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TY'S ALBUMS INCLUDE:

  
  
Ty Herndon Biography
The sound of Right About Now is the sound of triumph.
This comeback collection by Ty Herndon is a ringing reaffirmation of his status as one of country music’s most
powerful vocal interpreters. From the silvery falsetto notes in the CD’s title tune to the soaring, fiery and muscular
vocals on tracks like "Someday Soon," "You Still Own Me" and "We Are," these are
performances that electrify the senses. "Love Revival" and "Mercy Line" are tinged with blue-eyed
soul. Herndon simmers with conviction on the uptempo "If I Could Only Have Her Love Back" and "Love
Revival," while "Hide" and "In the Arms of Someone Who Loves Me" showcase his ability
to get inside lyrics of substance. The collection concludes with his slow, tremulous, intense rendition of the
gospel-infused "There Will Be a Better Day."
"My greatest ability is my ability to interpret a song, put it on tape and make it believable," says
Ty Herndon softly. "That’s why I love to do this."
"I can do that to a crowd. I can make them believe me. I’ve done it so many times. And I want to do it on
a different level this time, a more honest level, a level that I truly believe in."
Ty Herndon isn’t boasting. He says all of this with sincere humility. But it is a fact that this man has proved
time and again how charismatic a vocalist he is. Hits such as "What Mattered Most," "Hands of a
Working Man," "Living in a Moment," "Loved Too Much," "It Must Be Love," "A
Man Holdin’ On (To a Woman Lettin’ Go)" and "I Want My Goodbye Back" made him one of country music’s
most consistent radio favorites of the 1990s.
In addition to being a country chart-topper, Ty Herndon has also been a national television star, an ad-jingle
vocalist, a model, a talk-show host, an actor and a theme-park entertainer. Right About Now returns him to what
he has always done best, singing.
He has been doing that since age six, when he began singing in churches and at talent contests around his hometown
of Butler, Alabama. He attended high school in Decatur, Alabama. At age 17, he auditioned and was hired at OPRYLAND
USA as a cast member of "Today’s Country Roads" showcasing hits on the top county chart.
Representatives of TV’s "Star Search," the "American Idol" of its day, spotted him at the park.
He became a male-vocalist winner on the series, which led to singing on a number of cable variety shows, including
specials starring such greats as Johnny Cash and Porter Wagoner. Herndon landed a job as the host of "Countryline,"
a home video featuring his interviews with Ronnie Milsap, Earl Thomas Conley and other music-video stars. By the
time he turned 21, he had already acted on such programs as "I-40 Paradise" (TNN) and in the Jerry Reed
TV movie "Diamonds, Gold and Platinum" (TBS).
In 1986-87, Herndon became a cast member of the nationally syndicated television series "You Write the Songs."
He toured internationally for the USO. He sang song "demos" for the big publishing companies in Nashville.
Despite these accomplishments, Ty Herndon was a frustrated young man. No one on Music Row would give him a recording
contract. One executive even told him. "Son, you go back to Alabama, get on your little red tractor and stay
there." His father died while Herndon was chasing Nashville stardom. Shady show-business hustlers took the
green kid for a ride. As a result, his mother lost her home in Nashville.
"I was getting beat up. I was fed up, angry and bitter. I had no direction. So I went to Texas and started
my honky-tonk education. I thought, ‘If you are not gonna get a record deal, at least there you’ll be able to make
music’" and the money to pay his mother back. For the next six years, he learned to become a real vocalist
and entertainer by toiling nightly in Dallas nightspots.
In 1993, the same year he was named Texas Entertainer of the Year. That honor led to interest from Music Row at
last. He recorded his debut album in 1994, and in early 1995 its first single, "What Mattered Most,"
rocketed to Number One. It won Song of the Year at the annual Music Row magazine awards. He was named Best New
Artist at the 1995 Country Radio Music Awards.
In the summer of 1995, the singer’s addictions became public. At the same time he achieved 1 success with his first
single release "What Mattered Most." He went through rehabilitation at an Arizona facility, then resumed
his career.
The barrage of hits that ensued, led to a 1997 American Music Award Nomination and a Contemporary Achievement honor
from the Alabama Music Hall of Fame. His What Mattered Most and Living in a Moment albums were both Gold Records.
During the late 1990s he sold more than four million discs. His blazing live-performance style made him one of
country music’s finest concert attractions.
After 2002, he vanished from radio charts and concert stages. "I just stopped making music completely,"
he recalls. "I was dead inside. I lost all desire to take care of myself. I gained 75 pounds .I thought I
had no reason to live. I didn’t have the music anymore. There is a history of addiction in my family and my hope
is that it ends with me," says Ty Herndon.
Family, Friends, and Nashville songwriters rallied around him as he turned his life around, regained his health,
lost the excess weight and began to sing again. Herndon returned to the stage with a Music City nightclub showcase
in the summer of 2004.
"Songwriter Darrell Brown asked me to come to the Bluebird Cafe in Nashville two Christmases ago. He said
he had a song that he and Michael Peterson had written that he thought I could sing really well. And that's 'Right
About Now.' The crowd just came to their feet when I sang it. And I can honestly tell you with all of my heart,
it was at that moment that I thought, 'I want to make music again.' After I sang that song, that night, I started
to think I wanted to do a new record. I had a real vision."
Brown has co-written such 1 hits as Keith Urban’s "Raining on Sunday" and 2005 Grammy Song of The Year
"You’ll Think of Me." He has also produced records for such artists as Russ Taff and Radney Foster. When
he volunteered to work with Herndon, the singer eagerly accepted, co-producing four of the tunes that Brown brought
to the project. Top session musician Jonathan Yudkin was eager to make the transition into record production. Herndon
enlisted his aid for five more of the album’s tracks. Herndon co-produced "Mighty, Mighty Love" with
multi-platinum writer Dennis Matkosky, one of its co-writers. Recording artists Kim Richey, Robert Bailey, Emily
West, Lisa Bevil, Perry Coleman, Marcus Hummon and Joanna Cotton provided background vocals to the richly textured
collection.
"The people who believed in me and my talent made me even more serious about this. There were so many songs
that fit where I am at emotionally right now, and I wanted to sing about that. Three years ago, I couldn’t sing
the way I used to. I can sing these songs now. My throat is clearer than it has ever been before, and that feeling
is just awesome. Isn’t this a miracle? I have a light in my eyes. And this is a happy place to be.
"To tell you the truth, I had a lot of spiritual experiences making this record. I am very, very proud of
it."
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