003 the Pew Charitable Trust found that 53 percent of Millennials identified/leaned Democratic, while 38 percent identified/leaned Republican. In 2017, with fourteen more years of political experience, Millennials broke 59 percent Democratic to 32 percent Republican.

A strong showing in 2018 might cement – or even increase – that margin, but that’s putting the proverbial cart way before the donkey.

Burdett Loomis is an emeritus professor of political science at the University of Kansas.

Beat writer for Golden State Warriors visits Hays, recaps championship season

DeSalvo and Letourneau in the KAYS studio.

By C.D. DESALVO
Hays Post

For the second straight year, I had the honor of talking to Connor Letourneau, who works for the San Fransisco Chronicle as a beat writer for the Golden State Warriors NBA franchise. Connor’s aunt and uncle (Steve & Suzanne Leikam) live in Hays as do other family members. Every year after a grueling season of meeting fast-approaching deadlines and little sleep, Connor spends a few days decompressing in a quieter, more relaxed environment before heading back to the Bay Area for the NBA Draft.

Connor was kind enough to stop by Eagle Communications and answer my fan-boy questions, as well as recap the season, players and moments from the Golden State Warriors’ 2018 championship season.

Here’s who Connor is and what his connection is to Hays in his own words:

I asked Connor what a typical day in the life of a professional sports beat writer is like. He usually writes five to six stories on gamedays and two to three on off days:

How this season was different than last year for a team that brought back 12 players and how the mental exhaustion of chasing a third championship in four years affected them. Also, the challenge of the Western Conference Finals:

Connor talked about the rumors that there were rifts in the locker room during the season:

I asked Connor about the unselfishness of this team and he explained how that has actually hurt the Warriors as a whole at times: 

I was interested to know about some of the individuals on the team and what they’re like off the floor and behind closed doors. Connor explained that they’re just normal people that play basketball for a living:

Kevin Durant

Steph Curry

Klay Thompson

Draymond Green

Head Coach Steve Kerr

The final thing I asked Connor was what the Warriors plans are for the future and if this dynasty will ever come to an end any time soon:

🎥 New play feature proposed for Hays Aquatic Park

(Click to enlarge)

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Hays city commissioners will begin review of the 2019 budget tonight as they hear funding requests from the first three of several outside agencies.

Fort Hays State University is requesting $100,000 for its scholarship program, an increase of $10,000 from last year. The Downtown Hays Development Corporation (DHDC) is asking for the same amount, $53,655.

There is no request from the former Ellis County Coalition for Economic Development, now known as Grow Hays. The group announced last year it would no longer depend on financing from the city or from Ellis County. Both entities cut their funding to the group by 50 percent for 2018.

Another agenda item addresses summer fun.

During the annual joint meeting of the Hays Recreation Commission and the city earlier this year, staff presented various options that could be added to the Hays Aquatic Park to enhance the facility. Commissioners liked the idea and directed staff to search for a multi-play aquatic feature to replace the existing “starburst” in the zero-depth entry area.

Proposed new feature for Hays Aquatic Park

Three proposals were received ranging in price from $176,250 to $185,000.

The $185,000 play feature from RJR Enterprises, which allows more patrons to participate at one time, is being recommended by staff.  The monies would come from the Pool Reserve Fund.

Other agenda items include:

  • A bid for a small pocket park in the King’s Gate development which would be funded by the benefit district with no cost to the city.
  • Renewal of the city’s commercial insurance to include increased premiums
  • Ordinance amending the Hilton Garden Inn and Conference Center Community Improvement District (CID) state date from April 1, 2019 to July 1, 2020, to accommodate a changed construction schedule

The complete agenda for the June 21 work session is available here. The meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. in Hays City Hall. 1507 Main.

 

 

 

Wild West Festival Spotlight 2018: Cody Johnson

Wild West Festival Spotlight 2018 is made possible by support from: State Glass, Paul’s Lawn & Tree Service, Coldwell Banker Executive Realty, Hays Convention and Visitors Bureau, Patty Baconrind Appraising, and Diamond R Jewelry.

Headliner Cody Johnson will take the Wild West Festival Stage at 9 p.m. Thursday, July 5.

