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Wade Hayes
Highways & Heartaches
Monument Records
"Making
this record felt great. There was just so much excitement, so much
energy. Sometimes it didn't even feel like work." Singer, songwriter,
fire-fingers guitar player and humanitarian Wade Hayes is speaking
of his long-awaited Monument/DKC Music album Highways & Heartaches.

It's not unusual for artists to get revved-up about their latest
projects, but for this soft-spoken singer-guitarist, such comfortable
pleasure is something else. Because despite his down-home Western
courtesy and easy-going charm, the man is ferocious when it comes
to his music. He tours relentlessly. Agonizes over gigs and studio
performances.
He takes the whole thing SERIOUSLY. "Yeah, I'm afraid I'm a perfectionist.
If it were up to me, I'd keep singing and singing until I got it
just right. I want everything pitch-perfect."
Well, hard work pays off. And the proof is in the listener's ears.
From the trademark twang-guitar intro of "Up and Down" to the infectious
surge of "Up North," to the compassionate understanding of "Goodbye
Is the Wrong Way to Go," Highways & Heartaches is Wade Hayes
at his finest - authentic country, skillfully rendered, and delivered
straight from the heart.
Such excellence comes at no surprise to Wade's growing legion of
fans. Ever since his debut record "Old Enough to Know Better" hit
#1 in 1994, they've become accustomed to expert, roots-based fare
from an Oklahoma native proudly committed not only to country's
classic past (Merle Haggard, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson) but
to the music's future -- the kind of future he sees in the eyes
of fans who crowd his performances today. "I still love playing
honky tonks," he says, "but I've grown up a bit. I like outdoor
fairs especially now, the family atmosphere, the size of the audiences."
The Wade Hayes audience is certain even more greatly to expand with
the release of Highways & Heartaches. Longtime ally Don Cook
brilliantly produces three of the cuts. With the other material,
there's another kind of fire generated by Wade's alliance with Ronnie
Dunn - of Brooks & Dunn fame - and Terry McBride. With the production
team in place, Wade went in for a real "live" approach. "It was
great." he says. "Ronnie was able to find some really excellent
songs, and he was terrific helping with the overall feel of the
recording. He understands spontaneity - and that's what we went
for. And Terry was just as great to work with. For one thing, he's
maybe the funniest guy I've ever met - and I also couldn't believe
his musical intelligence."
Wade's own considerable musical intelligence is probably something
he was born with. Raise in Bethel Acres, Oklahoma (pop. 2000), he
grew up loving country. "A lot of the other kids we're into mainstream
pop," he says. "But country always moved me. I've never liked any
kind of 'lite' music. It's nice, sure, and it may put people at
ease. But I like a little tension - I've got to feel something in
music." He got that feeling from die-hard guitars, pedal-steels
and soulful singing. His grandfather a fiddle-player, Wade was given
his instrument by his own father, a carpenter and a professional
musician. At ten, Wade played mandolin; a year later, he switched
to his life-long love, guitar. By 14, he was performing with his
dad's band in the traditional venues of a journeyman picker - honky
tonks, VFWs, grocery store openings. And yes, he worked construction,
too - an experience that no doubt helped instill in him his noteworthy
work ethic.
Moving to Nashville in the early 90s in hopes of playing lead guitar
with an established star, Wade soon got more than he bargained for.
Hooking up with veteran songwriter Chick Rains, he immediately co-penned
two songs that would soon become #1 chart toppers, "Old Enough to
Know Better" and "I'm Still Dancing with You." With a writing deal
and a record contract under his belt, he was ready to hit the big
time.
But even a died-in-the-wool dreamer like Wade
Hayes might've been unprepared for such a swift ride starward. The
album Old Enough to Know Better soared, going gold and establishing
him as a force to be reckoned with. "It all happened so fast," he
says, "I didn't even have a chance to look up." But early success,
he remembers, sure was sweet. "I remember the first time I heard
myself on the radio. I'd gone home to see my mom and dad. We heard
my song on the car radio. The station was having a remote at a car
dealership, and we headed straight over there to thank them." With
1996's On a Good Night and 1998's When the Wrong One Loves
You Right, Hayes continued to broaden his musical horizons,
honing his craft and sharpening his chops. By 1997 he'd been voted
Male Star of Tomorrow at the TNN/Music City News Country Awards,
earned five Top-10 singles and drawn attention, by way of benefit
concerts, to his favorite charity, Habitat for Humanity. The next
year he scored again with the unforgettable "The Day She Left Tulsa
(in a Chevy)," all the time increasing his fan base with live concerts
and TV appearances.
With Highways & Heartaches, all of Wade's gifts are showcased
in high relief - the powerful voice, capable both of tenderness
and rowdy spirit, the high-quality song selection, the top-notch
standard of musicianship. Marvel at yearning and regret of "I'm
Lonesome Too" and "She Used to Say," the swagger of "What's It Gonna
Take," the rollicking heat of the swinging-doors anthem, "That's
What Honky Tonks Are For." And, Telecaster in hand, Wade Hayes touring
again, having reconfigured his road-band to its tightest strength
year. "I just keep singing and playing lead guitar -- that's what
I love to do. I don't worry about expectations, I just keep moving
ahead," he says. But he does take a moment to reflect on the creation
of Highways & Heartaches "It was just so much fun, I never
wanted it to end."
Playing the album again and again, listeners are bound to feel exactly
the same way.
Wade
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