| DAVE'S 
        DIARY - 2 MAY 2010 - CATHERINE BRITT INTERVIEW  BRITT 
        EXITS CALL YOU BACK TOWN  "They 
        pour on lies/ just to watch you drown/ in this call you back town/ in 
        this counterfeit city/ they don't look if you ain't pretty/ and it's such 
        a damn pity/ this counterfeit city."- Call You Back Town - Catherine 
        Britt-Ashley Monroe. When mainstream 
        radio moguls burned the wings of expat Novocastrian Catherine Britt in 
        the richest country music market in the free world she harvested hay from 
        the heartbreak.
 Now she is fast becoming a poster girl for all those talented troubadours 
        spat out as the fruits of their labour withered on the sales vine.
 
 Britt, 25, and fully energised after a six-year struggle for success in 
        the U.S. didn't get angry.
 
 She and fellow spurned singer-songwriter Ashley Monroe collaborated on 
        a brace of songs as sweet solace.
 
 Call You Back Town, the pick of their literary litter, follows 
        in the satiric slipstream of Nashville parodies by Texan Dale Watson, 
        Chicago champ Robbie Fulks, Becky Hobbs and a posse of Lone Star State 
        survivors.
 
 Britt split with multi-national label BMG-RCA in Nashville after flirting 
        with country charts without consummating commercial nuptials.
 
 She included their song on her self-titled fourth album, released here 
        in May on ABC-Universal.
 
 Her bonding with Knoxville girl Monroe - descendant of famed Monroe and 
        Carter families - created three songs on her new disc.
 
 The hard-edged country roars to life under tutelage of Britt's embryonic 
        producer Bill Chambers and son-in-law Shane Nicholson at famed Sing Sing 
        Studio in Melbourne inner suburb Richmond.
 
 Monroe, 24 and dumped by RCA sibling label Sony without releasing her 
        debut album, is an apt surrogate sister in song.
 
 The prolific pair's music may not have been pretty enough for the narrow 
        play-lists of commercial radio but artists diverse as Carrie Underwood, 
        Kellie Pickler, Jason Aldean, Miranda Lambert and Ricky Skaggs have covered 
        their songs.
 
 "Nashville can be a very harsh place at times, wonderful place too," 
        Britt told Nu Country TV and Stereo 974 FM.
 
 "A lot of great music comes out of Nashville and a lot of my heroes 
        live there. It's a harsh place, that's the reality and I saw both sides 
        of it. This song was a result of seeing that side at certain stages and 
        how I felt about that. No, they never call you back - you call and leave 
        a message and they never get back to you. That's what the town is seriously 
        all about and you are genuinely surprised when someone actually answers 
        the phone."
  ASHLEY 
        MONROE - SATISFIED SONGSMITH "Well 
        I'll go down good lord/ I'll go down good lord/ down to that holy water 
        and stay/ I'm gonna stay/ well I'm gonna bathe my sins/ I'm gonna bathe 
        those sins/ bathe all those dirty sins away/ well I can see that light/ 
        I can see that big ol' light." - Holy River - Catherine Britt. There was 
        no such problem when then teenager Britt was lured to Music City with 
        help from Sir Elton John and a cattle call of competing labels.
 But radio chose reality show graduates Underwood, Pickler and latter day 
        superstar Taylor Swift, who later poached Britt's fiddler Caitlin Evanson, 
        to fill their female quota.
 
 "RCA and I worked together for six years," Britt revealed.
 
 "Dumped is a harsh word but there came a time when we both had to 
        stop working together for many reasons. There were a lot of changes at 
        the label and we had to part ways. It was best for everybody. We're all 
        still very good friends, thank goodness. A lot of times in those situations 
        it ends up being quite messy."
 
 But not Britt - ABC Music released her two stillborn Nashville albums 
        here.
 
         
          |  | Monroe 
            was not so lucky. 
 Sony released two Monroe singles and canned the album Satisfied 
            that that was released digitally only - without any promotion.
 
 "I think Ashley is related to the late Bill Monroe, a cousin," 
            Britt said.
 
