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July 22, 2025 30 mins
Rising Nashville Recording Artist Trey Calloway is singing his heart out and keeps true to his roots with his neo-traditional country sound. He talked about his latest single and lots more! Tune in! 
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey y'all, this is Nashville recording artist Trey Callaway and
you're listening to the award nominated Backstage Past Podcast on
KYBN ninety eight point one, your Bay Area broadcasting network
and stream anytime on the Sports Guys podcast dot com
and on iHeartRadio podcast and on THWN dot org.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
And welcome inside the Backstage Pass. Always a busy day
full of shows and of course next week vacations of
time off that a little bit of R and R
and getting right back at it too as well. Presented
by our friends over at the Kadangordonshow dot com Today's
best Country mix and our friends at B and B
Construction Services out their summer projects ongoing custom homes, commercial remodels,
steel buildings based out of Sealy, Texas. Barn Dominium's becoming

(00:44):
very popular now too. They will travel. It's done correct
and with respect called brant seven one three, eight nine
zero twenty five fifty one in our friends at KC.
Beck and k C Beck Music, I tell you what
I love nineties country And if you guys aren't listening
to these nineties country stars we're talking about out there
too as well. They're doing the thing out there, one
of them joining us today on the show. We'll get
to the other three because we'll mention their names throughout

(01:05):
the show. But of course his new single out there,
she Don't Break It. Trey Calloway to the show. What's up,
my friend?

Speaker 1 (01:10):
What's going on? Brandon? How you doing? Buddy?

Speaker 2 (01:12):
Hey?

Speaker 1 (01:12):
Man?

Speaker 2 (01:13):
Looking forward to a little bit R and R next week?

Speaker 1 (01:14):
You know I heard that, man, I know everybody needs
a vacation every now and then.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Brother gotta have it, brother too as well. Let's dive
right into it. Here a KYV in ninety eight point
one your area broadcasting network, iHeartRadio podcast THWN dot orgon
the Sports Guys podcast dot com, where you can find
all the shows out there. If you ever missed one
new single, you guys have to be pleased with it. Man,
it's your sound, it's identifiable. I mentioned these other guys.
You're killing it out there. But you grew up on

(01:39):
nineties country. I know the story. For the fans that
don't know, Trey Calloway the artist, tell us about it,
and man, you always stick to your roots with this
type of music.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
Yes, sir, so, I was actually raised singing gospel music.
My father was an evangelist, a traveling preacher when I
was growing up, So I sang gospel music for the
for the beginning of my life, and then probably around
the age you're about thirteen fourteen, I started playing country music.
And it was you hit the nail on the head.
It was Alan Jackson and Garth Brooks and George Strait
and Clint Black. My mom really loved Clint Black and

(02:09):
Mark chest Nutt. So I grew up listening to that
kind of stuff, and then it got into the Jason
Al Deans and the Luke Bryan's and all that stuff
and started making a living with it. Probably around the
time I was about seventeen eighteen years old, I started
playing music for a living and I've been doing it
ever since. Man. So yeah, this song She Don't Break
It is definitely an ode to my nineties country, my

(02:31):
love for nineties country, and maybe a modern spend on
a classic flavor.

Speaker 2 (02:36):
You know, I love it too. It's got a little
bit of everything there, of the course, and everything just
came out there a June twenty seventh across all those
digital streaming platforms. So if you guys have not heard it,
guess what you're gonna hear it right now the backstage
past KYBN ninety eight point one, your Bay Area Broadcasting Network,
iHeartRadio podcast and the Sports Guys podcast Dot Colvins, Tray Calloway.
She don't break it. We'll find out if she did

(02:57):
coming back here in the fuse. Stay tuned.

Speaker 3 (03:01):
She don't bragging like she use to her. Don't hurt
me quite as strong.

Speaker 4 (03:09):
After Allah Hillis ben Brew, ain't no hang on on
no long.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
I've been picking.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
Up the pieces of but punch was barely beaten at
a broken into the so hardest feeling brand new.

