Bill Anderson's Blog, page 29

October 26, 2020

Join Bill with Jeannie Seely for a Facebook Live Q&A for Inside the Cirlce

Join Opry members Mark Wills, Jeannie Seely and Bill Anderson for a night of conversation about what it’s like to be an Opry Icon in the last installment of the Inside the Circle Series live on Opry’s Facebook presented by Humana!


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Inside the Circle: Opry Icons

Other event by Grand Ole Opry on Wednesday, October 28 2020



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Published on October 26, 2020 11:38

October 1, 2020

October 1, 2020














Hi Gang:


A friend of mine who sits in front of his computer all day working in a high pressure job paid me a great compliment the other day. He phoned and said, “I put on your instrumental record while I’m working, and my blood pressure goes down 20-points!”


I laughed but he was serious. “Honestly,” he said, “that’s the most relaxing music I’ve ever heard. I play it over and over again.” In the background I could hear the guitars from “A Lot Of Things Different” coming from his speakers.


When we recorded those instrumentals for our “Hits Re-Imagined” album, we definitely weren’t thinking of providing blood pressure medicine for our fans, but if that’s one of the side benefits then I’m pleased. And let’s face it, we all need whatever it takes these days to help us stay relaxed. Music has always been known to have soothing and healing qualities.


I hope you are staying calm, cool, and collected as the pandemic stretches on. There are a few things stirring the waters around Whisperville, including The Grand Ole Opry’s opening up to “very limited audiences” beginning October 3rd. We’re talking maybe 500 fans in a building that seats 4,400, but I take that as being at least a start toward a return to normalcy. We’ll  be celebrating the Opry’s 95th Anniversary this month (although the show actually began in November), and if all goes as planned, I’ll be back on the Opry stage October 17th. Then on Wednesday night Oct. 28th, Jeannie Seely and I will join Mark Wills for a live Facebook visit called “Opry Icons,” where we’ll be sharing Opry stories and memories for as long as they’ll keep the cameras rolling. It should be fun.


Back before the pandemic hit earlier this year, the band and I had gone into the studio and recorded the song we had been opening our road shows with called, “It’s A Good Day To Have A Good Day.” The plan was to use this as the opening track on a new album project that was in the works. The studios shut down shortly thereafter, though, and so far “Good Day” is the only song we have recorded.


The song has such an upbeat, positive message that we’ve decided to go ahead and release it for streaming and downloads during this crazy time. There is a lyric video version in the works as well as some video footage taken the day we recorded the song back in February. I’ll have more information about the release dates shortly, but we’re excited to have some new music in the works. I think we’re also going to be offering some related merchandise items such as t-shirts, sweatshirts, coffee mugs, etc. with “It’s A Good Day To Have A Good Day” printed on them. It’s easy to be anxious and depressed these days with all that’s going on…maybe our song and its message can help cast an uplifting and encouraging light on things.


Other projects in the works include a possible duet recording with Leona Williams and my joining a group of other country artists for an audiobook recording of the New Testament. I’ll keep you posted.


On the personal side, I told you last month about my granddaughter, Rae, and her fiance, Zach, being burned out of their apartment home in Chicago and losing everything. Well, the fire and their resulting homelessness have turned positive in that Rae and Zach have decided to relocate to Nashville! Zach had a great job offer, and I think Rae was ready to see some familiar faces again, so they are back in town. And our family couldn’t be happier.


If you’ve been a WhisperFan for any length of time you know that this is my favorite time of year, and even in all the craziness that is 2020, I still have beautiful fall weather, the baseball playoffs, and the football season to be excited about. I hope you’re hanging onto the positive things in your world as well, and believing that better times are up around the corner. Stay well…stay safe…and stay in touch. I’ve especially enjoyed hearing from so many of you during this time.


Thanks a BILLion….see you back here again next month.


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Published on October 01, 2020 13:52

Ask Bill – October 1, 2020














1) I enjoy watching old episodes of “Family Feud” when Richard Dawson was the host. I notice he always mentions you whenever he has a family from Nashville. I’m wondering if you stayed in touch with him after “Family Feud” ended and before Mr. Dawson died?


