I didn’t know any better,” he said.īut he has a totally different view now: “There are hard-core, blue-collar, beer-drinking county music listeners all up and down the country, from Canada to Mexico.Lee Brice has some of the best songs including “Boy”, “Rumor” and “Parking Lot Party” and we’ve got the perfect lyrics for your Instagram captions when you get to see him live.ġ. “I’m from South Carolina, and when I first started touring, I wondered if there were going to be country music listeners up north or out west. That was the intention.”Īs he travels, Brice finds that the right territory for reaching country music fans is practically everywhere. “There are songs in country music, no matter who wrote them, that will be around forever. “I still have people tell me every day, ‘We had that song at our wedding,’?” Brice said. One example that proves his point is his 2014 hit “I Don’t Dance,” about a groom who’s not at ease on the dance floor but dances anyway, which remains a staple at many marriage ceremonies, even five years later. Styles change, but if you try to chase the changes, you’re going to fall behind anyway.” “It’s tough to stay true to yourself and now go down some new road. “I’ve walked a fine line between what’s going to be a hit and stuff that I liked,” he said. When it comes to the songs themselves, Brice stays solidly committed to the country music tradition. I reach out personally to folks, depending on what they have to say. I’m old school, but you have to be up on Instagram and the rest of it, and get your music out there,” he said.
“That stems from gospel music, and that’s all love songs, in a different way.”Ĭommercially and technologically, Brice stays current, racking up nearly three billion spins on the Pandora streaming service, and while he has help with his social media outreach, he does as much as he can himself. “I was a sucker for that growing up,” he said. While his songs still sound fresh and honest, they’re always pure country, and they’re almost invariably about romance. The video for the song shows the husky, bearded Brice at his back-to-basics best, looking out the barred window of a dusky little bar, with folks in the background drinking beer from the bottle. The punchline lyric goes, “Why don’t we make it true?” It tells a straight-forward story about a couple who may the last to know they’ve fallen in love, because everyone else in town is already talking about it. “We work all the time, writing and recording, and put out as much music as we can, so when I get home for a few days, I can just be with my family.” “Rumor,” written Brice and two co-writers, is a new tune in the classic country music tradition.
“I put a full studio inside my tour bus and I have an engineer with me out on the road,” he said. Balancing his home life with his career isn’t always easy, but Brice has come up with some ingenious strategies. 15 at Santa Rosa’s Luther Burbank Center for the Arts. Then he’s out on the road for a string of new shows, including a stop Aug. It’s awesome,” said Brice, 40, by phone from his home in Nashville, where he was spending some precious time with his wife and three young children. “It’s a big thrill having a song in the number one slot again after a few years. After roughly a dozen hits and more than a decade of recording country songs, Lee Brice is on top again, with his July release “Rumor,” which has hit number one on the Billboard country airplay chart.