This Past Weekend - E534 Brooks & Dunn
Episode Date: October 1, 2024Brooks & Dunn are a country music duo featuring songwriters Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn. They’re known for their many hits like “Neon Moon”, “Boot Scootin’ Boogie”, “Red Dirt Road” and ...more. Their album “Reboot 2” comes out November 15th featuring new takes on their classic songs. Theo meets up with country music legends Brooks & Dunn to talk about writing some of their biggest hits while still strangers early on, memories of their friend Johnny Cash, and the competitive side of making music. Brooks and Dunn: https://www.instagram.com/brooksanddunn/ ------------------------------------------------ Tour Dates! https://theovon.com/tour New Merch: https://www.theovonstore.com ------------------------------------------------- Sponsored By: BetterHelp: This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp — go to http://betterhelp.com/theo to get 10% off your first month Shopify: Go to http://shopify.com/theo to sign up for a $1-per-month trial period. Manscaped: Go to http://manscaped.com and use code THEO to get 20% off and free shipping. Rocket Money: Go to http://rocketmoney.com/theo to cancel your unwanted subscriptions with Rocket Money. Boot Barn: Boot Barn: Visit http://BootBarn.com and use code THEO to get 15% off one item now through October 30th. ------------------------------------------------- Music: “Shine” by Bishop Gunn Bishop Gunn - Shine ------------------------------------------------ Submit your funny videos, TikToks, questions and topics you'd like to hear on the podcast to: tpwproducer@gmail.com Hit the Hotline: 985-664-9503 Video Hotline for Theo Upload here: https://www.theovon.com/fan-upload Send mail to: This Past Weekend 1906 Glen Echo Rd PO Box #159359 Nashville, TN 37215 ------------------------------------------------ Find Theo: Website: https://theovon.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/theovon Facebook: https://facebook.com/theovon Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thispastweekend Twitter: https://twitter.com/theovon YouTube: https://youtube.com/theovon Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheoVonClips Shorts Channel: https://bit.ly/3ClUj8z ------------------------------------------------ Producer: Zach https://www.instagram.com/zachdpowers Producer: Nick https://www.instagram.com/realnickdavis/ Producer: Ben https://www.instagram.com/benbeckermusic/ Producer: Colin https://instagram.com/colin_reiner Producer: Cam https://www.instagram.com/cam__george/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Some new tour dates coming up.
Sioux Falls, South Dakota,
La Crosse and Green Bay, Wisconsin,
Moline, Illinois,
Colorado Springs, Colorado,
Casper, Wyoming, Billings,
Missoula, Bloomington, Indiana,
Columbus, Ohio, Champaign, Illinois,
Grand Rapids, Lafayette, Louisiana,
and Beaumont, Texas. Get all your tickets at
theovon.com slash t-o-u-r and thank you so much for the support. Today's guests are icons in the
world of country music. If they had a Mount Rushmore of country, you might see these fellas
right up there on it. They had solo careers before they joined together
to create one of the most popular tandems
in the history of country.
You know there are many hits like
Neon Man, Mama Maria, and Meets Gee, Meets Gee,
and many, many more.
Their new album Reboot 2 comes out November 15th.
It has new takes on their classic songs
with folks like Morgan Wallen, Jelly Roll, and Laney Wilson.
I am so excited today to sit down with Mr. Kix Brooks
and Ronnie Dunn, Brooks and Dunn.
["Shine That Light On Me"]
I'm all set. ["Shine That Light On Me"]
I'm off the stage. I'm off the stage.
Yeah, thank you guys for coming in, man.
Good to be here.
Good to see you guys.
I watch you all the time, not just saying that. I watched you with Post Malone the other day.
I don't know how far back that was
videoed or shot.
Oh yeah. Funny stuff.
Yeah, he's wild, man.
Yeah, he's really... He's wild, man. He's a cat. Yeah. He's really,
he's just like an infectious thing, kind of.
Is it funny?
Yeah. Yes sir. No sir.
Yeah.
Psst.
Psst.
He's like a kid who got in trouble,
but he's going to keep partying, you know?
Yeah. Yeah, right.
Right.
Yup.
Will I be stopped drinking?
He said, where's the worst time of your life?
Well, it's when I was drinking.
Have you stopped? No. of your life? Well, it's when I was drinking. Have you stopped?
No.
What's different?
Well, I mean, he's, yeah.
He's an interesting cat.
And he's absolutely a sweetheart, though.
Oh, you talk to him, it's like Mr. Theo.
He's the nicest guy.
Yeah.
Yeah, he's super nice, man.
You guys have had such a career, man.
Thank you so much for all the music
Yeah, thanks for letting us hang around
Appreciate it around how long?
several semesters, yeah
Does it feel did it ever fit did it feel like um, cuz you guys got part
Do you guys get paired together or how did it kind of the beginning become?
We're not gonna go through all the history, but I just want, you know, just so some people may not know.
Classic story, you know, right out of the movies, just friend of ours who we both had
a lot of respect for Tim Dubois, great songwriter himself and whatever. He's actually an accountant
at Vanderbilt as well, you know, smart guy too. But he just invited us to lunch and thought we might be a good pair up.
And Ronnie and I are just kind of growling
across the table at each other.
It didn't make any sense to us.
And he said, look, you guys can both write songs.
He goes, just go see if you can write a song together.
Okay, so I think that was Tuesday, maybe Thursday,
we wrote Brand New Man.
Friday we wrote this song, Next Broken Heart. And Ronnie had already written Neon Moon and Boot Scootin'
Boogie. And I had another song, Lost and Found, and we just screwed up and been riding the bus
for 30 years trying to figure out how to get off of it. Yeah. It's like we weren't, we weren't
brothers growing up. Like, yeah, challenge it. Did it feel like a pressure?
Like you had to be like, like I just want, yeah, like,
cause with comedians, they don't really have that,
where they kind of partner you up,
I guess for television shows and stuff they do,
where they package shows.
But yeah, I wonder, did it feel,
did you guys feel a pressure like we have to,
or it was just?
No.
No, we felt, we felt broke and hungry.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm sure it was some motivation. We, we, we felt broke and hungry. Yeah
None of these kids really working that great Yeah, I mean I'd had some some success as a songwriter written a couple of hits and whatever and Ronnie just been out
No key, you know hide and writing great songs
totally unheard of for
Somebody who hadn't been in Nashville, really
studying the craft, so to say, to show up with songs like Neon Moon and Bootscoot and
Oh, yeah, next album, Hard Working Man and used to be my Ronnie just had written all
these great songs by itself, which, you know, now I can't even tell you who's out there
writing songs by themselves.
They'll probably watch and go, Hey, how about me, dude? But you know, it's who's out there writing songs by themselves. They'll probably watch and go hey, how about me dude?
But you know, it's it's a co-writing town. It just really is it's becoming more and more of a co-writing town
I last more and more writers on every song with nine writers
Nine writers. I mean what the heck we still like we'd throw a bet you mean like, you know three writers in yeah
Did it feel like over did it feel like you guys had to,
cause I bet it's like, once you get partnered with somebody,
it's like, dang, this is a long ride,
and you don't really know how long the ride is
when you start, you know?
Did it feel like you guys over the years,
like you had to be best friends?
Did it ever feel like a pressure to be like that?
Maybe, but we didn't, I don't think we took it to heart.
I mean, it was like, hey, Tim, back up on your story
a little bit for me.
But Tim had heard me playing a bar in Oklahoma,
and he was circling through, and Clive Davis,
and he were putting a label together.
So he told me, he says, I want to sign.
He said, I've already got Alan Jackson and Diamond Rio.
He already had a boy singer and a band.
And Pam Tillers.
And it's like, he's like, he's going down the list.
We didn't realize this at first,
but he was going down the list going, okay, now I need her.
I said, trio, I've got a trio.
Now I need a duo.
Yeah.
But he didn't, we didn't know that till after the fact.
The judge were breaking up.
So he saw an open slot on the CMAs.
I think.
Might have been true.
It was true.
I think it was that manipulative.
Yeah.
Yeah, I saw you guys do your walkout with Morgan.
How was that, man?
That was cool.
He's got it stirred up.
And it's like, OK, so where do we?
He's got it stirred up.
So how about that kid? Did you know about it before what it was or no? stirred up and it's like, okay, so where do we? So where do we?
How about that kid?
Did you know about it before what it was or no?
I really didn't.
They were trying to explain to me what was going on
and like, we're going to look back
and you guys come down the hallway
and then y'all are going to walk out together to his stage.
You know, we're going to film it and it's a big deal.
I'm like, okay.
We keep up with it to the extent that we know how he's selling out
stadiums everywhere and it's like, you know, get out of the way and he's crashing websites
and live nation is, you know, if you announce ticket sales at all, you know, it blows up
through the roof. So, and I had, I had, uh, did a walk on with him at Bridgestone when
he played here a couple of years ago. Oh yeah. I saw that show actually. Really? I was at
that show. Yeah. Yeah. That was awesome. Yeah. But yeah, I saw that show actually. Really? I was at that show, yeah.
That was awesome.
But yeah, to do that is kind of an interesting thing
because you're back there,
you don't really know what's going on, you know?
You can kind of start to hear people cheering,
but you don't really know.
So did you do that with him?
Yeah, yeah, I got to do one with him here in Nashville.
Yeah, with DeAndre Hopkins
that plays for the Tennessee Titans.
Uh-huh, yeah, sure.
But it's still kind of confusing because you're like- J-Hop. Yeah, D Deandre Hopkins at plays for the Tennessee Titans. Uh huh. Yeah, sure. But it's still kind of confusing because you're like...
J-hop.
Yeah, D-hop.
Oh, that's what I meant.
Oh, what did I call him?
Deandre.
No, but when I did it, he wasn't doing the walk yet.
So we were in Kansas City the other night with him.
Is that right?
No, no, no.
Yeah, we were in Kansas City.
Yeah, Kansas City.
Yeah, that's where you guys did the walkout with him, right? Yeah. Yeah, no, no. Yeah, we were in Kansas City. Yeah, Kansas City. Yeah, that's where you guys had to walk out with him, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, because it's kind of wild.
Yeah.
It's just this thing, I guess they kind of just started it.
Yeah, you don't know.
Yeah, you're right.
You're just kind of thrown into the fray there.
Yeah, you just kind of don't know what's going on.
Well, am I supposed to walk here and be cool?
Am I supposed to like, you know, rub your shoulders?
Right.
And it's starting to get weird.
People are rubbing on him and people are, yeah. Right? It's getting And it's starting to get weird. People are rubbing on him and people are, yeah.
Right.
It's getting, it's starting to get a little aggressive,
I feel like.
Right.
And the only thing you know is it's like,
they back up and-
What are you doing?
Stop doing that.
Get off of me.
And they'll touch the artist.
And they tell us, they said,
no, he's going to walk fast.
Okay, you're going to walk fast.
Yeah.
That's it.
And then off you go.
It'll be cool when he just starts wrestling.
Yeah.
In that way.
Yeah.
Towards the direction.
It's him and his agent just back there fist fighting.
Oh, I think, yeah, it's definitely bizarre
because you don't really know what's going on,
and then he's like, all right, let's go,
and for him, he's just getting to, you know, heading to work.
Yeah.
