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September 26, 2024 • 39 mins
Josie Show with guests William Lee Golden and Danni Stefanetti
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Roy Roy around the world on the world wide web.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Leading joy.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
Show Shoes Oh.

Speaker 4 (00:22):
Yeah, broadcasting live from the Joseih Network Studios in downtown
ma Dinah toennes Sieve, It's that time a week again.
It's time for the Josie Shoes, bringing you the most
exciting music, news and deaths from.

Speaker 3 (00:43):
Around the world.

Speaker 4 (00:45):
Right here on the Josie Show. Please make walking the
beautiful handy. I love it, Americans. Riady Else Sweetheart Business,
Josie lath and Pinos.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
Hello, everyone, and welcome to the Josie Show. We have
a great show for all of you today. I am
so excited. Back to back we have two interviews with
William Lee Golden and Danny Stefanetti because they have their
new duet I've Got my Heart on You, so we're
going to talk all about it with both of them,
back to back interviews. Let's go. Let's start off with

(01:28):
this great interview with William Lee Golden.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
Josie, William Lee Golden here, Hello, Hello, it's so nice
to hear your voice again. I just want to thank
you for all you've done for our family and the
wonderful awards and for Danny. You know, our friends and Anyhow,
I just wanted to thank you'all for that and to

(01:52):
let you know how how honored we are to be
a part of the Josie Award family.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Well, thank you so much. It's an honor to have
you all as well. Such a talented family. And of
course Danny Stephanetti is nominated this year, and William le Golden,
the Goldens are nominated, and of course Chris Golden, Elizabeth Golden, Elijah,
the whole family is nominated this year, which is wonderful
and we're just so happy to have you all a
part of it. But it's so excited to be able

(02:21):
to talk to you because today on the Josie Show
we get to talk about the duet. I'm so excited
about it.

Speaker 1 (02:28):
Yeah, well, it's you know, it's something that I've never done.
My mother was a writer. She wrote, she wrote poetry,
She loved poetry, and she wrote portray about her lives
and about our family and things, and and my son
rest He was a great songwriter. And I guess it

(02:52):
skipped over me or something. But I've always been touched
by music and songs and writings and stories. And it's
like when I sing songs with the Oakris Boys. You know,
it's something that I have to put myself into that song,
and it's you go there yourself and it becomes you

(03:15):
really live that story. And sometimes it's when it relates
in your own life. That's what I love about music
is some people seem to write a story that seems
to be the story of our lives sometimes and our feelings.
That's what songs and music is. It's words and melodies,

(03:35):
and the melodies usually reflect the emotions and that's you know,
And it's what I did with this, you know, recently.
It's not this year, but I did it here recently,
and it was I was dealing with a lot of

(03:56):
emotions inside, you know, as a as a parent, and
as we grow and through life, sometimes when we choose
an occupation of it takes a lot of sacrifice. Being
away from home, you know, our family is never a
promise in our heart, but sometimes we have to make

(04:20):
a decision to travel to be able to fulfill our
passion for music and for singing and what it does
for us mentally, emotionally, physically, and spiritually. So it's music
has always had a healing power.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
I felt with this song, the duet between you and
Danny Stephanetti. People are talking about it. People love it.
It's called I Got My Heart on You. And what's
wonderful is you actually got this inspiration, you know, this title,
and the inspiration behind the song from your youngest son.
Is that right? You tell us a little bit about
that and the inspiration behind I Got my Heart on You.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Well, it was Solomon, my youngest son. He's twenty three now.
And so when he was young and was small, and
I was on the road, sometimes he would call my
phone and he would be about five years old, five
or six years old, and he would call my phone,

(05:22):
use his mother's phone and call my phone, call my
number and uh. And if I was on stage or
something and was not near my phone, he would he
would leave a message and he say, Dad, Hey, Dad,
this is Solomon. I got my Heart on you. And

(05:44):
that was so sweet, you know, and for him to
that was from his heart, that's and that was his words,
and that it described love in a little different way
than I had heard that interpreted before. It those special
little words of how he described it, it was unique

(06:05):
and different to me, and it was something that I
kept those messages, I know, for years and had somewhere
here in a box. I've got a cdal where I
had those transferred of off of my phone, my old
phone onto a CD that I could always hold his
little messages. But that was just it was heart fessing.