Speaker 3 (03:28):
She don't brag it like she use to.

Speaker 5 (03:35):
I don't steal.

Speaker 3 (03:36):
We'll not go to sleep, bend nice.

Speaker 5 (03:42):
When that sad.

Speaker 3 (03:43):
Song comes on my heart, don't me fun mine. She
don't bragg it like she use to her. Don't hurt
me quite a strong after Amah Hills ben Brew, They
don't ain no no note long.

Speaker 4 (04:03):
I've been picking up the pieces of but once was
barely beaten, let us broken into the.

Speaker 3 (04:11):
So harness, still bred. She don't brag it like shes.

Speaker 6 (04:19):
No.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
I can't go well on this town and have some fun.
I don't try and hide my heart from Nell she
don't brag it like she's to her.

Speaker 7 (04:55):
Don't hurt me quite as strong after all.

Speaker 8 (04:59):
I'm mandrew the main don't hang on long nine long.

Speaker 4 (05:07):
I've been pegging of the pieces of but Hans is
very beating and a broken into so Hardy feeling brand.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
She don't brag it by Gus. This so Hardy's feeling
brand new. She don't brag it by.

Speaker 5 (05:27):
Gus to.

Speaker 9 (05:37):
Hey guys, this is Brandon Wisham and you're listening to
the award nominated Backstage Pass on KYBN ninety eight point one,
your Bay Area broadcasting network and on iHeartRadio podcast and
stream at the Sports Guys Podcast dot com and on
th HWN dot org.

Speaker 6 (05:58):
Va Kadin Bordon Show Today's Best 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 10 (06:13):
Hey guys and gals, this is Robert Flores from MLB
Network and you're listening to the award nominated Backstage Past
Howard by the Sports Guys Podcast dot com. It's a
grand slam of music and sports talk on KYBN ninety
eight point one, your Bay Area Broadcasting Network and at
THHWN dot org.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
Told you guys we love nineties country. Here again the
Backstage Past podcast out there, iHeartRadio podcasts and THWN dot org,
KYBA ninety eight point one, your area Broadcasting Network and
our friends All Eights the Sports Guys podcast dot com
is Yes, we've now gone to strictly audio so you
guys can hear the tracks all these great artists out there,
presented by B and B Construction Services and our friends

(06:53):
Kseybeck Music and the acadangrdon show dot com Today's best
country mix. Hey talk about this for the fans too,
and we mentioned that sound and how it's true identifiable
to you. But looking back, if you look at an
album like you know Wanted Man too, Man, this was
one of your best projects released the last year in August,
the summertime. I think we had you on the show
Miss Gone By Morning was a big spin for you.

(07:15):
A lot of hits out there too, and a lot
of spins from country fans talk about just the body
of work in the overall project.

Speaker 1 (07:21):
So Wanted Man was a great, a great experience. It
was the first album I ever made where I really
felt like I was helping to co produce it. You know,
Grady Saxon produced that album and he did a fantastic
job on it. But he really gave me a lot
of input, you know, he really listened to what I
wanted to do and my ideas as well, and so
it was really the first experience I had with that.

(07:42):
It was also my first experience with co writing. You know,
a lot of the songs on there, all but one,
were co written by some of my great friends, people
I've come to be really close with, and I mean, honestly,
just a great experience. You know, it was a learning experience.
It was that bridge between Carolina Man my first album,
which was really just a raw thing with you know,

(08:04):
a lot of four and a half minute songs and
just just hey, you know you you wait, we'll do
the music and then you sing it when we tell
you to sing, and that sort of thing. It was
my first experience with with getting to have a hand
in the making of it.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
Really. Yeah, I went off there too, loved it. We
talked about Miss Gone by Morning, but also Horses in
Heaven give us a little backstory of that one.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
So Horses in Heaven I wrote with JP Williams and
Doc Lewis and Cody Kelly and we were all sitting
in the room and we were throwing around ideas about
what we wanted to write that day. And it was
actually Doc Lewis that that spoke up and said, man,
I've got this title Horses in Heaven, and man, we
all just like went, oh, that's so good. So we

(08:45):
wrote this song about a best friend. As a matter
of fact, it was not originally about a friend of
mine that I lost last year to a drug overdose.
He had battled with it most of his life, and
it's one of my best friends. He was a phenomenal musician,
a very talented guy, and I miss him every day.

