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Southern Americana - Steel Guitarist Bruce Bouton Talks About Playing With Country Music's Elite

Steel Guitarist Bruce Bouton Talks About Playing With Country Music's Elite

03/31/20 • 53 min

Southern Americana

Bruce Bouton is one of Nashville's top session and touring pedal steel guitarist. He has played on all of Garth Brooks's studio albums and with many of Country Music's elite artists.

RELATED: Welcome to the Southern Americana Podcast

After moving to Nashville from his home state of Virginia in 1978, Bruce joined Dottie West's band as pedal steel guitarist and has toured and recorded with such legends as Keith Whitley, Lacy J. Dalton, Ricky Skaggs, Tracy Lawrence, Brooks & Dunn, Kathy Mattea, Tracy Bryd, Conway Twitty, LeAnn Rimes, Trace Adkins, Kenny Rogers, Rascal Flatts, Taylor Swift, Toby Keith, Eric Church, Keith Urban, and a host of others.

The Glory Days of Country Music Sessions

The music industry has gone through monumental changes over the past several decades. Bruce was fortunate to play a part in what he considers the "glory days" of Nashville's recording sessions. "I remember in the late 1980s and 90s on Monday mornings when there were 30 recording sessions with five to seven musicians at each one," Bouton said, reflecting on playing with so many of Nashville's top artists. "We had a blast and recorded some of Country Music's biggest hits."

A member of the Musicians Hall of Fame, Bruce spent his early years in Nashville touring with Ricky Skaggs, who when they first met, was just beginning his solo career. "Ricky is one of the most talented instrumentalists I know and I was lucky to play with him. I've never seen anyone practice as much as he does."

He still tours with major acts and recently played with Brooks in his home state of Virginia. Bruce also played with Brooks on his 2018 TV special, Garth: Live at Notre Dame!

Fighting For Artist Royalties

Recorded on the stage at the original and historic Puckett's Grocery in Leiper's Fork, TN, Bruce talks about fighting for and protecting the rights and royalties of professional musicians. He discusses how the deregulation of radio stations has hurt musicians and the industry and also talks about the "glory days" of Nashville's recording sessions along Music Row and 16th Avenue. Bruce also hosts the show, "The Sidemen" on Acme Radio, where he interviews the Nashville's multi-talented session players.

RELATED: A conversation with singer/songwriter/actor J.T. Hodges

Today Bruce spends time in Nashville with his college-aged daughter who is also finding her way into the music industry. A lifelong student of music, Bruce even takes an occasional guitar lesson from some of his session buddies.

If you're a fan of Country Music and it's incredible history, you don't want to miss listening to Bruce's stories about how Nashville music is made and played.

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Bruce Bouton is one of Nashville's top session and touring pedal steel guitarist. He has played on all of Garth Brooks's studio albums and with many of Country Music's elite artists.

RELATED: Welcome to the Southern Americana Podcast

After moving to Nashville from his home state of Virginia in 1978, Bruce joined Dottie West's band as pedal steel guitarist and has toured and recorded with such legends as Keith Whitley, Lacy J. Dalton, Ricky Skaggs, Tracy Lawrence, Brooks & Dunn, Kathy Mattea, Tracy Bryd, Conway Twitty, LeAnn Rimes, Trace Adkins, Kenny Rogers, Rascal Flatts, Taylor Swift, Toby Keith, Eric Church, Keith Urban, and a host of others.

The Glory Days of Country Music Sessions

The music industry has gone through monumental changes over the past several decades. Bruce was fortunate to play a part in what he considers the "glory days" of Nashville's recording sessions. "I remember in the late 1980s and 90s on Monday mornings when there were 30 recording sessions with five to seven musicians at each one," Bouton said, reflecting on playing with so many of Nashville's top artists. "We had a blast and recorded some of Country Music's biggest hits."

A member of the Musicians Hall of Fame, Bruce spent his early years in Nashville touring with Ricky Skaggs, who when they first met, was just beginning his solo career. "Ricky is one of the most talented instrumentalists I know and I was lucky to play with him. I've never seen anyone practice as much as he does."

He still tours with major acts and recently played with Brooks in his home state of Virginia. Bruce also played with Brooks on his 2018 TV special, Garth: Live at Notre Dame!

Fighting For Artist Royalties

Recorded on the stage at the original and historic Puckett's Grocery in Leiper's Fork, TN, Bruce talks about fighting for and protecting the rights and royalties of professional musicians. He discusses how the deregulation of radio stations has hurt musicians and the industry and also talks about the "glory days" of Nashville's recording sessions along Music Row and 16th Avenue. Bruce also hosts the show, "The Sidemen" on Acme Radio, where he interviews the Nashville's multi-talented session players.

RELATED: A conversation with singer/songwriter/actor J.T. Hodges

Today Bruce spends time in Nashville with his college-aged daughter who is also finding her way into the music industry. A lifelong student of music, Bruce even takes an occasional guitar lesson from some of his session buddies.

If you're a fan of Country Music and it's incredible history, you don't want to miss listening to Bruce's stories about how Nashville music is made and played.

Previous Episode

undefined - Welcome to the Southern Americana Podcast

Welcome to the Southern Americana Podcast

Recorded at Puckett's Grocery in Leiper's Fork, TN, welcome to the Southern Americana Podcast: Where we will Connect the South's music, people, and places.

Our first episode with singer/songwriter Emily Elgin is up on Apple Podcast (formerly iTunes).

