Busbee, In His Own Words: The Late Producer on Why He Fell in Love With Nashville – Variety

Posted: October 1, 2019 at 8:44 pm

In Nashville, Busbee was considered one of the good guys. That may go without saying for a lot of writer-producers in a town where being a bad guy isnt really allowed, but there was a special affection for the personability, diversity and sensitivity that Busbee brought to both the records he worked on and the personal relationships he forged alongside them. It was no accident that he was associated with some of the most ground-breaking or important female artists in Nashville Maren Morris, Carly Pearce, Lauren Alaina, Lady Antebellums Hillary Scott or that, when it was a male superstar he worked with, like a Keith Urban or Hunter Hayes, it wasnt the rednecks but the guys with the most sweet-spirited catalogs in modern country.

Variety had a chance to talk with Busbee in 2018 for a series of stories we were reporting on diversity and inclusion in Nashville. At the time, we couldnt include very much of what he had to say, but with musician friends and fans in and out of Nashville mourning his shocking death at age 43, it feels like a good time to bring out into the light the cheerleading he did for his adopted part-time town. Busbee remained an Angeleno (and was certainly known for his pop work as well, with a resume that included tracks with Pink, the Backstreet Boys, Shakira and Adam Lambert), but his discography is ultimately dominated by the dozen or so years he put in as a constant commuter to and from Nashville, whose embrace filled him with warmth and pride.

His single greatest legacy may be the two albums he made as Morris key collaborator, 2016s Hero which, besides star-making hits like My Church, included as great a pop-R&B ballad as this century has seen, Once and this years soon-to-be-Grammy-nominated sophomore album Girl. This just doesnt seem fair, tweeted Morris, posting a picture of herself embracing her enabler-mentor. I will always love you and the songs and albums I was lucky to make with you, Busbee. Rest well, my sweet friend. But if his personal approach had to be summed up in just one song, it might be the comeback single he co-wrote for Garth Brooks: People Loving People.

The father of three passed away Saturday from an only recently diagnosed glioblastoma. Here is a celebration of Busbee celebrating Nashville, in his own words:

Nashville is a very tight community, and Ive been embraced as an outsider. Im from the Bay Area. Ive lived in L.A. since 2000. And Ive been coming to Nashville very regularly since 2006. My dad is from the South, even though I was born and raised in the Bay Area, so I have a point of reference for Southern culture. Not that Nashville is, like, heavily Southern its a bit mixed in that regard but theyve embraced me. There are writers from other countries, whether its Australia or England or Canada, who are also embraced. If youre cool and youre talented, then youre in, as far as the community is concerned.

I tend to work with a lot of women, not as a general rule, but some of the people I have been fortunate enough to have success with have been some amazing female artists. You know there are fewer successful female artists in the genre than there are male artists. I dont know what to attribute that to. Ive never heard a record person say, All the fans want females, but we want males. For me it hasnt been this hyper-conscious thing of Im gonna go find a bunch of female artists. Its just that people have come across my radar that just knocked me out. Initially that was Maren Morris, and then more recently Carly Pearce, and an amazing writer who I have signed to me, Emily Shackleton, and people I have written with historically, whether it was Hillary Lindsey or Melissa Peirce.

Nashville seems to be a way more embracing culture than people would expect historically. Im not trying to pretend like theres never been an issue. I know that (gay) friends of mine even 10 years ago were not necessarily out and felt really nervous about whether they should do that or not. And understandably so, because the culture comes from a more conservative place, traditionally, or stereotypically. But it feels like I dont know what phrase to use that doesnt seem flippant the cats out of the bag.