(09:05):
I think about him almost every day. But the song
was not originally about him. But every time I would
play it live, I would think about him and my
friend that I lost, and and uh. And so the
song gradually for me, took on that meaning of a
song for for my friend Andrew, who's no longer with me.
And so it's the song's just about loss. It's about

(09:25):
about knowing that your loved one's going to a better
place and you'll see him again. That's that's that's you know,
I've had I've had you know, tough biker dudes after
the show has come up to me and say, man,
that song made me think about my mama or my
daddy or whatever and just crying. And that's the reason
we do it, you know, That's whereason we do it, man,
is to make you feel those real things.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
You know.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
That's what country music should be about. It ain't always,
but it should be.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
I love it, mag because every day listening to a
new artist here on the program and listening to those
songs that really stick out like you said too, and
make you feel something in a lot of ways. He's
out there too, because, like you said, you'd be the
toughest guy in the world, but doesn't mean you can't
shed a tear when it comes down to it. Because
I always say, looking back at those ballads and things
like that, and then songs, you know, I'll tell you this, man,
you know, it's soothing too. There's so much talent out
there right now, and it's just really saturated, both male

(10:14):
and female too. But I tell you, man, this female
era right now too with not just Lady, but I'm
talking about a whole host of others right behind her,
Priscilla Block and Hannah Ellis and Ashley Cook and some
of the others talk about this female impact on country
music and some of these ladies right now they're kicking ass.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Well, I'm a little bit upsessed with Ella Langley right now.
She's my new favorite female country singer. I think she's great.
My wife and I went to go see her opening
up for Riley Green at that I can't remember the
exact name of it, but it's at that medical Amphitheater
that's right over there in Franklin, right outside of Nashville.
So we got to see her show. So she's definitely
my favorite female country artist right now. Man. Everything she

(10:51):
does and I just saw that if it weren't for
the Wind went number one, So couldn't be more happy
for her. Honestly, man, I think I think women, if
I'm being honest, I think women do have it a
little tougher in the music business than men.

Speaker 11 (11:05):
Do.

Speaker 1 (11:06):
You know. Women have to get alddled up. They have
to always look addressed to the nines, you know, and
not sitting here. I mean, you look at me. I'm
in a ball cap and I've cut off shirt and
I'm sitting here having this regular conversation with you. But
it's there's a lot of pressure on females to not
only sound the part, but look the part as well.
And you know, the age thing can be a factor
for women more so, I think than it can be

(11:27):
for men. I think the way the landscape of country
music with the social media era has has has broadened
the horizons of age for men. You know, you got
your teeny bopper eighty eighteen year old guys, and then
you got Jelly Roll and Chris Stapleton, and it seems
almost like there's no in between. You know, you're either
a pop a young pop star, or you're seasoned musician,

(11:51):
you know. So I hope that that eventually catches on
in the female world of country music as well. So
I hope that I'm speaking into existence. I hope so,
because I mean, I have so many great, great, great
female artist friends who really become close to me, and
you know, they all share in those sentiments that it
is a tough business. It's a tough business for both sexes,

(12:12):
but it's a it is a little tougher for women.
If I'm being honest, I think, yeah.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
I'm digging some Ella Langley too, no doubt. Oh yes,
I love this one. You guys put it out earlier
this year. Your love is safe with me. So let's
talk about this one out here for the audience.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
So I wrote this song with David Alex Barton, a
great writer and a great dude all around. He's good
friends with a lot of my songwriter buddies. But yeah, man,
he is such a genius when it comes to putting
song lyrics together. He came over to the house with
almost the entire thing written. Matter of fact, the only
thing I really ever helped him on was a little