Richard and I became good friends during his days on Family Feud and my days as co-host of The Better Sex at ABC-TV. We recorded our shows in the same studio, shared similar dressing rooms and even some staff members. We also worked together on Match Game at CBS, and he had me as his guest when he hosted The Tonight Show at NBC. We couldn’t have been more opposite…his being from England and me from Tennessee…but somehow we managed to find common ground. He loved the Tennessee country hams I sent him at Christmas. It was very kind of him to mention me to his contestants from Nashville. I treasure the memory of our friendship, and am so glad I got to know him as I did.


 2) When you are on a game show do you ask them or do they ask you to be a contestant? By the way, you did very well.


Thank you. Those were some great days. My manager opened all the doors to the game show world for me back in the seventies, and I imagine he had to do some pleading to get me on the shows to begin with. As time went by, though, the shows began reaching out to him and asking for my availabilities. I always considered it an honor to be asked because back in those days there weren’t many country artists doing those kinds of shows, and I enjoyed them.


3) I was wondering if your display will still be at the Country Music Hall of Fame this year?


No, not in 2020. The Hall just reopened in September following a six-month COVID-related shutdown, and for now they will continue with the exhibits that were open prior to their having to close. The last word I heard from them was that my exhibit would open in November, 2021, and run until early 2023. Those kinds of things are always subject to change, though, so stay tuned.


Quickies: When someone writes a song how would they go about getting an artist to record it? What keeps the song from getting stolen?  As always, I suggest you direct your songwriting-related questions to the folks at the Nashville Songwriters Association, International. Their address is www.nashvillesongwriters.com. They are in a much better position to help you than I am. Since your album “Ladies Choice” is not available on CD, have you ever thought of maybe doing a love songs cover album? No, but the record I was working on when the quarantine hit was going to be an album of mostly love songs. They were new songs, though, and not covers. I hope to be able to continue with it sometime soon.  Are you going to sing at Rae & Zach’s wedding or just be a doting PawPaw? Have they set a wedding date? I don’t sing at weddings or funerals. I’ll just be a proud PawPaw. No, they have not set a date as yet. Are you planning on doing any shows in Ontario, Canada, next year? Like everybody else right now my plans for next year are up in the air. I’ve always enjoyed my trips to Ontario, but right now I simply do not know. Again, stay tuned.


Thanks for all your questions, but don’t stop now. Send yours to me at askbill@billanderson.com or to my attention at P.O. Box 888, Hermitage, TN. 37076. I’ll see you back here again next month.


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Published on October 01, 2020 13:47

Latest Photos

My granddaughter, Hallie (12), is a cheerleader for her middle school team, and I had the chance to go see her perform recently. Big brother, Blake, who is the starting center on the high school basketball team, was there as well along with little sister, Sophie. It was a fun outing, made even better by our team winning the game. The middle picture here shows me relaxing onstage prior to a concert somewhere last year. Looking at it makes me long for the day when we can all get back to performing again. The bottom picture was taken a couple of years ago when Mac Davis and I were part of a CMA Songwriter Showcase at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.  Mac was one of my favorite people to be around…I got to induct him into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame back in the 80’s. He was so creative and so witty…and I was saddened by the news of his passing. He and I were always going to write a hit song together, but we never got around to it. Rest in peace, my friend. You will be missed.







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Published on October 01, 2020 13:41

September 28, 2020

Bill Returns to The Paul Leslie Hour to talk about Re-Imagined Songs



Episode #466 – Bill Anderson Returns

Bill Anderson is a returning guest on The Paul Leslie Hour. He is a legend in music-both for the recordings he has made, but also the songs he wrote that others recorded. Known for writing and singing songs like “City Lights,” “World of Make Believe,” “Mama Sang a Song,” and “Po Folks.”




 




Bill Anderson Returns on The Paul Leslie Hour

Bill Anderson is a returning guest on The Paul Leslie Hour. He is a legend in music-both for the recordings he has made, but also the songs he wrote that oth…




 

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Published on September 28, 2020 09:28

September 1, 2020

September 1, 2020










Hi Gang:

Do you sometimes feel as though we’re all actors in the movie, “Ground Hog Day?”

