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Alan Jackson
- Biography

Alan
Eugene Jackson
(born
October 17, 1958)
is an American country music singer and songwriter, who
became one of the best-selling country musicians of the
1990s.
After
Garth Brooks, Alan Jackson was the most popular male country
singer of the '90s. An heir to the new traditionalist
movement of the '80s, Jackson's approach was rooted in
classic honky tonk yet remained comfortably within the
contemporary mainstream. Jackson's hallmark was consistency,
he wrote many of his own hits, and his way with a hook was
part of the reason he never really hit a commercial dry
spell, even into the new millennium. He also projected a
modest, wholesome, down-to-earth image that made him one of
the best-liked stars of his era even apart from his music.
The total package resulted in an astounding 20 number one
singles and 20 more Top Ten hits, all in the first 12 years
of his career.
Jackson was born in the small town of Newnan, GA, on October
17, 1958. He grew up singing gospel music, both in church
and at home with his family, and as a teenager performed
locally as part of a country duo. He left school to work and
married his high-school sweetheart, Denise, who worked as an
airline stewardess. During the early '80s, Jackson held down
a series of odd jobs -- car salesman, construction worker,
forklift operator at K-Mart -- while playing the local club
circuit with his band, Dixie Steel, and working on his
songwriting. He caught his big break when Denise found
country-pop star Glen Campbell waiting for a flight and gave
him a copy of her husband's demo tape; Campbell in turn gave
her contact information for his music publishing company,
and the Jacksons picked up and moved to Nashville shortly
thereafter. Campbell's company suggested that Alan take a
year and hone his songwriting even further, and so he worked
more odd jobs -- including the mail room at The Nashville
Network, plus some session singing -- before finally signing
on as a staff writer. By night, he performed in Nashville
clubs and recorded an updated demo with songwriter/producer
Keith Stegall. In 1989, Jackson became the first artist
signed to Arista's new country division.
Jackson's debut album, Here in the Real World, was issued in
1990 and became a platinum-selling hit on the strength of
four Top Five hits: the title cut, "Chasin' That Neon
Rainbow," "Wanted," and the first of many chart-toppers,
"I'd Love You All Over Again." He shot to full-fledged
superstardom with the follow-up, 1991's Don't Rock the
Jukebox, whose title track was an inescapable number one
smash that year. The record produced three more number ones
("Someday," "Dallas," "Love's Got a Hold on You") and also
contained one of Jackson's signature songs, the Top Five "Midnight in
Montgomery,"
which told the story of a visit to Hank Williams' grave.
Also in 1991, Jackson co-wrote several songs with Randy
Travis for Travis' High Lonesome album. With 1992's A Lot
About Livin' (And a Little 'Bout Love),
Jackson
took his place as not only one of the most popular stars of
his time, but also one of the best. The number one smash
"Chattahoochee" became another signature tune, and Jackson
also topped the charts with "She's Got the Rhythm (And I Got
the Blues)," while scoring three more Top Five hits from the
album -- which became his first to top the country LP
charts.
In late 1993,
Jackson
released the stopgap holiday album Honky Tonk Christmas,
which actually avoided standards in favor of lesser-known
material. He returned in 1994 with Who I Am, his second
straight number one country album, which gave him a
staggering four number one singles: a cover of Eddie
Cochran's "Summertime Blues," the music-biz satire "Gone
Country" (a dig at executives hopping on the commercial
country bandwagon), "Livin' on Love," and "I Don't Even Know
Your Name." In only his fifth year on the scene, Jackson was
able to issue The Greatest Hits Collection in 1995 and
scored hits with three newly minted songs: a cover of George
Jones' "Tall Tall Trees," "I'll Try" (both number one), and
"Home." It took The Greatest Hits Collection only a year to
sell over three million copies. And, of course, Jackson was
far from done. 1996's Everything I Love became his fourth
straight release to top the country album charts, and it
gave him five Top Ten hits, including the number ones
"Little Bitty" (a Tom T. Hall cover) and "There Goes." The
1998 follow-up, High Mileage, also hit number one and became
Jackson's highest-charting album on the pop side, reaching
number four; it contained four more Top Tens, including the
chart-topping "Right on the Money."
Jackson paid tribute to his favorite country singers of the
past on the easygoing 1999 covers album Under the Influence,
which featured material by Jones, Merle Haggard, Charley
Pride, Jimmy Buffett, Hank Williams, Jr., Don Williams (the
chart-topping "It Must Be Love"), and Jim Ed Brown (the Top
Ten "Pop a Top"), among others. Although Under the Influence
just missed hitting number one, 2000's When Somebody Loves
You returned Jackson to the top of the album charts and gave
him another number one in "Where I Come From." That year, he
also teamed up with
George
Strait for the duet "Murder on Music Row," a strident
defense of traditional country in the face of a new wave of
crossover stars.
The year 2001 brought an enormous hit in "Where Were You
(When the World Stopped Turning)," a poignant attempt to
make sense of the aftermath of September 11; rush-released
after an awards-show premiere, the song rocketed to the top
of the country charts and also became his first single to
crack the pop Top 30. It was followed by the full-length
Drive in 2002, which spawned another number one in "Drive
(For Daddy Gene)," a tribute to Jackson's late father. The
album was Jackson's seventh to top the country charts, and
it also became his first to top the pop charts. His second
greatest-hits collection appeared in 2003 and featured the
crossover hit "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere," a duet with
Jimmy Buffett. A year later the well-received What I Do
became the purest country album from Jackson in years.
Precious Memories, released in 2006, was a collection of 15
hymns originally recorded as a Christmas gift for his
mother.
Alan
Jackson Official Website
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