Users Online

Thursday, August 05, 2004

 

REBA RADIO

REMINDER: Don't forget about the special broadcast of Reba Radio this Saturday beginning at 10am. Check the NEWS section of the site on Saturday for details.

CLICK HERE to discuss in our forum.
 

Reba Sings for Her Award

Star Performs at Party Celebrating Her 22nd No. 1 Single

By: Edward Morris


Reba McEntire surprised guests at her No. 1 party Wednesday (Aug. 4) by closing the celebration with a nine-song set of her hits and newer material. The focal point of the festivities, held at Nashville's Rocketown nightclub, was "Somebody," the 22nd No. 1 single of McEntire's career and her first in six years.

During a brief press conference preceding the party, the still vivacious redhead scolded celebrities who bring politics to their shows -- but made it perfectly clear that she backs President Bush.

Dressed in a glittery white tank top and form-flattering blue jeans, McEntire told reporters that her WB sitcom, Reba, continues to be designed for family viewing. She will start shooting the fourth season next week. "We want to be family friendly," she stressed, conjuring up the vision of everyone from kids to grandparents gathered around the set in the living room.

McEntire has historically included socially-conscious songs in her albums, ranging from the plight of immigrants in "Just Across the Rio Grande" to the problem of spouse abuse in "The Stairs" to a sympathetic view of mercy killing in "Bobby." Asked if she seeks out such songs, she replied, "I don't make it a point to go looking for songs like that, but I sure do love it when I find them." As an example, she cited "She Thinks His Name Was John," which deals with a woman who's contracted AIDS from an impetuous one-night stand. She said it was the last one played in a batch of songs a publisher was pitching her, but that she knew from the moment she heard it that she wanted to record it.

Another reporter asked what she thought about stars who try to impart their own politics to fans. She said she opposed it: "I feel that people who are my fans really respect my opinions, and I don't want to sway anybody's opinions." Then she added, "I know who I'm going to vote for. I voted for him the last time."

Having conquered country music, Broadway (with Annie Get Your Gun) and now television, McEntire said she enters each new venture without dwelling on the prospect of failing. Explaining that she never even thought about the possibility of flopping on Broadway, she said, "I just wanted to be Annie Oakley."

No matter how many No. 1's she scores, she told reporters, each one seems important. She observed, "You never hear, 'How many No. 3s have you had?'" In spite of having acted in several movies, McEntire said she isn't being offered any movie scripts. But, she added, television suits her fine, especially the way production is scheduled. She said she gets off early enough on Fridays to do weekend concerts.

McEntire announced that her next single will be "He Gets That From You," (editors note: the correct title of the song is "He Gets That From Me") which is about seeing an absent father in the face and actions of his young son. In the original version, she said, the father is absent because of a "bitter divorce." Not liking that angle, she asked the songwriters to rewrite the lyrics to suggest that the father has "passed away." Fans helped pick the new single, she said, by voting for it on the Reba.com Web site.

Following the press conference, McEntire dashed off for a series of TV interviews, which were conducted on a balcony overlooking the spacious -- but packed -- party room. One of the partygoers was Terri Clark, who, without her habitual hat, moved about relatively unnoticed, dressed in a black T-shirt and denim cutoffs.

Luke Lewis and James Stroud, co-chairmen of Universal Music Group Nashville, called the party to order. "I grew up around rich kids who'd inherited money, " Lewis began, "and I resented them. Then, a couple of years ago, I inherited Reba McEntire." (He was referring to his taking the reins at MCA Records, McEntire's label.)

Stroud told the story of his first recording session with McEntire. He said he'd come to Nashville as a young drummer looking for work and was overjoyed when McEntire's producer hired him for the session. McEntire greeted him warmly and put him at ease, he recalled, until she noticed he was playing a new-fangled set of electronic drums. "She said, 'Those drums go and so do you,'" Stroud reported. "She fired me!"

McEntire stood at the back of the room with her mother, sister and other family members until Stroud and Lewis called her to the stage for the presentation of dozens of awards -- to her; producers Norro Wilson and Buddy Cannon, "Somebody" songwriters, Dave Berg, Sam Tate and Annie Tate and their publishers. Indeed, the award presentations went on so long that Lewis was compelled from time to time to ask the crowd to be patient.

That patience was eventually rewarded when everyone left the stage except McEntire, and the curtain lifted to reveal her nine-piece band. Her husband and manager, Narvel Blackstock, was at the back of the room, vigilantly monitoring the soundboard.

McEntire opened the show with "Can't Even Get the Blues," her first No. 1, from 1982. She told the crowd that she was at a garage in De Soto, Texas, waiting for her bus to be repaired, when she got the news that the song had hit the top of the charts. The first thing she did, she said, was call her mother.

Set List

"Can't Even Get the Blues"
"Somebody"
"How Was I to Know"
"Whoever's in New England"
"The Fear of Being Alone"
"Fallin' Out of Love"
"Love Revival"
"And Still"
"I'm a Survivor" (the Reba theme)




MORE PHOTOS:


CLICK HERE to discuss in our forum.
 

Reba Celebrates #1


From the moment you walked in the door of Rocketown in downtown Nashville, you could sense the buzz in the air! The Country Music Industry’s elite turned out to celebrate one of their reigning superstars: Reba McEntire. Last night’s gala was in celebration of Reba’s 22nd number one single “Somebody,” a feat that makes her the female country artist with the longest span of #1 hits.

The stage was set for a classy evening in the large concert hall decked out in red: red tablecloths, red candles and of course, the redhead everyone was there to congratulate. Drinks and hors d' oeuvres kept the crowd happy while waiting for the evening's events to begin. Reba arrived to a flurry of cameras and interviews. Once the initial excitement had died down, it was time to honor her - and honor her, they did. After co-label chiefs James Stroud and Luke Lewis recapped her amazing career, Reba was called to the stage to receive numerous plaques and framed pictures commemorating her 22nd number one hit. Representatives from Billboard, SESAC, ASCAP, Carnival Music, Warner-Chappell Publishing and MCA all took turns honoring Reba along with Dave Berg and Sam and Annie Tate who co-wrote the hit song.

In typical Reba fashion, she graciously received all the praise, still acknowledging how she got to where she is today. She recalled the day early in her career when her bus broke down and, while in the repair shop, she received the call telling her of her first number one, "Can't Even Get the Blues." Her mother was the first person she called on that day, and last night she appropriately turned to her mother in the crowd and said, "Can you believe it mama, 22!" Following her remarks, the celebration really got underway as a curtain opened to reveal Reba's tour band, which joined her for a surprise mini-concert covering some of her top songs from over the years. It was a fitting end to an evening honoring the unprecedented success of a dearly beloved artist and classy individual, Reba McEntire.


-Reba.com


MORE IMAGES:


CLICK HERE to discuss in our forum.
 

Faith, Kenny, Gretchen gather for Reba love

Reba McEntire had a star-studded party to celebrate her 22nd No. 1 country song in 22 years.

Among those nibbling those little salmon-on-toast thingees were Faith Hill, Kenny Chesney, Ronnie Dunn of Brooks & Dunn, my girlfriend Gretchen Wilson (who looked smashing!), Jamie O'Neal, Steve Azar and newcomers Julie Roberts and Jedd Hughes.

Reba, who sang nine songs at the party, said her latest No. 1, Somebody, meant almost as much as her first because fans came back to her after a three-year absence that saw Reba on Broadway and in Hollywood.

Yes, she loves those No. 1 hits. '

'You never hear people ask, 'How many No. 3s you have?' '' she told a group of reporters. Well said.

-Sent by Bernie

CLICK HERE to discuss in our forum.