Current:Home > MarketsGarth Brooks: "Life's better with music in it" -OceanicInvest
Garth Brooks: "Life's better with music in it"
View
Date:2025-04-16 14:01:13
Bars and honky-tonks, already pulsing with music at mid-day, line Nashville's Lower Broadway. Make room for one more. Named after his 1990 country hit, Garth Brooks' Friends In Low Places Bar & Honky-Tonk was still a work in progress last month when "Sunday Morning" visited. "Don't wanna be egotistical," he said. "'Friends In Low Places,' for me, is a chapter in country music. It needs to be here."
Pauley asked, "What is the difference between a bar and a honky-tonk?"
"A bar's a place usually where just locals come, like you saw in 'Cheers,'" Brooks replied. "A honky-tonk's probably got a dance floor, a little bit bigger, right? It's modeled like a dance hall."
The 61-year-old Oklahoman was a new name in town some 30 years ago, on the road to becoming the best-selling solo recording artist of all time – 157 million albums and counting. "If you're lucky enough to get to sell some records in this town, you owe this town," he said. "How can I pay back? Well, if you come down here on Lower Broadway and there's not a Friends In Low Places, are you kidding me?"
"Because this is going to be a honky-tonk, and people are gonna have a really good time," Pauley said. "And you're gonna serve every kind of beer."
"Yes, ma'am. We're gonna serve everybody," he said.
And times being what they are, that stirred some people up.
"You're gonna serve every kind of beer, to everybody," said Pauley. "And that's controversial?"
"I think if you want division on this planet, at this time? Talk about unity, talk about love. What's our other option?"
"But you got some fans who are thinking, you know, 'Garth Brooks, is he with us or is he with them?'"
"I'm with love," Brooks said. "You come on this ship or not. But love's big enough for all of us. They say the hardest question on the planet is, 'Why are we down here?' That's the easiest one. We're down here for each other. That's why there's more than just one of us down here. So, I love that. And I kinda love the differences, because that's the fun part of it."
The other parts were on his mind when Brooks and Pauley first met 30 years ago, in 1992, for "Dateline NBC." After rocketing to the top of the music scene, he didn't like what he saw. "If it wasn't for the people that come see me and my love for them, I would've been out of this business a year-and-a-half ago," he told Pauley then.
Today, Pauley noted, "You were a man with the world by the tail. And you wanted to let go of it. You were talking about quitting."
"100%," said Brooks.
"I 100% didn't believe you would. But you were serious?"
"Oh, very serious."
Of course, he didn't, and seven years later Brooks was named Artist of the Decade.
And then he did it.
In 2000 he and wife Sandy were splitting up, and he walked away to be a fulltime dad to their three daughters. "That's when life kinda began for me," he said. "I thought the '90s were rockin'. '90s couldn't hold a candle to getting to be a dad for those kids for the 2000s."
Inspired by his own childhood in Yukon, Oklahoma, the youngest of Raymond and Colleen's six kids – one girl and five boys, who shared a bedroom.
Pauley said, "Your childhood home sounds like the home equivalent of a clown car."
"It was nuts," he said. "And we were blended. It was a great thing. So, mom had three kids, dad had one. And they came together and had two more. But half- or step- was never, you never got to use that."
"And there's a lotta music?"
"Tons of music," he said. "Life's better with music in it."
And every kind of music: "James Taylor and Creedence, Janice Joplin. Dad was listening to Haggard Jones, Buck Owens. Mom was listening to Belafonte, Mahalia Jackson. And then on my own, I discovered George Strait. That day changed everything for me."
"You heard, what?"
"I don't know. When you hear that voice that you trust, you hear that voice who's singing, and you go, 'Man, whatever that is, makes me smile.' And then, when you get behind a guitar and you're like, ♫ Give me a bottle ♫, all of a sudden, your bones and everything goes, 'Hey, hey, we like this. Whatever this is, we like it.' And then, it's almost like breathing. So, you find yourself singing all the time."
When his youngest daughter went off to college, Brooks went back on the road, with country music artist Trisha Yearwood by his side (they were married in 2005). The fans were still there, more than ever.
He's scaled back a bit, with a Las Vegas residency, but beginning a new radio venture. And with the imminent opening of the Friends In Low Places Bar & Honky-Tonk, Garth Brooks is savoring a full-circle moment.
"You might be interviewing the luckiest, most blessed guy on this planet," he said. "My children are healthy, they're on their way, Ms. Yearwood's happy (I'm hoping!), and then hopefully, the music [is] bringing people together. And they're using it to celebrate. They're using it to mourn. They're using it to unite. How does it get better than that?"
For more info:
- garthbrooks.com
- Friends In Low Places Bar & Honky-Tonk, Nashville
Story produced by Kay Lim. Editor: Ed Givnish.
"Sunday Morning" 2023 "Food Issue" recipe index
Delicious menu suggestions from top chefs, cookbook authors, food writers, restaurateurs, and the editors of Food & Wine magazine.
Jane Pauley is anchor of the award-winning "CBS Sunday Morning," a role she began in September 2016. Pauley is the recipient of multiple Emmys, the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, the Edward R. Murrow Award for outstanding achievement and the Gracie Allen Award from the Foundation of American Women in Radio & Television. Pauley is a member of the Broadcast and Cable Hall of Fame.
Twitter InstagramveryGood! (936)
Related
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Coach hired, team still required: Soccer’s status in the Marshall Islands is a work in progress
- GM, UAW reach tentative deal to end labor strike after weeks of contract negotiations
- Hurricane Otis kills at least 27 people in Mexico, authorities say
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Matthew Perry's family, Adele, Shannen Doherty pay tribute to 'Friends' star: 'Heartbroken'
- Hurricane Otis kills at least 27 people in Mexico, authorities say
- 5 dead as construction workers fall from scaffolding at a building site in Hamburg
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Authorities say Puerto Rico policeman suspected in slaying of elderly couple has killed himself
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Russia’s envoy uses the stage at a military forum in China to accuse the US of fueling tensions
- Maine mass shooting may be nation's worst-ever affecting deaf community, with 4 dead
- Will Ariana Madix's Boyfriend Daniel Wai Appear on Vanderpump Rules? She Says...
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Back from the dead? Florida man mistaken as dead in fender bender is very much alive
- Gigi Hadid, Ashley Graham and More Stars Mourn Death of IMG Models' Ivan Bart
- Crews battle brush fires in Southern California sparked by winds, red flag warnings issued
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Alaska's snow crabs suddenly vanished. Will history repeat itself as waters warm?
These US cities will experience frigid temperatures this week
Authorities say Puerto Rico policeman suspected in slaying of elderly couple has killed himself
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
A former British cyberespionage agency employee gets life in prison for stabbing an American spy
Federal judge reimposes limited gag order in Donald Trump’s 2020 election interference case
A 5.4 magnitude earthquake has shaken Jamaica with no immediate reports of casualties or damage