• JOBS
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • HOMES
  • CARS
  • CELEBRATIONS
  • COUPONS
  • TV WEEKLY

Get Connected

View More Weather »

  • Login
    • Email
      Password

  • Logout
  • Register
  • Subscriber Services
  • E-Edition
  • Welcome


  • Home
    • News Contacts
    • Polls
    • Lottery Numbers
    • Website Feedback
    • Blogs
    • School Closings
    • Webcam Weather
    • Archives
    • RSS Feeds
    • Pinterest
  • News
    • Kanawha County
    • Putnam County
    • State News
    • Statehouse News
    • Education
    • Nation and World
    • Technology News
    • Oddities
    • Reporters Pad
  • Cops and Courts
  • Sports
    • Prep Sports
    • WVU Sports
    • Marshall Sports
    • West Virginia Power
    • Rich Stevens
    • Mike Casazza
    • Chuck McGill
    • Derek Taylor
    • Professional Sports
    • Tee Shots
    • Gridiron Gurus
    • WVIAC Sports
  • Opinion
    • Endorsements
    • Editorials
    • Commentary
    • Daily Mail Columnists
    • Syndicated Columnists
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Vent Line
  • Business
    • Reporters Pad blog
    • Jared Hunt
  • Food & Living
    • The Food Guy
    • My Turn
    • On Retirement
    • Ask the Vet
    • Country Living
    • Recipes
    • On The Trail
    • Daily Mail Food Guy Blog
    • The Mommyhood Blog
  • Arts & Entertainment
    • FestivALL 2013
    • Games
    • Comic Strips
  • Multimedia
    • Be our friend on Facebook
    • Faces of the Mine
  • Obituaries
print | email | comments () | letters to the editor | size
The e-mail address(es) that you supply to use this service will only be used to send the requested article.
Pin It
Tweet

Arts & Entertainment

Monday March 4, 2013
Country's Ashley Monroe gets her moment
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - John Grady recently handed Ashley Monroe a box filled with copies of her new album, "Like a Rose." He'd rushed out of the building and caught her in the parking lot. The arrival of the CDs was a milestone moment for the country singer-songwriter and her manager, the culmination of nearly a decade of work together.

To be honest, Grady was a little misty.

by The Associated Press
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Singer Ashley Monroe's latest album, "Like a Rose," will be released Tuesday.
Advertiser

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - John Grady recently handed Ashley Monroe a box filled with copies of her new album, "Like a Rose." He'd rushed out of the building and caught her in the parking lot. The arrival of the CDs was a milestone moment for the country singer-songwriter and her manager, the culmination of nearly a decade of work together.

To be honest, Grady was a little misty.

Not Monroe. She tossed the box in her car, put the vehicle in drive and headed right on down the road. Just like she's always done. Throw out any obstacle and Monroe will deal with it.

"I'm just now learning that there is a master plan," Monroe said. "Because there's been many times where I've looked up at the sky and thought, 'Really? What am I doing? What am I supposed to be doing?' But now I'm seeing all the good and the bad that I've lived and experienced just kind of come together. OK, all that was supposed to happen."

Need proof?

Witness the glowing reviews and warm reception she's received for "Like a Rose," co-produced by Vince Gill, a modern take on traditional country music.

She's a member of the country music supertrio Pistol Annies with Miranda Lambert.

And what about that blingy engagement ring from Chicago White Sox pitcher John Danks?

Seems like everything's wrapped up with a nifty bow for Monroe at age 26. But track her story back to when she was 14 and you get a picture of just how far she's come.

Monroe lost her father to pancreatic cancer when she was 13, and for a while, her mother to grief. That's when she started writing songs.

"I thought, 'I've got to get this out,' " she said. "It was so heavy and so sad and everything had changed so drastically."

By 14, she was trying to pull her Knoxville, Tenn.-based family back together. She did so by taking a bold step.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - John Grady recently handed Ashley Monroe a box filled with copies of her new album, "Like a Rose." He'd rushed out of the building and caught her in the parking lot. The arrival of the CDs was a milestone moment for the country singer-songwriter and her manager, the culmination of nearly a decade of work together.

To be honest, Grady was a little misty.

Not Monroe. She tossed the box in her car, put the vehicle in drive and headed right on down the road. Just like she's always done. Throw out any obstacle and Monroe will deal with it.

"I'm just now learning that there is a master plan," Monroe said. "Because there's been many times where I've looked up at the sky and thought, 'Really? What am I doing? What am I supposed to be doing?' But now I'm seeing all the good and the bad that I've lived and experienced just kind of come together. OK, all that was supposed to happen."

Need proof?