He's bouncing off the walls, yeah.
Yeah, it had to be weird because you get to the stage and then you guys can't go out to the stage, so it's like. Yeah, it's like, yeah, heading to work. Yeah. And then it's, yeah. It had to be weird cause you get to the stage
and then you guys can't go out to the stage.
So it's like, yeah, it's like, yeah, we're on.
It's like, stop.
Yeah.
No, this is not your show.
Stop here.
The cameras all follow that guy.
Yeah. It really was like that, man.
Cause I didn't even play anything when I was like,
I could try, you know, I was like, let's do it.
You know, that's how we were.
He's just, he's just wing it.
Give me something to bang on. Oh yeah. And DeAndre's like, he's do it. You know? That's how we were. He's just wing it. Give me something to bang on.
Go with the flow, man.
Oh, yeah.
And DeAndre's like, he looked like he was ready
to just run a 40 yards F-flat, you know?
So I was like, yeah, let's get him out here, dude.
So that was interesting, man.
What's been one of the tougher things
that came with fame that you guys realized?
Because you guys went to being,
obviously you were doing well in your careers individually.
But even as you were just saying like, you know,
you guys, the first couple of songs you put out were hits.
That's right.
First four were number ones.
Yeah.
I mean, that's a lot of number ones, dude, you know?
We just called some buddies up in a panic
and started playing honky-tonks and bars.
Even our manager told us not to do it.
He said, no man, if we're running off,
like we're knocking hits out of the park right now,
we need to have a tight band, you know, when they do,
or we get to a place where we're in front of a lot of people.
So we went for the first year, year and a half,
playing clubs everywhere.
From here to California.
Which was the coolest.
It was Animal House.
The coolest memory.
The coolest memory for me because I probably like Ronnie,
I mean, just a lot of years of turning corners
on clubs and stuff and there'd be four or six cars
in the parking lot.
Oh yeah.
You know, and you just have to go and set up.
And one of them's yours too.
Exactly.
And one of them's a girl you came to,
you're invited to impress. Exactly. And a couple of guys that don't like you because they want her too.
And she's not cute at all.
Yeah, you set your stuff up, you know, and nobody cares and whatever. And then next thing, you know, we're parking down the road and to get to a place because the parking lot's full. Those were great nights, they really were.
You really couldn't screw up too bad
because it was fired up and that's kind of what you dream
about when you're learning to maintain your guitar.
Just man, just the clubs part of it.
I mean, the whole Coliseum thing
and that other kind of success was,
I wasn't even thinking that far.
This was just like, man, it worked.
It was so crazy because we don't know each other from Adam.
Even at that point, we don't know each other from Adam.
We would learn in interviews about one another.
About each other?
Yeah, like I didn't know you did that.
Now, as you started to get famous,
I'm just curious about this kind of stuff,
because fame and popularity is such like a,
it's an interesting thing, right?
And it's its own thing,
because you can't exactly plan for it.
Like, were there things that you kind of missed
kind of immediately about that?
Because once you kind of,
once it starts to happen, it's hard to put it,
you can't really put your life back into that old jug, really.
No, and you don't see it coming.
You can't plan for it, no matter where it is.
I think even if you grew up around it, which I didn't.
But this is so strange, though.
I can remember going home after the first, say, run,
the real tour when we were opening for Reber or whatever.
And my wife and brother-in-law, she said, you've changed. I'm like, what, she said, you've changed.
I'm like, what?
She said, you've changed.
She said, you're not the same.
And I was like, I didn't feel like anything was
any abnormal other than I was going out on a bus
and singing in front of people.
I didn't come back going, you know, hey, I'm famous.
Yeah. Yeah.
But people's perception of you changes, you know, don't you think?
Yeah, and that, yeah, it is. And it's kind of uncomfortable because you don't, you kind of wish it wouldn't.
Well, you need that safety net of normalcy, you know, come back to, especially at home.
And it was just kind of, all of a sudden you're getting pushed, pushed in the corner in a way by that whatever perception
is of fame.
I just did a bunch of acid, so we're heavy with this.
Oh, I'm not even here.
No, no.
This shit's just coming out of the cosmic space, right?
Of mushroom, not acid.
Acid's out.
I think that it's funny.
My wheels are turning just thinking about those times. And honestly, I love, somebody made a statement one time
we're having a conversation like this and said,
yeah, I want to be a star, I want to be a star,
I want to be a star, will you people please leave me alone?
You know, I've never felt that way.
You know, I mean, like Ronnie for so many years,
I was 36, he was 38 when we met, you know, with nothing going on really.
And I mean, that's pretty old to just get started with a career where you're put together by a
record company and to think you're going to have a 30-year plus run or something, you know.
Well, we didn't think about the 30 plus year run. I know, that's what I mean. Our philosophy was, hey, you got three to five years.
Let's maximize it.
Let's take what little money we make.
And I was going to go, our big, Janine, my wife and I just
got married in Oklahoma.
So our goal was, you know what, interest rates are like 10%.
And this was back, don't see how far back it was.
Interest rates are 10%.
We make a million dollars.
We can live off $100,000 a year and live like kings.
That we drove up to the first house,
bought this little house in Nashville,
we go, we're just here for a little while,
save your money.
Yeah.
Honestly, I don't know if you remember this, Ronnie,
but we were sitting in the Nashville airport,
just shooting the bull. And we were sitting in the Nashville airport, just shooting
the bull and we've always just, I guess, had kind of a natural, just a couple of guys and
we're smart asses just, you know, just goofballing all the time, talking to people just like,
like we are today.
And, and anyway, these two girls came over and I saw three of them over there talking
and they came over and asked if they could get an autograph and they had a CD and whatever.
And you know, we just shot the bull back and forth a little bit and whatever.
And I mean, they were sweet.
Whenever we signed their CDs and I've always been happy to do that.
Glad anybody cares, you know?
Oh yeah.
And a couple of minutes later, their friend comes over and said, our friends told us what
you said.
We're getting rid of all our CDs.
We've always thought y'all were so great.
What?
I mean, just teed up on us and we're looking at each other and going, I'm
trying to remember this conversation, what I could have possibly said that.
And I, I mean, I like to think of myself as a good guy, nice guy, and I, and
have always respected our fans and everything else. I'm like,
what just happened? But it made me realize that moment, that minute that we spent together,
totally wraps somebody's impression of you and what kind of human you are and how they'll tell
everybody they meet for the rest of their lives that they're just jerks, you know, and you just, that's the part.
Did you ever find out what you said?
I have no idea what we said.
You were involved.
You must have been involved.
That's what I'm thinking.
What did you say?
I wasn't there.
I wasn't there.
Don't pull, don't suck me down that rabbit hole.
It does feel like you get on this one, like this one minute game show to prove to somebody
that you're okay or something.
I don't know.
Yeah, that stuff, it's like.
It's like a job interview.
You gotta be quick.
Yeah.
And you, yeah.
And you, and the job is you want them to think you're okay
or something, you know?
You're the guy for the job in one minute.
Yeah, yeah.
You can do it, I can't.
Yeah, that kind of stuff gets a little tricky.
Was it tough like um
What about like having a family and stuff in touring so much like what were things that like?
Yeah, what's that like like dude?
Is it hectic? I had just been married
I mean we just got married came up and in June Carter cash gave us a little cabin on top of the hill
next not far from their house
to live in.
Wow.
And so nice little house, like something out of a magazine.
But it was on top of a mountain by itself.
And so was she.
Boom, we get we had a hit right out of the gate.
We're gone.
And it wasn't too long.
It's like, I mean, we didn't have, we had like cell phones, but we didn't think I
have cameras, but I started getting these terrorist faxes.
I called them like she would fax the hotel.
Cause I talked longer than we talk so long on the phone.
They go, okay, all right, all right.
All right.
I'll be home in two weeks. I know. I understand. I get it. I love you. phone. They go, okay, all right, all right. All right, I'll be home, you know, in two weeks.
I know, I understand.
I get it, I love you, bye.
You know, ring.
I'm not answering the phone.
That ain't gonna happen.
So not 10 minutes later, I get this knock on the door
and it's like they slide this stack of faxes underneath.
So she started faxing me.
It's like, what the hell?
And this goes on for, I don't know, a few months.
And we sorted it out.
But to this day, I mean, then she's-
It was night.
I had to go to therapy over it.
Oh, I'm sure.
With her or without her?
With her, at her request, obviously.
You know, because I'm broken, she's not anyway.
That's a long thing.
You know, I'm-
Eric Chenault had one of those that,
cause we had a cell phone per se on tour,
but it was like something that the army would use.
You know,
I had a suitcase thing that it was in and all that.
You know,
the second you press a button,
the helicopter would come by.
You know,
like 18 bucks a minute.
A long way from 18 bucks.
Yeah.
It's important.
It wasn't cheap, man. It wasn important.
It wasn't, yeah, but it wasn't with our wives or anything.
We were a little,
we didn't give our wives a number.
It's strictly a beer phone.
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But my kids were on the bus.
That was in the summer.
It was good because we were still playing a lot of fairs
and stuff back then.
And during, it was kind of like summer vacation, honestly.
It was, I never, nevermind.
We got, fortunately we did have some success
and made a little money and were able to get our own buses
pretty early, is the reason we're still sitting here having this conversation.
There were 13 of us on one bus for a year with the merchandise,
where you get boxes of t-shirts and stuff like that. And then, uh,
one of our guitar players slept in the back with, with the merchandise.
Oh yeah. There's always that. It was animal. I got human gerbals back there,
just burrowing in a bunch of extra larges
back there.
It was absolute animal house.
He just completely just covered himself with nine mediums
back there.
It got him Bird Burton, who was the famous guitar player
for the amazing rhythm aces and a bunch of rock stuff.
And he'd come up there, bless his heart.
We were really trying to keep him around.
So, hey, you have the sofa with the merchandise.
He goes, we don't have any blankets
so you sleep under T-shirts, right?
Anyway, it was an animal house.
It was like animal house?
Yeah, we had one guy, all the bunks,
like there's what, nine, six to a side, I think.
And then the back lounge,
and there's one guy that we called him,
what, Fred Sanford, he was the junk man.
And you couldn't stop at a truck stop
and he wouldn't go in and like buy a fricking CD.
A CB radio and a bunch of chips.
You hear him at four in the morning.
Turn over and be like an ace hardware in his bunk.
And I was cranking around.
You hear chip bags crinkling at night and stuff.
And you're like, what?
And all of a sudden there's the wall and then the bunk.
And you see like their chip bag would fall down through to the next guy.
He's like, God dang, man.
It was crazy stuff.
Truck stops are great though.
Oh man, so much fun.
There's so much good stuff in there.
Especially when you cross a border.
Early on, Faith Hill was opening up for us.
And, and-
Oh, wow. Huh?
Yeah. And I forget. Oh, and, and wait-
All the boys love that.
Y'all struck out with her, I guess.
Amen.
Amen.
No judge.
We got stranded in Canada in a snowstorm.
Yeah.
A lot of stuff.
God couldn't have set the table any better
for one of you guys.
It was tough, man. It was rough.
Yeah. So in the first truck stop, I go in and I'm looking at all their of stuff. God couldn't have set the table any better for one of you guys. It was tough, man. It was rough.