 "She's also related to the famed Carter Family. She's got quite 
            a cool bloodstream going through her family line. She always makes 
            a joke about Knoxville - everybody's related to everybody."
 
 Monroe co-wrote the recent Jason Aldean No 1 hit The Truth 
            and landed two songs on Texan fireball Miranda Lambert's huge selling 
            ACM award winning fourth album Revolution.
 
 Meanwhile Britt is on the road again with Troy Cassar-Daley - the 
            dual ARIA Award winner with a lazy 20 Golden Guitars in his swag.
 |  She is showcasing 
        her 14 original songs penned solo and with Monroe, Evanson, bluegrass 
        singer Chris Stapleton, Rory Lee Feek, expatriate Australian Jedd Hughes, 
        Bill Chambers, Melanie Horsnell and fellow Novocastrians Morgan Evans 
        and Mark Wells.  SWEET 
        EMMYLOU  "As 
        the needle runs through you/ the way the pain cuts through/ I know you've 
        been there too/ those sad melodies/ oh how they comfort me." Sweet 
        Emmylou - Catherine Britt-Rory Lee Feek.  Ironically, 
        Catherine doesn't know if country-folk icon Emmylou Harris heard her collaboration 
        with Rory Lee Feek on their thrice recorded tune Sweet Emmylou.
 Sweet Emmylou adorned debut Joey & Rory album The Life Of 
        A Song in between two recordings by Britt.
 
         
          |  | Feek 
            and singing spouse Joey Martin released their version in Australia 
            on Sugar Hill-Vanguard through Shock. 
 "I was watching that movie, not the greatest movie in the world 
            the other day, Julie & Julia, and Julia saw this person 
            blogging about her as a chef and all this stuff and was freaking out. 
            She didn't think it was respectful -you are just worried when the 
            artist hears this tribute song, how they're going to react, and how 
            they're going to feel about it. I'm not sure if she has heard it at 
            this stage. I'm very nervous about when she does hear it - maybe I 
            don't want to know what she thinks."
 So why did Britt cut the tune twice.
 
 "I did it on my last album Little Wildflowers as a hidden 
            track," Britt recalled.
 |  "We 
        sat down in a little kitchen and recorded it on our lap top. I always 
        loved the song. I never could I really recreate it and do it properly. 
        I thought I was trying too hard to make it sound good. It wasn't until 
        we recorded it on this album it came out really naturally and flowed out 
        like it did. We ended up keeping it for this record. It came out great 
        - it's one of my favourite songs. I'm stoked."
 Feek, a prolific writer, wrote Easton Corbin's 2010 #1 hit A Little 
        More Country Than That.
 
 He scored in 1998 with Texan Collin Raye's hit of his song, Someone 
        You Used to Know - it was his first cut and peaked at #3 on Billboard.
 
 The following year he another Texan Clay Walker had a smash with his Chain 
        of Love.
 
 He also had cuts for Kenny Chesney, Randy Travis, Charley Pride, Reba 
        McEntire, Terri Clark, Lorrie Morgan, the late Waylon Jennings, Buck Owens 
        and others.
 
 Oklahoma singer Blake Shelton - latter day partner of Miranda Lambert 
        - cracked #1 in 2004 with Feek song Some Beach.
 
 Feek also produced the Blaine Larsen album that year and co-wrote his 
        biggest hit, How Do You Get That Lonely?
 DOWN 
        - NOT JAMEY JOHNSON  "Well 
        you dressed me up with diamonds/ held me up so I could fly/ then like 
        a fallen star/ you shot me right out of the sky." Down - Catherine 
        Britt-Ashley Monroe. Luckily Britt, 
        Monroe and Evanson used songwriting as lucrative therapy for ruptured 
        romances - especially Down. 
         
          |  | "I 
            don't write many happy songs, it's another of my depressing songs," 
            Britt added. 
 "Ashley and I share a lot of emotions - she has been through 
            a lot in her life. Her father passed away from cancer when she was 
            only 13. That was decisive of her move to Nashville in the end. We 
            used to sit around and talk about the most amazing things, from that 
            we shared these harsh things in our lives and these songs they came 
            out of nowhere. We had both been through a lot of harsh times and 
            lost loves - we just sit there and pour our hearts out. We literally 
            lived next door to each other, go around to each other's houses and 
            have a cry and pull out our guitars and write these great songs.
 