—–

When Cody Johnson’s Cowboy Like Me debuted in the Top 10 on the Billboard Country Albums chart in January 2014, jaws dropped in offices all over Nashville.

“I got a lot of ‘Who is this kid?’” Johnson says with a laugh two years later. “I love that. That was a new horizon. And I’m gonna work to make sure people know exactly who I am.”

Johnson does that from the start in Gotta Be Me, a follow-up project that’s loaded with solid country instrumentation and winsome melodies. In the first minute alone, he paints himself as a cowboy, raised on outlaw country, who drinks too much, fights too much and won’t apologize for having an opinion. By the time the 14-track journey is over, he’s shared his rodeo history in “The Only One I Know (Cowboy Life),” demonstrated his woman’s influence in “With You I Am” and paid homage to his gospel heritage in “I Can’t Even Walk.”

Johnson delivers it all with an uncanny confidence. His smoky baritone and ultra-Southern enunciations give him a voice as uniquely identifiable as country kingpins Jason Aldean or Tim McGraw. And he uses it to convey a Texas-proud swagger, a real-man charm and an unwavering honesty about who he is, where he comes from and where he hopes to go.

“I’m a God-fearin’, hard-workin’, beer-drinkin’, fightin’, lovin’ cowboy from Texas,” he grins. “That’s about it.”
The hard-workin’ part is key. The other parts are easily found in his music. It’s intense, focused, sincere. And when he takes the stage, there’s a Garth-like conviction to his performances. Johnson inhabits the songs, recreates their emotions because they’re so familiar. And he’s willing to lay bare those emotions because he’s always been willing to risk. He lives in the moment behind that microphone, the same way he rode bulls in an earlier day.

“That’s a very, very rough sport to be in,” Johnson notes. “It’s very, very rough on your body. It’s very rough on your mind, and it’s scary. I mean there’s not a professional bull rider that won’t tell you it’s not scary. If it wasn’t scary, we wouldn’t do it.”

Johnson pauses for just a beat.

“I’m kind of an adrenaline junkie.”

Needing a fix is part of the attraction in both the rodeo and music. In the former, there’s always another buckle to chase, another bull to conquer for eight seconds. In the latter, there’s always another fan to win over, another song to write. And in some ways, Johnson has been chasing something illusory, indefinable, since he first arrived on planet Earth in Southeast Texas.

Johnson grew up in tiny Sebastapol, an unincorporated community on the eastern shore of the Trinity River that’s never exceeded 500 residents. Even today, it’s more than 30 miles to the nearest Walmart, in Huntsville, Texas, a town best known as the headquarters for the state’s criminal justice department. It’s a rough and tumble area, and it comes through in the music. Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, George Strait, Billy Joe Shaver – their songs were all essential to the local clubs, and Johnson was exposed to their mysterious allure even before he was old enough to get in.

“You could hear the music from those bars across that lake,” he recalls. “I’d always hear somebody singing ‘Whiskey Bent And Hell Bound’ or something like that, and I always wondered what was going on across that water in those barrooms. It definitely intrigued me. I always wanted to go see what was on the other side of the tracks.”

At a young age, Johnson was given the tools to eventually work in those clubs, though his official education was grounded in the church. His father played drums for their congregation, and that was likewise the first instrument that young Cody picked up.

“Learning drums first taught me about feeling the song – feeling that dynamic of when it’s supposed to be big and when it’s supposed to be soft,” he says. “I think that still sticks with me as a songwriter and as a performer, and in turn it’s helped me shape my band, because I know what I’m looking for on every front.”

Johnson learned guitar next, and when a teacher heard him playing an original song, he convinced Johnson to form a band with a few other students enrolled in the Future Farmers of America. Just a few months later, that first band finished runner-up in a Texas State FFA talent contest, creating an internal buzz that Johnson would continue to chase.

He didn’t necessarily think it would be a career. He briefly went to Angelina College in Lufkin, Texas, but traded that in to become a rodeo pro. Johnson did OK in that sport – the oversized belt buckle he wears today was won fair and square on the back of a bucking bull – but he broke a litany of bones: his right leg, his left arm, two ribs and his right collarbone.

