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Darryl WorleyWe have had the pleasure of producing Darryl Worley in concert for a recent client event. Please feel free to contact us if you would like us to provide him for your next corporate event. Here is more on this remarkable Artist for your reading pleasure: Like so many historic events in the history of country music, this one started on the stage of the Grand Ole Opry. Country star Darryl Worley knew he had written something powerful when he created "Have You Forgotten?" But it was his performance of the song on the Opry stage that made it a phenomenon. "Have You Forgotten?" came about as a result of the singers USO tour of Afghanistan over the 2002 Christmas holidays. He was profoundly moved by the dedication of the American armed forces stationed there and decided he needed to salute those men and women in some way when he returned home. "I literally had soldiers come up to me and say, You know, were over here fighting for you and your family, and we need for you to go back home and fight for us," Worley recalls. "And I knew exactly what they meant. It became a mission to me, a duty to come back here and do something to honor them. I didnt even think the song would get recorded I just had something to say." Worley was scheduled to play the Opry on the weekend of Jan. 11-12, 2003, four shows in all. He and co-writer Wynn Varble had just completed "Have You Forgotten?," so he decided to try the tune out on the Opry crowds. "At the first Friday-night show, they started applauding in the middle of the song," Worley recalls. It startled me so much that I forgot a line. Every performance of it that weekend got ridiculous ovations. On the televised Grand Ole Opry show, on Saturday night, people actually stood up at the beginning of the song and remained standing throughout the whole performance. They cheered and cheered and cheered. Id never seen anything like it. It really got ahold of my heart. "By Monday morning, the label was getting phone calls from all over the country. Everyone was trying to get the song. So we put together a meeting as quick as we could. We set up a recording date right then. And its been like a whirlwind ever since." The song which rose to #1 on Billboards Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart is the centerpiece of Worleys new album, Have You Forgotten?. The record contains two "sides." The first eight songs are designed as a salute to Americas soldiers. In addition to the title track, they include three new compositions: Worleys Civil War ballad "Shiloh," his rocking anthem "I Will Hold My Ground" and "I Need A Breather," which he intends as a little "vacation" for those caught in a stressful wartime environment.
The other half of Have You Forgotten? touches on some highlights of Worleys career to date. Five of his DreamWorks singles are reprised: "When You Need My Love" (2000), "Good Day To Run" (2000) and "Second Wind" (2001), all from Hard Rain Dont Last, and "I Miss My Friend" (2002) and "Family Tree" (2003), both from I Miss My Friend. "The Way Things Are Goin" and "Too Many Pockets" first appeared on Hard Rain Dont Last, and "The Least That You Can Do" is drawn from I Miss My Friend. "Have You Forgotten?" burst onto the country charts with enormous intensity it took only five weeks to reach #1. It is unquestionably a "career" single for Worley, who will donate a portion of the proceeds generated by it to military families in need. Says Worley: "Isnt it amazing when things like this come about just because you were trying to do something good? I knew the song had a strong message, but you really dont know how something is going to be received. You hear about the silent majority, but you dont realize how much of a majority it is until something like this happens." If anybody is in touch with heartland America, its Darryl Worley. Raised in rural Hardin County, Tenn., the home turf of "Walking Tall" sheriff Buford Pusser, he comes from blue-collar stock and a long line of musicians. Grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins were singers and pickers. Darryl started playing harmonica at age five and guitar at age nine. As kids, he and his brothers formed a harmony trio with Darryl as its lead singer. He began writing songs when he was in high school. His interest in songwriting blossomed during his student years at Martin Methodist College and the University Of North Alabama. He funded his education by working at the local paper mill, in construction and as a commercial fisherman on the Tennessee River. He also formed his own country band and landed a regular job singing the songs of Merle Haggard, George Jones, Willie Nelson and Dwight Yoakam at the Back Porch Restaurant in Shiloh, Tenn. "I graduated from that to the Moose Lodge and the local American Legion Hall," Worley quips. "You name it, I played em all down there. I could make a list of beer joints as long as my arm. As soon as I graduated from college, I really started hammering away on songwriting."
His song tapes led to a contract with FAME publishing in Muscle Shoals, Ala., which found Worley chucking the life of a prospering businessman to roll the dice as a $150-a-week songwriter. At that point, his singing became a matter of survival. Fortunately, acts like Archer Park, The Hutchins and even George Jones recorded his early tunes. And in 1994, on the strength of "A Good Day To Run," among other songs, Worley graduated again, this time to EMI Publishing in Nashville. The companys executives introduced him to producer Frank Rogers, who was then working on Brad Paisleys debut disc. Worley and Rogers hit it off instantly and went into the studio together. The result pricked up ears at record labels up and down Music Row. DreamWorks Nashville principal executive James Stroud was so enthusiastic, he flew his private jet down to rural Tennessee to see Darryl in action at the Moose Lodge. And "down home" is where Darryl Worley has remained. Although his career is based in Music City, he is still a resident of Hardin County. His wife, Beverly, is a hometown girl whom he married in 2001. They live in a cabin on some rural acreage. It was indeed a long way from that countryside to the wastelands of Afghanistan. But that journey changed Darryl Worleys life forever. "I had a feeling Have You Forgotten? might affect my life, but I guess I didnt realize how drastically," he reflects. "I cant give credit for this to anyone but the military and the good Lord. Its all just been incredible. The only thing I regret is that I couldnt go right back to Afghanistan and play it for the troops the day after we finished writing it."
If you would like us to provide Darryl Worley for your next corporate event contact us today. Serious inquiries only please. |
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