(12:46):
bit of phrasing here and there, and then I helped
him write the second verse, and then we had the song.
And of course, you know, he wanted me to record it,
and I wanted to record it. My wife actually happened
to be in town when we wrote that song. She
was in her office working and she came out because
she heard us sing in the work tape and she's like,
you got to record that one, and so we ended
up recording it. Then it became a highest streaming song

(13:07):
to date. So I love that song. I love playing
it out live. It gets requested quite a bit, so
that's a good one man, Thanks for asking me.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
I love it too, no doubt. You know, we talked
about this era of ladies too, But may I tell
you the three guys that was gonna mention beside yourself
keeping it real And there's others out there too, but
just the ones that I'm listening to can speak on
behalf of my playlist. I mean, Randall King's still doing
this thing out there. Cole Goodwin, who we were talking
before the show too, as well as this new single
is killing it right now across all platforms. And then
Zach Top talk about just why the thirst and the

(13:36):
hunger and you know, fans kind of getting it back
a little bit to nineties country, Why that's so important?
And then did you feel like this was going to
be a comeback here about missing like authentic nineties country sent.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
Well, I think country music has always, throughout the decades,
gone through pendulum swings of more poppy to more traditional
to more poppy. It's happened several times in the history
of country music, you know, all the way back to
the original opry guys. You know when they started putting
huge string sections behind them and that wasn't a traditional
country thing. You know, they have big, old almost like

(14:11):
Frank Sinatra type bands behind them, and then you had
your rhyme stone cowboys and I love Glenn Campbell as
much as the next guy, but that was pop country
of the day, even to a degree. Once Dolly Parton
left the Porter Wagner show her you know, subsequent albums
after that were very poppy all the way up to
today to Taylor Swift. Even out bands like Alabama got

(14:33):
called pop country of their day. So to me, I
think what we're seeing is a switch, is a swing
back to traditional country, which I'm all about because if
I hadn't come to town when I did. I think
if I had moved to Nashville when I was twenty
years old, I don't think there would have been much
of a place for me here because I don't I

(14:54):
don't fit in with the you know, I don't. I
don't hate pop country. There are a lot of pop
country the artists quote unquote that I enjoy, but that's
just not what comes out of me when I write songs,
you know, It's it's I feel like I moved to
town at the right time for the right kind of
music that I make, which is fiddle and steel and
and you know, cranked up telecasters and uh and and

(15:16):
the I call them barn burners, you know, the barn burners.
That's what that's what speaks to me. Uh and I
think it's starting to speak to the rest of the
landscape of country music, or at least at least that's
my hope.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
Well, we're gonna speak to the audience right now too.
One of the best ballads that's come out there too,
from Trey Callaway at Trey Calloway music dot com. You
can follow the tour dates merch out there to It
makes you, guys, go give her artists, all of them
out there, visit on the websites and social media out there.
She misses being message, grab your level one and slow
dance right here on the backstage. Past year KYBN ninety
eight point one, your Bay Area Broadcasting Network, iHeartRadio podcast

(15:52):
THWN dot org for tar Here World Network and of
course our friends the Sports Guys podcast dot com. Back
in the Flash, Stay tuned.

Speaker 5 (16:09):
They met in high school. They fell in love. They said,
I don't drove away his trouble.

Speaker 12 (16:19):
He always dreamed of being a soldier, sitting when he
got back they'd spend days growing in older, his sircing too.

Speaker 5 (16:31):
They came under fault. Not every hero comes home.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
Now.

Speaker 13 (16:38):
She missus his heart, his tender touch, the warm of
his arms, rapping her the memory of ever smile in
a thous and good night ki servs. But most of

(16:58):
all she he just misses being missus. She still goes
to the store, cooks on the stove, a been her fortune,

(17:19):
but she sits there.

Speaker 8 (17:22):
She lies in there empty bed every night turns out
from light and she cries.

Speaker 5 (17:31):
Cause she misses his heart, his tender touch.

Speaker 7 (17:36):
The warmth of his hearts, wrapping her of the memory
of every smile in.

