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Between having three
dogs named Merle, Nash, and Dolly and an East Texas accent so
pronounced you could pick her out in a crowded honky-tonk from
across the room, Sunny Sweeney is so country she probably snores
Loretta Lynn melodies in her sleep. That much was clear long,
long before she ever got around to recording her debut album,
Heartbreaker's Hall of Fame . So what the hell she was
thinking when she skipped off to New York City shortly after
graduation to pursue a career in theater or comedy instead of
conquering the dancehall and opry circuit back home is anyone's
guess. Maybe she was just testing herself — making absolutely
sure she was born to be a country singer, not just
another pretty young improv-comedian from Longview, Texas,
lighting up the Great White Way.
Or, you know, maybe
a waitress, nanny, dog walker or cubicle drone. Frankly, there
was a spell there in her early 20s when seemed hell-bent on
collecting as many different W-2s as she could instead of
pursuing her destiny. And she actually did OK at the comedy
thing — after leaving the Big Apple and returning to Texas to
hook up with a comedy troupe in Austin. But every time a skit
found her singing, it became more and more clear she was just
putting off the inevitable.
“My friends in the
improv group kept saying, ‘Man, you should try singing,'” says
Sunny. “At first I thought they meant ‘cause I wasn't good at
the comedy stuff, but they were just being supportive and wanted
me to succeed at what they thought were my strongest points.”
Her family seemed
intent on pushing her in the right direction, too. Her step dad,
a musician and songwriter himself, had tried to teach Sunny
guitar when she was a child, but it didn't stick. Years later,
when he tried again, it did. So much so, she became obsessed.
“He gave me a guitar for Christmas and taught me the three
country chords: G, C and D,” she says. “The next day we drove to
Colorado to go skiing, and I played the damn thing the entire
way up there and back.”
That was all of
three years ago. And she's been making up for lost time — with a
vengeance — ever since. She played her first “real”
gig, fronting her own band , in September 2004 at
Austin's Carousel Lounge. In less than a year, she was holding
down weekly residencies at multiple Austin honky-tonk bars and
drawing a crowd at each show that countless other artists in the
“Live Music Capital of the World” would kill for. She even
scored a short tour or Europe, highlighted by sharing a bill
with Dwight Yoakam at a festival in Norway. To say that even her
most supportive friends were surprised not so much by her
success as they were by how quickly she got her own ball rolling
would be an understatement.
Mind, this all
didn't just fall into her lap. As she puts it with her
characteristic, matter-of-fact bluntness, “I have busted my ass
doing this. The crowds at home started coming pretty steadily
after four of five months, but those first months were the
longest months I've ever had. I booked myself on like over 200
shows the first year I had a band.”
“This is the hardest
I've worked on anything in my life,” she continues. “But I still
cannot believe this is my job . I'm doing what I've
always wanted to do, and, honestly, it's the thing I'm
supposed to do because I haven't gotten fired yet!”
But the real proof
that Sunny Sweeney is doing exactly what she's supposed to be
doing is all right there in her first record. Heartbreaker's
Hall of Fame , recorded in Floresville, TX and co-produced
by Sunny with producers Tommy Detamore (guitar, pedal steel, lap
steel, Dobro) and Tom Lewis (drums). It isn't one of those
quiet, timid little baby-steps records that slowly grows on you
with hints of future potential. It explodes into the room with
an ultra-confident, Texas-sized “HOWDY!” and demands your full
attention — now . Kinda like the time Sunny, as a
senior in high school, marched into a choir class and told the
instructor she wanted to sing Dolly Parton's “9 to 5” in the
end-of-year-show — even though she wasn't in the choir and the
teacher had never met or heard her before. So Sunny belted out
the song on the spot and walked out. (She got the gig — and an
admonishment from the teacher for having not auditioned for the
choir sooner.)
Listen to Sunny rip
and swagger her way through the dozen songs on
Heartbreaker's Hall of Fame , and you can well understand
that choir director's frustration: Where has this gal been
hiding until now? The first thing that grabs you is her voice —
a big, bold and brassy instrument that brings to mind both the
classic female county singers of the '60s and '70s that she grew
up on as part of a country-music-loving family (both her
grandfather and stepfather are musicians) as well as two of
Sunny's biggest modern influences, Natalie Maines and Kasey
Chambers, at their most unapologetically untamed. It's a voice
that all but screams Sunny's adopted slogan: “Get your
honky-tonk on!”
And on
Heartbreaker's Hall of Fame , Sunny does just that. From
winning originals like “Ten Years Pass,” “Slow Singing Western
Tunes” and the title track to classy covers of tunes by some of
her favorite writers (including Iris Dement, Thom Schuyler,
Keith Sykes, Audrey Auld and Jim Lauderdale, among others), it's
an album that has little in common with either pop country or
even “Texas country.” It's country, pure and simple — as primed
for a Lone Star honky-tonk as it is the Grand Ole Opry or any
radio station that still makes room for George and Tammy and
Merle and Loretta. Clearly, Sunny knows the good
country.
“Growing up in East
Texas, we had mostly country radio stations, but I was a child
in the early '80s right when the genre had started its
downfall,” she admits. “But the first time I heard Merle
Haggard, I remember actually thinking, ‘Now this guy,
his songs are worth a shit!' I'd hear something else I didn't
like, and then I'd hear the intro to a Merle song and my heart
would stop. And I always loved Loretta, too, but it wasn't until
I got older that her lyrics really started to mean so much to
me. It was from her that I learned that it's OK to be yourself:
write from your heart and what you know.”
And here's what
Sunny knows now: this whole singing and writing country music
for a living is even better than she ever dreamed it would be,
even though she's still getting the hang of doing it on her own.
(She only recently hired a small but dedicated support crew to
help out — leaving her more time to focus on writing, be at home
in Austin with her dogs, or during her once-a-month trips to
Nashville).
“It does make me a
bit crazy,” she says of the do-it-yourself route she's chosen
for her career so far. “But even though finding a label would be
great, anyone that knows me knows that I won't just settle for
the first thing that comes along. I just know that if and when I
ever get a chance to sign a record deal, it's going to have to
be my way or the highway. And that's no joke! Because I've stuck
to my guns through all of this and only play the kind of country
music that I want to play, and the fans that I have all seem to
dig it, too.”
“That's the coolest
part to me,” she marvels, “that people actually come to a show
to see me . That still freaks me out — but I love every
minute of it!”
www.sunnysweeney.com |