 Down is just another of those break-up songs."
 |  So was Down 
        inspired by former boyfriend and fellow BMG-Sony artist and latter day 
        star Jamey Johnson?
 "I think was before Jamey actually," Britt confessed.
 
 "Jamey was a short part of my life but nonetheless important - that 
        was a passing moment in my life and it did affect me. I definitely got 
        some songs out of it but I don't think this is one of them."
 
 So will Britt be sharing royalties with Johnson for that?
 
 "No, I wish, that would be great," she joked. "I would 
        love to get half his royalties."
  JEDD 
        HUGHES  "Now 
        I'm building walls and closing doors and leaving you behind/ shutting out the hurt inside and taking back my mind/ the blood you drew 
        it hurt you too now we both have to pay/since you slipped away since you 
        slipped away/it's colder than the winter now and quiet all the time/I 
        tell myself you're still around just to ease my mind." - Since 
        You Slipped Away - Catherine Britt-Jedd Hughes
 Britt enjoyed 
        creative shelter from the Guitar Town storm with expat Jedd Hughes when 
        she arrived in Nashville as a teenager.
 Hughes, born in the tiny town of Quorn north of Adelaide in the Flinders 
        Ranges and raised in Tamworth, and Britt both left here as teenagers.
 
 Texan Terry McBride discovered Jedd studying music at the famed South 
        Plains College at Levelland near Lubbock in the West Texas panhandle.
 
 Hughes scored a gig as a guitarist for the other Kentucky Coalminer's 
        Daughter Patty Loveless.
 
 He then releasing his solo album Transcontinental and became an 
        in demand guitarist for Texans Rodney Crowell and Jack Ingram while writing 
        with Ingram and Guy Clark, expat Australians The Greencards and Felicity.
 
 "We hung out on and off in Nashville, lived literally around the 
        corner from each other," Britt recalled.
 
 "When I first went over there I hooked up with him. He was one of 
        the only people I knew over there - it gave me a chance to hang out with 
        an Aussie. Every time we could write together we did. We were so busy 
        all the time, both trying to get our careers off the ground. Since You 
        Slipped Away was one of the many songs we have written together. I 
        have always loved it - it was the first song we wrote together."
  CAITLIN 
        EVANSON  "Where 
        do you go when the lights go out/ when the music stops, the curtain falls/ 
        the people all leave nothing but empty seats/ it's just you the piano 
        and four walls." Where Do You Go - Catherine Britt-Caitlin Evanson-James 
        Slater But it was 
        Nashville fiddler Caitlin Evanson who Britt credits for Where Do You 
        Go - the song that kick started her album.
 "Caitlin and myself became really great friends, best friends," 
        Britt said.
 
 "We lived together in a house with other girls - she also played 
        fiddle in my band. We travelled all around America together. She's a very 
        talented singer songwriter. We had this song a long time. When I came 
        back from America I was ready to make music again. I got my head straight 
        and knew what I wanted to do. I played this song for Shane and Bill and 
        it was the grounding of the record. It was the first step - we knew we 
        were going down this route and based the record on that song."
 
 Britt thanks Evanson for having the time to share her talent.
 
 "She went on to other things when I left the states, she started 
        working with Taylor Swift," Britt quipped of the multi-instrumentalist 
        who has toured here with both blonde singers.
 
 "She sure doesn't have many days off these days."
  MELANIE 
        HORSNELL  "I can't 
        change a thing/ so there are things, I may have done, I'm not proud of 
        every one/ but every one, is who I am/ I'll never take it back again/ 
        wherever I go, there I am/ wherever I've been so I've been/ I turn around 
        and I grin." - Can't Change A Thing - Catherine Britt-Melanie 
        Horsnell.  
         
          |  | Britt 
            wrote three tunes for her album with Sydney songsmith Melanie Horsnell 
            - another artist better known overseas than her homeland. 
 They include the first single Can't Change A Thing, released 
            in late April.
 
 The song was ignited, like many of the car and truck crashes, while 
            on the M3 Motorway that has also claimed a few other scalps on the 
            eve of the NSW election.
 