I sure do…one day after another with very few changes. Oh well, it is what it is, and we just have to stay strong, hang onto our faith, and believe it will all be behind us someday soon.

Actually, life is marching on, and some good things are happening all around us. The Country Music Hall of Fame is reopening Sept. 10th and that’s good news. Even better news broke today that the Opry is considering some limited audience shows later this month. Jeannie Seely’s new album, on which we sing “When Two Worlds Collide” together, is receiving rave reviews. We recorded a Zoom session the other day with Jeannie, Willie Nelson, Steve Wariner, Rhonda Vincent and myself which you should be able to see and hear sometime soon. Moe Bandy’s new record was released on Aug. 28th, and I’m honored to have written or co-written three of the songs in his package. He told me he recorded “City Lights,” because his son asked him to. It’s his son’s favorite song.

And speaking of “City Lights,” on the night of August 27th, the 63rd anniversary of my writing that song on top of the little hotel in Commerce, Georgia, I sat outside on my deck in Nashville teaching my 12-year old granddaughter, Hallie, how to make a few chords on her guitar. My life was changed forever on August 27th all those years ago. I wonder if she’ll look back someday and say her life was changed on that exact same date in 2020. Stranger things have happened.

But back to recordings: We’ve continued to receive several outstanding reviews and many very positive comments on our “Hits Re-Imagined” project, and I thank all of you who have added it to your collection. It’s part of a 2-CD special we’re offering our fan club members this month, and if you haven’t ordered your copy yet, now might be a great time. A reminder that any item you order from us online comes to you personally autographed.

I’ve been approached recently by some folks…including a couple from overseas…asking me to record some new material either with them or for them. I can’t go into the details just yet, but some interesting things might be about to happen. If we can just get the recording studios back open, maybe I can get inside and start whispering again!

On the personal side of things, my oldest granddaughter, Rae Robeson, had a bad fire at her apartment in Chicago last month, and she’s been living in a hotel for the past couple of weeks. Fortunately, she was not at home when the fire…supposedly caused by an electrical malfunction…broke out. Her fiance, Zach, was not at home either, but their beloved English bulldog, Winston, was in the apartment alone. Fortunately, a neighbor alerted the firefighters, and they broke down the door and rescued him. The apartment was a total loss, but it could have been so much worse.

I got a lot of great responses to the story last month of my attempting to peel a peach only to drop it into my garbage disposal and having to remove it by hand. One fan even went so far as to mail me a disposal cover which has already come in handy. Well, if you think the peach story was funny, wait ’til you hear what else I have done.

A friend was visiting late one afternoon when I said I needed to go outside and water my plants and flowers. My friend went out on the deck with me, and as I turned the hose toward a pretty blue-green plant and began to wet it down she asked, “Why are you watering that?”  “Because it’s thirsty,” I replied.

“No it’s not,” she laughed. “That’s an artificial plant.” I bent forward and looked more closely. “You’re right,” I answered, totally embarrassed. I had spent the last six months watering an artificial plant! No wonder it didn’t grow!

Join us back here again next month for another chapter in the continuing saga of why a hillbilly singer/songwriter should never be quarantined at home!

Thanks a BILL-ion….

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Published on September 01, 2020 13:29

Latest Photos

“The top picture is a close-up of the Grand Ole Opry ring I wrote about in the Ask Bill section of our newsletter. You can see the year “1925” embossed on one side of the ring. That’s the year the Opry began. I couldn’t fit both sides into the picture, but on the other side is “1975,” date of the Opry’s 50th Anniversary and the year the rings were presented to us. While the ring doesn’t have a lot of monetary value, it’s very sentimental to me and something I really care about. The middle picture is of someONE I really care about, my grandson, Gabe. We are socially distancing here while celebrating his 16th birthday on August 6th. Gabe continues to battle cancer, and we continue to appreciate your positive thoughts and prayers on his behalf. The bottom picture was taken last week when my longtime buddy, Steve Wariner, and I got together on Zoom and wrote a new song. I couldn’t help but think how far it is from writing a song on a hotel rooftop in Commerce, Georgia, to writing on Zoom in 2020. I think we put together a pretty good song. Hopefully, somebody will think enough of it to record it somewhere down the road. If they do, you’ll be the first to know.”