(06:29):
But you know, as about earlier before we got interrupted
by my sampson here are but he's our guard dogs here, but.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
Anyhow, it was that time that and those things. I
kept all of that and I would replay it occasionally,
but it was just always touched my heart and it
was his words, and he would say it sometimes and
you know, like around here and just to share his

(07:05):
feelings and it was just and then you know, when
he was about twelve, I guess eleven or twelve within
his mother wanted to you know, I was an absentee
father for one hundred and fifty days a year and

(07:26):
an amset tee husband, you know, because the Oak's Boy
was for years we toured one hundred and fifty days
a year every year. That was kind of a cutoff
thing of for our year how many dates we would work.
And so being gone that much, being an absent tea

(07:46):
husband and father, and like I say, we were never
absent tea in our heart and our feelings and our
family is what we're most important, you know. That was
the time that we would go go out and work,
but we would it was a time to get to
come home. It's what we always loved. And we tried

(08:06):
to come home every week, and but we didn't always
get to. Sometimes we would be out on an extended tour,
especially out west, and you're gone for two or three weeks.
And uh, anyhow, it was I went through the third divorce.

(08:29):
Solomon's mother was my third wife, and my first wife.
It's a mother of my older three sons, Chris and
Rusty and Craig. So uh but Brenda, Brenda wanted a divorce,

(08:49):
I guess to have more of a normal life and
uh without me being outsent so much. And uh, anyhow
it was. Divorces are always heart wrenching and there's never
a fun thing about that. But you have to deal

(09:12):
with sometimes things that our own shortcomings, you know. And
I'm not blaming anybody else my divorces except myself. And
I love my wife and I've always loved my families
and anyhow, but I respect Brenda and her wanting to

(09:39):
freedoms to be herself, you know, and not be tied down.
And but she wanted to move to Austin, and uh,
after we'd been divorced for about a year, I mean,
we were going through the divorce a year and a half.
And then after the divorce, she wanted to move to Austin,

(10:03):
and so she picked up and moved out there and
took Solomon with her, and uh it was that was
there's no way to describe the heart ache and sadness
of uh the horn apart from the child and uh

(10:24):
feeling like the loss touch. And uh so I was
here at home, you know, where Solomon had grown up,
in this old plantation home here that we bought forty
four years ago, and uh, Sumner County, Tennessee. And uh
so Solomon was gone, and I was he was a

(10:47):
teenager and uh in his adolescence, She's being to apart,
you know. And this it worried me about the effect
that that would have goe him. And uh, I know
it was certainly affecting me in an emotional way. And
not be able to spend time sometime we didn't want

(11:08):
I would want to. And uh anyhow I was here
some moon had gone to Tulsa to visit her daughter
and granddaughter's and I encourage that to spend all the
time you can with your family. Family is the most important.
If we have in lo their their god guilt and

(11:32):
uh so, uh but yeah, I was sitting here by myself.
She had gone and I was here a weekend by myself,
uh the old tross that weekend, and I was just
out on the back patio and I was sad and
uh this and Solomon and thinking, reflecting about all the

(11:54):
things we'd done and feeling like, you know, I would
try to call him a lot, try to text him,
and I wasn't getting that the response, and uh anyhow
it was, uh it was heart renting to me. And
uh yeah, so I was stepping back there and I was,
I guess, feeling sorry for myself for getting into being

(12:19):
missing my son so much, you know, and here reflecting
on the times that we've spent together and him growing
up and watching him grow up to got to the
adolescents than being kind of pull apart. But uh and
I was crying and by myself falling and squalling back

(12:44):
there and just you know, it's no one here to disturb,
and I was just kind of letting my feelings out
and uh, and I couldn't get over it, and it
was just uh. And then I, you know, I was
that I started thinking about things that I started kind
of putting moaning and growing and putting a melody and

(13:05):
feelings together and doing it in my mind. I started
thinking about this, and so that I started putting words
together and a melody together with my thoughts and my
feelings and just something to get out that I could
share with him that sometime in the future, you know,
to let him know how special it was to me.