The South is an amazing place. It's given birth to a multitude of remarkable music and amazing personalities. And as I've heard all of my life, the entire Southeastern United States is the "garden spot of the universe."

I'm Paul Stanley, and I'll be your host for this Southern Americana podcast. For the past seven years, I've been a freelance writer and publish much of my work about the South on my website, OneSouthernMan.com. I love the South, everything about it, especially the music and people, and I want to share it with you.

I grew up in the small town of Savannah. No, not Georgia, Savannah, Tennessee, which sits on the banks of the Tennessee River, just a few miles from Shiloh battlefield and Pickwick Lake. I've spent almost my entire life in Tennessee and the South, except for my college years in Texas, another state, or should I say a country that I adore. Oh, and I spent three years in my mid-twenties on foreign soil, in what I refer to as "the tundra," or Kansas.

Yet the South has always called me home. Where I grew up, there were many sayings about the South that hung on our walls:

A Southerner:

"A person born or living in the South; gracious, easy-going, slow-taking, friendly, devoted to front porches, oak trees, cool breezes, magnolias, peaches, and fried chicken."

Another said, "The South is a place where...tea is sweet, and accents are sweeter, summer starts in April (thank goodness), macaroni and cheese is a vegetable, those front porches are wide and our words long, pecan pie is a staple, Y'all is a proper noun, biscuits always come with gravy, even chocolate gravy, everything is "darlin', (and you're preferred to that or Honey by any respectable diner waitress) and someone's heart is always blessed."

I could add a lot more to that list, such as bourbon, barbecue, SEC football, and tailgating in The Grove at Ole Miss. We'll talk about these and many more subjects in future episodes.

From time to time, I'll bring in co-hosts who will also share their love for music, especially the genre we know as Americana.

What is Americana music?

It's a lot of things. Its roots are found in the blues that originated from the Mississippi Delta, and country music that made its way from the hills of Appalachia to Nashville.

It's from the early rock n roll sounds created by Sam Phillips and Elvis in Memphis. And what about the jazz riffs from Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Americana combines folk songs of the great depression with the sounds made famous by Rick Hall and The Swampers in Muscle Shoals.

And let's not forget about the soulful gospel sounds created in Black churches that dot the southern landscape.

Whatever it is, Americana music sounds great.

As for people, where do we begin? There's singer/songwriters, playwrights, actors, musicians, athletes, chefs, business people, and tons of other exciting people from all walks of life. Some are household names you'll easily recognize, others you probably never heard of. Many were born in the South, while others are transplants. Some even reside in other regions or across the oceans, yet all have left a footprint in the South.

And the places. The larger cities of Atlanta, Nashville, Birmingham, New Orleans, Charlotte, and Charleston certainly give us plenty to talk about. And let's not forget the smaller towns and communities such as Clarksdale, Oxford, and Natchez, Mississippi, Muscle Shoals, Alabama, Fayetteville, Arkansas, quaint towns in the bluegrass lands of Kentucky, small communities in the low country of the Carolinas, or in the hill country of Virginia. There are so many places that impact Americana.

Most of our episodes will be recorded in a small community in Middle Tennessee called Leiper's Fork. Over the past twenty years, this magical community not only is home to some exciting locals but also to some of the top Americana and recording artists such as Chris Stapleton, Sheryl Crow, Wynonna Judd, Carrie Underwood, Vince Neil, J.T. Hodges, Will Hoge, Layla Tucker, and countless others.

Where is Leiper's Fork?

Leiper's Fork is located about 10 miles southwest of Franklin, TN, which is about twenty miles south of Nashville. It's one of the places where the Americana Music Triangle was conceived, and if you haven't yet visited, it's a place you'll want to experience soon.

We'll also hit the road and record episodes all over the South where ever we can find engaging music, peop...

Next Episode

undefined - Layla Tucker Blazes Her Own Musical Trail

Layla Tucker Blazes Her Own Musical Trail

Layla Tucker's musical roots run deep. The daughter of one of Country Music's leading ladies, Tanya Tucker, and songwriter Jerry Laseter, this 20-year old firebrand, is creating her own musical path.

You might think Layla would form her career by singing her mother’s songs. It’s not that she doesn’t love the songs her mom produces and sings, rather she has her own style and wants the world to see her individual creativity.

Growing Up With Music's Royalty

Layla grew up and has been around Country Music royalty her entire life, yet you wouldn’t know it. She knows most everyone that works in Puckett’s Grocery, especially the real cowboys who frequent the venue. After all, this is her backyard.

RELATED: Steel Guitarist Bruce Bouton Talks About Playing With Country Music's Elite

I sat down with Layla on the stage at the historic Puckett's Grocery in Leiper's Fork, TN, to record an episode of Southern Americana podcast discuss her plans to forge her path on the Country and Americana stages. Musical influences that range from Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, Merle Haggard to Kacy Musgraves, find there way into Tucker's songwriting and vocals. Her latest song, Misery Loves Company, contains lyrics that define Layla's cocky yet down-to-earth personality that shines through in her vocals.

"Just because we have different views on the way things ought to be, I can't seem to win for losing with you. So I'm just gonna be me, cuz misery loves company."

A few hours after we recorded this episode, Layla was still there, waiting her turn to perform on Thursday nights open mic night. Her performance is only short of spectacular.

Layla's musical trajectory will take her far; not because of her family's musical heritage, but because she's so freakin' talented.

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