Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey guys, I'm Tiffany Woyce and you're listening to the
award nominated Backstage Pass exclusively on KKTC True Country ninety
nine point nine.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
And welcome inside the Backstage Pass. Always a busy week,
and that means one day closer to Country Radio Seminar
coming up there at the Omni Hotel, the nineteenth to
the twenty first presented by our friends over at clay
Arie Music, and of course out there the Caaden Gordon
Show dot Com, Today's best country mix and broadcasting from
the clay Arie studios out there across here in Texas
and in Tasta, Mexico, Colorado, Nashville, and I guess globally,
(00:31):
we're all over the place out there at our our
own iHeartRadio station as well under Backstage Pass. We'm always
placed to have with the ogs when they come back.
It's always good to have them here on the show.
Tiffany woys here on the program, the current single American
dreamer across all those digital streaming platforms. How are you,
my friend?
Speaker 1 (00:48):
I'm doing wonderful. How are you?
Speaker 2 (00:50):
It's good? We had that we're talking a little bit
before the show. We had that snow in Texas, and
people were like, yeah, snow in Texas, are you kidding me?
Just about two weeks ago? And I ourd to believe
it's so two weeks flown by, but we got it
hard down me. It was thick, the white patchy stuff
four to six inches here all over. And I never
thought in my lifetime I was gonna see Galveston, Texas
down here, the well known beach and I mean hotels galore,
(01:14):
and on a beach you would actually get snow. How
many times do you hear that?
Speaker 1 (01:18):
And you don't? And that must mean that your grocery
stores were eliminated of the things that you usually don't
understand why for some reason you go there and it's
like the weirdest things are completely gone. You're like, why
would you need all of that?
Speaker 2 (01:34):
It does, yeah exactly, and you're like, why are we
out of this product? And that product too. At the
same time, I was lucky enough they did stay open
down here. We didn't lose power. It wasn't like the
ice storm that we had back in the late nineties
two where it just kind of lost power for almost
a week down here and it was just frozen. You
couldn't even really get on the roads. But we just
waited until pretty much it thought out and we were
back out there too. Again. Well tell me this, you know,
(01:54):
start of a new year brings those resolutions twenty twenty five.
Hard to believe we're even saying that right now. I
feel like we just began twenty twenty four for you personally,
give me some of those goals and new Year's resolutions
and kind of tell me about the start to the
new year after a month gone by.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
You know, I think one of my big focuses right
now is my podcast, and What's Mine is Yours is
what it's called, and we're kind of revamping it, like
you're going on to season three, and with every season
we're learning something new, and I think it's where a
lot of my creative energy is going right now. Obviously,
I'm still in the studio. I'm still recording new music.
(02:30):
I actually go back into the studio this month because
there's a song that's really really special to me that
I want to get out as soon as possible that
I wrote last year, and so I'm still doing that.
But really a lot of my energy and a lot
of my excitement is in the podcast. I mean, not
only obviously as podcasting so popular right now, but what
(02:51):
we're doing with the show and kind of how we're
letting it kind of take on another life and grow
and change and evolve, I'm really really excited about. So
it really started off as me interviewing songwriters, and that's
how it's been for season one and season two, and
now I'm working kind of with new partners and in
a studio and stuff. We're really trying to figure out
(03:12):
who the audience is and trying to figure out, you know,
how do we get this scene and heard by more people.
And so now we're going to start interviewing kind of
everybody in the creative space in Nashville. So kind of
because I think everybody looks at Nashville and looks at
the music industry through a different set of lenses, depending
on what side of the industry you are on. So
whether you're a makeup artist, whether you're a stylist, whether
(03:33):
you're a producer, whether I mean all of those things,
I think everybody sees Nashville so differently, coming from whatever
position you're kind of working for.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
Yeah, I love that too, because you know what I
started six years ago. I had to find pretty much.
You know, the status quo of what you're talking about there,
the purpose for it, you know, the audience. Was I
going to do singer songwriters? Was it just going to
do sports? Was I going to kind of mix it together?