(13:30):
And so that's how that song was written and get
emotional thinking about it.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
Absolutely, it's a beautiful song, it really is. And your
songwriting debut, first song.

Speaker 1 (13:46):
Yeah, it's the first song that I'd ever written and
completed and going back through the process and all weekend,
that whole weekend, I was just in that. Then that
song I went. I was there and I couldn't and
I kept writing and putting more to it, and I

(14:07):
wasn't writing it down at that time, but I was
just putting it all together and my thoughts and I
would wake up the next day and it would be
going over in my mind and I would just add
to it and until I finished my feelings and uh
put the verses and the course and a bridge into

(14:28):
it and then another course. Uh and uh so Jeff Panther.
I was sharing that with Jeff, and uh so we
talked a lot. We talked about every day, and uh
we've been best friends since uh eighty one, I guess.
And uh anyhow, I was sharing with him, you know,

(14:50):
that kind of what I'd gone through, and that I'd
written that, and uh so by the end of the weekend,
I wrote all that down on his paper, always in
my mind, the whole melody at all. But uh well,
I didn't write the melody down, but it was just
in my mind. And uh anyhow Jeff got me to

(15:12):
He kept trying to pull it out of the well.
He would ask me, you know, did you ever put
that song down? Did you ever get someone to help
you do it? I said no, And I called one
guy that see if he'd come back and maybe I
could sing it to him and he could put the cord,
you know, put something that I could do a demo
on it. But it never happened. And so Jeff got

(15:35):
me to sing it into my voice out on my phone.
You know that you could talk and talk to your
phone and it records it. So I did. I recorded
it just kind of the way of the mood I
was in and all when I went back there in
my you know, I sang it acapella on there, and

(16:01):
then he got Danny on the phone, and uh we
talked about it, and uh he wanted her to help
put it the music to it. She's a great guitarist,
great great songwriter, and she was written over three hundred
songs herself. But she is so talented and such a

(16:21):
positive person. She took what I did and she added
a little energy to it. Actually she brought it the
beat of it up a little bit, you know, increase
the uh bit and uh excuse me, made it faster.

(16:41):
Well what I had. So she did is she uh
helped me work on little dip. But Danny's Stepanie. And
see what she did is she helped me get the
h She took it two lines. The first line of
the she helped me with. She thought it was stronger

(17:06):
than the second line. She thought that that line needed
to be repeated. So she helped me tweet tweet my
song and also to tweak the bridge and or repeat thing. Eric,
she added a couple of words in her you know
what she thinks. So she helped me finish it up.

(17:29):
So that's how the song got together. And then she
came here to the house and brought her laptop and
her guitar and a great microphone that she had and
we sit here in the living room where I'm sitting
talking to you right now, and we sing. We sang

(17:51):
the song and she got me to sing my part,
and I asked, I wanted her to sing I could burse,
you know, and to help me, because I thought it
would fit better that way, you know, for her. Olbraided
interpretation of that, especially with her meeting from Australia, because

(18:15):
it's a verse about traveling together, you know, going places
from the East Coast to la and then an all
night flight to London and sow Paris along the way
and Virgin Island beaches, and you know, it's things that
we all did together, Solomon and his mother, and so

(18:39):
that's we would do that as we would travel. I
thought that was, you know, it was the way great education.
There's things that you do that expose yourself to different
culturals and also you know, going to the Virgin Isle

(19:00):
in the middle of winter, so we kind of did
that is kind of something to spend time together and
body together. Every year is after the crueling Christmas tours,
we would take about ten days and fly down to
Saint John and the US Spurgeon Islands and spend a