Speaker 11 (17:46):
A thousands and good night kisses. But most of all,
she just misses being missus.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
Where he can move.

Speaker 5 (18:08):
All she came full game.

Speaker 8 (18:14):
This father's always a rose on his stone. Cause as
as close as she lever gave, she.

Speaker 13 (18:27):
Still misses his heart, his tender touch, the warmth of
his arms, rabbing her ven the memory of every smile
in a thousand good night kisses. But most of all,

(18:48):
she just misses being missus.

Speaker 2 (18:56):
Here.

Speaker 5 (18:56):
Most of all, she just misses b missus.

Speaker 14 (19:09):
Hey, y'all, this is Nashville Recording artist Rainer Roberts and
you're listening to the award nominated Backstage Pass on ky
BN ninety eight point one, your Bay Area broadcasting network
and on iHeartRadio podcast and anytime at the Sports Guys
podcast dot com. You can also stream on THWN dot org.

Speaker 6 (19:31):
The Caden Gordon Show is a two hour show playing
the best in country music, so check it out at
the Caidangordonshow dot com. Again, that is the Caden Goordonshow
dot com.

Speaker 15 (19:45):
Hey, guys and gals, this is Megan Lindsay and you're
listening to the award nominated Backstage Pass on KYBN ninety
eight point one, your Bay Area broadcasting network and on
iHeartRadio podcast. Stream the show anytime on THHWN and at
the Sports Guys podcast dot com, and.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
Of course out there. Appreciate the sponsors she misses being
missus out there. Tray kellaway too as well on the
backstage past BV Construction Services again, those summer projects out
there at Barn Dominium's custom homes, commercial remodels and of
course steel buildings of Sealy, Texas that's based out of there,
will travel done correct and with respect. Seven to one
to three out there eight nine zero twenty five fifty one.
Give him a call for your next project. Also Casey

(20:27):
Beck at Casey Beck Music out there you knew you
had a smash. I'm gonna ahead say here for this
one from an acclaim type of song that because I'm
gonna tell you this if you wrote this, I'm not
surprised because this is right up your roots for she
misses being Missus? Right?

Speaker 1 (20:39):
I did, right, I did write this one. I wrote
it with two of my great friends, Jim Hawkins and
Aaron Lloyd, and a fella named Brett. We have to
give him some credit. We're on the lookout for a
mysterious fourth ghost writer who Aaron met while he was
on a plane from Texas to Nashville. Actually had to
write this song with us. And you met this old
man named Britt who's about seventy six, or he might

(21:02):
be seventy seven now, but he said, you know, I
always wanted to be a songwriter and life just kind
of got in the way, and you know, babies and
job and all that stuff. He said, but I've always
had this hook she misses being Missus? So you can
you can have it and do what you will with
it and he threw it out at the right man.
We wrote it here in about an hour, and I
think it was my idea to make it about a

(21:22):
war widow, about a boy and a girl who fall
in love in high school and the husband dreams of
being a soldier and doesn't come back, and so it's
her day to day life of mourning him and missing him.
And man, this song really did take on a life
of its own on social media. You know, I've had
women who lost their husband's comment and they it was

(21:42):
just once it started to get that virality, it just
took off and it was really cool.

Speaker 6 (21:48):
Man.

Speaker 1 (21:48):
It was really cool thing to see, and I love
It's one of those songs I love playing out live.
I played it at my Bluebird debut a couple of
months back, and man, it really it went over well.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
Well, I tell you what, these songs keep getting the
way they're at out there too as well. I'll mention
you to claim. But uh, I'm gonna see this tray
callaway grand Ole Opry debut, and I wanna have to
get jealous because I'm have to be in the front road.
Can we make that happen? Please?