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Published on September 01, 2020 13:29

Ask Bill – September 1, 2020














1) I have been a fan of yours for many years, and I know you have an Opry ring. I have always been curious to see what it looks like up close. Is there any way you could show a picture of it?

When the Grand Ole Opry celebrated its 50th anniversary in 1975, they had a custom ring designed for all the male members of the cast and a special 50th Anniversary bracelet designed for the ladies. Our initials were engraved inside and on the back, and we were told that the molds were destroyed shortly after they were manufactured. That was to insure that these items could never be duplicated. I don’t have a lot of material things that are very important to me, but I treasure my Opry ring. We’ve printed a picture of it in the photo section of the newsletter.

2) What is a normal day like in your life? When does it start and end? And do you always sit around with pen and paper in hand?

Back before COVID-19 and the quarantine came along, I used to joke and tell people there was no such thing as a “normal day” in my life. One day I’d be co-writing a song with a friend, the next day I might be in the recording studio or doing a television or radio show, and the next I’d be packing a suitcase for a road trip. Recently, for me and for most of you, things have been quite different and much more routine. These days I usually get up around seven or eight o’clock, have my coffee and my quiet time, check my e-mail and my messages, and take care of as many of my business and household chores as I can before noon. I don’t walk around with a pen and paper in hand, but I do keep a guitar handy, and I often write in the early afternoon and evening. I get on my treadmill and exercise before dinner, watch a ball game or a movie or read for awhile, and try to turn my light off between ten and eleven. Exciting stuff, huh? I miss the crazy, unpredictable days I used to have, and hope we can get back to them again soon.

3) When the backup players…like Jimmy Capps…play on a record do they just get a one-time fee or do they get another percent if it becomes a hit?

That’s a great question, and the answer today is different from the one I might have given just a few years ago. In the early days, musicians only got paid union scale for recording sessions, and they did not participate in the success of the recordings they played on. That changed back in the early 2000’s. According to Dave Pomeroy, head of the Nashville Association of Musicians, 5% of the monies earned by a digital recording today goes into an Intellectual Royalty Fund to be divided among the back-up musicians and background singers who performed on that particular recording. In 2019, a total of 62-million dollars was distributed among these musicians and singers, not exactly an insignificant amount, and well deserved.

Quickies: 1) I am wondering if you get residuals for your appearances on the older game shows like Match Game, Password Plus, etc. Yes, but it’s not very much. I think my last check was for $19.00. 2) On the original recording of “World Of Make Believe” who is the male background singer? It sounds just like Freddie Hart.  I don’t recall, but it was not Freddie. 3) What was the song you used to sing at your shows where you told the fans to put their arms around the person next to them? That was my country-disco song, “I Can’t Wait Any Longer.” We used to have a lot of fun with that one.

Thanks for all your questions, and don’t stop sending them in. Our address is askbill@billanderson.com or P.O. Box 888, Hermitage, TN. 37076. Stay curious…and we’ll see you back here next time.

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Published on September 01, 2020 13:28

August 5, 2020

August 5, 2020



































I have always prided myself on being…or at least trying to be…a glass-half-full kind of guy.


I try to look for the best in people, in places, and in situations, I find myself in, regardless of how negative they might seem at the time. But I’ll admit…I’ve struggled just like many of you in trying to find something good inside this crazy Coronavirus pandemic and the stay-at-home, social distancing rules that we’ve been forced to follow for the past several months. It hasn’t been easy, but I was sitting around this past Sunday afternoon looking at life through my rose-colored glasses, and I’ve decided that something good is going to come out of all this by the time it’s finally over. Maybe it already has.