So in the first truck stop, I go in and I'm looking at all their cool stuff.
And the freezer in Canada, and I pulled, it was an eel.
It was a frozen eel in the freezer.
And I'm like, wow.
So I bought it.
I mean, I have no idea what I'm going to do with this, but I couldn't resist.
That was a phase when everybody started in rough.
But that was a phase when everybody was in, but that was a phase when,
when everybody was playing pranks on the road.
Faith and faith was like, she was one of the guys.
I mean, you had to have to keep up with that.
She would, she would throw stuff.
An eel could come in handy in all kinds of regards.
Who'd even had an eel?
I don't even, some people don't even.
Canadians.
Yeah.
I think that was the point.
It's why you bought it.
It's like, look at this.
What the hell?
So it's kind of a little bit of a nicer snake,
it's the most Canadian thing, you know?
Yeah, but we get to the end of the tour,
and sure enough, I walk by,
we're fixing to go to the, you know,
Stage Faith, Faith is on next,
and Wade Hayes had just gotten off stage,
I went by to tell him, you know,
good show and whatever, and he's kind of leaned over,
he's looking pretty peaking, and I'm like,
dude, you okay?
He's like, no man, it's like, faith put salt in my drinking water
on stage and I go, oh, and he was-
Made him sick so he was stomaching.
Made him sick, so I'm like, that's wrong.
I go, I got you, dude.
So she was at-
Get your back, bro.
She's in a hotel, but we had the codes to her room
and her fictitious name, whatever she was using at the time.
So me and Doug make a run.
Well, first I put the eel in the microwave
and the eel didn't even have a head.
I mean, and then once you've thawed him out,
he got real slimy, you know?
So we had over there-
Heartbreaking childhood it must have had.
Dude, you know it.
And-
You bring your own food.
Pull back the covers and just laid him out right where those pretty little feets were
going to go.
You know, kind of pushed it down so we put the covers back, just made it look really
good.
Anyway, and the next, didn't hear a thing.
She didn't say anything.
We just keep waiting for the other shoe to fall.
Nothing.
So we're going through customs, getting back into the States the next day, you know, and
so I go through and you know, lady's going,
she goes, Mr. Brooks.
I go, yes, she goes, I need you to come over here to the side.
And I go, yeah, she goes, apparently there's been
a complaint filed against you about some stolen jewelry
by Miss Faith Hill.
And she starts pulling this rubber glove on.
And I go, don't do that, don't do that.
It ain't in there.
That guy.
I was like.
No.
You better not be kidding her.
I swear to God.
Like, she couldn't hold it.
No, she finally broke.
I go, come on, it's not our first day.
Leave me alone.
You're not even in this game.
You do sing a little higher that night. The world was fun then too when things were a little bit more simple, you know?
Oh yeah. In a lot of ways.
Yeah. That was a lot of fun, man.
And you couldn't capture the moment as much, so you had to enjoy the moment because that was the only, you know what I'm saying?
Well, you got too much downtime. I mean, it was not, you know, if you're not on stage doing something creative,
you're doing something destructively creative on the backside.
Oh yeah.
You know, you know, you've been out there.
Oh, it's the dark arts out there, brother.
It is.
Did you guys ever have a comedian that opened up for you guys?
I know sometimes they used to do that on shows.
Gary Mule Deer.
Oh really?
Yeah.
Still a good friend.
Love Gary.
Yep.
We did, um, did, uh, what Vegas? Vegas a couple times.
It's hysterical. I don't know how many times but he was out with us quite a bit.
That's a tough gig I feel like. Well he, but he played guitar as well. Well you know Gary's like,
he does play guitar and it's you know it's incredible because he just did a, we did a show together
out in California not too long ago.
And he played, because he always,
he's got a Johnny Cash voice and he'll do Ring of Fire
or something like that every now and then.
He's hysterical though.
Just real straight face joke teller
and can just break you down.
I gotta tap in with him.
I've heard of him before.
I've seen a lot of like, cause committees you go to the next club and the other person's
just been there, you know?
And I've seen a lot of his, uh, you know, seen his name a ton over the years, but I've
never gotten to watch him.
Been around forever.
But he, he actually performed a song and it was, I bet this thing had 20 verses and it
was, it was, it was, I'm not kidding.
It was like, but it was a real country music analog
kind of take you through this whole journey of thing.
It was really neat, big time stand to know
because I've seen him perform.
I don't even know how many times at this point.
And, and everybody there was like, wow,
you got that off your chest.
And he did not tell a single joke.
Really?
He sang that, he sang that one song and left the stage.
So it was so cool.
But it was a humorous song.
No, it wasn't funny.
It was a real song.
It was.
But he was a comedian.
He is a comedian.
He's a great comedian, yeah.
Maybe that's his ideal comedy.
Him and Roger Miller toured together.
And you've heard of people doing these Rogerisms,
these funny things that he told all, he knows all of them.
I mean, if you ever run into him, get him going on Roger
because he's one of the great historians,
the keepers of the Rogerisms too.
Great guy, funny comedian.
Yeah, I need to run into him.
Yeah, what do you feel like being a duo?
Were there other duos that like in music that reached out to you guys
over the years to help learn how to navigate
that template?
Does that make any sense to you?
Yeah, it does make sense, but no.
As friendly as they say the world of country music is,
it's so darn competitive.
Everybody hates one another.
They act like they don't on TV.
You think people are really competitive though?
Oh, heck yeah.
No, big time competitive.
One of my favorite things is Dolly Parton
in an interview years and years ago,
she said they were talking about somebody.
She just goes, oh honey, there's room for everybody.
No, there's not.
Yeah.
You want to get down to it? No, there's not. You want to get down to it?
No, there's not.
What's the most competitive part?
Is it people trying to get the best songs?
Is it like, where does the competition really come in?
Do you feel like, cause that's interesting.
I think just by nature to be here and be in this game,
in your game or anything, that there's a competitive,
don't you feel?
There's a competitive dynamic that runs through it.
Especially in the beginning for sure.
Yeah, but you wanna catch it like,
how many number ones do you have?
Who had a number one this week?
Who has it?
And we can be cool and like sit back and go,
you know, we don't care.
It's no big deal.
We're not in it for that.
We're in it for the love.
And that's not the case.
But that's also healthy. that's what keeps you going.
We do make some real friends along the way.
We have.
I mean, you do.
There are people that you're competent.
I mean, David Lee Murphy is a great example.
He wrote with him yesterday.
You know the song Dust on the Bottle?
I'd be a little dust, I believe, more for you.
Him singing, him writing, turned into writing a lot of songs.
He's written a lot of great songs too.
And we got here, both got here in 79,
literally swept floors for Charlie Daniels
for 30 bucks a night.
I was getting rent paid and playing writers nights
and stuff and still he's on tour with us now
and going out with us next year,
toured with again last year
and we've toured together before.
Just we've got real friends that the competition
I can't say, I don't know,
maybe it does go away or something.
And at some point in your life,
I think you have a certain amount of success
you still wanna succeed, but it's like, you're not so ferocious. Like when you start and everything matters and
it's not that everything doesn't matter anymore, but it's like everything kind of turned down the
heat a little bit. You know, let's simmer here and see if we can't do something real, something good.
Now we kind of know you can't, you build confidence too. Again, like I said, Ronnie and I if we can't do something real, something good. Now we kind of know you build
confidence too. Again, like I said, Ronnie and I, we didn't figure we'd go a year or two. That's why
we were desperate through pretty much through our whole career is just kind of, this isn't going to
work. This, we, you know, we're always doubting ourselves, you know, always trying to do anything
we could, what, you know, to do something really special
because it's probably gonna be our last song,
you know, our last video.
I mean, we've always kind of felt a little desperate,
I think.
Does it feel like it's out of your control sometimes
as a musician?
Because a lot of it is what songs you get, right?
And you can write your own songs,
you can write them with other people.
But does it ever feel like it's out of your control?
Kind of like how well you keep doing, or it ever feel like it's out of your control? Kind of like how well you keep doing?
Or does it feel like it's in your control?
You know what it is.
I mean, 60, 70%, I don't know how much you can add
to the dynamic.
I can add up to 100%.
Of luck, right?
No, I'm going to win.
I guess, I don't know.
We could try to do more.
I can't even.
I mean, it's luck.
A lot of it is luck.
You know?
But it's that thing, if you're working at it
and luck strikes, it's like you're ready for it.
You know, you got your ball, man, on bang, catch it.
And we're from there.
But we work hard at it.
I mean, we're songwriters before we're-
Right, that's a good point.
So y'all weren't up there just,
hey, somebody sell me a hit. You're like, I have the ability to make my own.
It's all about song. It's all about the song.
And then as you move through the business, you meet people, you meet people with their
pitch and you give me a good songs too, you know, and you can't, can't write them all.
You know, uh, and timing has a lot to do with it. It really does.
What do you mean by that? That's luck too. Yeah, certainly.
That is, it's all luck is just time it. It really does. What do you mean by that? That's luck too. Yeah, certainly that is.
Yeah, luck is just time.
Yeah, time is just luck with a clock.
There you go.
That's great.
Write that down.
We both, I mean, we both had some kind of solo record deals
before we had a duo deal.
Ronnie was singing his ass off before I met him.
At 38 years old, why wasn't he a star already?
Right.
I don't know.
Bring it up, Hage.
I'm just saying. It's 38 years older
Yeah, is it tough to age gracefully is it tough to be like because even I notice it, you know in my own career
It's like, you know, you start to do good and you're like, oh well
I'm getting older and then you're like you start to see the younger guys that are doing well and you're like, oh well
This is all gonna,
is there a graceful way for this to end
or does it just end or like?
I think you just play that one by ear, you know?
I keep telling people I'm gonna die in denial
about related age.
It's like, I'm not gonna know how old I am.
I don't wanna know.
It pisses me off to see every article,
somebody writing stuff, and you go, well, and so and so,
80 years old, whatever, leave age out of this.
I think 30.
Willie's out there rocking his cool.
Oh, yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'll go to Willie.
He'd be the standard bearer for that.
But no.
I mean, McCartney,
they're still out doing their thing.
Yeah, I was actually, so I'm in a couple of,
months ago, was that we were in the same bathroom
at the same time.
Wow, what'd you do?
Huh? What'd you do?
Just the number one.
Did you try to shake his hand or anything?
Oh no, I didn't do anything like that.
I freezed.
Hey, I just let it be, dude.
You just let it be.
That was a little...
Well, you said something to him.
I think I honestly, I probably said, like, good day
or something like that.
Like, I think I was probably trying
to welcome him in, like, a British tone or something.
Good day, mate.
Right?
Yeah.
I freeze.
I freeze.
Anytime I get around somebody that's really, really famous,
I just backlock them.
That's true, dude. Right, good day. They don't together. No, you're in famous. I just, I'm back like a dead man.
Right, good night.
You're in Ireland.
Good night, mate.
They're like prisoners from England or something.
He must have been like this guy.
I've never cooled around somebody famous.
I wish I could be.
Yeah, were there guys like that coming up that you guys met?
Or what questions had I just asked?
Let me make sure I stay on topic, sorry.
Were you ever in the bathroom with Paul McCartney?
Oh, yeah.
That's right.