Speaker 1 (22:11):
Brandon, come on, man, you know, I I feel in
this perpetual state of one song away. And I told
my friend Jeff, I was on the phone with him
before I called you, and they said, yeah, we're all
one song away, you know. And so that's that's the attitude,
the positive attitude of the song of this town is. Man,
I just the next song, the next song, the next song,

(22:31):
that next song is gonna be the one. And I
really do believe in my heart. You know, I have
great team, great people surrounded me that believe in me.
And uh, man, I'm working my my tail off to
to really make it happen. You know. I've dedicated a
lot to this life and and uh it's it's finally
starting to show some some some really good things going
on with you know, talking to folks like you man,

(22:52):
keeping it, keeping us alive.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
Brother, We tried to. And I'll tell you what when
it does happen. If I don't read it on social media,
text me, because you know what we're gonna I'm gonna
fly and to see the debut. Sorry, I'll be at
the opry. I'll make that problems to you too as well,
because it will be the first time. And I say,
good friends are hard to find in this business. And
when you find them, like I said, you keep them close, man.
And I'll be at that debut at the Opry to
as well. And of course I know it helped my

(23:14):
case with running a lot of shows on WSM last
year to as well, So that was.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Another yes, sir, every time you get a chance, every
time you get a chance, just mention my name to him.

Speaker 2 (23:24):
Hey, I would love to do that too, as we'll
love everybody over there too as well. WSM give the
Home of the Opry out there too, which is just
the mecca of country music too. Love it so much too.
We thank those guys for taking a chance on us
here at the backstage past last fall. You never know
it might have enough spind with him coming up real
soon here WSM the home of the Grand Ole Opry.
Still love that Coffee Country and Cody show listen every
morning too, and of course all the great music they

(23:46):
play out there. So I'll tell you what. I went
outside a little bit, went to a baseball game, saw
the sounds play when I was there during c MA week,
and I know we saw each other. It was just
nuts and crazy and we were like, you know, we're
gonna catch up on this thing. Another time. I did
get a chance to check out the Sick Floor Diner
and it was open twenty four hours. Oh, he's just
off Broadway there. And then one of my other favorite places,
love pizza, love Italian food, and so three one two

(24:07):
Pizza over in Germantown was actually Coco Deep Dish style.
Did you get the chance to try any new I mean,
obviously you live there now, but any new places that
kind of stick out to you know.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
So yeah, my buddy Dom's gonna love me talking about
this on air. So there's a place over in berry Hill.
So my new producers guy named Brandon Hood, and he
works out of a studio called Studio Phoenix, which is
over in berry Hill, and he's working with tom Myers
right now. He's working with Mackenzie Carpenter. He's got some
great artists he's working with. And I'm just kind of

(24:38):
honored to be there, you know. I kind of feel
like I'm just like happy to be there. So it's fun.
But anyway, after a session one day, we went over
to a place called Baja Burrito, which is right there
in berry Hill, right next to all the studios, and
so every time me and dom Dom helps me with
my social media. He films me and helps all that
kind of stuff, and he's kind of the brains behind
the operation. But he we always have for a day

(25:00):
of work, we always go get Bhabrito. It's probably my
new favorite place in town, man, if I had to pick.
And I love a good burrito as much as the
next guy. So I highly recommend if you're coming to
Nashville to visit going to Baabrito. It's it's a little
bit of a secret spot and but it's worth it.
It's like a really suited up like Chipotle on steroids.
I'd say, yeah, it's really good man.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
I'll tell you what. I started getting into, man, and
just it was kind of weird because before I taste
it and I was like, you know, it's not my thing.
But depending on how you fix it and the way
you go about it, man, I love guak. Now I'm
getting into walking burrito ships love that had something day.
I was impressed. But Baja Burrito sounds pretty good, man.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
Man, next time you're in town, holler a, I mean
we'll go. I'll take you.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
Look forward to that.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
As I was at to say, r I p Azzy
Osbourn greatest heavy metal front man of all time in
my opinion, and uh, he will be missed. Legends never die.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
They don't. And I was gonna ask you about this
when I saw that news today. This meant, man, I
know the health wasn't as great too, But like I said,
we all go to that better place when our calling.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
I'm a secret, I'm a secret metal hit. What's not
a secret no more. I've been telling a lot of
people lately, but I've always been a medal hit too.
I love I love hard rocking heavy metal as much
as I like country. You know, I just do country
because that's what I'm good at saying. You know, I'm
not as great of a medal singer a good country singer.
But but yeah, I'm gonna miss Ozzie. I listen to
market bark at the Moon a little bit louder today,

(26:30):
on my on my way on my way home.

