Category: Charles Kelley

  • Inside Charles Kelley & Stevie Nicks’ ‘Southern Accents’

    Inside Charles Kelley & Stevie Nicks’ ‘Southern Accents’

    Country singer shares stories and exclusive photos from his recording session with the Fleetwood Mac legend

    Charles Kelley has always been a huge Tom Petty fan and holds a special love for the 1985 song “Southern Accents,” part of an album of the same name. He says he thought the homesick ballad would make a great country song and had long wanted to cut it with his band, Lady Antebellum, but they never got the chance.

    In an exclusive interview with Rolling Stone Country, though, the expressive singer and native son of the South explains how an opportunity finally presented itself with his first solo project, The Driver. . . but it turned out much different than expected.

    “Growing up in Georgia, it reminded me a lot of my dad,” Kelley says. “He’s a very spiritual person and the way he works, the way he prays, it’s definitely that old-school Southern thing. So I always thought it would be a cool little homage to him.”

    Kelley recorded a demo version of the song in straightforward fashion and was happy with the result, but then fate intervened in the form rock legend Stevie Nicks. The Fleetwood Mac singer had become friends with Kelley and his Lady A bandmates through their CMT Crossroads collaboration and the song “Golden” — a Lady A track that spoke to Nicks so much she asked to re-record it with the trio — and during a trip to Nashville, Nicks heard Kelley was working on a solo album. After hearing the early cut of “Southern Accents” she felt inspired once again to join in, and although Kelley didn’t envision his version of the song as a duet, you don’t turn down Stevie Nicks.

    Stevie Nicks
    Stevie Nicks covers Tom Petty’s “Southern Accents” with Charles Kelley. (Photo: Philip Macias)

    The pair wound up at the Village Studios in Los Angeles, and their remarkable session was captured on film for a new video and intimate photo series. Coincidentally, they recorded Kelley’s “Southern Accents” redo in the very same room where Petty cut his original version.

    “It was pretty spooky,” Kelley says. “It was one of those moments where it’s like, ‘Alright, we’ve gotta do this thing right and do him proud.’”

    Nicks had also done some work at the Village (including the double album, Tusk in the midst of Fleetwood Mac’s decadent heyday) and during a session that lasted from 7:00 p.m. until 3:00 a.m., Kelley says she only actually sang for about an hour-and-a-half — because that was all she needed. The rest of their time together was spent deep in conversation as the free-spirit regaled him with story after story of star-crossed hookups and drug-fueled all-night recording sessions.

    “She was like, ‘We had all these animal tusks around and animal prints covering the studio, and this is where we would throw down the coke,’” he says with a laugh. “And as I’m drinking my Starbucks coffee, I’m thinking, ‘The times sure have changed.’ But just to hear those stories was so funny.

    “She’s really sweet, and she’s a very wise person,” he continues. “She’s very mystical. Conversations always drift into spiritual, mystical worlds when she’s talking about music and how it moves you and the colors of it. It’s very much what you would think Stevie Nicks would talk about, but on the flip side, we’ll have a 30-minute conversation about how much she loves her dog and how she was watching something like The Voice and talking about Adam [Levine] and Blake [Shelton], very normal things. But man, she’s still Stevie Nicks.”

    Stevie Nicks Charles Kelley
    Charles Kelley and Stevie Nicks recorded “Southern Accents” in Los Angeles. (Photo: Philip Macias)

    Around midnight, Kelley says Nicks found a creative spark and the song took off, with her entering as a ghostly voice in the second verse, all about a recurring dream the narrator has of his mother.

    “She became very opinionated in a good way, like, ‘This is how I want it to sound,’ so it was cool to see her take some pride in it,” he says. “She was talking about picking takes and how it’s not always about the perfect note, it’s about the emotion. She has a thing and she knows what her thing is. And she does it so well.”

    In the end, Kelley says the track helped pull The Driver together. After getting the final mix, he played the desolate, haunting track for his wife, Cassie, whose smile was all he needed to see.

    “I was in the [Driver] project for so long and was very self-conscious about it,” he says, “so to have my wife be like, ‘This is really special,’ I was really proud.”

    Stevie Nicks Charles Kelley
    Stevie Nicks and Charles Kelley discuss their Tom Petty cover. (Photo: Philip Macias)

    Chris Parton / Rolling Stone / July 14, 2016

  • Charles Kelley: ‘Total dream’ having Stevie Nicks on album

    Charles Kelley: ‘Total dream’ having Stevie Nicks on album

    Charles Kelley achieved a personal dream when he was joined in the studio by Fleetwood Mac alum Stevie Nicks.