Tell us about the time you and McCartney
were in the bathroom.
Oh, one time I went to a,
one time I was also in the bathroom with,
I'll go through them all, Montell Williams, okay?
He was a talk show host, and Kid Rock one time,
and I urinated right between them, dude.
Oh wow.
That's a DMZ man.
It really is dude.
Incoming.
You make the wrong move there.
Anything could go to go happen right?
Either way.
Yeah.
Either way it was big trouble.
I just want to try and shake hands just to see what they're going to do though.
Hey man, it's just, I've always, you know, just.
Especially if you reach over the stall. I'm sorry. No. Hey, man, it's just, I've always, you know, just.
Especially if you reach over the stall top.
Yeah.
Johnny Cash said that, he asked, the strangest thing
like that that ever happened to him, and he said that he
was in a stall in the airport or something.
He said, this paper slips under the wall.
And I was like, we're good.
Don't touch it.
I don't have a pencil.
Like, hey, that paper likes men.
That's all I'm saying.
Right?
So you guys got to meet Johnny Cash?
Yeah.
No way.
What was he like, like just as a regular guy?
Was he like a friendly guy?
Was he kind of like a stoic guy?
Stoic, quiet by nature when you first meet him.
And that in and of itself is intimidating.
Oh, yeah. And then as you get to know him, he's a
17 year old kid. That was it. I mean he's crazy. Funny as all get out. Yeah. My wife, her first
husband, rented a car one piece at a time. And Johnny's saying about it, one piece at a time. And Johnny sang about it,
one piece at a time.
Anyway.
He built that car.
He built the car.
Oh, built that car one piece at a time.
I'm sorry, yeah.
The song.
He built the car, so he...
Or Johnny really built a car, sorry I'm confused.
No, her ex-wife built the car about the song
that Johnny sang called One Piece at a Time.
Got it, he liked a song and him and his bud said,
man, let's build it. Let's actually build it.
They're always going around.
They own strip coal mines in Oklahoma.
Johnny did?
Or his friends?
No, Janine, my wife's.
OK, got it.
They were well acquainted.
They all became fast friends, traveled the world together,
I mean, really, really tight.
And so when I was brought in, her husband passed away. And when I was brought in,
it's like, she's, she's marrying or dating a musician,
you know, and Jenny goes,
I'm going to take you to John and June's house in Nashville.
First time that she did it from Oklahoma. And I went,
nah, I don't remember them to do that. I just kind of saw that one coming, you know, and John, and
of course, John's real quiet.
And would you wear over that you get dressed up or what?
You know, black, all black.
No, jeans, what I have on now and this kind of stuff.
And, uh, were you nervous or not?
You remember?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was always, I was super shy and quiet and then I'm kind of
coming out of my shell a little bit these days, but, uh, I was always I was super shy and quiet and then I'm gonna come out of my shell a little bit these days but
He was obviously glad to see her I mean I'm the new kid on the block, you know, you don't just
Long drink water. Yeah, your girlfriend bringing you to over to meet her parents. Who's just pervert or whatever. Yeah
I mean, I don't know you but I mean I'm a per. So I'm sure most of us all. That goes with it.
You can't be in a band and not be a pervert.
Anyway, and Johnny knew that.
He'd be a pervert himself.
Oh yeah, who isn't, man?
Right?
Dude, if you show me 70 people,
y'all show you 70 perverts.
You in a band, you a comedian?
Yeah, you're a pervert.
Wow, that's pretty fascinating though.
And did people look up to him as like a, kind of like, was he this, was he as,
because now he's almost, there's an idolatry about him in a way, you know,
you see the t-shirts with the Johnny Cash and just his cash, something like.
No, but he's always been that way. He's been like, forever.
Listen, here's a funny thing. So the log cabin that they had us live in,
June did that for Janine, not for me,
called her and said, look, okay,
this guy's gonna run around making a music business,
good luck, it ain't gonna happen,
but we'll give you a place to live, right?
We'll give you a flammable home.
Right, temporary residence, okay?
Because it's not gonna last long
until I find you a guy with money.
All right. So thank God we had these hits right off the bat and suddenly June goes,
woo, okay, you're in. You know, she told Janine during that first visit, she said, look,
here's how it goes down. She says, the odds are a million to one, no, 10 billion to one, you know,
that they make it. And if, if he does, it's not going to last long.
It's just, that's not, that's the nature of the business. And, uh,
number three, they're all crazy if they do make it for a long time, you know,
so she, she called her babies. Uh, it was well,
and Jenny's Willie Nelson, Hank Jr.,
uh, uh, Larry Gatlin. I mean, just the wild boys of that, of that era. Oh yeah. The feral. Yeah. So she goes, you know,
this, this look, you know, the uninsurable, they put us through hell.
She said, so get ready. You know, she's, there's no, there's no good to it.
There's no, no. So anyway, where's there's no, there's no good to it. There's no, no.
So anyway, where was I?
Uh, with Johnny, you said, was he stoic and stuff?
First day there, June takes Janine and they leave the house to go shopping.
Oh, so it's just you and him?
And me and John in that house alone.
Okay.
I was going to the bathroom and staying there for at least a minute to get ready to and.
Yes, sir. It's like I'm the unwelcome guest or at least I'm feeling that way. Oh for sure.
And there's there John's quiet anyway he does he hasn't he hasn't like. And what's
he just polishing a gun or something? No, no. Probably yes pretty close to it. He comes out of the far end of the house. There are two black leather recliners in front of this TV.
And he sits down and he's watching like CNN or whatever.
I sit in the next one, just sitting there
and no one says anything.
I'm like, fuck, longest day of my life.
I didn't know what to say to him because he didn't talk. But now I know,
know what I know. He didn't talk to anybody. Right. Uh,
and all of a sudden out of the blue, he goes, you see these, uh,
you see these and these are news reels here. These, these things.
He said, that's a loop. And he said, you know, I'm an addict. I went, okay.
And he goes, I used to sit and watch TV for days
until those loops would end.
And then he said it would start a whole other cycle
of the news.
And he's explaining how TV works to me and that stuff
through the eyes of being high.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And shortly after that, it seemed like two days that we were sitting there, it was probably
a couple of hours, and Janine and June come back.
They've been shopping at Stein Mart.
And I like Stein Mart actually.
Some of the sleeves are a little different.
Well June took her there in her new blue Rolls Royce that John had just given her for her
book.
So there's a little y yin-yang there.
Yeah.
Janine was just pale white.
She knows no strangers, so you never see Janine down.
So she kind of walked in.
She was like, she'd just been scared by a ghost.
And I kind of peeled away and met her in the back of the house.
I said, what happened?
She goes, I'll tell you later.
I can't talk about it.
Well, June had read her the write act
on all this stuff I just told you about,
they're not gonna last, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah.
And I said, can we go now?
She goes, no, we got one more day.
He goes, please.
Please.
Ah.
One more day.
Right, but no sooner did we get here
and they were the most absolute supportive people in the world.
John came up one day, we were getting ready to shoot the CD cover for Brandy Mann, the first CD.
And I said, he was always into everything. He said, what are you going to wear?
You know, how are you going to look? How are you going to do your hair? That kind of stuff, into image.
I said, well, I don't know. I said, I've got a few things, ideas.
He goes, all right, I'll be back.
He said, left, getting his Mercedes.
He's shot out.
It's down the hill.
He needed a goat to get up the mountain to it.
He goes flying down the hill.
I guess he goes home, comes back in an hour or so,
opens the trunk of the car, reaches in,
and hands me this black suit.
And he goes, I had this back in 1972. It was made by Manuel. And he goes, I had this back in 1972.
It was made by Manuel.
And he goes, I was sick back then,
which meant he was sick, right?
So he was skinny enough for me to wear my skinny ass
to get in that suit, you know?
He goes, don't tell June.
She doesn't like me giving stuff away.
And I have it to this day.
I wore it on the back of that CD cover.
Oh, wow. Yeah. That's crazy back of that CD cover. Oh, wow.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
That's crazy.
Oh, it was, hey man.
Check the pockets, dude, let's party.
I bet that thing's got something.
She was something.
And the parties there too was strictly lemonade.
Lemonade and iced tea.
Really keeping it sober?
Keeping it completely sober on the table for sure.
Oh, yeah.
You know, and nothing in the back kitchen.
I mean, she was pretty.
She wore the pants in that deal, huh?
Yeah.
At that point.
Was she pretty much a,
because he probably needed somebody to really care for him.
Yeah.
And spiced to that little story
is that that particular weekend that we were there,
he was on furlough from rehab.
Okay, and.
How long do you have to be,
we let you get furloughed?
I thought that was a military.
Johnny Cash, right?
Only Johnny Cash would have went to, right?
Only he would have went to boot camp.
Right, and so all of a sudden at the end.
How many tours did he do?
Right.
Oh, he did a lot.
But the day before he's supposed to go back,
this is a Saturday, he's going back on Sunday,
he comes down with the flu.
June's having no part of that.
She's completely just, no, we're done.
So she wanted to talk to him,
and we're caught in the middle of that,
and I'm going, can we go home now?
Can we go home now?
She's, no, no, no, not yet.
Please go home!
June, June can tell this story better than I can, but.
So June goes to Janine's, she goes,
y'all have to drive me to the hospital.
Take him to the hospital here in Hendersonville.
Make sure just to see what's wrong with him.
She says, I'm not talking to him.
Says he can walk as far as I'm concerned.
OK, we got it.
So we get in the car, start to get in the car.
John wants to drive.
OK, so John drives.
He drove?
Yeah, man.
But it was like pedal to the metal, boom, off all the way.
Pedal to the metal.
And Janine said, well, he just drives like that.
Oh, yeah, because you start nodding off,
and he nods off.
Right?
You nod off, you nod off.
So we get to the hospital, and they're
rolling him in in a wheelchair.
And Janine goes up to the desk to give him
all the information, and they take John back.
And he's there maybe an hour.
And then we come back. And he goes up to his room,
you know, his hospital room at the house.
He's playing it up, man.
He's like, I got to do more, I can't go back.
You're going back to rehab.
So June goes, well, how did it go, Janine?
She goes, well, they asked for his doctor.
And June goes, oh, hon, he's in rehab. The doctor was in rehab. The doctor was in rehab. Oh,
sweet. No, no, no. He hadn't made furlough yet. Dr. Nix in rehab. Okay, we can go now, right? Pretty soon.
Wow, that's a great story. That's my first Johnny Cash and June Carter experience.
We had Ric Flair, we spoke with him one time, the famous wrestler, you know him,
and he's quite a character and he was in a rehab center and the doctor that
got put in there with him and he was in there and one day they're giving
pills to both of them and he's like, why one day, one day they're giving pills to both of them.
And he's like, why are you giving pills to the doctor?
And I'm like, no, the doctor's in here now.
I can't.
Oh, yeah.
So apparently that's part of the deal, man.
Well, it's just everywhere, just like that.
Oh yeah. Look, so many of my friends, I mean,
I go to recovery meetings, so many people deal with,
you know, that sort of stuff.
Was it tough for you guys to keep it clean over the years?
Did you guys get tempted with drugs or alcohol or what was that like?
I don't know. Really?
Tempted with drugs or alcohol?
Yeah. Oh, not me. Did you, Ronnie?
