When Craig Morgan was ten years old and on a school field trip to Nashville, he sang "The Star-Spangled Banner" well enough to catch the ear of a distinctive older lady in the crowd. "She walked up to me and said, Son, someday youre gonna be a famous singer," Morgan remembers. Two-plus decades later, hed be looking at a picture of the womanMinnie Pearlin the Ryman Auditorium dressing room that bears her name, getting ready for his first performance on the Grand Ole Opry. What Minnie didnt know was that before his moment in the spotlight finally came, Morgan would be an EMT, a contractor, a sheriffs deputy and a Wal-Mart assistant dairy manager. Hed also spend ten years serving his country in the U.S. Army.
But That's Why Morgan is one of country musics most beloved performers. It doesnt matter if hes jumping out of airplanes, putting gallon jugs on a refrigerated shelf or singing hits like "Redneck Yacht Club," "Almost Home" and "Tough"his honesty, humility and work ethic stand out as strongly as his talent. That's Why, the long-awaited follow-up to 2006s Little Bit of Life, is Morgans fifth album and BNA Records debut. From the evocative and instantly familiar single "Love Remembers" to the rural rally cry of "Sticks" to the church-choir epic "Ordinary Angels," its the sound of an artist soaring to new heights as both a vocalist and songwriter, but with his steel-toed boots still firmly on the ground (the same cannot be said, however, for the tires of his Kawasaki motorbike). As Music Rows Bob Oermann wrote, "Craig Morgan is country musics champion of the Everymana loyal husband and father, unblushingly sentimental, tough enough to kick your butt if you cross him, and the kind of friend everyone would like to have."
Thats why I keep swinging this hammer...break my back for a slice of that American pie, Morgan sings on That's Why's stirring title track, his stout voice ringing out with such authority and passion that you know the sentiment is no less true now that the hammers been replaced with a guitar. Morgans father played in country bands (and his grandfather was a farmer), but "I didnt think music was something that Id ever do for a living," he says. As it turns out, selling records, being on the radio and playing some 200 shows a year has only made him embrace fatherhood and family more firmly. Morgan has four children with his wife, Karen, as well as a daughter from a previous marriage; they live just a few miles from the farmland in Dickson, Tennessee, where his mother and father went on their first date. "Family truly is the thing thats most important," Morgan says. "I love the music; I love singing and writing songs and producing records. But ultimately, I do what I have to do to take care of my family. Even someone who has the greatest job in the world would rather spend more time at home. I know I would, and I have the best job in the world."
Hes certainly become quite good at it. "Thats What I Love About Sunday," from Morgans 2005 album My Kind of Livin, was the most played country song that year. Three songs off of Little Bit of Life (the title track, "Tough" and "International Harvester"), enjoyed stays in the Top 10, and he was nominated for Top New Male Vocalist by the Academy of Country Music in both 2006 and 2007. Truth is, you cant tune in to a country station anywhere in the United States without hearing a Craig Morgan song within the hour. But hes also just a bit like that great actor everybody knows and recognizes from a big successful movie, yet cant quite place on sight. Oh, that guy! "People know the music," Morgan says. "When they come to my shows, they might know the latest single, or they may know a previous single. But sometimes I can read their lips: theyre going, oh, I didnt know he sang that one! Or, I forgot about that song!"
The move to BNA from indie Broken Bow (after a heated bidding war) is bound to change that quickly. Its a full-circle move for Morgan, who released his self-titled first record for Atlantic Nashville in 2000, but declined to stay with Warners when the imprint folded. Instead, he went on a five-year run as countrys most successful independent mainstream artist. Even in this troubled time for the recording industry, Morgan welcomes the additional support and distribution oomph of a more established label. "I went to an independent when everybody thought it was crazy, and now Im going to a major when everybody thinks thats crazy," Morgan says. "Im hoping this one works out as well as the first decision did."
Morgan and his longtime friend and partner Phil "Philbilly" ODonnell have always been actively involved in choosing the songs they didnt write themselves, and always co-produced the records. "Producing is an aspect of the business that I love, because theres a creative process that takes place in the studio, outside and away from the writing and the singing," he says. Nothings changed this time around. "We did all the same stuff weve done on the past three records. The only difference is, we get pitched better material. Both the writers I already know and people that I havent written with, because of the success weve had, have started pitching me great songs."
Morgans gift is for, as he puts it, "real-life stuff." His eye for the everyday, whether hes trying to make sense of a world where kids want iPods for Christmas instead of BB guns, or describing girls with ponytails tucked in their baseball caps, is so unerring that its easy to overlook just how much goes into the songwriting. On the aching, piano-and-steel tinged ballad "Lookin Back with You," Morgan spins todays most precious moments into tomorrows cherished memoriesnearly every line is ripped right from his life, but every line is also the work of an exquisite craftsman, whether hes going for humor, pathos or a mundane detail. When my new truck is my old truck/and I take off these big old tires/and its our turn to slow down traffic everywhere, he sings. Elsewhere, "Sticks," with its bluegrass bar band vibe, seems destined to supplant John Mellencamps "Small Town" as an American classic of both rocknroll and country. I was raised in the sticks/thats where I get my kicks ... tailgatin with my buddies/boots and dog and tires all muddy. And if Morgan keeps writing songs like "Planet Her" for Karen, he may not ever need to get her birthday presents. "Ah, shes not much for the music," he jokes. "Shed still rather have a Corvette."
On "Lookin Back with You," Morgan envisions the two of them in "Cracker Barrel rockers" but its probably safe to say he isnt ready to trade in his KX-450 yet. Before most concerts Morgan jumps his bike across the stage; he attended the 2006 ACM Awards on crutches after crashing in a race. At the same time, he's also famously at home going 5 mph on an International Harvester combine (Case IH -- with the IH standing for International Harvester -- is now one of Morgan's sponsors, and he drives a Case IH Farmall 55 tractor). "I find great comfort and ease of mind at both," he says. "The great thing about being on a tractor is it slows your world down a little bit. Your thought process changes. It gives you a chance to reflect. On the motorcycle, Im not thinking about anything but riding. For me, relaxing is getting on my motorcycle and going as fast as I can and as long as I can through the woods."
Needless to say, Morgans full-on personality made him well-suited for the military. He spent 10 years on active duty in the 101st and 82nd Airborne Divisions, and goes overseas to perform USO shows every chance he gets. "Sometimes you walk away feeling regret: that I should be there with them still," he says. "But Im starting to appreciate what I can do now for those men and women outside of being a soldier. Doing stuff for the USO will always be a priority for me." Morgan received the 2006 USO Merit Award for his involvement, joining the likes of Steven Spielberg, Elizabeth Taylor, and Bob Hope as a recipient.
As with the touring, being in the military made him value home and family as much as ever. And he still runs his country music operation like an Army unit. "My dad and mom raised me to be grateful and thankful and appreciative," he says. "They always told me, if somebody loans you something, give it back in better shape than what you get it in." Thus, Morgan and the band and road crew sweep the stage before and after shows, and are not likely to ever get an angry phone call from a motel clerk. After most gigs Morgans right there with them loading up the truck. "Something in my genes and my blood requires that I workright or wrong, it makes me feel like a man," Morgan says with a laugh. "People ask me how I stay grounded ... man, I go home and I still mow my own grass. I clean my own pool. I have kids that I get onto and play with and love the same as everybody else. I will always be that same guy. Just like the people who buy our records and listen to our music."


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