    “I first connected with Stevie when Lady Antebellum did (the TV show) ‘CMT Crossroads’ with her,” Kelley says. “We hit it off musically and stayed in touch.”

    Kelley asked if she’d like to join him on a version of the Tom Petty song “Southern Accents.” As fate would have it, Nicks is a major Petty fan and immediately agreed to participate. Her beautifully weathered tone is an earthy fit for the number and recalls the sound of country legend Emmylou Harris.

    “It was a total dream of mine to have my voice on an album with Stevie Nicks,” Kelley says. “This was definitely my geek-out moment on the record. ”

    Read the full article at the Chicago Tribune.

  • Charles Kelley talks about working with Stevie Nicks

    Charles Kelley talks about working with Stevie Nicks

    Charles Kelley talks about meeting and working with Stevie Nicks in a new Billboard interview.

    The legendary Stevie Nicks adds her touch on Kelley’s cover of Tom Petty’s “Southern Accents.” He tells Billboard that one doesn’t have to necessarily share a microphone with Nicks to be enchanted by her mere presence. “Every time I’ve ever been lucky enough to be in the same room as Stevie, it feels like a dream,” he said. “I first met her while filming the CMT Crossroads special with Lady Antebellum. She is such an open book and incredibly refreshing that you forget for a moment that you’re hanging out with your hero. She was very open to suggestions I made but she also had very strong convictions of her own as to what she thought would make for a great performance. The process was very collaborative.”

    Kelley admitted the two found some common ground on the track. “We’re both giant Tom Petty fanatics so we wanted to make sure that we did the song justice. She is also a close friend of Tom’s, which I can’t say for myself. I can only hope that Tom hears our version and it brings a smile to his face.”

  • LISTEN: Charles Kelley, Stevie Nicks cover ‘Southern Accents’

    Listen to Charles Kelley and Stevie Nicks’ cover of Tom Petty’s “Southern Accents.” The new track is from Charles Kelley’s solo debut THE DRIVER available now on Amazon and iTunes.

    [jwplayer mediaid=”334336″]
  • Charles Kelley – Southern Accents (Feat. Stevie Nicks)

    From the Charles Kelley album The Driver (2016)

  • Double dose of Stevie in February

    Get ready a double dose of Stevie in February!

    On Friday, February 5, Charles Kelley releases his first solo album The Driver, which features harmony vocals from Stevie on the Tom Petty cover “Southern Accent.”

    Listen to Charles Kelley’s cover of  ‘Southern Accents featuring Stevie Nicks now!

    Then on Tuesday, Feburary 9, Dave Stewart releases his first autobiography Sweet Dreams Are Made of This: A Life in Music, in which Dave describes meeting Stevie for the first time and recording Stevie’s 2011 album In Your Dreams. The autobiography includes several pictures, including a few with Stevie. Here is Stevie’s comment about Dave, which is printed on the back cover of the book:

    “In 2010, I spent an entire year with Dave making a record called In Your Dreams at my house in Los Angeles. It was the ‘best year of my life.’ But now, I really see what it meant to me; it meant everything. He allowed me to be my most creative self. He is my hero. The memories of those days still take my breath away. Thanks Dave. It was real….beautiful.”—Stevie Nicks

    Both releases are available for preorder now!

    Amazon: The Driver and Sweet Dreams Are Made of This: A Life in Music
    iTunes: The Driver

  • Charles Kelley’s new solo album Driver out Feb 5

    Charles Kelley’s new solo album Driver out Feb 5

    Charles Kelley Driver album coverLady Antebellum singer Charles Kelley’s new solo album Driver will be released on Friday, February 5. The album will feature a cover of Tom Petty’s “Southern Accents,” with backing vocals from Stevie Nicks.
    Driver is available for preorder now on Amazon and iTunes.

    Coverage

    Charles Kelley’s friends help out in studio and onstage (CMT)

  • Lady A’s Charles Kelley, Stevie Nicks to cover Tom Petty

    Lady A’s Charles Kelley, Stevie Nicks to cover Tom Petty

    Stevie Nicks will be adding harmony vocals to the Lady Antebellum singer’s cover of Tom Petty’s ‘Southern Accents.’

    On Wednesday, Lady Antebellum’s Charles Kelley announced at a private music industry event in Nashville that he would be recording a new version of Tom Petty’s “Southern Accents” (from Petty’s 1985 album of the same name) with Stevie Nicks on harmony vocals. Kelley will head into the studio to record his first solo album after Lady Antebellum wraps up their Wheels Up Tour.

    According to Billboard, Kelley said the lyrics of the song reminded him of his father, who sold Bibles to pay his way through medical school.

    No release date information for Kelley’s solo album has been announced.