I'll go with you. I want you to explain this.
We might've, we might've had a drink or two along the way. I don't know.
I think Ronnie did take a lot of pills, but I never did.
Oh, what?
Foul.
Foul.
Uh oh.
Yeah, but I have allergies.
Oh, now you do.
A lot of allergies.
I've never seen somebody in, oh, that dust will give it to you.
I'm from Louisiana too, dude.
I started drinking at a very early age. I've never seen somebody in, that dust will give it to you. I'm from Louisiana too dude.
I started drinking at a very early age.
That's true.
Wow.
Was it hard?
Yeah.
Were there certain points where you guys had to like tell each like, at what point do you
guys have, do you guys ever have to be like each other's like, uh, caretaker?
Yeah.
Not caretaker in the sense like actually physically, but just like, you know, and then how hard is it to take that
suggestion from the other guy, you know, like from the other lead.
We don't do it much. We don't do it much. I mean, that's one of the unique
dynamics of how we, you know, the relationship we have. We don't do that.
If it is, it'll be some comment in passing and you, you know, and you'll know.
Honestly, we sit here and laugh about this stuff,
but there's not a lot of nonsense that goes on.
It's like we're up there to do what we do.
We appreciate where we are.
And God knows we know the pitfalls.
Yeah.
And have we ever been over-served on stage
or whatever like that?
Yes.
Has anyone ever told us?
Are you slurring your words? Yeah? You're slurring your words.
Yeah, you're slurring your words.
No.
You're slurring your vehicle.
I've been told that before.
You've already written that song.
Don't write it again in the middle of it.
That kind of shit.
But yeah, we've had a few faux pas.
People don't believe when I tell them this.
We have never, I mean, we're both, you know,
hard-headed, whatever.
You know, I came from a pipeline background,
same with him, you know, and it's,
we have never raised our voices to each other.
Wow.
Have we ever been mad at each other?
Yeah.
Have we ever been pissed at each other?
Yeah, for sure.
We'll go off and pout.
But that's it, you know, we've always been able to go to our separate corners
and come back later.
In some of it, you think it was just because you started
to achieve your most success, that people would know you
from once you were older?
You think if it would have been younger?
Do you ever think of the blessings?
It's kind of a blessing and a curse,
because everyone wants to be 27 and famous, you know?
But if you're 38 and you get popular, you know,
it's, it feels a little different, you know?
Has a lot to do with it.
You appreciate it.
You know, cause there was, there was a point
for a long time where there was no plan B, you know?
And we both felt that.
And no, so you, you learn to appreciate it.
It's just that just,, that just, you know,
beating into you through the ranks.
Yeah, dude, we used to slow dance to y'all's music, dude.
I would be so nervous, dude.
God, dude.
I just couldn't even, I would stand so far away
from the girl, like as far as I could, but still touching her a little like this kind of thing.
Barely touching her.
Ten fingers.
You were down in the trenches, man.
You were on the floor.
See, we're up there on the bandstand going, I don't look right.
I don't think I'm going to do that.
Just go on, dude, go on.
Get up against it.
Go on.
What are you doing? I was too, I couldn. Get up against it. Go on. What are you doing?
What?
I was just, I couldn't get up.
It was too short.
And that high-match thing, man.
Whole front of my body sweat.
And I was like, I never knew you could sweat just
in one hemisphere of your body.
And never move?
Oh.
Yeah.
You guys, we were talking about songwriting earlier.
You guys, your new album has a lot
of like some of my favorites on and people that have, that we've been able to have on
the podcast before.
I think Ernest is on, Hardy, Morgan.
Yeah.
Lainey.
Lainey Wilson.
How amazing is Lainey Wilson?
She's great.
She's special, man.
She's special.
She's a Louisiana girl.
From right up the road from where my farm is. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah
I mean literally we're
Honestly 18 miles apart. Oh that is close. You're from Covington. I think I saw somewhere
Yeah, did you really spend grow up there? Yeah, you did. Yeah, I grew up there
Our town is we have this tallest statue of Ronald Reagan there
Somebody stole the arm, but they got it back. They got it back?
Yeah.
Somebody like, how'd they get it off?
Uh, I don't know.
What kind of, is it bronze or it's?
It was, I think it's bronze.
Bring it up.
Concrete or something?
Oh no, it's special.
Oh, there you go.
So, so which arm?
Huh?
Was he the one with his right arm or his left arm?
I'm not sure.
You can Google that too.
How'd they get the arm off?
Yeah. Well, that's tough. You can Google that too, how they get the arm off. Yeah.
You can weld that stuff.
You can Google that?
How they get the arm off?
How they get the arm off Reagan.
I don't know.
What?
In coming to Louisiana.
What?
In coming, a lot of welders down there, right?
First of all, find coming to.
They got torches.
There are a lot of welders down there.
Exactly.
They got torches.
That's pipeline country, man.
Damn right.
Oh, we can get an arm off.
You want an arm? Yeah. How far? They tried to recycle it. That's how country, man. Yeah, right. Oh, we can get an arm off. You want an arm?
Yeah.
How far?
They tried to recycle it.
That's how they caught the guy.
What?
And yeah, they took it to like the local aluminum.
Oh, cause he's thinking it's maybe copper or something.
He can buy some crack.
I was like, I'm gonna get me,
hell yeah, I'm gonna get me a couple hundred bucks
for this thing.
Yeah, they cut it off.
Guarantee he's a welder.
Yeah.
Look at Ronnie.
Oh, that was in Poland.
Yeah, so they must've done it, but they did it by us too.
Somebody got it off, but they got it back on.
It was a copycat thing.
A copycat arm thief.
Wow. That's dark.
What?
No, they did it in Poland.
How far is Covington from Railroad Road to Arkansas?
A long way.
There's a place there.
Okay.
Yeah, he's close to Baton Rouge.
Because we talk a lot about Northern Louisiana,
where the farm is, and Monroe, and all that.
So all my grandparents are from El Dorado, Arkansas.
Okay, it's a beautiful country out there.
I mean, it's pretty,
Shreveport's kind of gone through a,
it's been through some things, you know?
Yeah, it's pretty funky,
which is where I went to school.
Oh yeah.
Whatever, yeah.
They just tore down the tallest building in Shreveport.
What?
Really?
Bring it down, doing the-
Not the Beck building.
This was in, they did a beautiful implosion.
I watched it the other day on TikTok.
Wow, I wonder if that's where it was.
That's where my father's office was.
Was it a drone attack?
I don't know.
I mean.
What?
Dude, I don't know.
The tallest building in Shreveport.
There it is. They just brought it down, yeah.
I think it was the...
That's a bank building.
Yeah, it was a bank building, you're right.
Yeah, because I think,
because the middle one, Nicholas Green.
The back building's 20 stories.
Must have been the richest, richest building in town.
No, look at that.
Wow, that's pretty fancy right there.
Beautiful building, look at all those.
What'd they tear it up for? Real glass windows on them. Yeah. I don't know, that's fancy right there. Beautiful building. Look at all those. What'd they tear it up for?
Real glass windows on them.
Yeah.
I don't know.
That's it right there.
Wow.
Wow.
Probably somebody's wife was trying to get in
and settle in.
Look at all the buildings around it.
Right?
It wasn't the tallest.
It was the only.
Probably for a casino.
It could have been, man.
Street four, it's kind of wild.
That whole, I've been like, there's a lot of haunted. Everything could have been, man. Street four, it's kind of wild.
I've been like, there's a lot of haunted.
Everything there seems kind of haunted.
That's Louisiana in general.
It's like New Orleans.
Yeah, everything's haunted.
Like, you want to buy this haunted biscuit or whatever.
It's monkey foot.
It's two extra bucks.
It's got some damn ghost jam in it or whatever.
Everything does.
It's got voodoo all over it.
Is that hot?
Yeah. I hope so.
Ghost jam.
Yeah.
I just think, but yeah, everything in New Orleans is haunted. It's like, oh, you haven't
been this haunted. This is haunted, you know? It's like a nursery for children, but it's
haunted.
Okay, so I read this article the other day. Well, I guess it was online. It's like the
top 10 most, least desirable states to live in.
And Louisiana was number one.
Oh wow.
I can't imagine that.
That's what I'm saying, bro.
Come on.
Champs.
You got out, you got out.
Everybody's not into haunted.
That's true.
Look at you.
You're rich and famous.
49 states were the people that aren't into haunted.
Yeah, people don't like shit haunted, bro.
Yeah, y'all just stay off there.
We'll keep our haters in our hands.
I forget what it was based on.
Oh, you want to live in the natural realm?
That's fine, bitch.
We're doing others.
You don't have a monkey foot under your pillow?
Hanging from your ear?
Yeah, you don't have a baby that's
chewing on a lucky rabbit's foot?
You wouldn't know a hoodoo man from Colonel Sanders.
What?
What?
Oh, everything there is haunted or soaking wet, dude.
It's Louisiana.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's humid.
It's humid.
Yeah, everything's got a little bit of mold on it.
We go down there, you go down there all the time,
because your farm's down there and in place,
and all your buddies, three, four.
We go down there and duck hunt, like on the marshes.
That's awesome.
I've never been duck hunting.
Going next week.
Are you?
Oh yeah.
Is it more enjoyable than turkey hunting
or do you feel, is there some difference?
I think so.
I like stuff flying.
I've shot my share of turkeys,
but really don't care about popping them anymore.
It's like, you know, it's like, do something, you know?
You're like, okay, I'm over here.
It's almost like you're attacking
like a bird in a wheelchair or something.
Exactly, and they get all puffed up too.
It's like some, you know, he's on his last,
he's making his last move on her.
He's so puffed up, he can't even walk anymore.
You know, he's just like.
Like me at the dance.
Yeah, just like doing that.
Got his two fingers up there,
just trying to get close to her to do the neon moon.
And then you go, bam!
He's headless.
Shit, sorry about that, yeah.
Turkey's been all the work of calling them in.
This place we go down in Louisiana,
it's called Little Pecan Island,
and it's like one of the four seasons.
I shouldn't rat us out.
Really, it's beautiful.
They've got a lot of good turkeys down there.
Unbelievable, unbelievable.
Not turkeys, ducks.
Oh, ducks.
A good friend of ours, Jim Flores from Houston,
owns it, and it's unbelievable.
And what kind of ducks do you get out there?
Everything. I have pictures of ducks do you get out there? Everything.
I have pictures of the sky full.
I mean, it's unbelievable.
And do they go in shifts or how do the ducks go?
They migrate at different times.
Oh, so they're not like releasing them and then they come back in?
No, they don't release them.
No, it's all wild.
Okay.
They come from the north and they get cut off down in Missouri and whatever.
There's a lot of duck habitat on the way for them to stop and eat and whatever,
especially with climate change. Won't get into all that,
but like Arkansas flooded timber,
a lot of those ducks come out of the rice fields and stuff and they're
primarily green heads and mallards, you know,
but by the time you get to the marsh, you got every kind, you know,
teal and mallards and you could go on.
You have a fat stork up there even. Oh, everything, everything.
It's like Africa, like going out into the marshes.
No, you're in that kind of environment.
Oh, wow.
So it's so natural, you mean?
It's so natural.
It's real cool, yeah.