And I kind of found that niche. You know, it
took a while for to catch on, but it was like,
we're going to do a sports shows, kind of put
them out th there. We took it from a local
angle to a regional to a national and no global level,
(04:04):
which is still amazing too. Went to a few radio seminars,
learn a lot at a place like in a country
radio seminar. Then you go to like CMA week and
you work with a lot of great people who make
this happen because I tell people, I mean, I don't
I schedule you guys too, but hey, thanks to a
great PR firm out there, Monarch and the other ones
too that make these things happen. Give them a shout
out to because once you find that it's different because
(04:26):
I've been on other people's shows and so I see
both sides of the token, the interviewer and the interviewe
and I'm sure you've done that through the first and
second season of what you've done, tell me about just
what you've learned, as both those titles the Interviewer and
the interviewe.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
Oh my gosh. Well, obviously all I've known until doing
the podcast was what it's like to be interviewed, which
I have no problem doing. That comes so easy to mean.
First of all, I love talking, but to be on
the other side of it, you have to learn to
not talk as much but listen more. And I haven't
always said I'm the best listener, and so this really
did teach me a different like, gave me another tool
(05:02):
in my box that I had to learn and grow
to be better at. And now I think it's actually
made me a better not just obviously a podcaster and
a host, but a better friend, a better family member,
a better all of those things, a better person in
a relationship because really, I genuinely when I listen, I'm
not just you can't as a podcast host when you're listening,
(05:22):
you actually have to be listening. You can't just be
like m hmmmm. And the next it's really how you
engage and create conversation with somebody from what that person
just said to you, and they'll totally know if they
weren't you weren't actually listening. So it's really I think
that's the thing that I've learned the most being on
the other side of the microphone, coming from being interviewed
(05:43):
all the time, and now understanding how hard it is
for people like you in your seat to one do
the prep work on the person you're going to be interviewing,
coming into something not completely blinded, where you actually know
you you've done your homework a little bit on the person,
and then on top of it, listening to what they
have to say, so you can create engaging conversation and
it's not just going down a list of questions, because
(06:05):
that's so boring.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Yeah, I like the unscripted, and that's why you know
you and always we've got along so well too, is
because you know me. We just let the conversation take
it where it's going to go. I mean, that's you
do your prep work, you hit on a few points
and things like that. But it's amazing too, and I
come up with all kinds of silly questions even in
the whole rapid fire. I got a new one for
you today to your excellent money. A lot of laugh
which is kind of fun and I'll tell you who
(06:28):
gave me the idea too. You know what's cool. You
know we just kind of passed the Grammys a little
bit last night. I want to get your take on
this because I've been very much to the type of
person to bite my tongue, but I always value anybody's opinion,
especially women in country music too. We see all these
ladies that are doing so well out there with Landy
Wilson and Ashley Cook, Hana Ellis, and I mean the
(06:49):
list goes on and on. Ashley McBride, Carly Pears, you're
right up there with him looking back at how hard
this industry is. And you know that from actually talking
to the songwriters. That's where it begins and ends right there.
If you don't have anything written, nobody can record it.
When you look back at it, to it something well
written too. Looking past all this Grammys, I'm okay with
this whole situation of you know, Beyonce and you know
(07:10):
best Country album things like that. Where do you stand
as a female Because for me, being a media host,
I'm always careful what I say because once you get
out there, if you don't bite your tongue, if you
say something you can offend somebody. I'm not in the
business to offend people. I have my opinions do it.
What I like to say, though, is honestly, if if
your material is good that you put out there, somebody's
(07:31):
going to find it. And that's what I say is
because I've earned everything that I've gotten on this show,
so I appreciate the creativity and the difference, and that's
what makes music so fun to me. It makes music
to earth. Where do you stand on all this country?
And really, I said controversy for me, it's it's funny you.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
I mean, I had friends over last night and we
watched the Grammys, and I actually do have a big
opinion about it, and I don't mind speaking it because
I think it comes from different angles of how I feel.
When she first released the album and everything I was
like and it was on being played on the radio.
Now I'm not saying I think the music was actually good.
