Up front
Brad Paisley keeps making hits and taking risks
LOS ANGELES - In the decade since country singer Brad Paisley put out his debut album, the kid from Glen Dale, W.Va., has concocted a savvy musical amalgam of Roger Miller’s songwriting wit, Buck Owens’ hard-rocking twang, and Chet Atkins’ guitar wizardry. But there’s powerful evidence of another influence at work in Paisley’s music, one of the titans of American popular culture: Mark Twain.
Like Twain’s youthful literary hero Tom Sawyer, Paisley frequently couples wisdom with a finely honed sense of humor and appears to share Huck Finn’s disenchantment with the emphasis that all those grown-ups around him place on becoming “sivilized.’’
In hits such as “Online,’’ “
In person, Paisley’s as quick with a quip as you’d expect from his humor-laced songs and he has a gift for putting visitors quickly at ease with his long-lost-friend demeanor. He frequently exhibits an impressive attention to detail, whether it’s concerning some facet of the stage setup for his live shows, the production work on a new recording, or the musical equipment surrounding him.
“Welcome to the Future’’ opens with a spirited appreciation of the technological progress in the last half century before segueing into an expression of amazement and gratitude at other changes that have taken place. He charts a seismic shift that courses from witnessing the burning of a cross on the lawn of a black classmate years ago to the recent election of Barack Obama as president.
“There was an amazing shift in public emotion that night. It was breathtaking. I felt like in country music, we’re the first ones to write about some kind of conflict, or war, and yet we shy away from these other topics, like equal rights. . . . I had that idea, and Chris DuBois, the song’s co-writer, and I started mulling this around. I said I don’t want it to be a dark song in any way; I want it to be as hopeful as it can be. We need to make this point and make it well.’’
It’s a big gamble whether the country audience will embrace that kind of subject matter - a gamble Paisley’s label is courting by releasing the song shortly as his next single. It also will test whether he can extend his streak of 10 consecutive No. 1 singles, a modern record in pop music.
“We tend to be a Republican format,’’ said Joe Galante, chairman of Sony Music Nashville, the parent company of Paisley’s label, Arista Nashville. “He’s reaching out a little differently with this one, so it is a little riskier than normal.’’
“I wanted to get the emotion of it without being the least bit preachy,’’ Paisley said. “Republican or Democrat, on Nov. 4 you had to be moved. People stood there in disbelief at the turn our country had taken. There was a sense of pride, no matter who you were. I remember having discussions on my bus, in my household: Could he really win this? A lot of people were saying, ‘I don’t know if it’s time, if the country’s ready.’ And then all of a sudden, I guess we’re ready. Welcome to the future.
“It’s the proudest thing I’ve ever recorded,’’ he said.![]()



