A triple treat
Jennifer K Mahal
He gets anxious to go home to his retreat at the foot of the Smoky
Mountains. She has wanderlust, getting itchy for the road after a few
weeks. He dances onstage. She says she’s the “chick singer that stands
with the guitar.”
But Billy Dean and Suzy Bogguss have been friends for more than 15
years, and these days they are trading off singing lead and backup with
one another and John Berry in a triple treat tour that will come to the
Orange County Fair tonight.
“It just seemed like a good idea, so we tried it last year,” Dean
said, “and it worked so well -- that and our voices really blended
together.”
Among the three of them, the country music hits could fill more than
one compact disc -- Dean’s “Somewhere in My Broken Heart” and “Billy the
Kid,” Bogguss’ “Outbound Plane,” “Drive South” and “Hey, Cinderella,” and
Berry’s “Your Love Amazes Me.”
“It’s fun for us because we were all touring for a while,” Bogguss
said. “This way we get to sing some new songs and yet the show gets to be
hit-oriented.”
Both said having the other on the tour bus is like having a sibling.
“We always tease onstage that I have the middle bunk,” Bogguss said.
Dean said he and Berry appreciate having Bogguss around.
“It’s great, because having Suzy on the bus, John and I are always
dipping into her hair products,” Dean said.
The friends share a number of similarities. Both have children --
Bogguss has a son with husband Doug Crider, Dean has a daughter and a
son. Both grew up in families involved with the farming industry --
Bogguss’ dad worked as a machinist for International Harvesters in
Illinois, Dean grew up on his family’s farm. And both grew up with music
in their lives.
Florida-born Dean said he can’t remember ever not knowing how to play
the guitar.
“My dad was kind of a weekend warrior,” the 39-year-old said. “He had
the same band and they played at the same place up until the day he died.
I used to go sit in the band room and watch him.”
Dean wrote his first song when he was 15 after taking the family car
out for a joy ride. He was pulled over and the police gave him a ticket.
“My mom found out about it because I had to find the money to pay. It
broke her heart,” said Dean, who is working on an album to be released
next spring. “I ended up writing a song to her.”
He even went into a studio and made a 45-rpm record of it, much as
Elvis did. The song, titled “Dear Momma, I Love You,” became his mother’s
Christmas present that year.
Though he tried a semester in college on a basketball scholarship,
Dean dropped out and moved with his high school music teacher to
Nashville to pursue a career as a singer-songwriter. His debut album,
“Young Man,” became a crossover hit in the early ‘90s, and his first
single, “Only Here For A Little While” made No. 2 on the charts.
“If I could choose between writing and performing . . . I would choose
writing and working in the studio any day,” said the man who substituted
songs for term papers in high school. “Don’t get me wrong, I like
performing. But it’s that agonizing creative germ in me that has to come
out. It’s more powerful than my urge to perform.”
Bogguss said her first memory of public singing was when she did her
first solo for a church choir around age 5.
Her road to Nashville passed through Illinois State University, where
she earned a bachelor’s degree in metal smithery.
“You have to be very tenacious to work with metal . . . because it’s
mean. It bites back, cuts you and hurts you,” the 44-year-old said.
“There must be something I like [about that] because the music business
is like that too.”
Bogguss sang her way through college, making money through gigs in
bars and coffeehouses on weekends.
“I remember a conversation with a professor saying ‘The overnight
trips you are taking to play are taking a toll on your work,”’ Bogguss
said, adding that the teacher asked her what she wanted to be, a metal
smith or a singer. “I said ‘I don’t know, I think I’m gonna be a singer.”
She bought a camper truck and started traveling all over the country,
starting a mailing list as she toured. She booked herself into clubs
using an alter ego named Rachel to do the actual wangling. Only one place
ever caught on that Bogguss and Rachel were the same.
“There was a place in West Yellowstone, Montana, that I went back to a
couple of times,” Bogguss said.
The lady there told her that she sounded a lot like her assistant.
Having an alter ego made it easier for Bogguss to build herself up. It
also was simpler when it came time to negotiate accommodations for her
and her dog.
“As a third person, it was easier to say, ‘We don’t like to have her
out there without her guard dog,”’ Bogguss said.
After five years on the road, she “stumbled” onto the idea of becoming
a recording artist and headed to Nashville. Bogguss lacked the confidence
to market herself as a lead singer, however, planning to go into backup
singing because she was good at harmony. That is, until a producer told
her to stop telling people that.
“‘No one’s gonna build you up for you,’ he said,” said Bogguss, who
recently released a live hits album on the Internet. “You can be humble,
but you can’t be too modest.”
FYI
WHAT: John Berry, Suzy Bogguss and Billy Dean
WHEN: 8 p.m. today
WHERE: Arlington Theater, Orange County Fair, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa
COST: Free with general admission, which is $7. $10 for reserved
seats.
CALL: (714) 708-3247
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