And are you in a boat or are you in?
You go out in a boat.
Okay.
Everybody gets their own guide in their own boat.
Do you have to hide underwater or you're above water?
Scoobotanks, we have Scoobotanks and shotguns. Is it really your life? Everybody gets their own guide and their own boat. Do you have to hide underwater or you're above water? Scuba tanks.
We have scuba tanks and shotguns.
Is it really your life?
No, but the...
The blind about as big as your sofa.
And it sunk in the water and then it's covered with...
And every guide has his own group of blinds
you guys have to take care of.
A lot of straw and stuff, natural stuff.
Okay, so you're hiding in there?
Is there bugs or anything in there?
Bugs everywhere, man.
Bugs everywhere.
Bugs everywhere.
You know, snakes, alligators, for real.
Alligators all over the place.
First thing they do when they get to your blind,
you know, the guy will get out and make sure
there's nutria, no snakes.
Water monsters.
Snakes and gators.
Keep it clean of all the appetizers.
Get all that out of there, exactly.
Then they'll take the boat back.
Bad way to start a duck hunt.
Come back pulling the piro, sink the piro
next to your blind, get in there and start quacking at them.
Wow.
Anymore.
Ducks are good to eat too.
Turkeys, you know, people can say what they want.
You know, you can fry anything or whatever,
but turkeys aren't that great to eat.
And some people are just food, just real creeps
when it comes to eating.
You know, I've had owl, you know,
I don't know if we can say it or not, but.
No, you can't.
Well, I didn't.
You just did.
I didn't have it.
You ate an owl?
You just said you did though.
Huh?
You just said you had owl.
Did he not just say he had owl?
I didn't do it.
Wait a minute.
I think he said eagle.
Yeah.
No, I didn't say eagle, dude.
And if I did, it was a wigged eagle.
I don't mean bald eagle.
No, but I did have, we had owl, my sister's a
grilled up two owls.
You just said you didn't.
Was it fries?
I thought we could say it now.
You can't.
Ronnie did it.
No.
I didn't say anything.
I didn't say anything. You're a freaking owl eater. A ball eater.
I didn't have a lot.
You didn't have a lot.
There's not a lot to them.
That's the trick.
You didn't swallow?
I didn't inhale.
You're the frogs of the animal kingdom, of the bird kingdom.
Owls are the frogs of the bird kingdom.
Once you pull that skirt up and, you know, I've done some things in my day, but nothing,
but even just to let you know, I'm not going to do anything.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something.
I'm going to do something. I'm going to do something. I'm going to do something. I'm going to do something. I'm going to do something. They're the frogs of the animal kingdom, of the bird kingdom. Owls are the frogs of the bird kingdom. Why don't you pull that skirt up and, you know,
I've done some things in my day, but nothing,
but even just to look, it's a-
We're letting you run with it.
Pull up what I'm talking about.
Let's at least see the, so we just, and these, the owls-
Did you Photoshop the eagle howl?
They were of age too, the ones I'm talking about.
I was like, oh man, these were adult owls.
You're not supposed to do that.
So much for wisdom.
Whoa, whoa, what is that?
Brother, that is something needs to take care of that.
That's disgusting.
Wow.
Oh my God.
Those, they migrated over from Chernobyl.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yep.
That's a Russian owl for sure.
I wish I hadn't seen that.
Definitely, dude.
They just had, what did I just see about Russia, dude?
They're giving away.
Well, there's a war in Ukraine.
There's a war in Ukraine.
No, but it was something exciting.
Oh, Vladimir Putin urges citizens
to have sex during work breaks to address Russia's dire birth
rate.
Yeah, he's just trying to get, he's just trying to, like.
He's trying to make everybody happy.
He's trying to put an army together.
He's trying to earn an army.
Right, he's just like, hurry up.
Nice.
That's not a bad deal though, dude.
Now that's the kind of stuff we need around here.
You don't understand.
Yeah, it's like, you know,
when everybody's really down over there
and depressed and whatever,
it's like, okay, sex on work breaks.
Okay. That's a board. That's so obvious what he's doing. That's a, okay, sex on work breaks.
That's a board dictator is what that is.
Literally brother.
Yeah. He didn't, he didn't have to push that through Congress. What are we going to do?
What are we having for lunch?
It depends on who texts me back.
Right.
That's what I'm talking about.
Everybody duck.
Right.
I'm proud of him now.
No wonder Trump likes him. What? Everybody duck, right? I'm proud of him now.
No wonder Trump likes him. Yeah.
What?
The only thing about communism
is it's starting to sound appealing, right?
I'll tell you this.
Yeah, communism sucks, but I'll tell you what,
the lunches are good.
Right?
Lunch break is hard to beat.
What did I just see?
I saw another called that,
do you see that Pizza Hut thing?
I don't know if you can find that, Nick.
It was Pizza Hut now now listen to this,
people are having such a tough time getting jobs.
What is that?
It was Pizza Hut will put your resume on a pizza box
to help you get a job.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
So you can send.
I took a leave of absence in 78.
I've got like a 50 year hole in my resume.
That's like, I'm done. Okay, so I've got like a 50 year hole in my resume. That's,
Okay, so I've had this idea forever.
Sorry.
Sorry.
But it's like, we're always talking about random ways
to promote records and do things, right?
That's a good way.
All right, what about Amazon boxes?
You know, we go to Amazon and go,
Hey, what if we like, what would it cost
to put our logo or whatever on an Amazon
box? How many people, you know, I'm sure that's non-negotiable.
Everybody. Yeah. I bet that's a dude. I wouldn't be surprised if they,
I'm amazed they haven't done that. Yeah. Really? Cause they,
they own most of the, that's something most of us see all the time. Yeah.
But yeah, that pizza, now you can put your resume, you can send it to somebody
you're trying to get employed by.
You send them a little, you know, send them a little pizza.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'll tell you this, if I'm having a slice, I'll, cause you're putting, you're
feeling good, you're eating pizza.
Yeah.
So I'm going to think that guy's pretty quality.
Your endorphins are already stimulated by the pieces and you look over there
and go, you know what, I like that guy.
Like a couple of weeks later, you're like, hey, what happened to that pizza box?
You know, nevermind. We need a new guy in the tech department. We need it. Yeah. What happened?
But then you might start just naming your workers. You don't know their names. You just name them
like pepper, like the Italian guys is like extra pepperoni. Like, yeah, remember we hired him, you know?
Or meat lovers is the guy that's maybe a little zesty,
you know?
Big sausage, spicy sausage.
What's, so with the new album, is it going to be,
tell me about it a little bit.
What made you guys want to come back and make more?
Because at a certain point,
do you feel like you've made enough
or does that never go away?
What is that kind of like?
The first one was to keep everything between the lines,
not stray very far from the previous cuts.
The first what, you mean?
The first record, reboot one.
Oh, OK.
We're on reboot two now.
But neither of these were our ideas to do, our managers, which is,
he's had, this is the first good idea he's had, I think in years.
I've had managers. I know what you're talking about. That's what I'm having.
He's a great man.
Is he?
Why Baltimore is the day after Sacramento. I still haven't quite figured it out,
but Why Baltimore is the day after Sacramento. I still hadn't quite figured it out, but
his big, big saying is, Hey, what are you, what are you bitching about me?
He says, I give you 85%.
Or, or his other one is this is a charity.
You know, I wouldn't need to do this.
You know what I mean?
Damn Clarence you're in.
He goes, I know.
So what is 15% of nothing?
It's like, nevermind.
Poor little children.
And what is his name, just so we can-
Clarence Spaulding. Clarence Spaulding.
He is great.
We're 30 something years without a contract.
Wow.
He's got Aldine and, I mean, he's doing great.
And he speaks fluent, Brooks and Dunn,
and we couldn't do it without him.
Yeah. Oh yeah, I can imagine that.
Yeah. You got to have somebody to handle a lot of stuff for you.
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But yeah, so tell me a little bit about it.
What was it like getting to work with some of these artists?
Had you worked with them before?
No, no.
Lainey, she comes in and does her thing.
They all get to pick their own songs.
18 artists.
Okay. They pick whatever
song they want and that goes on without us. That's all up to them and then maybe they
haggle about it with management or whatever. Anyway, everyone showed up with their own
version of the song. And it was like you have artistic creative license to do whatever you
want to do with this one.
Oh, dude, I can't put me up there.
I can't do karaoke.
I mean, if it's Christmas carols, I can do it.
But it's like, even some of that, I get nervous,
like in the second stands or whatever, you know?
Yeah.
Melanie has to feed me my words to my songs in my left ear.
I mean, that's what she was feeding.
I thought you was going behind a speaker and eating something.
Eating bird seed out of her hand.
Yeah.
She has to feed me whiskey all through the show.
I did a tour over in Afghanistan with Robin Williams
and Lewis Black and Kathleen Madigan.
And Robin just impressed me because
he seemed like he's just ad libbing everything, you know.
And the one thing that I learned from him before,
and we would spend all day on Blackhawks going to real remote places everywhere, you know,
and then at night we'd do in Kandahar, Kabul or whatever some some larger shows. And he
was before he would go on, he was he had a little piece of paper, you know, he'd just
written a handful of notes and whatever. And he would pace back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. And I was just really impressed at his professionalism
and the way he, and knowing you guys do,
people just, you make it look so easy, you know,
that when you're flowing through your deal
and you got your deal clickin' right,
and I was just learned a lot.
And Lewis was hysterical, as you can imagine,
just hangin' with him. imagine. Just hanging with him.
He spent any time with him.
Yeah, he's very entertaining.
He's very smart.
The way he talks is funny.
Yeah.
Just to listen to him, you know?
Oh yeah.
He is so aggravated.
It really, really is.
Of course we couldn't, you can't drink over there at all, you know?
And so-
Oh, I'd make it worse probably.
Well, yeah.
And we got there, of course Lewis has this giant bag like you carry around this huge kind of smaller duffel bag
Look a man bag you can go across you go around the world. We follow those airport scotch bottles
Like damn I didn't know Jim Beam made allergy medicine.
It's insane.
Look at all these different colored allegro's.
Dude, you guys are funny, man.
We didn't mean to be.
It's probably helped y'all over the years being able to laugh, huh?
Yeah, you gotta laugh.
You gotta have a sense of humor.
Like comedians for the most part.
You see this profile, and correct me if I'm wrong, but it's like, you know,
it's kind of a, a lot of comedians are kind of dark, right?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
And it's kind of, it's anger coming out in humor sometimes,
more times than not, not to go Dr. Phil here.
Yeah, no.
Yeah, I think it probably is.
A lot of them are dark, yeah.
I mean, definitely a lot of them,
you lose a lot of them to suicide.
And it's a pretty...
Too much downtime too, you know?
Yeah, that gets kind of scary.
Yeah.
You know?
Everybody out there gets that.
I trust me.
No matter what business you're in.
We're on a bus, you know, sitting in your whatever.
Oh, and being on a bus, dude.
I used to ride Greyhound.
That'll make anybody want to take their lot.
Oh, sure.
I used to ride, I used to go work on a farm up in Natchez,
Mississippi in the summer, and I'd take a Greyhound
up from Baton Rouge, and they put all the inmates on there,
and it's a lot of like missing people on there.
Oh.