Cody started recording his own music during that phase of his life, beginning with Black And White Label, which featured his dad, Carl, on drums. Johnson sold the CDs, pressed on his own CoJo imprint, from his pickup.
Eventually, Cody took a job at the prison to pay the bills. His band kept hitting the clubs on the weekend, with Johnson kept banging away on the guitar on Fridays and Saturdays while overseeing some very hardened convicts whose crimes had cut them off from humanity.

Cody Johnson Live from Revolver Media on Vimeo.

“There’s a lonely style of music that a lot of those guys listen to,” Johnson says. “I worked in the field for a while, and they sang old prison work songs. Some had kind of lost hope, and I can see now that you have to sing about people that don’t have hope the same way you want to sing to give them hope.”

Meanwhile, his weekend crowds began to grow, and Johnson started landing hits on the Texas music charts. After the release of his third album, he won New Male Vocalist of the Year in the Texas Regional Radio Music Awards.
The music thing started to look like maybe it could be a business, not just a sideline pursuit. He was stunned when his wife, Brandi, agreed.

“It was a moment when I felt like I wasn’t on my own anymore,” Johnson says. “To have my fiancée at the time say ‘I’m behind you, no matter what we have to do,’ it gave me a whole new level of confidence that some people might have thought I already had. But I didn’t.”

Even with her belief, the road wasn’t easy.

“I sacrificed, and I worked my tail,” he says. “I barely slept for years trying to make this thing happen, and me and my wife didn’t have a lot of groceries. We didn’t have a lot of things for a long time.”

Johnson reached a new creative plateau when he enlisted singer/songwriter Trent Willmon, who wrote Montgomery Gentry’s “Lucky Man,” to produce an album in Nashville. That project, A Different Day, raised the bar on Johnson’s barroom ambitions. The studio musicians he worked with challenged his own band. Johnson grew – and his bandmates grew – because they had to stretch themselves to live up to the album on the road. That pattern has continued through three projects as he continues to chase something illusory.

“It’s that always-never-good-enough kind of attitude that gives us that drive,” Johnson says.

When Cowboy Like Me broke onto the Billboard chart, it demonstrated that they had built an audience, but also gave them a little cache to push it even further. The band has broken beyond the red-dirt confines, drawing sizeable audiences in such far-flung destinations as California, Montana, Wisconsin and the Southeast, as Johnson wins over fans with his honest songs and on-stage ferocity.

And Johnson’s built up a Twitter following of 73,000 fans – impressive numbers for a guy who’s marketed and developed his career without the aid of a major label.

He approached Gotta Be Me with two major objectives: to make yet another advance musically, and to provide an authentic self-portrait to that growing fan base still trying to figure out who this Cody Johnson guy really is. He worked with some of Nashville’s best songwriters – including David Lee (“Hello World,” “19 Somethin’”), Terry McBride (“Play Something Country,” “I Keep On Loving You”) and Dan Couch (“Somethin’ ‘Bout A Truck,” “Hey Pretty Girl”) – while drawing on his own history, rich with its own compelling subject matter.

“Every Scar” draws a life lesson from all those rodeo bruises and broken bones. “Half A Song” blends his barroom experiences with the melodic and rhythmic sensibilities he picked up at his daddy’s feet. The fiddle-rich “Wild As You” embraces a freedom-loving woman whose sense of adventure is as deep as Johnson’s own. And that spacious gospel closer, featuring his parents on harmony, surrenders some of the rabble-rousing, adrenaline-raising pieces of his past into bigger spiritual hands.

In essence, Gotta Be Me documents the life of a guy who’s lived in the fast lane as a beer-drinkin’, rodeo-ridin’ cowboy, but who’s also seen just enough darkness to temper that wild streak.

“You’re only a couple bad decisions every day from screwing your whole life up,” he reasons.

With a good woman behind him and a whole lot of promise in front of him, that’s enough to keep Cody Johnson in check. The energy he put into his rebel years now goes into his work. He’s not sure what he’s chasing, but he knows it’s paying off The “me” that Cody Johnson is becoming will continue to evolve, and it’s his intent to share that journey in an honest, meaningful way. The same way that Haggard, Strait and Nelson did when they made their marks. When it’s all said and done, the plan is mostly to reach the point where people are no longer asking “Who is this kid?”

“I don’t want to be a blemish on country music,” Cody Johnson says. “I don’t want to be a dot. I’d like to be a mark.”

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File