(19:23):
week or ten days down there. Would rent a house
and rented she eat and to enjoy the island, and
it's just a paradise really. I think Ken Chesney owns
two homes there and or he did, but he also
had a home there when we were vissing, you know,

(19:43):
I know we had that's when I knew that he
had just bought another hall there. And but it's just
a great place. It's one of the most beautiful places
there in Trump Bay is one of the most photographed
base and beaches in the whole island sections down there,

(20:05):
you know, of all the islands, that's one of the
most photographs is Trump They there on Saint John and uh.
But anyhow, we did all of that together and it
was that s in that song and it's it was
getting all of that out of me, you know, and
it was something from hopefully the right and that he

(20:27):
can have to know, you know, he inspired me to
want to get this out of be and that was
the only way that I could get it out that
I felt like that he could have when I'm you know,
I'm getting old, and it's something that when he's old
enough to and he's studying medicine right now, he's a emt. Uh,

(20:51):
he's studying to be a practitioner what he's doing. And anyhow,
I've sent him a copy of this so we could
have and uh, I think he appreciates the fact that
I was inspired to do that for his sweet little
messages that he would call and leave me and and uh,

(21:14):
you know a different times he would you know, Dad,
I got my heart on you. So that's how that
song and it's a love song from it's one of
the deep loves from a family for a child, you know,
and missing that child when it's pulled away or moved

(21:38):
away to where you feel it's out of your reach,
you know, and as much as you want sealed, uh,
you're not able to. And it's you realizing how fast
life slips away. And uh, anyhow, how much is uh
there's a lot more behind me than there is a head.

(21:59):
So love we have to make all we can of
every day that we have while we're here.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
It's it's so true, it really is. And uh it's
such a beautiful song. It's so well written. You did
a phenomenal job. It was wonderful and such a great
idea to have Danny Stephanetti do it with you as
a duet. And uh so I hope everyone goes and
checks out this song. I Got My Heart on You.
It's just it's just so wonderful. It's one of those

(22:28):
songs that you know you you wrote it for you know,
of course you and your son that deep love, but
also it can go for anybody really you know, uh
who love your life?

Speaker 1 (22:40):
Yeah, yes it is, and I've heard some people said
that they feel that way about their.

Speaker 2 (22:49):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
See. So it's it's the love and affection that we
live there in our close environments, you know, yea, our
nants so.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
To speak, absolutely everything, definitely.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
So it's it's touching our intervewing and our soul and
who we are and that's kind of where it comes from.
But it's and as a father, you know, it's still
it was. You're the first person I've really talked to
about that today. And I know We've got several interviews
sched you here, but as I was reflected back, only yeah, sorry,

(23:40):
I apologize for getting emotional there and my dog getting
erupted in our conversations here today.

Speaker 2 (23:48):
But you're fine, You're so fine. I'm so glad you
shared that with me, and it was this is such
a deep interview and it's just so beautiful. You could
just tell the love that you have for your family,
your kids, you know, And that's what I think people,
you know, why they relate to you, why they love
you all these years, is because you are very relatable
and you do have so much love in your heart.

(24:08):
And so I'm really glad that you showed that, you know,
on this on this interview, and you know, I'm just
so thrilled. I'm just so thrilled that I got my
heart on you. Is out and available for everyone, so
please make sure everybody please check it out and check
out everything that William Lee Golden is doing, you know.
Also a quick mention, you know, a new album is
also coming out by The Overage Boys, releasing October twenty fifth,

(24:31):
Mama's Boys. So I mean there's a lot you're doing.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
A Oh, I'm busy every day, so then I'm flying that.
You know, it helps to keep me motivated, and it
entergasted me. Get off the Overrige Boys bus and I
sometimes come home and get on a different bus and
go out with my family and saying, and that's what
we're doing this week. We're in the We're at Renfer Valley, Kentucky.