Like I remember a dude came up and he was like,
have you seen me?
He said to me, I'm like, you sound damn missing, dude.
It's just like, that's a crazy thing to ask somebody.
A station, man. Oh, God, here sound damn missing, dude. It's just like, that's a crazy thing to ask somebody.
Oh, God, here, you know, I don't know if it's even still where it was. My sister had this
au pair who came from France, this real sweet girl that I'd met up in Maine. And I told her, you ought to come visit Nashville sometime. I forgot all about it. And I get a call one night
at the house, you know, and, and it's the process. Brosey, she's crying. I go, yes, it's Mr. Brosey.
It's it's Rosa.
I said, it's horrible.
I go, what is what has happened?
What is wrong with it?
I'm here. I'm here.
I go, you're where?
Is it in the ville of Nashville?
I go, you're here in Nashville?
Yes, I'm here.
I go, where are you?
What is wrong with it? I met the'm here. I go, where are you? What is wrong, Ros?
I'm at the Grey Dog.
I go, the Grey Dog?
You're at the Greyhound bus station?
So my God, I go, look, do not go to the bathroom.
Go sit in a chair.
Don't talk to anybody.
Don't look at anything.
I'm on my way.
It's like emergency.
Oh my God.
Freaking, it's like going. It's like being in the opposite of a hospital. That's a real catch. Oh, going faster than my wife when she's like emergency. Oh my God.
It's like being in the opposite of a hospital. That's a rough entrance.
When she's having a baby, it's like, I've got to save her. Like right now,
this is an emergency.
Every row of the grand bus, things get seedier and seedier. First it's weed.
And then four rows later, they're doing like abortions and like early term,
but still like it's like, it gets real dicey, dude.
It gets real dicey on Greyhound.
But yeah, to have to rescue a French woman
from a Greyhound bus terminal.
You know, the-
Was this her first time in?
I mean, this is her entrance.
Yeah, she had been on, up north,
they've got real trains, you know, tram and stuff.
But they, on the schedule, if you look at it,
I'm like, how did you get here?
She showed me her schedule.
They put Greyhound bus in the middle of Amtrak.
So you go from these beautiful, nice things.
Welcome to America.
Yeah, you can work on your computer to,
oh my God, what happened?
A lot of people on there, yeah,
just testing pills on each other.
A lot of people, yeah.
Now?
Yeah, a lot of people drinking their own bath water.
I had a dude selling 40 proof bath water on 10 ones.
I didn't have a lot, but I had a little.
You know what I'm saying?
Wasn't that bad?
It wasn't that bad, dude.
I'll say this, it kind of had a Peppermint Snaps vibe to it.
I'll say that.
Oh, God dang.
There's a routine.
Jerry Clowry was one of my favorite comedians.
You guys ever get to meet him?
No.
Not in town.
No, I didn't get to meet him.
He was a famous Southern comedian, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He was great.
What about Brother Dave Gardner?
I never watched him.
Oh, really?
You got to check him out.
Brother Dave Gardner is his name?
Oh, yes.
And he was like,
Let's bring him up, man.
He was sort of the country Lenny Bruce
without using a lot of foul language,
but some real dark humor.
Man, very inappropriate humor.
Oh good.
That's him, brother Dave.
Brother Dave Gardner.
Look at him smoking that cigarette. Yeah. Showing you how it is, got his suit going. Check that hair, it's shining, Dave. Brother Dave Gardner. Look at him smoking that cigarette.
Yeah.
Showing you how it is, got his suit going.
Check that hair, it's shining man.
Oh yeah, no.
That one, that cover up on the right, I've got that album.
It's all torn up for Doggachoo'd the Corner
off my dad loved him though.
Wow.
I'm gonna start listening to him.
Mm-hmm, he was something else.
Not like your average Yee-Haw country comedian.
Was there an artist that's passed
and you guys were admired growing up,
you went to their service or anything,
somebody you guys really miss?
Cash for sure.
Did y'all go to his service, were you allowed to go?
Yeah.
Oh wow.
That must've been really interesting, I'll say.
It was my first, yeah.
June, June was the same way, we were at the hospital
and she was at her heart attack. Wow.
Didn't get to go to Murrell's but. Was he a funny guy? What was he like? He could be funny. Yeah,
but he wasn't being funny on this one. No, he came out and did the last five or six dates with us on our tour in 2010.
We were shutting things down.
It's one of those instances where you meet somebody famous and the hag just shut me down.
I could not carry on a conversation with him.
It's about as bad as Cash.
He didn't like chatting.
Well, no, he didn't, but he liked you.
And he let you know.
Where John didn't let you know for a while.
He just smoked you out just to see what you got.
Merle.
He could survive it.
Merle's agreed to go on tour with us,
but we had to perform with him every night, which, of course,
was-
On stage together. Yeah. Throw us in the bar patch. I mean, that's was such a huge honor
and whatever, but he would come up with some obscure songs and whatever. And I jumped.
It wasn't like silver wings or anything. No, he's throwing his curve balls from way in
the back, man. Like, okay, tonight. I was out there singing Pitbull or something. Diving in person.
And I hopped up on his bus one afternoon
to find out what our song was.
We were in Woodstock, New York, I remember,
and he's up there burning one down,
and he goes, you need to sit down.
I go, okay.
What is it?
Murl, he goes, what the hell's wrong with y'all?
I don't know, Murl, what's wrong with this?
I got that damn window, all them people out there.
What the hell's wrong with y'all?
I don't know Murl, what's wrong with this?
All them damn people out there, y'all wanna quit.
Murl, it's a good point. It was ingenious. Our last tour we thought. So Merle, you know I gotta tell you, Poncho on
Lefty's probably one of my favorite songs ever I said and watching you and
Willie in that video is one of the coolest things I've ever seen.
You two, you all are like best friends.
I mean, Ronnie Dunn and I didn't even know each other
when we met, you know, we've bullied our way
through this fricking career for 20 years.
We have not taken a break, you know,
and we've just gotten to a point where we think
it'd be the best thing for us.
We've made it 20 years.
You and Millie Willie Nelson made one album together.
And he goes, yeah, but we only had one hit.
Okay, Merle, what's my song?
And he started laughing.
I'm like, you win.
You're smarter than me.
Always will be.
It is crazy to think that when you almost say that to some people, even me hearing it
from you guys, like, yeah, this is going to be it.
Because it's, because it's, but that's just, it is what it is.
It's like your life's at where it's at, you know?
When you've taken breaks, what are other things that you've started to fill your lives with
that became like important to you or that meant something to you?
I know you have your vineyards.
My friend Chris used to work out of there.
Yeah, but that was, I started that 20 years ago and other things.
Really what I really wanted to do and I'd been offered a couple of bit parts and movies
and stuff along the way.
You know, making a movie takes a long scheduling and all that.
And we really, we did tour 20 years without stopping. And I kind of did some theater in
college. I went to Louisiana Tech, you know. Oh hell yeah, dude. Yeah. And enjoyed all that.
With the Red Fern Grows. They used to do that musical up there. Oh yeah. A lot of good.
A lot of beautiful. All right, Covington, don't get me started now. Talk amongst yourselves. This is a war you don't wanna start.
Hey look, Ronald Reagan.
Okay, it is, right?
It is, dude.
The Ruston versus Covington, that'd be a great battle.
Bring that arm back.
You can keep Terry Bradshaw.
That's so good.
Okay.
Anyway, but I got in, told, called William Morris,
you know, and said, he looks at us and said,
hey, I don't, I don't want to start a movie.
I'm not qualified or, you know, don't have the chops,
but I would, I would, if there's a bit part or something
that maybe some, some whatever, if something comes up,
you know?
Yeah. And so, yeah, they started sending me some things
and I actually started doing some movies, this and that.
And my son had studied film at Vanderbilt in English
and wanted to be a screenwriter.
And one thing led to another, he came out
and started writing with some guys that had produced,
I co-starred with Ernie Hudson eventually in a Western.
Oh, sweet, I'm not familiar with Ernie Hudson.
Yeah you are.
The Hudson River, no.
Yeah, you are, he was in Ghostbusters.
He doesn't know him.
He was in the original Ghostbusters.
Oh he was, oh the talk about the glasses?
The only black guy in the movie, are you kidding?
Oh shoot.
I'm gonna go back.
That Ernie Hudson.
Oh, that Ernie.
I know who he is.
Oh, Ernie Hudson.
Ernie Hudson.
Watch it, it said Bernie.
Oh I love Ernie Hudson. Yeah, I could tell he is. Oh, Ernie Hudson. Ernie Hudson. Oh, I love Ernie Hudson.
Yeah, I could tell you did.
Yeah.
No, I'm joking Ernie.
No, that's a, so that's something you've enjoyed
getting to do then.
Yeah, so I got to do that a little bit
and my son wound up being a screenwriter,
went out to LA to be Tarantino
and he writes movies for Hallmark now. Is he really?
Well, I'm art still makes a lot of movies, you know, there's a lot of places aren't even making movies so true
Kudos to him. He's got some work is a year Hallmark does
Some of the studios hardly make any movies anymore. So good for them man. Wow, that's cool. You've been in movies
No, I just wrote a movie with, um,
me and David Spade wrote a movie together.
He did like Tommy Boy, you know who he is.
Oh, yeah.
And so we wrote a movie and I think we're gonna start making it on January 6th.
He was in Ghostbusters.
Yeah, he was, dude. He was the black guy.
With the glasses?
Yeah, with the glasses.
And one arm.
One arm, right? Yeah.
That's who he was.
So I'm scared about it, but I think it's going to happen.
We worked on it for so long and now it's supposed to happen.
Now I'm like, I'm scared, you know?
Cool.
That's natural.
That's normal.
Yeah.
I think, yeah.
Being scared of something maybe that you don't know how you can do at it or something.
But we also have done it all ourselves. So it's like, so that feels good.
You should, you should talk to Billy Bob Thornton.
Really?
Yeah. I mean, I think what he did was Sling Blade.
Oh, yeah.
But they said and did that. So ZZ Top was out.
That's what I like.
Boy, and biscuits.
Billy Top, I mean, Billy Top. ZZ Top was out. That's what I like. Boy, and biscuits. Billy Top.
I mean, Billy Top.
Yeah.
ZZ Top was out with us.
And Billy Gibbons was telling about the editing process after Billy Bob and all of them finished
it up, and Dwight Yoakam.
Oh, yeah.
He was in it.
He says, I go to this little apartment building in LA.
It's hot as hell.
He says, I go up second floor.
It's because the biscuits are bacon. Right? of this little apartment building in LA, it's hot as hell. He says, I go up second floor, right?
So I knock on the door, and he says, it kind of cracks open.
And he says, they go, ah, it's me, Billy Kelly.
Oh, let me in.
Come on, what are you doing?
It's Dwight Yocum, and they're all in like,
they're like white wife beater t-shirts or whatever,
sweating all over the place.
In there with old school hand editing machines, cutting sling blade.
Wow.
Doing all that.
I bet he's fascinating guy Billy Bob Thornton.
Yeah.
And Dwight Yogan.
I've been working with him on a Taylor Sheridan
this next series coming up with a land man,
doing some music stuff together.
But it's just fun. It's fun.
It's fun.
He's got a band.