To give you a point of reference of my upbringing: I grew up fairly conservative Christian, and then started playing jazz music, and then apparently got decently good at it. In my later teens I would play salsa gigs in the city. So on Sunday I would go to church at a fairly conservative Christian church some of whom would not be cool with the next part of what Im going to tell you I would do on Sundays, which was leave church and drive to San Francisco and play with a salsa band at a gay club. And some of the people in my own community would just be like, How can you do that? They just couldnt wrap their heads around it. It wasnt that they necessarily thought those people are horrible, but it was just not their mindset or understanding. And then growing up in the suburbs and going to the city a ton, and then having a point of reference with my dad being from the South, it was just this weird gumbo of complex flavors of experience.

I feel like the genre is continuing to expand. Its wonderful because specifically right now there are a few artists that are leaning more traditional country than there has been in a while. And then there are so many artists that are leaning more progressive or pop or whatever you want to call it. And it seems like the spread is wider than it has been in a long time. That can exacerbate some different tensions, but its super-exciting, and it brings different people to the party.

Historically, it is a really tight-knit actual community. Its obviously not Little House on the Prairie this is a modern city - but if functions in that way. Back in the day, if your neighbors barn had a tree fall on it, youd go help him rebuild it. I was talking to one of my friends who is the top call guitarist in town, asking him, What happens if everybody is in the studio but somebody gets in an accident on the way to the studio or something? He talked about how hes gotten a call at five minutes till 10 a.m. thats when the first session of the day starts that somebody came down with the flu and they need him, and hes like, Absolutely. And theres just a lot more of a true sense of community in that regard than most other places Ive been to. And its especially shocking considering that so much of the town is a transient town. There are obviously a lot of people who are from Nashville, but much like L.A., most people that I run into, at least in the music community, are from somewhere else, and yet theres still this like sense of community. If youre going to be here, youve got to be communal. You cant just be this island.

Im very, very grateful to have been embraced by this world. You know, they didnt have to do that. Theres no guarantee in that regard. But literally, if you have a certain level of exposure here, you know most everybody. I remember bringing my sister to the CMAs last year, when I was honored to be nominated for something, and so we were seated on the floor, and in between during the commercial breaks, you could just walk around, and I was introducing her to everybody. Keith (Urban), whos a friend, and Garth Brooks, who I dont really know, but he cut one of my songs so I said hello to him and introduced him to my sister, and Tim McGraw and Luke Bryan and Thomas Rhett the list goes on and on. You could literally just walk up to these people, a lot of whom thankfully I know, but even the ones I dont, and theyre just approachable and happy to meet you.

I think this community has a built-in accountability - like if youre kind of a dick, everyones going to know, and no ones going to be happy with that. Youre not really allowed to do that. There are a few rare exceptions, but by and large, thats just how it is, because everyone talks. Its not necessarily even that everyones running around gossiping per se. I mean, some of that happens, because thats what people do. But everyone asks. If you get asked to write with someone youve never heard of or you havent written with or work with an artist, you ask your friends. You can make a few phone calls and figure out whats going on with most people: Is this person a good person? Are they really talented? It makes it harder in a good way to get away with not being kind. Which I really appreciate.

It is really, really frowned upon to be difficult. I remember details from when were at the BMI Awards and an artist like a Keith Urban or a Kenny Chesney will be there from time to time, and they still look like the stars they are, but with what they choose to wear and how they carry themselves, they are making it about Its all about all of us tonight, and were all just songwriters here, too. Its quite amazing to see somebody make that kind of shift, when, in most rooms they go into, theyre expected to be the center of attention, and then they go into that environment honoring songwriters and they dont make it about themselves. I dont know, its just really spoken to me.

I could go on and on. Please cut me off at any time! I just love this town. I love L.A., too, man. There are so many great people there too, and its such a great community as well, in a very different way.

