Country music newcomer Chase Bryant has always operated a little left of center.
Take the way the βLittle Bit of Youβ singer plays guitar. Heβs left-handed. He plays a right-handed guitar β upside down.
βThings for me always happen a little left of center and a little different way down the grain,β the 23-year-old Texas native explained. βIβve never really picked the easy route in life; I pick the hardest.β
Bryant, who plays the early evening slot at Country Thunder on Thursday, April 7, said he had to learn everything backwards.
βThink about jumping on a trampoline but with your head instead of your feet,β he offered as a visual aid. βAnything you could possibly do itβs upside down.β
His guitar prowess has added to the mystique of an artist who scored Top 10 hits from his first two singles β βTake It On Backβ and βLittle Bit of Youβ off his 2014 eponymous EP β and got his first national exposure touring with superstar Tim McGraw and rebel country artist Brantley Gilbert.
We caught up with Bryant by phone last month and chatted about his guitar, his forthcoming debut album and the incredible journey that took him from his tiny Orange Grove, Texas, hometown at age 16 to Los Angeles and finally Nashville.
What did your parents say when you said you were leaving for California?
βGood luck. They were very supportive, but knew that anything can happen. Anybody can fail. Weβre all built for failure.β
When you were in Los Angeles, did you have a day job?
βI didnβt. Music was my day job. Itβs always been my day job. That was it. I was out there on my own just doing my thing.β
Youβve had an amazing 18 months.
βIt is my plan to have success, but you know, timing is everything. Sometimes you donβt have control over that timing. You just work hard and sometimes you get a break. I was able to build a really, really great team around me, people who care and people who are just as excited about my career as I am. We built this boat and now weβre just kinda letting it sail. Weβre just seeing where the hell it sails now. Weβve had fun.β
Do you feel pressure to put out the album?
βI look at it now that man, Iβve got two Top 10 singles off my first two singles and some people never get that opportunity. I would rather put out a record that is just as good as those songs than put out a record that people go, βOh yeah, thereβs a great album cut on there and thereβs a couple hits.β I would rather you listen to it and go, βMan I want to hear all of this on the radioβ.β
Youβre producing the album yourself. How did you convince the label that was a good idea?
βIβve convinced a lot of people of a lot of crazy things. I feel like the music speaks for itself. β¦ I want to make a record that I can look back at with things that are going to linger in your head forever. ... I want to make a record thatβs definitive of who I am. ... Iβm a kid from Texas with a lot of hopes and a lot of passion for what I do, and I think people will realize I drink the same beer they do; mine doesnβt have gold in it.β