Don’t get me wrong…the illnesses and the deaths and the losses we’ve all suffered are not taken lightly. I’ve lost friends to the virus. I have others who have been extremely sick, including my own manager. Even more, are struggling financially. I’ve gone to bed at night fearful that the virus might strike me and my family. I’ve washed my hands more in the past five months than I did in the previous five years. I’ve worn the mask and the gloves on the rare occasions when I have dared to venture out, and I know we’re not out of the woods yet by any means. But maybe there are lessons to be learned from what we’ve had to endure. And maybe…just maybe…when this is all in our rearview mirrors, we will have become better, stronger, kinder people who will have learned some valuable life lessons along the way.



Take my house, for example. I have lived in the same place for a little over twenty years, longer than I’ve lived any one place in my life. But I have discovered during these past few months that as much as I love it, it’s probably really never been my “home.”



“Home” for most of my life has been the back of a tour bus, a seat on an airplane, a strange hotel in a strange town somewhere, backstage and onstage at a performance venue full of friendly but often unfamiliar faces. My house was the place I left from and the place I came back to, but was it ever really home? Not like it has been lately for sure.

I have three outdoor seating areas attached to my house…one facing east toward the morning sun, one facing south, and one facing west toward the sunset. I love those decks and patios…and I’ve loved times in the past when I’ve been able to entertain friends and family there, standing outside gazing at the lake in my back yard. But in my hectic, always-something-to-do lifestyle, I have never just sat out on one of the decks and watched the world go by….listening to the birds sing, watching the squirrels play, laughing at the ducks and geese who wander up to bathe in the pond beside my little waterfall.

Until now.

I was walking from my front deck out into my yard the other day when the postman drove by. He stopped, we waved, and suddenly he leaned out the door of his little truck. “I’m really lucky,” he said. “I get to deliver mail to the greatest singer/songwriter who’s ever lived.”

I started to ask him if Willie Nelson had moved to town, but I didn’t. I could tell he was sincere, so I just smiled and said, “Thank you very much. I really appreciate that.” And he drove away.

Late on Easter morning, I had gone out to retrieve the Sunday newspaper from my driveway when a neighbor drove by, stopped, rolled down his car window, and wished me a Happy Easter. I wished him the same, and keeping my distance, moved closer so we could talk. I picked up the smell of hot food coming from inside his car. “Wow, somebody has gotten some good-smelling take-out,” I offered, and he told me where he had purchased it.

“I bought more than we’ll ever eat,” he said. “If you’re gonna be home, I’ll bring you some.” Sure enough, a few minutes later he was at my door with ham, scalloped potatoes, green beans, and all the trimmings. Plus, his small kids had asked him to also deliver to “Mr. Bill” a couple of their brightly-colored Easter eggs and some Easter candy. I was blown away.

And here’s the ironic part: Had we not been in our current stay-at-home situation, I would have not been home the day the mailman stopped, and I’d have been in the back of a tour bus returning from some shows in Texas on Easter Sunday.



A couple of mornings later, my next-door neighbor phoned and told me she was going to the grocery store. “Can I get anything for you?” she asked. And then, before I could give her my shortlist, she said, “I’ve finished reading a couple of books you might enjoy. I’ll leave them in your mailbox.” And she did.

So what am I trying to say here? Not much other than I have actually enjoyed some of the downtime that I’ve been forced into taking. I have enjoyed sitting out on my decks staring at the natural, God-given beauty all around me. I’ve enjoyed getting to know and experience my neighbors in a whole new way.

Oh sure, I’ve been inside the house strumming on a guitar trying to write some new songs. I’ve been answering fan mail and business mail just like I always do. I’ve had bills to pay just like everybody else. I’ve missed going into the recording studio, missed going out to see my friends, and performing at the Grand Ole Opry, and I’ve missed driving into town to eat lunch and hang out with my buddies. I’ve missed being out on tour and visiting with you. And, sadly, I’ve been unable to go and say goodbye to some very close friends who have, unfortunately, passed away during this time. That’s been especially tough.



But I’ve also had time to put some chicken into the slow cooker (Thanks, Gus Arrendale!), talk and text with my kids and grandkids without having to go take care of something “important.” I’ve even let my whiskers grow out a bit on days when I simply didn’t feel like shaving. And you know what? The world hasn’t ended because of it.