He does?
Oh yeah, Billy Bob Thornton has a band.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've known that for a long time.
I've never gotten to see him play, but I would probably enjoy it.
Have you seen it, Tim?
Billy Bob Thornton's band?
I think they're going to be here in a while.
I'd love to go see them then.
I'm going to make a point of that.
They're coming before long.
He told me the other night. Yep, Boxmasters.
That's it.
Next month.
They got their gigs starting opening for ZZ Top.
Bill Hamm, their manager.
And you guys opened for ZZ Top at one point, right?
Is that right?
Yeah, we co-headlined with them.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what I meant.
Long time, had a blast.
Yeah.
Ronnie, what about you?
What's something that you've enjoyed keeping your time with and when you have free time?
I got a tinker at the farm a little bit still, you know,
I'm always writing songs or something,
but I grabbed a camera and a buddy of mine who had been a 25 year,
uh, photographer for sports illustrated, uh,
moved back to town and we hit it off.
I'd just been to Cuba doing some photography
and playing around with it.
And he said, show me your stuff.
And I did.
And he says, okay, you're going with me.
So we took off for like a year, year and a half,
two years, shooting everything.
Cheyenne rodeo, Galapagos, all over the place.
Wow.
Yeah.
So you really enjoyed it, huh?
Yeah.
Do you sell any of the prints?
I'd love to buy one at some point.
Yeah, I'll give you all you want.
That'd be cool.
There's so many.
That'd be cool.
I'd love to give you one,
but we shot some great cowboy stuff.
Did you?
Awesome, yeah.
Dude, I just went to the PBR like two weeks ago
when it was here.
Yeah.
Oh, that was bull riding, but I love rodeo.
Rodeo is one of the best, man.
I'm with you.
If you take your wife or kids out,
you don't know what to do with them.
If there's a rodeo within 40 miles,
My parents used to do that.
It's a blast.
Have you been to the prison rodeo in Angola?
No, I'd love to go.
Are you kidding me?
Have you been?
Dude, yes.
Went just recently and actually played down there.
You know about the rodeo.
Yes, I know about it, dude.
It's unbelievable.
Eight seconds for freedom, They call it. Yeah.
For freedom. But it's six seconds.
You know, the first event is called busting out.
So, um, yeah, these, uh, I've got a friend, uh,
Brianna Calhoun, who she does prison reentry and we,
we stayed at the warden's house. Oh yeah. Oh dude. He's fantastic.
Yeah. Um, I want him on this show.
Yeah, we stayed up making gumbo and drinking beer about one o'clock in the morning.
But the rodeo, the first event busting out, they put six prisoners on six bulls and they're
PBR bulls.
They're real bulls because they do a PBR exhibit kind of thing there.
Put six guys on it, they release all six of them at the same time.
Of course, the prisoners stay on for like a 10th of a second
and then it's all hell breaks loose.
And every event at the rodeos like that,
there's one called pinball where they set up eight
hula hoops in the middle of the deal.
Eight prisoners stand in the hula hoops,
they release two bulls on them and the last one
in the hula hoop wins the prize.
No, it's fantastic.
You got nothing to lose.
You gotta go.
The prize is just a little bit of sunlight.
The prize is good.
Right? You get two hours in the cage outside.
You get to use a harmonica for 10 minutes.
Right, right.
Big time bragging rights.
You get a ball to bounce.
There were 96 volunteers this year.
And it happens twice a year.
You should really go.
It's unbelievable to watch.
I didn't know you could just go.
Oh, it's like, it's a 20,000 seat arena.
See, there it is.
Wow.
Look at them.
That's it.
That's pinball right there.
I'm not kidding.
What bull?
We got to go on this one, man.
Bro, it'd be fascinating.
This is the place where even the bulls are
afraid to come out at you. It ain't going out there.
There it is.
Freaking, there's 20 lifers out there.
The best one's the winner.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
I'm going to, I'd love to go to that.
I'm going to try to get to, I'd love to interview the warden because it's a fascinating thing.
They don't, there's not another prison, I don't think that does something as famous
as this.
Look at this.
Here you go.
No, no, no, no, no.
He's going to stay.
Oh man down. See, you still got one in there. Man down. He's go. No, no, no, no, no. He's gonna stay. Oh man down. He's still got one in there. Man down.
He's walking. Yeah. He's a pinball wizard. He's like no never mind. No, he left the station.
Oh rodeo is so fun man. Man, the Cheyenne rodeo. You get a press bunker where you're ground level.
And that's a big one huh? Yes. And it's crazy. Keep daddy of them all, they call it.
Is it?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
And there's another one that's real organic.
We went to, what's the name of that?
In Montana?
Miles City.
And that's where the breeders bring all the rodeo stock in.
They have for years, years.
I mean, I don't know, 50, 60 years, whatever.
And people watch them, these kids,
local cowboy kids, climb on these horses
and they'll ride, I mean, they used to run 300 horses
plus through a day.
They ride them to see how they buck
and then every now and then they'll stop and have an auction.
And then they go right back to it.
About the end of the day, these kids are back there
and pick up trucks with like liters of whiskey just.
Just tuckered out.
Can't move, man.
It beats them to death.
But great pictures.
Yeah, a buddy of mine's daddy sells,
I guess horse semen or whatever.
How are they, I don't know what they call it.
Straws.
Your horse.
Is it straws?
It's semen and it is straws is how they sell them.
Yeah, they sell, I don't know how much you can get.
I guess you can get a, I don't,
I've never seen the containers they put it in,
but I know that they mate with other horses
and they'll have lines of horses coming up
to mate with their horse all spring.
Sure.
He's like a, I think he's like a madam or whatever.
You can't do that with their breeds,
but quarter horses you can.
For racing horses?
Racing horses have to be actually bred.
They have the, the males to get on the feed.
Oh, you can't artificially inseminate them.
Yeah, I think, yeah, I'd rather.
Yeah, that's a part of the deal. They got to watch it.
You can't be selling semen in the thoroughbred business because it's so expensive.
You know, I mean, this is a secretariat semen or whatever.
Can you prove it? You know, it's like, oh, hell, the Celsius is three dollars a can.
I can't even imagine.
I'm up to that.
It's everything, wildlife, you know, deer,
things like that, you name it.
It's all out there.
Did you guys ever get to play Asia?
That's one last question I was thinking.
Did you guys ever?
What is Asia anyway?
That's random.
That's a good question.
Asia is, I guess it's.
Come on now, easy.
China, Vietnam.
Thailand. Thailand. Come on, Vietnam, Thailand, Thailand.
Come on, give us some Asian countries.
Japan, Korea, North and South.
There you go.
Malaysia.
Malaysia again.
Maybe that's why they call it Asia.
Malaysia.
Yeah, it's a big Sacramento.
Sacramento, yeah.
But these guys, how far, I'm just curious how far because your music was like has been a fixture in in my life you know and and
so many people my age but I just wonder like what other ethnicities and stuff
listen they've never heard of us we did a thing for rock my world one year it
was a record company's great idea they came in with all these cue cards and whatever.
Every country, all the ones you just named, everything you could think of, but phonetically
how you would pronounce our new song is called Rock My World.
We would love for you to like it in other parts of the world.
That kind of thing.
So Ronnie and I, as stupid as we are, we're trying to...
We said yes.
We said yes, and we're every language you can think of,
you know, from Japanese.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, you know, just...
And they had the cards and it sounded out of the marita.
Oh, yes, it sounded out for you.
My sister's got a home in Italy.
My brother-in-law's like,
I'm over there watching a soccer game.
He goes, and your commercial came on in this bar and the break.
He goes, and then shut the whole place down.
He goes, everybody's on the edge of their seat.
They're looking light.
And at the end of it, they go, so I still have no idea what we said in Italian.
As long as there's probably some exercise thing that makes your head turn around better.
As long as there's some young Vietnamese kids sitting somewhere going,
Under the neon moon.
Yeah, yeah.
Booscoop.
Yeah, that's what matters, man.
Okay.
We might cut that part out.
Cut, cut.
The new album and the new tour, will they come out simultaneously?
How does that kind of work?
Pretty close.
I think the new album comes out in November.
November the 15th.
Yeah, and we start touring in February.
Heavy stuff, it starts hitting in February.
Yeah, and then spring.
February, March, April, something like that.
We're going to stop for a minute.
I think you're going to go do your deal.
I'm going to run to Africa and come back, and then we're going to pick it up in June.
Run over there to Congo.
Yeah. Yeah. I'm going to run to Africa and come back. And then we're going to pick it up in June. Run over there to Congo.
This guy, yeah.
Yeah.
You know.
I'll go down to Twinsboro and Covington.
Yeah, we'll be over in Murphy'sboro if you need us, dude.
He's down there.
Well, not Murphy's.
Smyrna.
I mean, it's really Murphy's.
Yeah, sorry, we'll go to Smyrna.
Gulfstream promised me they'd have it fixed by then,
by plane.
So we got it.
We're good.
Anything else you guys wanted to talk about?
There was something you wanted to get out there?
No, we know we just, we're selling that record right now.
Reboot two. You got to have it.
You got to get it.
It'll change your life.
Thanks for the hang man.
Love watching your show and nonsense and everything is fun and games.
Yeah.
I feel lucky to have a job, man.
Really lucky to talk to you guys.
This has honestly been one of my favorite episodes, I think.
It really has. You never said that before, before right i've said it probably three times every
freaking show what he probably got back up it's just been it's been like yeah you guys made it
so easy and also you guys have such a good sense of humor i think um so long as you get with
musicians and they don't talk they they don't, they're musicians. I remember Tom Petty would like going, talk,
he's going to talk, right?
Freaking musicians.
There's a reason why they handed him an instrument.
Last guy you wanted to do is have Tom Petty come sit by you
and do an interview with him, right? I guess.
How's your voice? It's all right.
Bill Vezor told me I was interviewing him, you know,
doing the countdown show and said, so how'd you get to be such a good piano player? He goes, well, actually Ier told me, I was interviewing him, doing the Countdown show.
And he said, so how'd you get to be such a good piano player?
He goes, well, actually I was a drummer
when I was a kid.
And I said, oh really?
I said, I've never heard you play drums.
He goes, shit.
And I was a kid, man, all I wanted was a drum set.
Christmas, I'd get a drum set.
He goes, I just beat on those drums relentlessly,
day and night, whatever.
He goes, I got pretty good at it.
I go, what happened?
He goes, I came home from school one day
and my drums were gone.
There was a bicycle sitting there where my drums used to be.
Shit, man.
I go, what'd you do?
He goes, rode my bicycle.
I got real good at it too.
Yeah, that guy believes in himself too much.
Your drums are gone.
That's one of those guys.
Road to Cincinnati.
Kix Brooks, Ronnie Dunn, Thank you guys so much, man.
Thank you for all the years of wonderful music and entertainment.
And uh, yeah, I got to, I'm going to come and check out one of the shows on tour, man.
I'm excited about it.
Please come see us.
I will.
We certainly will.
Thank you guys.
Fun stuff.
Really fun.
Big fans. I was floating on the breeze and I feel I'm falling like these leaves I must be cornerstone
Oh, but when I reach that ground I'll share this piece of mind I found
I can feel it in my bones
But it's gonna take a little