(24:59):
It's a bit big Renfrol Valley show. They have a
big show there. They've had a long run and show
up at Renfer Valley and it's one of so pridgable
this place, it's one of our places we love to play.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
Oh well, so excited. Well, I hope everyone goes and
find you live. Definitely see a Golden Shovel. It's so wonderful.
I love family shows. I love how close you all are.
So please make sure you go and see the Golden
of course Oakridge Boys, and just keep following William Lee Golden.
You can find them on Facebook also your website, so
please make sure you go and check it all out.

(25:37):
And thank you so much from the boy of my heart.
I really truly appreciate you joining me talking so deeply
about this song and we just we just absolutely adore you.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
Joseph, thank you so much, and we're so honored to
be a part of your show and to be able
to and we're honored to participate in your show when
we can. To Pierre to grab the Lobery over. You're
at the big awards show you have and what you're
doing for music business and for entertainers of all genres.

(26:13):
I mean, you're you're really a pioneer. And you know
the I guess the Grammy Awards is the only other
awards that reaches so many different dimensions. You know, you're
kind of loss of diamond. It's some multi faceted award show.
So I commend you and Jana Maria on what y'all

(26:37):
was put together there.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
Thank you, thank you so much. We really appreciate you,
and please, please you know remember that you know you
and your whole family are definitely in our thoughts for
the loss of Rusty. We absolutely love, love love him.
Every single time I was near him, every time we
were around him, he always just had so much energy
and he was just wonderful at what he what he

(26:59):
did his gifts. So you're and our thoughts and prayers.
You're very welcome, You're very very welcome and I will
talk to you again real soon. Okay, thank you so
much again for joining me. Oh thanks, Oh of course,
absolutely all right, talk soon. Take care. Oh we love

(27:20):
you too, We love all of you. Should take care.
I love chat with William Lee Golden and up next
is my interview with Danny Stepan, Eddie Enjoy, good.

Speaker 3 (27:31):
Atin you know there and nuts to good afternoon.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
How are you doing.

Speaker 2 (27:37):
How are you doing lately? It's been a while to
be back on your story. Oh, it's always a pleasure.
It's always a pleasure to have you. Thank you so
much for doing this. We have we have really exciting
topics to talk about. Actually, because you have a new
duet between you and William Lee Golden. I got my
heart on you. Let's talk about it.

Speaker 3 (27:55):
Very exciting. I know that William's coming on your show today,
and what an amazing project to be part of with
the country music legend like William Lee Golden and so
so pumped for the world to hear this single that
was dedicated to his son Solomon and something that's very

(28:17):
close to William part this song and eighty five years
Oh then he's debuting as a songwriter. So that's very
cool too.

Speaker 2 (28:25):
That is so amazing, so amazing. What were your thoughts
when you first heard this song, Like, did you know
right off the about when you heard it that you
wanted to help it and record on it with him?

Speaker 3 (28:37):
Yeah. So I'm knowing William for over a year and
Jeffrey Panter, as my manager and forty year friendship with William,
obviously heard this poem and this malady and words that
William had lying around, and he really had to keep
pulling it out of William like come on, let's he

(28:58):
put this down on a voice in them come on.
And then it wasn't until later I came into the
process where I put some guitar playing and Jeffrey and
I got in the studio and did the recording and
put all the app put all the instruments down. And
that wasn't until later we were first start putting this
into a song. And eventually, after I heard the melody

(29:23):
and voice memo, I went, I think I know what
to do with this and ran it past William and
he was all for it and spurned organically. But it
took some time. The songwriting process was the quickest fit,
but it was Jeffrey saying you know, getting William come on,
come on, this is a great song.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
Let's hear it. You know, right that motivation? M M yeah, exactly,
absolutely absolutely. And what was it like recording the song together?

Speaker 3 (29:52):
Was it a lot of fun?