It was a fun album, so that it was well done,
(08:06):
so that that part of course, my concern with it
was is no matter what Beyonce puts out, she's Beyonce,
so she's always going to take the slots on the
top of the charts. She's always going to the album
will significantly always do well because she has such a
core fan base that no matter what she does, people
(08:26):
are going to run out and get it. So that
set aside. Okay, So, but the point of the album
I think she had said originally was that she wanted
to bring spaces to the country music industry for other
black country artists, which I loved and that was wonderful.
But my concern with this was is that she actually
took space from somebody else versus giving space in a sense,
(08:48):
because she was the one on the top of those charts,
none of those other artists. So other than maybe Shaboozie,
I know Shaboozie credits her for a lot of things. Now,
what I think I would have loved to see her do,
and who's to say she still won't do it, is
like team up with someone like Netflix or something and
call it the Cowboy Carter Documentary and showcase those artists
in town and follow them around and give them an
(09:09):
actual platform to show their music. So she kind of
like so that it's not just all about Beyonce and
Beyonce being Beyonce, because Beyonce will always be a star
no matter what you can't tap it it away from her.
I think people's complaints last night about her winning Country
Album of the Year was the fact that is she
gonna stick around in country or was this just for fun?
Like was this just like a one off? And if
(09:30):
this is just a one off, it kind of sinks.
I kind of think that maybe like someone like Lanny
Wilson or something, I mean, someone who's actually true in
their country roots and is gonna stay country. I think
I see both sides of the token of like the
idea of like why people are irritated, But then I
also see that like, hey, it was a good album
and it actually really was popular and it did actually
(09:51):
really well, So it's kind of I see the argument
for both sides. I lean more on the side of
like gosh, now announced this world tour. I'm sure hoping
she's going to showcase a platform for those other artists
so that she could actually, I guess, in a sense,
put her money where her mouth is where she says
I wanted to create space for other black country artists. Okay,
(10:14):
well then let's do it.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
I'm with you on that. I hardly agree with that too,
and that's where success breeds success When the materials good,
people are gonna find it. And it's like the album
here that I really love so much too, and I'm
gonna talk about this. We take this a quick time
out here, but I'm Your Woman was one of the
albums that Tiffany put out there twenty twenty four. We're
gonna talk a lot about coming back here, but we
got to play, you know, the latest single. I'm always
(10:36):
about playing the latest music out there too again broadcaster
from the clay Airy Studios Theclayairy dot Com. Check out
his latest single across all those DSPs out there. An
American Dreamer here it is, and I'll tell you what
you get the gist of this song too and dream
big because that's what life is all about. Coming back
with Tiffany. Why is an American Dreamer here again? KKTC
True Country ninety nine point nine and out there powered
(10:56):
by the Sports Guys podcast dot com. Coming right back,
Stay tuned.
Speaker 3 (11:12):
I believe we're a little more same that we are differend.
Speaker 4 (11:19):
I believe just a little more grace would do it's good.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
I believe there's no place better than the place we're living.
So I believe old gloi flying, never naighblehood.
Speaker 4 (11:39):
This is the landed up.
Speaker 3 (11:42):
Sometimes I wonder why we get.
Speaker 4 (11:46):
Trying e s We're we breaking heart while.
Speaker 5 (11:53):
It's still mine, is still your horse, It's still standing
up phone.
Speaker 4 (12:00):
Nation, not a coda of American jin.
Speaker 6 (12:11):
I believe in being called uitio.
Speaker 4 (12:17):
I believe in that those boys and girls in blue.
Speaker 5 (12:24):
I don't believe everything's in the papers, and.
Speaker 6 (12:30):
I damn sure don't bow they're selling.
Speaker 5 (12:34):
Norm This is still the land of comfort.
Speaker 4 (12:41):
Sometimes I wonder why.
Speaker 5 (12:44):
He trying to saving alcohol, really breaking heart while it's
still not celious. It's still standing a farm, still a nation,
a god.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
Let's tell a little more, a little moore facing the
mad of a little less tagg, a little moore, give
a little woe. I way we face is still the
land of comfort.
Speaker 7 (13:34):
Sometimes sound wander, keep try scary about.