In fact, I may just be appreciating the beautiful things, the natural things, the simple things, and the special people this ol’ world has to offer more right now than ever before.

I guess it all depends on how you look at the glass.

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Published on August 05, 2020 13:44

August 3, 2020

August 3, 2020










Hi Gang:

I told Jeannie Seely the other day that the twenty dollars I paid for my 2020 Monthly Planner was the biggest waste of money I could ever remember!

Almost everything I wrote down beginning in March and running through December has been erased. Nothing that I planned on has happened and most of it never will happen. A little thing called the Coronavirus has seen to that. I don’t know what kind of calendar you keep for your schedule, but I’m sure you’ve experienced a similar feeling. Thank goodness I wrote it all in pencil.

By now you probably know that our December Country’s Family Reunion cruise has been cancelled. The Salute To The Grand Ole Opry that Dailey & Vincent had planned for us in Hiawassee, Georgia, in September has also been cancelled. When these and several other of our scheduled concerts began falling like dominoes, I told my agent to simply clear the slate for 2020 and start focusing on next year which is what he has done. Like most artists in our business, we won’t be touring the rest of this year, but the majority of our dates have been rescheduled for 2021. When the dust settles, we’ll post a revised lineup.

Good things are still happening, though. Jeannie’s new album is coming out this month and she asked me to be part of it and sing “When Two Worlds Collide” with her…the song Roger Miller and I wrote together back in the early sixties. I hope you’ll enjoy our duet version. I’m proud to have three songs on Moe Bandy’s upcoming album due out August 28th. He cut “City Lights,” a new song Bobby Tomberlin and I wrote called “What If,” and the title track, “A Love Like That,” which I co-wrote with Bobby and Mo Pitney. Moe’s records are always country and always among the best.

John Berry’s recording of a song we co-wrote, “Don’t Think I Ain’t Country,” hit #1 on the Country Christian Music charts in late July. It’s not a “Christian” song as such, but it has a positive message which, fortunately, that audience can relate to. And o ur own album, “The Hits Re-Imagined,” continues to receive some wonderful reviews and comments, and I thank you for those. If you haven’t added a copy to your collection I hope you will do so.

We’ve had to face some sadness over the past few weeks with the passing of some of our good friends and co-workers. Our former road manager and souvenir salesman deluxe, Robbie Wittkowski, who rode a whole bunch of rivers with me back in the 80’s and 90’s, died of double pneumonia in a hospital near his home in Arizona. He was 64.

Everybody’s buddy and longtime radio personality, Bill Mack, passed away down in Texas last week. Bill gave so much to our business, and will certainly be missed. And of course we all continue to mourn the loss of Charlie Daniels, a great American and a kind, giving human being. What a hole all these deaths have left in the fabric of our musical family .

We had to postpone recording the pilot episode for the proposed new TV game show, “Name That Country Tune,” that I was scheduled to host in late July. Hopefully, we can get that back on the books sometime soon. It’s a really fun show that I think our fans will enjoy once we can get it on the air. I’ll keep you posted.

One thing that didn’t get postponed was my 59th Anniversary as a member of the Grand Ole Opry which took place on July 15th. We couldn’t go out and celebrate, of course, but thanks so much for your many congratulatory messages. They were all most appreciated. I just hope we can celebrate big next year on #60!

On a personal note let me add another warning to all the other warnings you are getting these days: Don’t peel a fresh peach directly over your garbage disposal! I tried it, dropped the peach down the drain, and nearly broke my wrist trying to get it out. Peach pits (seeds) and disposal units are not designed for each other, so it had to come out. No harm was done, but I wouldn’t want to have to go through fishing it out again. It was awkward and extremely messy. Men aren’t supposed to be in the kitchen anyway!! (Oh boy, that’s bound to stir up a hornet’s nest!)

Take care…stay safe…keep smiling…and I’ll see you back here again in September. Thanks a BILL-ion for everything…

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Published on August 03, 2020 08:18