February 21, 2012

JASON ALDEAN REMAINS THE GUY NEXT DOOR

He’s like a lot of the guys in his audience (hoop earrings, scraggly beard, tight plaid shirt) and he’s open to all kinds of influences.

“I just grew up thinking that good music is good music,” said Aldean. “In our show we’d play like a Waylon (Jennings) song and then we’d turn around and play a Guns N’ Roses song. That represents where I grew up and what I grew up listening to. Macon, Georgia, is a big melting pot of music. Country is always my favorite but I was never ‘Country music is all there is and everything else sucked.’ Guys like Eminem and Ludacris are awesome.”

He may be open-minded, but Aldean’s music has an edge and an attitude (think Kid Rock’s Southern lil’ brother with more maturity and a better voice) that set him apart from such current country superstars as Kenny Chesney, Brad Paisley and Keith Urban.

“I see fans reaching now for rougher, edgier and grittier kinds of things,” said concert promoter Gary Marx. “People like Jason Aldean and Eric Church have attitudes. They’re a little fresher and more aggressive, and people are responding.”

But it’s not a manufactured image for Aldean.

“I don’t record songs that aren’t me,” said the plain-voiced country-rocker, who turns 34 this month. “What you see is what you get. I don’t have the energy to go out and be something that I’m not.”

Aldean is in the midst of his first arena headlining tour. This is the second leg, and he’s retooled things for 2012.

“This tour is unlike any we’ve done,” he said recently from a tour stop at Arkansas State University. “We decided to play basically in the round. It’s been a really cool deal.”

In the past year, Aldean has arrived as one of country’s bona fide stars. Not only is he filling concert venues but his My Kinda Party took the Country Music Association Award for album of the year in November and ended up as the biggest-selling country disc of 2011.

“It’s crazy, man,” he said. “It’ll have that title ‘album of the year’ forever. It’s a cool feeling.”

In this challenging economy, Aldean knows how to give value. While most albums have 10 or 11 tunes, My Kinda Party has 15. While Urban and Chesney asked as much as $80 a ticket in 2011, Aldean’s top price is $50.

“I remember having this conversation with (promoter) Live Nation when we signed with them,” he said. “You can go out and charge 80 bucks for a ticket and have the place half full or you can charge 40 bucks a ticket and have the place completely full and you make the same amount of money. It’s just common sense.

“And it’s no big secret the economy is screwed up. Same with the album. Make them feel like they got their money’s worth.”

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