Speaker 5 (13:40):
Bars only begin Wow, it's still not It's still it's
still standing.
Speaker 4 (13:51):
I'm still a nation, not a gud dog.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
I'm still mon nation, not a gun.
Speaker 8 (14:22):
Hey y'all, this is recording artist Olivia Rocks, and you're
listening to the award nominated Backstage Past podcast exclusively on
KKTC True Country ninety nine point nine.
Speaker 9 (14:33):
That Kaden Gordon Show Today's Best Country Mix is a
two hour show playing independent and mainstream country music you
know and love. Be sure to check it out at
the Kangordonshow dot com for more information on the show and.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
As part of the program is brought to you by
clay Air Broadcaster from the clay Air Studios the Clayair
dot Com check out the latest signal.
Speaker 5 (14:56):
Round playing the stage.
Speaker 4 (15:01):
Thank You Tide.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Hey y'all, this is Tarren Papa and you're listening to
the Backstage Pass with Brandon exclusively on KKTC True Country
ninety nine point nine in Taos, New Mexico.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
And back here, Tiffany Woy is on the Backstage Pass
broadcaster from the clay Arie Studios KKTC True Country ninety
nine point nine out there two Clay's latest single, make
sure you check it out across all those DSPs. It's
a little snippet of it right here on the Backstage
Pass and the Tiffany Woys Johinning Gus my friend love it.
It really just takes me on a ride from start
to finish and makes people believe this new song. American
(15:56):
Dreamer love it so much because honestly, we'll get one
ride around the sun, no doubt about it. And the
song really is patriotic and makes people feel positive the
entire time.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
Loved the song, and obviously it came out for a
reason around the election time, and that was something that
has been on my heart for a really, really long time.
It was something that I wanted to say, but arguably,
I guess like in this industry, it's kind of scary
because people always have a feeling about it no matter
what side of the lane you stand on, and this
song wasn't supposed to take a side. Like I sent
(16:29):
out with the single, everywhere I sent it out, I said,
this wasn't red or blue. This is red, white and blue,
and this was about being proud to be an American
and all that has happened in our history that has
allowed us to give us those freedoms. And it's still
obviously found its haters, and that's okay. I knew it
was going to when I released it, and that I
(16:53):
knew that going into it, but I also think that
if you're not going to shake up something a little bit,
then you're not even doing our jobs. So I was
really really proud of that because I knew it wasn't
gonna be a typical single. I knew it wasn't something
that is, I guess, necessarily year round, even though you
totally can be year round. But it was one of
those things where I knew it was timely, I knew
it had a purpose for a period of time, and
(17:16):
I'm really proud of what it was able to do
in a short period of time. I'm really, really really
proud of the song. I'm and I'm so proud of
my co writers too, standing with me and being courageous
enough to put their names on something that they knew
was going to have a little bit of a backlash,
even though it totally shouldn't have. But that's either neither
(17:38):
here nor there. But I'm just so so so proud
of it, and I'm hope, I'm hopeful that it has
a life past the fact that now that like the
election's over and all this other stuff, I think I
could be hearing it, you know, on Memorial Days, fourth
of July. It is, like all those other things, I
think that it can be, you know, resurgenced and brought
back kind of time and time again. And I really
(18:00):
hope that that song found a home with which I
think I think it did a lot of people really
reacted really really well to it, and there was far
more love than there was hate. And I'm just I'm
really proud of it. I'm really really proud of what
we did with it.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
I'm proud of that music video out there for the
American Dreamer Again. I just brought it on the when
I choose to just stream out their iTunes. I loved
it too. How much fun, that's the key word was
it to put together a badass music video.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
It was a lot of fun. And it was my
actually first time using a different videographer because I usually
use the same videographer for everything, and he was busy.
He does all of like Tiger Lily, gold stuff, so
he was really busy. So I used a different videographer
this time. His name was Quentin Cook, and he did
such a good job. Like I always come with a
crazy vision, and so it's interesting working with a new
(18:50):
videographer because you never know how they're gonna take your visions.
