If he was ever going to make a record, Tucson country singer Billy Shaw Jr. wanted to make it as perfect as possible.
Pro studio, session musicians, a producer who could work magic with his lyrics and fiddle licks and create something he could be proud of.
But the cost of making that album is beyond his market analyst pay grade, so after a couple years of flirting with the idea, he put it way on the back burner.
âI had actually given up on it. .. I had decided it was too difficult,â said the Tucson country singer, known for his black framed Buddy Holly throwback glasses and bookkeeper cool demeanor.
On Tuesday, March 14, Shaw will check that box when he releases his eponymous debut album at The Maverick.
âTo me, it still doesnât even quite seem real, but I have CDs I can hold in my hand,â said Shaw, who has been a fixture on local stages for a decade, including with his namesake band the last seven.
Shaw recorded the albumâs nine songs last fall in the Nashville studio of Grammy-nominated, platinum-selling country singer Jamie OâNeal, who will join him for the Maverick release concert.
âI found those songs really interesting and unique,â said the âThere Is No Arizonaâ singer. âHis voice kind of reminds me of Rob Thomas of Matchbox Twenty. ... I canât wait to see him perform in person with his band and his songs. Itâs going to be a lot of fun.â
The Billy Shaw Jr. Band â from left, Amy Munoz, Billy Shaw, Johnny Pesqueira and Bobby Soto Jr. â pose as they finish up a set on Feb. 25 at The Maverick, where they will celebrate their debut album release.
OâNeal and her producer/ recording engineer husband Rodney Good produced the album after Shawâs wife, Jessica Northey-Shaw, sent OâNeal a scratch track of his songs.
Northey-Shaw has a decade-long connection with OâNeal, who she helped establish a social media presence. In addition to OâNeal, Northey-Shaw helped Garth Brooks and other Nashville superstars sign onto and navigate Twitter and other social media platforms back in their infancy.
In 2013, the Tucson native and social media pioneer was ranked No. 3 on Forbes magazineâs top 50 social media power influencers.
When Northey-Shaw sent her the songs last summer, OâNeal said she was immediately impressed with Shawâs songwriting and unique voice.
âHe really tells the story of his own life in his own perspective,â OâNeal said.
By November, Shaw found himself in OâNeal and Goodâs Good Vibes Studios, working with a group of seasoned studio musicians who laid down the instrumental tracks in a single day. Vocals took another two days.
Billy Shaw Jr., center, has been a fixture on local stages for a decade, including with his namesake band the last seven.
âThey didnât have to spend months trying to figure out how I wanted them to play my songs,â marveled Shaw, a Santa Rita High School alumnus who earned a mathematics degree from the University of Arizona after running track for two years at Pima Community College.
Good and OâNeal recommended a few minor tweaks on some of the songs, which include the ballad âI Will (If You Say I Do)â that Shaw wrote for Northey-Shaw as his marriage proposal five years ago.
âBilly was really up for anything,â OâNeal said. âHe was willing to try anything. He was willing to change phrasing. He was willing to work on different ways to sing it. When ... he said, âThis is my first time in the studio,â you would never know it. He was great; he was confident.â
Johnny Pesqueira, the guitarist for the Billy Shaw Jr. Band, breaks out in a solo at The Maverick on Feb. 25.
The album plays like a soundtrack of Shawâs life in Tucson. The opening track laments sitting behind a desk instead of living the cowboy life while the honky-tonker âWildâ plays off the alcohol-induced chemistry of total opposites drawn together by a country love song.
Shaw, whose live shows have always been a mix of popular covers with originals sprinkled in, wrote the albumâs nine songs, showing off a mix of country styles, from the fiddle-rich heartbreaker âBar Down the Wayâ â âmy fairytale ending wasnât fair to me at allâ â to the Western swing feel of âWhen I Close My Eyes,â the neo-trad twang of âTwist it Offâ and the country rocking âGetaway Driver,â which opens with the roar of an engine.
Billy Shaw Jr., center, teamed up with Grammy-nominated country singer Jamie O'Neal, left, and her recording engineer husband Rodney Good, right, to record his debut album in Nashville.
âThatâs one of my favorite songs,â OâNeal said. âItâs just unique the way the song goes from his friend picking him up in his wagon to the whole spectrum of the friend picking him up when he gets bad news and getting him out of the hospital.â
Shaw hopes his album âmakes people smile, laugh, party, cry. I just want people to find what they need to find in the music.â
âI like to tell stories through music, but I donât like to tell people what it should mean to them,â said the father of two boys, 17 and 21. âThe same song is going to mean 10 different things to 10 different people. But I do want it to evoke something.â



