George Strait, Willie Nelson, And More On New Album: Exclusive.
Key Sentence:
- As Asleep at the Wheel envoys 50 years of carrying western swing to the majority.
- Some well-known companions are assisting the original band with praising the achievement.
George Strait, Willie Nelson, Lyle Lovett, Emmylou Harris, and Lee Ann Womack are the craftsmen showing up on Half a Hundred Years, out Oct. 1 through Home Records/Thirty Tigers.
Frontman Ray Benson began chipping away at the collection, and the orderly creation of narrative, before the pandemic put everything on hold.
“To at last get this collection completed and out feels like the finish of a long abnormal excursion, to author a Grateful Dead saying,” Benson tells Billboard. “From pedal to the metal to some dead stop in March 2020, exploring the new scene of pandemic recording was another test without a doubt! From Perth, Australia, Rome, Italy, Vermont, California, and Nashville to Austin, Texas, the accounts were a victory of imagination and innovation that we needed to rethink each day!
Having the first musicians interfacing with current and previous musicians brought the absolute most gifted performers playing the wide assortment of music, Asleep at the Wheel! Anticipating the mid-year and fall visits to get people dancing and boogieing once more!”
In 1970, Benson helped to establish the band as a 19-year-old in Paw, West Virginia. Situated in Austin since 1974, Asleep at the Wheel has procured eight Grammy Awards and experienced more than 100 staff changes through the following fifty years.
Over the 50 years, Benson has played his job as a melodic caretaker genuinely. “The one explanation that I continued going is that consistently a fan would come up and be so grateful, saying, ‘Never stop. You’re the lone band that goes out and about and makes this old, cool music,'” Benson said in a proclamation. “That is the point at which I realized it was something beyond a living–that I was honored with caretaking a type of music.”
Sleeping at the worst possible time scored just one top 10 on the Hot Country Songs graph, 1975’s “The Letter That Johnny Walker Read,” however has been a close to consistent presence out and about and has delivered more than 25 studio collections, most as of late 2018’s New Routes.