And I was like, well, I immediately knew I wanted
to be an airplane hangar, like that was something that
I wanted to and he was like okay, like I
don't know where we're going to find one of those,
and you know, nearby, and luckily we were able to
use like a military based airplane hanger about forty five
(19:10):
minutes outside of Nashville. And what we did is he
took a hose and they kept wetting the floor so
everything was reflecting on the ground. And then I had
this idea ever since watching Mickey Geiton's Heaven Down Here
music video, I really wanted a big projector behind me,
kind of showing various things on a projector, and so
(19:34):
I was able to come together really seamlessly, and it
just was. It was really nice. For first of all,
I didn't have to move around a lot. I stayed
in one position, which is not like most of my
other music videos. But because I didn't want the music
video necessarily to be about me, like that was the
one thing because this song, in my opinion, wasn't a
focus on me. It was the lyrics, it was the
song itself. It's so much First of all, this is
(19:56):
a message that is so much bigger than a breakup song,
a love song, or a drinking song. The message is
so much bigger than me and anything else. I've ever done.
That's what I wanted it to be. The center focus
was really listening and paying attention to the lyrics, and
I think that Quentin did in a fantastic job and
he really brought my vision to life. So I was
really really happy with it.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
I love the song and getting out there across all
the DSPs, Tiffany Voice here the backstage past KKTC True
Country ninety nine point nine empowered by the Sports Guys
podcast dot Cow, but also broadcasting from the clay Airy
studios out there at the Clayair dot Com. I loved
your album I'm Your Woman, which I thought was fantastic.
You were going to play one off of there too.
Just a great body of work and some great tunes
off of there. You and country music was one of
(20:40):
my favorites. And then took Back, which we're gonna play
here just a little bit on the show here on
True Country ninety nine point nine, talk about just overall
body of work and selection of songs, because I mean
it probably had more in the can that could have
made the album out there too, but you guys settled
on some great music for it.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Yeah, and this one was really special to me, so
since I've lived in Nashville and I've been doing this
like really full time, which is about eight years now.
This was the first body of work that I wrote
the majority of it. So this was my I've always
I came to town not wanting to be a co
writer or a songwriter. I just wanted to be pitched
really good songs and be a vehicle for really, really good,
(21:16):
well written songs. And I did something completely different this
time because I really have been testing the waters at
becoming a co writer and crafting becoming a songwriter, and
this was really the first introduction into that and releasing
music that I was actually a co writer on. And
it really was proven that you are better off singing
(21:36):
your own words because this music so far out of
all my music, was responded to the best, and I
guess there's something to be said about singing your own stories.
And when it came to say took Back, I mean
that was the catapulting reason of me going into songwriting.
That was kind of the first song that we kind
of designed the whole project around was took Back. And
(21:57):
that was actually my next single going to radio. Even
though it's been out for a while. We're finally kind
of taking it to radio, and that song was obviously
it was it was heartbreaking to write, but it was
my healing journey into the idea that I was engaged.
And my fiancee at the time called off the wedding
six weeks before the wedding and then months later asked
(22:19):
for the ring back, and that was like, again, it's
not about a ring, and the ring I think was
it was just like a last little gut punch. But
it was one of those things where like the ring symbolized,
giving that back was like, okay, that's a really finalization
that it's totally over over because the ring symbolized a future,
it symbolized love, it symbolized a promise, and it was interesting.
(22:41):
They're like like that moment of taking it back and
it's like, well, that's not all you took back. You
took back everything that that symbolized not and you know,
and the ring is actually the least important part of it.
It's just what the principle of the ring was supposed
to mean that never did. And I went into the
writing room, you know, that day with this idea of
(23:03):
the ring, and it just took on a life of
its own, and it's probably the song I'm other than
American Dreamer. It's definitely the song that I'm one hundred
percent most proud of because I was the most vulnerable
and a story that I wasn't sure how deep I
was going to go into sharing. And then I realized
that once I've put it out and once I've you know,
seen the reaction with it because it's done really well,
(23:24):
like on Spotify and whatnot, that a lot of people
needed to hear it too, And I was really really
proud of allowing myself to be vulnerable. And now it's
been you know, two years, so it's been a while
and I'm I'm doing obviously far better now, but it's
still whenever you talk about it and I sing it
and all those things, all those feelings come back because
(23:44):
it was a huge monumental moment in my life that
I think changed me forever and made me look at
relationships and how I tackle next relationships so differently, and
it was just it's a big moment that I'm so
proud that I was able to release and show the
world a different side of me that was more personal
and not just kind of a fun, happy, go lucky song.