Speaker 2 (29:53):
Because I believe he said that you all, you know,
you brought your laptop, you brought your microphone, you brought
your guitar, and you guys were in like living room
or something, right.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
Yeah, the Golden era and he's living room there with
the grand piano and all the Grammys there and the
beautiful golden sofa. Yeah, we did the video in there
and it was really a special time. Yeah. I brought
my laptop and microsphone and all into face and put
down laid down William's vocals, and I did the pedals

(30:26):
fields bass guitar and a lot of guitar layers over
there in Palm Springs, and then we put down all
the harmonies and that when I flew to Nashville to
get his vocals.

Speaker 2 (30:39):
Oh that's amazing. I think that is just so cool
how it all really came together and it's so perfectly.
It's such a perfect song for duet. And what I
love about it is, of course it's you know, love
between you know. Initially William wrote it for his son Solomon,
his youngest son, Solomon, but it really could work universal
and he could work from you know, a mother to

(31:00):
you know, anybody really mother, son, husband, wife, you know,
so it's really universal in that way.

Speaker 4 (31:08):
It really is.

Speaker 3 (31:09):
It's a love song that can relate to Yeah, siblings,
like he said, a husband and wife friendship all different universally.

Speaker 2 (31:17):
Yes, absolutely, and I love that. And I love the
relationship that you have with William. You two work very
well together. You know, you seem to really get on very,
very very well, which is just so so lovely. How
how many first introduced to William was?

Speaker 1 (31:33):
It?

Speaker 2 (31:34):
Was it through Jeff Panther.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Yeah, my manager and his forty year friendship with him.
I remember at one of our first meetings, I didn't
think the music and music video executive producer that was
in the world of hip hop. I didn't know he
was in the country music and that was, you know,
my copy. So how was I to know his best

(31:58):
friend is a courtly band, that a legendary country band,
which I had no idea of until my Auntie one
day mentioned, oh my gosh, you're working with the Oprah's voice,
one of the Oprah Boys. I was like, oh, I
hadn't heard of them where I grew but my auntie
knew of them, right, And yeah, Jeffrey put two and

(32:22):
two together and thought I'd be the perfect person to
put lay down some guitar and composition under this song
that William presented me with and kind of works really well,
like our voices together and definitely easy works with William,
and then obviously Jeffrey and I have that production combination

(32:44):
that works together really easily too. So yeah, it came
together quite quite nicely, well, yeah, nicely without thinking too
much about it.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
It kind of just happened naturally. Yeah, it really did
just happen. I love it. It just such a beautiful song.
And you too, add such you know, a different dynamic
to the song. It's so you know, dimensional, like it's
just it's so lovely and I hope everyone goes and
checks it out. Where can listeners go after this song?
Right now?

Speaker 3 (33:15):
Yeah? So the song drops on September twenty seventh, and
and the video will be dropping I believe shortly after
the music video. Yeah, people will be able to head
over to iTunes, Spotify, and everywhere like that or William
Leggo's website. I'm sure it will be on there and

(33:39):
his YouTube channels. So yes, safeteen to that, So stay tuned, y'all.
I'm so excited.

Speaker 2 (33:46):
That was gonna be my next question. If there's gonna
be a music video for it, I'm so excited.

Speaker 3 (33:50):
Ooh this odd yeah is actually we we filmed it
when I was in Nashville. He filmed it at the
Golden Ear in the living room. William.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
It's lovely. Well, oh, I can't wait. I can't wait
to see that and we'll definitely be sharing it everywhere
once that comes out, that's for sure. Thank you.

Speaker 3 (34:16):
Thank you for your spot and also thank you for
your the thought for the a one I got last
year at the Grands all about pre on at the
Joins you was, and also nominations you guys have given
me this year.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
I'm just away. Congratulations. Well it's well so well deserved.
You do so much, and you have such great music
out there and you're an incredible musician. My goodness.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (34:41):
You're very very welcome. You're very very welcome, and it's
it's just always so lovely to see you and see
what you're doing. You're always working.

Speaker 4 (34:49):
You know.

