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BMI: Chuck Cannon Country hitmakerPosted 04/30/2000 The in-your-face number, co-written with Keith, was inspired by non-believers and football players. During their first writing session, a TV set in the background showed jarring collisions between football players. "Somebody got off a good hit and Toby, who used to play football, told me that the tackler is telling the guy on the ground, 'How do you like me now?'" A creative light bulb went on and Chuck asked, " 'Do you think there's a song there?' We worked it down to being about a girl telling you that you aren't ever going to do very well - and you end up doing very well." Past naysayers prompted Chuck to craft the song. "I've had people that meant a lot to me that really tried to discourage me from doing music as a career," he says. "I guess I drew emotional elements from that. It's kind of like giving the musical finger to somebody." Cannon has two more songs on the current Keith album, a cut on the next album by the red-hot group Lonestar, and new recordings by Mark Wills and Collin Raye. A South Carolina native, Chuck was influenced early on by black spirituals, Appalachian folk, Elvis Presley, Merle Haggard, the Beatles, Bob Dylan, Elton John and Johnny Cash. After performing on the beach circuit, he moved to Nashville to study Music Business and Finance at Belmont University and later honed his songwriting craft. Another venture for Chuck and wife Lari White: a new label for hit Nashville songwriters. "We're now mixing our first sampler for Nashville Underground Records," he notes. Besides Chuck, the writers include Pam Rose, Victoria Shaw, Stephony Smith, Gary Burr and Chuck Jones. Written by Gerry Wood Leave Comment: |
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Watching Chuck Cannon for the first time, I decided he was as gifted a scribe as many of the folks on our list of the 100 Best Living Songwriters and funnier than most. “Every sinner’s got a future / And every saint’s got a past,” he sings in “Whiskey Drinkin’ Preacher” before breaking into Shawn Mullins’ hit “Light You Up,” which he co-wrote. |