(24:07):
It was something that really kind of peeled the layers
back on me a bit more than not a lot
of people get to see.
Speaker 2 (24:13):
I'll tell you what, a lot of people are gonna
feel this one too. And so ladies, maybe guys too,
have been through this those personal experiences she lives out
the songs that she writes here it is took Back
from the album too. I'm Your Woman Tiffany Woys dot com.
Check out for tour dates out there too, and of
course we hope to see her at Country Radio Seminar
coming up and Beautiful Nashville, Tennessee the nineteenth to the
twenty first there at the Omni Hotel. Get your tickets
(24:34):
now too. If you haven't already too, come join us.
We'll be broadcasting the show live on KKTC True Country
ninety nine point nine and of course out there to Facebook, YouTube,
all those special places, and the Sports Guys Podcast dot Com.
It's took Back. It's Tiffany Woys powered by the Sports
Guys Podcast dot Com exclusive KKTC True Country ninety nine
point nine. Back in the flash statute.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
It's just rough.
Speaker 10 (24:58):
It's just shot him wrong head you used to hold
and I'm run a collow, that little piece of gold
wance burnt high. No, it's cool.
Speaker 11 (25:19):
Forever for always, so death to us.
Speaker 4 (25:25):
It ain't working.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
We'll keep working because.
Speaker 11 (25:29):
It's written in the star she made it froms you're
always you're the best of all the love out of her.
Speaker 10 (25:41):
So here's the thing. It ain't just string.
Speaker 9 (25:48):
That you took back.
Speaker 10 (25:55):
It's just a house.
Speaker 4 (25:58):
It's just a book.
Speaker 10 (26:00):
Much boots and hands to the brown.
Speaker 4 (26:05):
Last stream used to swear nehing. Now there's brand news,
just one name on the bill.
Speaker 7 (26:19):
For ways till death to us for a perfect We'll
keep working because it's written starts.
Speaker 4 (26:32):
She made the ROMs you heard always forget.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
The best of the all the Lord, here's the same.
Speaker 4 (26:44):
It ain't just s sts a bad I can't believe again.
Speaker 6 (26:59):
That's so hello, or still the thread for ways till
death to us spot.
Speaker 5 (27:12):
A faint working, Well, keep working because it's originally the
stars bars you.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
Would always get the best of the.
Speaker 4 (27:26):
Head.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
So here's the same.
Speaker 4 (27:31):
It as just a red.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
But she's too bad, so he's the fast.
Speaker 4 (27:41):
It it's just a rid due to bad.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
What's up, y'all?
Speaker 1 (28:05):
It's Lakeview and you're listening to the backstage past podcast
exclusively on kk t C ninety nine point nine True
Country in Taos, New Mexico.
Speaker 9 (28:15):
The Caden Gordon Show Today's Best Country Mix is a
two hour show playing independent and mainstream country music you
know and love. Be sure to check it out at
the kangordonshow dot com for more information on the show.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
And we're broadcasting this part of the program brought to
you by Clay Air again presented by Clay Are a
good friend out there too as well? Time for that
the current single broadcaster from the Clay Arie Studios.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
Good Bye, Hey, this.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
Is Nashville recording artist Michelle Wright and you're listening to
the backstage pass on KKTC True Country ninety nine point nine.