Witness the glowing reviews and warm reception she's received for "Like a Rose," co-produced by Vince Gill, a modern take on traditional country music.

She's a member of the country music supertrio Pistol Annies with Miranda Lambert.

And what about that blingy engagement ring from Chicago White Sox pitcher John Danks?

Seems like everything's wrapped up with a nifty bow for Monroe at age 26. But track her story back to when she was 14 and you get a picture of just how far she's come.

Monroe lost her father to pancreatic cancer when she was 13, and for a while, her mother to grief. That's when she started writing songs.

"I thought, 'I've got to get this out,' " she said. "It was so heavy and so sad and everything had changed so drastically."

By 14, she was trying to pull her Knoxville, Tenn.-based family back together. She did so by taking a bold step.

"I said, 'We've got to start over. We can't be in this town. It's going to poison us. Everywhere we go people are going to be like, "Are you OK?" or judging us because we weren't making the healthiest of decisions, any of us,' " Monroe said.

"It was just grief. We were just saturated in grief. I said, 'We've got to move to Nashville. We've got to start over. We've got to get a new scene and I'll write every day and we'll make this work. We've got to make it work.' "

And for a while, it did. Only 15 when she started to haunt Music Row, she caught the attention of songwriter Brett James almost immediately and soon met Grady, who was then president of Sony Music Nashville. Grady guided her into her first record deal and in 2007, Monroe finished her first album, "Satisfied."

However, "Satisfied" was caught in the gravitational forces of a merger and was never released by the label. She put it on iTunes in 2009 and jokes that 500 people have bought it over the years.

Monroe returned to writing and worked with everyone who'd take her call. She didn't limit herself to country. She'd pop up all over town, writing with Gill or Lambert or Guy Clark. She recently teamed up with rock 'n' roll singer-guitarist Brendan Benson to write a song for the TV show "Nashville." And Jack White has pulled her in to work on projects with Ricky Skaggs and Wanda Jackson.

Monroe's got the duet "Bruises" with Pat Monahan of Train and is scheduled to tour with that band this summer - after she releases an album with Pistol Annies this spring. That group is the result of her networking abilities and her late-night inspiration to introduce Lambert to Angaleena Presley by phone, a moment of instant connection among three powerful songwriters and personalities.

"It's crazy," Monroe said. "The other day I wrote down everything and I was like, 'Wow, I've done a lot of things!' It's amazing. It blows my mind. But it also makes me happy because it's bringing all these things together."

Bits and pieces of those experiences can be heard on "Like a Rose," which veers from the deep sadness of the title track and "Two Weeks Late" and "Used" to the bawdiness delivered with a wink in "Weed Instead of Roses" and "You Ain't Dolly (and You Ain't Porter)," a back-and-forth duet with Lambert's husband, Blake Shelton, that closes the album.

Gill met Monroe not long after she came to town. She co-wrote a couple of songs on his Grammy-winning album "Guitar Slinger," and he co-wrote a few songs on "Like a Rose."

Why did he decide to work with her?

"Well, she writes songs like Guy Clark and sings like Dolly Parton, two pretty great reasons right there," Gill said with his mellow chuckle. "One would be enough, but to have both, I thought, 'Yeah, this might be a great way to spend time.' You love being around the most gifted people if you get the opportunity, and I honestly believe she's of that brand, of that ilk, whatever is a good word, you know? Everything about her is undeniable."

More Articles in Arts & Entertainment
1 | 2 | Next Page »
« Previous Article in Arts & Entertainment  
 
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Comments

The Daily Mail now offers Facebook Comments on its stories. You must be logged into your Facebook account to add comments. If you do not want your comment to post to your personal page, uncheck the box below the comment. Comments deemed offensive by the moderators will be removed, and commenters who persist may be banned from commenting on the site.

Get Daily Headlines by E-Mail

Sign up for the latest news delivered to your inbox each morning.

Thank you!


Thank you for signing up for Daily Mail eHeadlines.
Please check your email for a confirmation message.
Advertiser-
Top Jobs
  • ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
  • GREAT CAREER OPPORTUNITIES!!! 60 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS! $8 to $18/hour!
  • PAYROLL & BENEFITS COORDINATOR
  • More Top Jobs
    Contact Us

    You have currently read articles.

    You have articles left until you need to login or register

    Supported Browsers: Internet Explorer 7+, Firefox 3+, Safari 3+
    #ws1.cnpapers.net
    Built on May 14, 2013 at 12:20 pm
    #
    © Copyright 2013 Charleston Daily Mail
    Terms of Service • Privacy policy • Site Map
    Send Web site feedback or a Letter to the Editor