Biography
Few
acts have carved as distinctive a niche in modern musical history as
Confederate Railroad. With their high-energy combination of honky-tonk
rockers, sensitive ballads, and offbeat humor, they have created a unique
identity that has brought them chart success, multi-platinum sales,
and continued popularity as a road band. Versatility, likability, and
a willingness to stretch boundaries are all part of the mix, but if
there is a formula, not even they can put their finger on it.
"I don't think I have
any more of a clue now than I did when we started," laughs founder/frontman
Danny Shirley. "I know that if you start thinking, 'Is radio going
to like this"' or 'Is this going to offend anybody?' that it really
waters things down, so I don't try to second-guess anybody. What I do
is look for songs I like--that seems to work best."
Nearly five million albums
later, there is no doubt that it works. Songs like "Queen Of Memphis,"
"Trashy Women," "Jesus And Mama," and "Daddy
Never Was The Cadillac Kind" became major hits and established
Confederate Railroad as a key part of country music's landscape during
the genre's expansion of the '90s. The accolades kicked off with the
Academy of Country Music's Best New Group award in 1993 and have included
a Grammy nomination, and a host of nominations from the Country Music
Association and the British Country Music Foundation.
For guys who started as a
Georgia bar band, it was the stuff of dreams. "I remember saying
when we got our first platinum album," says Shirley, "'At
this point, our success has pretty much surpassed our talent, and from
this point on, everything else is just icing on the cake.'" The
latest swirl of icing is the band's new Audium Records CD, Unleashed,
a microcosm of everything Shirley and company do best. There is sensitivity,
hard-driving honky-tonk, and a generous dose of pure fun, not to mention
good-natured new assaults on decorum and political correctness. The
rollicking "I'm Diggin' It," as well as "White Trash
With Money" and "That 'R' Word" have attitude to spare,
and show that time has not dulled the edge of the band's skewed and
witty worldview. Likewise, "That's What Brothers Do," "Wasted
Time," and "Between The Rainbows And The Rain" show the
band's flip side, its ability to capture life's poignant and tender
moments. "Body Like A Temple," a duet with country legend
and longtime friend George Jones, brims with honky-tonk fire, and "Still
One Outlaw Left," finds the band and David Allan Coe, who share
a great deal of road history, teaming up for the first time on record.
"Borrowed Time" show's the band's way with a pure Southern
rocker, and "Thick As Thieves" celebrates the camaraderie
that has marked CRR's long road history.
Jones and Coe continue a
CRR tradition involving guest artists. Steve Earle and Charlie Daniels
are among those who have sung on the band's earlier projects, and this
time, songwriters have joined the chorus. Bob DiPiero and Craig Wiseman
sing backup on their "Diggin' It," Anthony Smith on his "What
Brothers Do," and newly signed Mercury Records artist James Allen
Otto on "Borrowed Time."
This album also showcases
Shirley's writing skills. He is a co-writer on "White Trash With
Money" and "Wasted Time," both based on real-life events.
Confederate Railroad's current line-up includes, along with vocalist/guitarist
Shirley, Mark DuFresne on drums, Wayne Secrest on bass, Gates Nichols
on steel guitar and vocals, Jimmy Dormire on lead guitar, and Cody McCarver
on keyboards and vocals. The quintet's love of the give-and-take of
live performance is such that they still perform a hundred dates a year,
and their legions of fans are as appreciative as ever.
"There's nothing profound
about this," says Shirley. "We've been playing music in one
form or another for 20 years, and we still enjoy it. One reason is that
we do material we like. We do what we want the way we want, regardless
of the consequences." It is a strategy they have employed since
the band's early days in the 1980s. Then, Shirley and his cohorts were
splitting their time between a regular stint as house band at Miss Kitty's
in Marietta, Georgia, and roadwork backing up David Allan Coe and Johnny
Paycheck. The strategy, while effective in the long run, was not a quick
ticket to the top. "I knew eventually we'd get a label deal and
a real shot at it," says Shirley, "but we had a rougher image
than what was the going thing then. When other club acts around us--people
we were often out-drawing--began getting deals, I questioned myself
for a time. 'Do I need starched Wranglers and western shirts? Should
we try to be a little more mainstream and play the game?' We made a
decision back then that we would be ourselves."