Coming up there too at CRST. You never know who's
gonna stop by that booth too, is gonna be about
fifty interviews coming up in a two and a half
day period there again. Omni Hotel nineteen to twenty one
percented by our friends over Clay Airy Music and The
(29:30):
Caden Gordon Show Today's Best Country Mix makesure you guys
check out the show. He's also a KKTC on Saturdays
too as well. Back here with Tiffany Woyce on the show,
those songs become personal. You mentioned how much I loved
took back to at the same time, and so many
great songs off that record too. We talk about, which
is I'm Your Woman. I loved out there too at
the same time you and country music. I gotta get
(29:50):
the backstory about.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
Well, you know, it's actually funny that that was one
of the few that because I will always say I'm
always going to take outside cuts no matter whatever a
song comes across the tab that I fall in love with.
There's nothing my ego does not see it in the
way of like having to have my name be the
co writer or the songwriter, because that's not how I
got started here. So I will always take another good
(30:13):
song when it comes across the table. And when that
one showed up, I was so that one was just
fun and I really and I wanted to still have
those elements of fun on the project, and that one
has really done. Everyone loves it too. I love that
one and it blended so well. And I found what
is a tricky thing to do, as you know an artist,
(30:33):
and I'm sure a lot of people have ever mentioned
that is if you're blending songs that you've written along
with other songs that you haven't written. You have to
be able to do that. You do that really carefully
so that they create, you know, a body of work
that blends together really well. You don't want something to
feel so random, thrown on, something that doesn't feel like
it fits in the family. And that one just blended
and fit in so well, and it was really fun,
(30:56):
and it paid homage to a lot of fun things
about country music and fun, cheeky ways, and it was
just lighthearted enough and with a great melody and a
fun tempo that just made, you know, really rounded out
the project really well. And that's what I haven't done
live out of all the songs, and I think that
(31:16):
will be really really fun to do live. So I
hope I get to do that more often, but I don't.
But the problem is is, since I do a lot
of writers' rounds now, I don't really like singing songs
that I'm not the you know, the writer on obviously,
because that kind of defeats the purpose. So I'm gonna
have to find other stages to have to get on
so that I can sing that one because it's so
much fun.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
You're doing something that week. Count me and I'd love
to come see you to perform out here at the
same time and love all the great music out there
across all the DSP's all right, we're going fun with
a little bit of the rapid fire as we close
the show. So that new question that came actually, this
idea came from Christian Bush. We had him on just
a couple of weeks ago, one half of the Great
duo sugar Land Grammy Award Winners and things like that.
(31:57):
Christian came on and we started talking about this is
where I say the conversation could take us. You know,
his podcast show host never do anything scripted, it's unscripted.
We started talking about his beard when it came up,
his beard on his face, and so he reminded me
of all that WWE stuff that people still watch today globally.
It's it's an icon out there reaching you know, those
millions and millions of people to enjoy it. I'm also crediting,
(32:19):
like I said, WWE fans things like that. So my
compliment to him was, as it just came up in conversation,
was the beard looks as good as the chief content officer.
I think it's CCOs and the CEO Triple h out
there one. I wasn't sure if you were a WWE fan.
If you're not, I want to play hyper people here
with this. So you've probably watched it before. I'm sure
(32:39):
everybody's seen it. Yeah, yeah, I'm watch It's all good,
you know, you know seeing it in person. I want
to put on like the first backstage pass WWE or
just backstage pass wrestling event for country music. I want
to get a ring. I had some contacts in the business.
I want to give him a call see if this
is a great idea to get our sponsors. I mean
(32:59):
pay for the whole thing. I want to MC it.
Call the action out there too. Just read ringside. My
question would be, if we could do this, who would
Tiffany Woys wrestle in country music? Could be male or female?
If she was taught everything like we get the choreographers.
You'll go to some training for like a month or two,
you come back with set up the event. Who would
you wrestle in country music?
Speaker 5 (33:18):
Now?
Speaker 2 (33:18):
Male or female? And then the biggest question part two,
that is everybody all the wrestlers had like a finishing move,
you know, a stunner elbow from the top rope, like
a finishing move. Who would you wrestle and what would
be your finishing move for Tiffany Woyce, Oh my.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
Gosh, that's crazy. Okay, well, because like I feel like
there's nobody that I want to fight, But if I
want to get close to somebody, then I'm gonna say
I want to wrestle Keith Urban because I want to
get close to him. So and then in the least
creepy way possible, I'll just hug onto him. That will
be my movie hug.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
You could see a mixed tag match keeper than Tiffany
Woy's versus two other opponets would be Now he's gonna.