Now, man, the Internet is a crazy place. And I say that as somebody who was an early adopter and all of that nonsense. But people just dont feel accountability when theyre posting responses. So if someone like Maren said something I definitely obviously dont want to speak for her, but I know its been a challenge with some of the backlash shes received at times. Just because you feel compelled to speak out doesnt mean you dont deal with repercussions in an emotional sense or otherwise. Weve talked about it and even written a song about it. When Ive been bored occasionally, Ive looked at some of the responses to some of the more outspoken posts shes posted, and peoples inability to communicate in a way thats kind when they disagree with somebody is a bit muted. I feel like, folks Im preaching to the choir - we can disagree and actually potentially have a helpful conversation. It really saddens me. In Nashville, and Im not thinking of anyone specifically, but to use the stereotype of maybe a gay writer and a super-conservative producer, they can be friends, even if they dont necessarily agree with each others value sets in certain ways. And in part they can actually have relationship because theres accountability. Like, you are an actual person who I actually know and have to actually be responsible for my actions and words and everything, where on the Internet, its a whole other ball game. Its definitely something Im grateful that I dont have to navigate like the artists do, when it feels like people just want to be mad about stuff, quite frankly.

The other thing that I think artists sort of have to navigate, that again Im humbly grateful that I dont have to, is that you have a persona. Im not saying theyre not being real, but the persona is what people perceive you to be, and some of it is the fact that an artist on a stage in front of 10,000-15,000 people is basically a caricatured version of himself. It has to be to fill that space. But that persona in part is also what the fans interpret you to be. And its like, well, if I have a certain belief system, and I love your music and I feel connected to you, then we probably agree, right? And then when they find out that we dont necessarily agree on something that seems so incredibly important to them, then that can cause a major rub. And again, with the ability to just hop online and vent, go read some of these posts on some of these artists saying some of these things, its just crazy. Theres no apparent desire to understand or to be understood. Its like, Im gonna just have a go at you. Im a really big fan of hoping and praying that people can live in peace amongst differences more and more.

Im trying to think of an analogy in a different music space. Its hard because this music space is historically more synonymous with a specific culture than most music spaces. Theres potentially a broader cross-section of type of people who might be into pop, because pop is just short for whats popular, and so its all kinds of music and brings all kinds of people to the party from hyperconservatives to hyperliberals to everything in between. So there are types of things that historically the stereotypical listener of this music holds dear that are not necessarily synonymous with where a lot of the artists are in their evolution or process, because were all evolving. Some of the things I believe or the way I express myself are not the same as when I was a kid or a teenager or in my 20s. And thankfully Im not a public figure who people fell in love with for a thing they perceived me to be when I was 22 years old. Im just a normal person in that regard with a community around me of friends who we are evolving together in a more day-to-day way. Those sort of back porch conversations or backyard conversations you have with your friends that can lead to some profound evolutions arent necessarily the same kind of conversations that youre having directly with your fans. Theres just no context for that. Its not necessarily even appropriate. Maybe lyrically you can express things, so they catch those glimpses, but with a lot of fans its I just assumed you thought this because youre part of this community, or you make this music, or you played this show with this other person who thinks this thing.

Hopefully again, we can possibly learn to listen and live in peace. I know it sounds just fruity almost like yeah, of course! but I mean that literally: like, live amongst people you potentially disagree with on whatever it is, and live in peace. Because theyre real people who have real strong beliefs just like you do.

There are some practical realities about Nashville, too, like this citys going to double in size over the next five years, apparently. Traffic is getting crazy, and people cant necessarily justify keeping their little tiny two-story publishing house on Music Row that now is worth eight times what they paid for it or whatever. So people are selling those pieces off. Some people I know sold almost a half-acre plot of basically dirt for four million dollars. And its like you cant justify keeping space if thats the kind of return you can get on a property. Some of the community isa physical thing. Music Row is a thing that you can drive around, and tons of publishers and record labels are there, and sadly, I think over time thats going to at best dissipate, and at worst I dont know if its going to fully go away, but kind of go away.

Its just tricky, man. I hope the communal aspect of this city, musically and otherwise, can survive. I think its ever evolving. Its going to be fascinating to see where its at in 10 years.

See the article here:
Busbee, In His Own Words: The Late Producer on Why He Fell in Love With Nashville - Variety

Related Posts