Speaker 2 (26:32):
Yeah, at trains running in Heaven right now too as well,
crazy crazy trains up there too, just sitting right next
to our right hand man, the Good Lord, no doubt
about it too. So had you never become a working musician,
And maybe I've asked you this before maybe I have,
especially for the new listeners out in Cali now out
there too for KYPN. Talk about just what you would
have done career pathwives had you never become a working musician.

Speaker 1 (26:53):
That's a great question. Honestly, I don't get asked this
very much, and so I feel like my antswer always changes.
I think I would have made a really good shift,
I think and like and like when I say a shift,
I would have loved to have on my own place,
probably at the beach somewhere like a beach shack. And
I would have loved to have made not like slop,

(27:14):
not like greasy, greasy burgers or something, but a nice
restaurant but not super nice, but like nice enough to
where you can either be wearing like beach attire or
you can come in with some slacks and a button
down or a pearl snap or something like that and
you can get a really good hamburger or maybe like
a low country ball. Because I lived in South Carolina

(27:35):
for a long time, so I picked up a lot
of that beach swamp vibe when I lived down there,
and I also I'm also from North Carolina, though originally
so the barbecue thing, so maybe we serve some barbecue,
some ribs, some red sloughs, some yellow matt you know,
some yellow potato salad, all the good potato salad, not
the bad potato salad. So I think I would have

(27:59):
been a great shift and I may still even do
that one day, you know, if I ever have even
if I ever have success in the country music world,
great great success. I think I would love to own
my own restaurant. I think i'd be a good, a
good chef. Tray, I say.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
What about a name of just where are you gonna
go eat tonight?

Speaker 1 (28:22):
Let's do it? I'm ready, But I think that's it, man.
I honestly think I would have loved it. I also
think I would have liked to have been some kind
of some kind of a history professor. I'm a big
history buff. I think I would have liked to talk
you know, Civil War history, or World War two history,
or Vietnam anything like that. I think it would have
been would have been a cool job too.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
I love it as well. That's what I teach in
high school now to history, the only side that we
do too. So yeah, I always wanted to be out there.
I love the United States history too. All that, and
I'm with you the Civil War and love those old
documentaries too. At the same time, and I know you've
got to run tight schedule. You've got some cool things
coming up to over these next few weeks. More releases
we can expect to looking forward to that. She Don't
Break It is out across all the DSPs now give

(29:03):
me a visit at Treycalloway Music dot com. For our
affiliates out there, a KYB in ninety eight point one,
your pay area Broadcasting network, and the Sports Guys podcast
dot com. It's a grand slam of music and sports. Also,
iHeartRadio podcast and THWWN dot orgo, great streaming station out
of Oklahoma City, three hundred and fifteen thousand listeners over
the last year in Oklahoma City for Target Hill Worldnetwork

(29:25):
dot Org. Out there. Appreciate Buster and all the great
folks up there who play the show. Give him a
follow again Trey callowaid Music dot com. And She Don't
Break It across all the DSPs. My friend, always welcome
back here on the program. Much love to you, and hey,
continued success going forward. Always here man when you want
to drop us Avine no doubt.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
Thanks Brandon I'll talk to you.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
Somebody got it, Trey Calloway out there. More great music
coming up across all the platforms presented by the kadiangordonshow
dot com, Today's Best Country mex and our friends at
BnB Construction Services and kcbckkcbeck dot com for great music
out there too to check it out across all the DSPs.
God bless take care, We'll see you soon.

Speaker 16 (29:59):
Heyy, this is Jared Ray Reddick and you're listening to
the award nominated Backstage Past Podcast on k y b
N ninety eight point one, your Bay Area broadcasting network.
Stream on the Sports Guys podcast dot com and on
th WN dot org and on iHeartRadio podcasts
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