Speaker 1 (33:55):
Get a restraining order, He's like, who's this Tiffany and I?
Speaker 2 (34:00):
And then like a finishing move, would you, like, I guess,
do some kind of elbow from the top rope? Would you?
Speaker 4 (34:05):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (34:05):
I don't want to.
Speaker 2 (34:06):
Hit him, Okay, I don't want to hurt him.
Speaker 1 (34:08):
He's too he's too beautiful. I don't want to I
don't want to hurt him. I don't know, I don't know.
It's a great idea, Like what would be my last move?
Speaker 4 (34:16):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
I don't know because I don't want to hurt him.
He's just too He's just too I just want I
just really want to get close to him. I was
telling everybody recently that that's somebody that I want to meet.
And just like, I bet he smells good too, you know,
I just feel like he's just all around great.
Speaker 2 (34:32):
I'll tell you her. My nerves would be too getting
that close to uh my all time favorite used to
have the secret crush owner Terry Clark. That would be
the nerves. Yeah, So as a as a show host here,
I just let the cat out of the back, would
be a little nervous around Terry Clark. Even though I've
gott an interview here at her here on this very
program too. It just people would never know it was nervous.
But at the same time legend to me. And again,
(34:54):
just that nineties cowgirl hat was something that you know,
like I said, just kind of hey everybody by store,
like I said, a huge icon that she is today too.
All right, So I know there's gonna be a lot
of restaurant choices hole in the wall places. Nashville is
growing when it comes to food and places to eat.
Where do you like to go? And we probably talked
about this in the past, but is there a new
(35:14):
place that you've tried to research?
Speaker 1 (35:15):
Oh a new place? Yeah, actually there is kind of
a new place that I love to grab cocktails and
the food's really good too. Is this place on twelve
South and it's called the Henry, really really good and
I live kind of near that area, like kind of
close ish, and that's a really fun spot because they
have like a rooftop area too, which is really really cool.
(35:37):
Now this isn't new, but my tried and true. I
love Mexican food. I love Rose Pepper and East Nashville.
They have the best margarita, the best, like traditional Mexican food.
I always recommend that to people that are visiting here
and especially if they're trying to get away from just
the downtown idea that that place is like is the best.
Speaker 2 (35:58):
I love it so much recommendations. We're gonna have to
try there too for our four days coming up in Nashville,
Tennessee there too. At the same time, she's got a
great podcast, and of course her newest single is doing
well out there across all the DSPs. American Dreamer. You
can check her out the American Dreamer at Tiffany Woys
dot com and of course season three of that podcast,
can't wait to catch up. I hope you're there in person.
(36:20):
Come by my booth at the CRS event at the
Omni right there in the immediate room. WOULD love to
see you, and you have to appreciate all the contributions
you've done for my show over the years, and of
course you know, continue success going forward. I always appreciate
you coming by and I would love to see you here.
In just a couple of weeks, I will.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
Absolutely be stopping my your booth. I can't wait to
see you in person.
Speaker 2 (36:39):
One of the best out there, Tiffany Boys again, KKTC
True Country ninety nine point nine and of course powered
by the Sports Guys podcast dot com. Back tomorrow, broadcaster
for the Clay Aristudios Dclayair dot com and of course
presented by the Cadenbordonshow dot com. Today's Best Country Mix.
We're back tomorrow with more great shows at All Week
and the nineteenth of the twenty first CRS The Omni
(37:00):
Hotel Country Radio Seminar is going to go off with
a bang about fifty interviews and two and a half
days exclusive on KKTC True Country ninety nine point nine.
Where to put them? Who knows? This is going to
be a lot of fun, a lot of good times.
More great music coming up here too as well. Take care,
God bless we'll see you soon. Hey y'all, it's Nashville
recording artist Ian Flanagan and you're listening to the Backstage
(37:21):
Past podcast exclusively on kkt see True Country ninety nine
to nine in Taos, New Mexico,