Speaker 2 (34:49):
Another really cool thing that you that you did with
of course William Lee Golden, but it was actually with
all the Ogre's boys and also a lot of stars
that were there as well. You were in the music
video Elvira, which was amazing. What was that experience like
for you?

Speaker 3 (35:06):
Wow? Wasn't that a fun music video?

Speaker 2 (35:11):
It was fun.

Speaker 3 (35:13):
It really was a day. I'll never forget. That experience
to me was it was just so memorable, exciting and
to see Kid Rock on set digging root, Tray Atkins
and all those country music staff started lineup, and then

(35:34):
we had a hair, hair and makeup person. We had
these fruit platters that on the top level of this
this bar in downtown Nashville where it was filmed, and
I wrapped up in the two of the actual two
of us with the OA Cruse boys and I got
to speak to the guys on the bus. That was
a really fun trip there, and that was Joe Bondl's
last music video to be part of that. And also

(35:58):
really he smiled, was contagious so to be even chat
with him on the back and he's always so kind
and would always encourage me anytime I got to meet him,
but a few times I did over the over the
last year. So yeah, that was a big highlight of
the trips, just getting to share a bit of a
bit more time with Joe Bundle and to be part

(36:22):
of music video that's such an epiphany song for the
Oakley's voice.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
Right, such an iconic, such an iconic song, and then
of course thing with so many wonderful legends in the
course your Barnslaw was, you know, his last music video,
So you have such great memories being able to you know,
being on that stat.

Speaker 3 (36:42):
Yeah, and we had some younger artists as well, Tase
Matthews and some other up and coming artists on the
set two and yeah, it is an iconic song and
I always have it in my head now so catchy, right,
it's so catchy.

Speaker 2 (36:58):
Oh my goodness, many more incredible memories and things you know,
to come. I could see it. I could see it
happening for you for sure.

Speaker 4 (37:06):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (37:08):
You're very welcome. You are just incredible, and thank you
so so much for joining me and catching up with me.
One mastup. Can you please just give out your website
and also your social networking site so people can follow you.

Speaker 4 (37:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (37:22):
People can head e to Danny Stepfanetti on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram,
YouTube and all of that, and they can hear my
music on Spotify, iTunes and my website Danny Stefanetti dot
com that has all my two dates, music videos and
all my latest news is on my website. So head

(37:43):
over to the.

Speaker 2 (37:45):
Perfect Please check your out, everybody. Danny Stephanetti, thank you
again so so much for talking with me. I truly
appreciate it.

Speaker 3 (37:53):
Thank you Dozie and Fateena Marie as well for both
of all your support and all you do is to
Josie Wards and have such your fun time loss up
type us so I'm looking for it again and you
guys are amazing what you do in the music industry.

Speaker 2 (38:10):
Oh, thank you so much, my friend. I really appreciate it.
And congratulations again for tuning into the Josie Show. I
had such a great time getting the chance to talk
to William Lee Golden and Danny Stephanetti. And please make
sure you check out their new song I've Got My
Heart on You, a beautiful duet, so please check it
out and share it with your friends and family. It's

(38:31):
a must. It's so beautiful and thank you all so
much for tuning into the Josie Show. I'll see you
guys again real soon. And remember, the tenth Annual Josie
Music Awards is coming up. Our pre party is on
October twenty sixth at the CMA Theater at the Country
Music Hall of Fame and Museum. And then October twenty
seventh is the tenth Annual Josie Music Awards the awards

(38:52):
ceremony at the grandel Opry House. So you can get
tickets for both of these events at Josie Music Awards
dot com. All right, hope to see you all there.
Thank you for tuning in. See y'all next time. Goodbye.

Speaker 4 (39:08):
The Josie Show was copyrighted property of the Josie Network
of brands.

Speaker 3 (39:12):
It may not be duplicated.

Speaker 4 (39:13):
Authors are edited and sold are aired without.

Speaker 3 (39:15):
Written consent from the Josie Show owners.

Speaker 4 (39:17):
Any copyright prendment of the Josie Show will be subject
to legal actions
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