The payoff took awhile, but
it came. "Our first single, 'She Took It Like A Man,' went to #26,"
says Shirley, "and management and the label were bummed out, but
I was thrilled." He had reason to be. The next two singles, "Jesus
And Mama," and "Queen Of Memphis," shot to the top of
the charts, and three more--"Trashy Women," "When You
Leave That Way You Can Never Go Back," and "She Never Cried,"
gave them an even half-dozen hits from their first album, which has
sold nearly three million copies. They were named the Academy of Country
Music's Best New Group in 1993 and earned a Grammy nomination. Their
million-selling second album's "Daddy Never Was The Cadillac Kind,"
"Elvis And Andy," and "When And Where" further established
them as among the most versatile acts in the business. Their long history
as club mainstays and road warriors had given them a noteworthy stage
presence, and they drew both kids singing along with "Trashy Women"
and grandparents touched by "Jesus and Mama." Other highlights
were more personal. "There was the time I was lying on the floor
at George Jones's house watching the Tennessee-Georgia football game
in 1992," says Shirley. "He turned to me and said, 'You sang
real good on that 'Jesus and Mama' song. That comment was like getting
a blessing from the pope." Jones also told the band that watching
"When You Leave That Way" was the first time he'd ever cried
watching a video. That was indicative of the band's wider success with
videos. The cool combination of humor and emotion that marked their
recorded work made their videos among the industry's most interesting.
They consistently reached the top of the video charts--the drag sequence
in "Trashy Women" still comes up as a conversation topic among
fans--and were nominated for Best Country Video by the CMA in 1996.
The road warriors may be
a little tamer these days ("We can get as wild as we always did,
just not as often"), but they're still providing both poignant
moments and pure fun, and enjoying all of it. "You start playing
music in your bedroom because it's fun, an enjoyable part of your life,"
Shirley says. "Then as you start to become successful at it, it
becomes a business. If you're fortunate, and you're around long enough,
it gets to be fun again, and that's where it is for me."
SONG
BY SONG
STILL ONE OUTLAW LEFT--I
really wanted to do something with David Allan Coe. We even talked about
writing one together, but our schedules just didn't work. We could both
really relate to that, not necessarily because of the content of our
music so much as just the willingness to go against the grain. If there's
any outlaw left, it's still David.
THAT'S WHAT BROTHERS
DO--I was visiting a writers' night in Nashville and heard this
performed. My youngest kids are four and two, close to what this song
is talking about, and it really hit me because of them, the way my four-year-old
will teach the two-year-old all the stuff he knows. In fact, I told
my wife Jenni about it when I got home. Then, both guys who were helping
me look for songs, Al Cooley and John Dotson, brought it to a song meeting
at my house. I knew that had to be a sign.
BODY LIKE A TEMPLE--When
we were pulling this album together, I thought this would make a great
duet if I could get George Jones to agree to do it. A lot of us can
relate to this song, but I knew for sure he could.
DIGGIN' IT--I've
known Craig Wiseman and Bob DiPiero forever, and I've recorded many
of their songs, and I couldn't resist this one by the two of them together.
It's just a fun, uptempo, lighthearted song.
WHITE TRASH WITH MONEY--When
things first started going well for me, I bought a nice house in a nice
part of Chattanooga. The neighbors were all concerned that with an entertainer
moving in there'd be parties and Harley-Davidsons and naked women at
the pool, not realizing that since I entertain for a living, all I want
when I get home is peace and quiet. Eventually, one neighbor told me,
"Hey, you're the most laid-back person in the neighborhood."
I had to write this song anyway.
WASTED TIME--My
ex-wife and son lived in Atlanta, and I went down to one of his football
practices one day. It was a two-hour drive each way, and I got there
just as a two-hour practice started. Afterwards, I walked him to his
mother's car for just a minute, and drove home. Out of six hours, I
got to spend about a minute with him. I got to thinking about all the
time I'd missed through the years, and that's where the second verse--and
the song--came from.
THE "R" WORD--I
hate political correctness in every form. I don't like someone telling
me what to think. I thought this song tied in very well. It's by Dennis
Linde, a guy who has a knack for capturing the offbeat--"Bubba
Shot The Jukebox" and "Goodbye Earl" are both his, and
I think he's done it again here.
BORROWED TIME--I've
calmed down a lot in the last ten years, but this kind of took me back
to those days where you knew deep down it was all going to catch up
with you someday but you didn't really care yet.
RAINBOWS AND RAIN--That
song was pitched to me three or four years ago, when we were doing the
"Keep On Rocking" album, but we didn't have room for another
ballad and I had to pass. Then, I thought about it again for this one.
It had stuck with me all that time. It's about as close as I come to
a love song.
THICK AS THIEVES--I
liked that one because it made me think of my relationship with the
band and crew. We'll have differences between us, but we'd all back
each other up if somebody picked on one of us.

THE BAND
Cody McCarver - (Birthday
August 14th)
Danny Shirley - (Birthday August 12th)
Gates Nichols - (Birthday May 26th)
Jimmy Dormire - (Birthday March 8th)
MarkDuFresne - (Birthday August 6th)
Tweak - (Birthday March 5th)
Wayne Secrest - (birthday April 29th)
Booking
Information:

The Bobby Roberts
Company - Click
Here for booking info