 "I wrote it on M3 driving from Newcastle to Sydney," Britt 
            recalled.
 |  "It 
        was on that two hour drive that I do so often - I had all that time to 
        think. That melody came out of nowhere and I just started singing it. 
        I sang it for two hours straight. I just walked in there to Melanie's 
        home, picked up my guitar and played it to her and said 'what do you think 
        about this?' The lyrics fell out within 30 minutes - it was one of those 
        lucky things where the song falls out and it's meant to be and it ends 
        up as a really catchy tune - we're really happy with it. It's always a 
        pleasure to write with Melanie. I always get so inspired by her poppy 
        melodies - she's very good with that. She's so brilliant with that."
 It was so brilliant that Britt and Horsnell also wrote More Than You 
        Are and Saved for the album.
  CHRIS 
        STAPLETON   "Train 
        cry on, you're lonely just like me/ well I pray that this whistle/ can 
        drown out my blues/ our love was a lie/ and that's the cold truth/ when 
        two hearts are empty/ nothing is nothing to lose." - Lonely - 
        Catherine Britt-Chris Stapleton. Britt also 
        wrote a new tune with Kieran Kane and Kevin Welch sidekick Chris Stapleton 
        who recently decamped power Nashville bluegrass band The Steeldrivers.
 "They were one of the great new bluegrass bands, they were just starting 
        up when I was over there," Britt added.
 
 "Chris is one of the most talented singers. Oh my God, he's got this 
        really cool graded voice. It was so great to work with him - the times 
        we did. It's sad he left the band. I guess he will go on and do other 
        things as he's an incredible songwriter. We wrote this song and hung out 
        together and wrote many songs."
  MORE 
        NOVOCASTRIANS   "You 
        can get on top, but it won't take long/ I'll mess you up like a wrecking 
        ball/ you're a love struck junkie trying to run/ you be the user I'll 
        be the drug/ hey, there's no where to run/ I hate to tell you honey, but 
        you're under my thumb/ like a travelling preacher, door to door." 
        - Under My Thumb - Catherine Britt-Morgan Evans-Mark Wells Britt helped 
        keep the publishing royalties in her hometown when she penned Under 
        My Thumb.
 "I wrote the song recently with Mark Wells and Morgan Evans," 
        Britt said.
 
 "They're Newcastle singer-songwriters and country rockers. I was 
        being silly. I had been listening to Lucinda Williams all day. I had these 
        rocking melodies in my head. I started messing around on the guitar and 
        came out with that. I was messing around with Morgan, saying how he was 
        under my thumb. I'm not sure how impressed he was with that."
 
 Britt also included other songs that she held onto for many moons.
 
 "There was a compilation of songs that I have been writing over time 
        that never really fitted records for whatever reason," Britt explained.
 
 "People didn't feel they were right, I guess at the time for the 
        records I was making. Like the first record I made this was done independently 
        without a label. Once again it's been picked up by ABC and Universal to 
        be distributed. I just went in with a bunch of songs that I have always 
        loved but no-one felt fitted anything else. It's funny this time they 
        all fitted together - the bunch of misfit songs. I've been wanting to 
        record these songs for a long time and there's plenty of Ashley Monroe 
        songs that we have written and are similar and in that vein - I'm really 
        glad we got these songs down and got them out there."
 MAMA 
        AND STEVE  "My 
        mother and father were buried here/ beneath the cold and lonely hills/ 
        so carry me home and lay me down/ so when it's time, I'll come around/ 
        sleepy town, oh sleepy town/ don't you change where I am bound/ lay me 
        down oh lay me down/ in sleepy town, is where I'll be found/ somewhere 
        high up in those hills." - Sleepy Town - Catherine Britt. 
         
         
          |  | Britt, 
            born in the Newcastle suburb Kahiba, has had life long support for 
            her music from her psychologist father Steve and mother Sue. 
 They took her to talent quests as a pre-pubescent schoolgirl, encouraged 
            her writing when she was a sales serf for JB Hi-Fi and recently doubled 
            as roadies during her performance at the resurrected Whittlesea Country 
            Music Festival.
 
