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</p><p>
When the Randy Rogers Band’s last project debuted as the most-downloaded
 country album on iTunes, plenty of the industry “insiders” on Music Row
 were left scratching their heads: Who are these guys?
</p><p>
The Nashville elite may not have known about the five-piece band, but 
much of America already did. Rolling Stone magazine ranked them 
alongside such artists as U2 and the Stones in its list of Top 10 
Must-See Artists in the summer of 2007. They earned $2.5 million—a 
staggering total for a still-developing act—on the tour circuit in a 
single year. Willie Nelson, the Eagles, Gary Allan and Dierks Bentley 
all picked them as opening acts for their concerts. And more than 2,200 
people showed up and bought the bands album at an appearance at 
Wherehouse Music.
</p><p>
The fans’ exuberance was shared by USA Today, which praised the band for having “loads of grit, swagger and heart.”
</p><p>
The Randy Rogers Band built its audience by combining forces: It’s a 
dynamic live act centered around songs that fit the rowdy, party vibe of
 the concert circuit, but their songs also say something.
</p><p>
That’s particularly true in the new album, The Randy Rogers Band, in 
which a dozen persuasive tracks give the listener plenty of reasons to 
want to down a celebratory brewski. But the songs also maintain a depth 
that makes them powerful and provocative even beyond their edgy 
arrangements and tough-guy sound.
</p><p>
Invariably, the songs are about people making choices and dealing with 
the consequences they bring. That’s the case in the opening “Wicked 
Ways,” in which a string of wild endeavors leaves an out-of-control 
adult in need of redemption. It’s true in “When The Circus Leaves Town,”
 where a performer comes to terms with the emotional crash that 
accompanies the conclusion of a pumped-up show. It’s even a tenet in 
“One Woman,” a ballad that finds a former playboy recognizing his old 
choices and behaviors were a shallow pursuit next to the promise and 
solidity that stand before him.
</p><p>
“These songs are definitely true, and they’re relatable to many 
different life situations that I’ve either gone through in the past or 
will go through in the future,” Rogers, the lead singer and primary 
songwriter, says. “I just tried to create believable characters and 
relatable characters. I hear from fans that we really have helped them 
in real-life situations when they’ve applied the songs to their everyday
 life. That’s what I strive for in the songs that I write.”
</p><p>
“We’re not old, but we are getting a little bit more mature,” bass 
player Jon Richardson asserts, drawing laughter from the rest of the 
band. “We’re trying to be more mature, anyway. And that’s something that
 we can write about a little more naturally now instead of ‘Here’s a 
song about how much fun I had’ or ‘Here’s a song about a girl.’ That’s 
probably just a natural progression of our own lives being reflected in 
our songs.”
</p><p>
Indeed, the Randy Rogers Band is confronting the same questions about 
relationships and identity that face many of the college students and 
young adults that form the centerpiece of the group’s audience. The 
balancing act between work, home and recreation is a difficult one—even 
tougher for an ensemble that spends more than 200 days annually on the 
road.
</p><p>
“All the guys, except for Jon, are married or soon to be married,” 
guitarist Geoffrey Hill observes. “Les [drummer] and I both have kids. 
So sometimes it feels like you’ve really gotta struggle to fit all that 
into your life, I guess, but it’s kinda part of the game. I always said 
that I play music for free, and I get paid to leave the family behind 
and go on the road.”
</p><p>
That requires a constant rededication to the group, a commitment the 
five members have repeatedly made since the current lineup coalesced in 
2003.</p>
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