(continued....)
Ensconced at The Church Studio, it took Ripley
five years to create The Tractors' self-titled
debut album. Released in 1994, there were few
commercial expectations. "We were not expected
to be a hit," says the down-to-earth Ripley.
"But we were new and fresh for radio, at
the right place at the right time. We proved there
was still hope for anyone making a great record."
Powered by the single "Baby Likes To Rock
It," The Tractors hit Top 10 country, plowed
past double platinum and became the #1 selling
debut country album of the year. Earning acclaim
far beyond the confines of country, the album
won a front-page rave in USA Today and an "A"
from Entertainment Weekly. The band was nominated
for two Grammy Awards (Best Country Performance
By A Group for "Baby Likes To Rock It"
and "Tryin' To Get To New Orleans"),
a TNN/Music City News Award as a Star Of Tomorrow
(Vocal Duo Or Group) and three Academy Of Country
Music Awards (Top Vocal Group, Top New Vocal Group
and Album Of The Year), and won the Country Music
Association's Video Of The Year Award for "Baby
Likes To Rock It." Outselling established
major acts such as Alan Jackson and Brooks &
Dunn, The Tractors were Arista Nashville's top
artist.
A band of veteran musicians playing neo-traditionalist
retro-whatever country-something, they had succeeded
without flash or gimmicks. "There's a difference
between being the thing and trying to be the thing.
Hank Williams sang like Hank Williams; he wasn't
pretending to be someone else. We are who we are."
They weren't from Nashville either. "We had
nothing against Nashville. We took comfort in
being accepted by the town. One reason we weren't
there was because we couldn't afford to move there."
In 1995, The Tractors toured and released for
the holidays Have Yourself A Tractors Christmas,
which featured "Santa Claus Boogie."
Over the next couple years, they also contributed
to the acclaimed tribute albums Not Fade Away
(Remembering Buddy Holly) and Stone Country: Country
Artists Perform The Songs Of The Rolling Stones.
But by the time their true follow-up was issued,
Farmers In A Changing World (1998), country music
had changed course and headed to the shores of
pop. The album cover proclaimed "Same 'Great'
Sound," and it was, but the music industry
had closed its ears to The Tulsa Shuffle. In the
case of Arista Nashville, it was in the process
of shutting its doors as well.
"I had no intention of making some other
kind of music as The Tractors," says Ripley.
"We sound like we do every time we play.
I wanted a label that had faith in and enthusiasm
for that sound--and Audium did." Given his
Tractorspeak credo that "the harder you try
to do something the less likely you are to do
it," its surprising Fast Girl took only eight
months to record. "Maybe I'm finally getting
the hang of this," he adds with a smile.
"As it turns out, Fast Girl is closer to
my original vision than any of the previous albums."
Filled with the unexpected magic of first takes
and the truth of false starts, Fast Girl employs
modern technology and Ripley's dogged persistence
to recreate the "one mike, one room, no time"
atmosphere of the '40s, '50s and early '60s--just
like on his favorite records. "The studio
is my life. I've been coming here just about every
day for 13 years. To a lot of artists, recording
is the enemy and they live to tour. We record
most of the time but go play sometimes."
What he has tried to do with The Tractors is make
records that will last just as long as his favorites.
"I'm all for having hits and I think of radio
when I write songs but today's hits are disposable,
only for these times. I want to approach a timeless
quality. I want people to pull out a Tractors
album years from now and for it to still sound
great. I want The Tractors to be left standing
when the dust settles."
Whatever Americana means, Ripley surely knows
what it sounds like because he's experienced the
life it reflects. "I'm not a cowboy. I'm
a farmer. I just keep the wheel in the furrow
and keep moving on. You get on the tractor and
go round in circles and at some point the field
gets plowed."
In Steve Ripley's case, that field bears some
mighty powerful roots, which thankfully have yielded
yet another new musical crop from The Tractors.
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