 So it's fitting that she sings of being with them in the after life 
            on her new tune Sleepy Town.
 
 And she confessed she had not bumped them off for the soft gospel 
            tune - one of two she wrote solo on this disc.
 |  "No, 
        I'm speaking from an old woman's point of view," Britt reassured 
        the interviewer.
 "I'm talking about how I'm about to die and please take me home to 
        my hometown - bury me with my parents under those Blue Mountains. It's 
        about Newcastle - my hometown that I love very much."
 BILL 
        CHAMBERS    "It 
        takes a fool to learn, it makes a fool to cry/ it takes a lot to lose 
        and a love to die/ you came at me like a freight train/ then you left 
        a mess like a hurricane." - I Want You Back - Catherine Britt-Bill 
        Chambers She also 
        wrote her album entrée track I Want You Back with mentor-producer 
        Chambers.
 It was a fitting reunion for the duo that dated back to Britt's talent 
        quest era.
 
 "I've known Bill since I was 11 years old, I guess," the singer 
        recalled.
 
 "We have been talking about writing this song for so long. It never 
        happened so I said 'I'm going to make a day and come up to your studio 
        on the Central Coast and write a bloody song.' We came out with this track. 
        Bill produced this record with Shane Nicholson. I really enjoyed working 
        with him. It was such a pleasure to work with him again. He produced my 
        first two records. I really missed working with him - he is such a big 
        part of my life. I don't think anyone else in the world gets me as much 
        as he does."
 
 Chambers produced Britt's acclaimed stone country debut disc Dusty 
        Smiles & Heartbreak Cures.
 
 And, he also co-produced her first Nashville recorded disc Too Far 
        Gone with hit writer and seasoned producer Keith Stegall - the man 
        behind Georgian superstar Alan Jackson's huge selling albums.
 
 When Britt arrived in Nashville she requested Chambers as her studio angel 
        in waiting.
 
 "I had to go in and explain if they (BMG-RCA) loved me and what they 
        heard on Dusty Smiles and Heartbreak Cures that was Bill. That 
        was really Bill they were hearing. It as my singing and my songwriting 
        but that was him - production, instrumentation - that was Bill, everything 
        sonically that was Bill. I wanted him to be part of Too Far Gone. 
        He walked me through that. It was really scary for me, out on a limb giving 
        it a go. I didn't really know what I was doing. Fortunately for me in 
        those early days in Nashville he walked me through that. It was really 
        good to have someone familiar and part of the creative process."
  SINGING 
        AT SING SING  
         
          |  | So why 
            did Britt choose acclaimed Richmond studio Sing, Sing as her recording 
            font? 
 "That was Nash Chambers idea, he was project manager and engineer 
            on this record," Britt explained.
 
 "I love Melbourne - I adore Melbourne. It's one of my favourite 
            cities. I go there all the time - it's just got a really good musical 
            vibe there. Every time I play in Melbourne they want to hear the singer-songwriter 
            real music stuff - they really appreciate the good music. One of the 
            guys in my band lives there. We spent a week recording. My brother, 
            his wife and their kids are now living in Melbourne. I'll be back 
            down there soon - I'm touring Victoria in May with Troy Cassar-Daley. 
            Hopefully there will be some inner city gigs."
 |  But it was 
        a retreat on the NSW Central Coast that was the locale for the CD slick 
        photos.
 "Patonga is a little peninsula in the middle of nowhere," Britt 
        said.
 
 "It's really hard to get to but once we got there it proved to be 
        one of the most beautiful places I've ever seen - a fantastic place to 
        shoot photos. Not a lot of people have been there before - it was really 
        fantastic."
 
 The results are on the ABC-Universal album released in May.
 
 CLICK HERE for a previous 
        Britt feature interview in the Diary on February 20, 2008.
 CLICK HERE for another 
        on February 12, 2006.
 CLICK HERE for earlier 
        feature on October 21, 2004
 
 This interview was broadcast live on Bob Taylor's top rating morning show 
        on Melbourne country music HQ - Stereo 974 FM - in the bowels of Brooklyn 
        in the city's western suburbs on Wednesday April 28.
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