Walker Hayesâs âFancy Like,â aka the âApplebeeâs Song,â wasnât supposed to be as big as it became.
It was a last-minute add to his 2021 EP âCountry Stuffâ and that 30-second TikTok of him and his daughter dancing was never intended to be seen by a million people on the day it was released in June 2021.
âI wish I could be like, âI saw the world (needed this),â but I didnât,â he confessed early this week during a phone call to talk about his show at Tucsonâs AVA at Casino del Sol on Friday, June 14. âIt was crazy. It was absolutely bonkers.â
But there was something about that song and the timing that struck a nerve with America when we needed it most.
âI donât think thatâs me; I think God uses people in mighty, mighty ways and I think a lot of people hear some of the silliest songs I write and they feel hope,â Hayes said. âHonestly, if I could give the world a hug like that every day, I would love to.â
âFancy Like,â on the surface, is a song about a guy who treats his girlfriend to âApplebeeâs on a date night/Got that Bourbon Street steak with the Oreo shake/Get some whipped cream on the top, too/Two straws, one check, girl, I got you.â
But look beyond that, and you find that itâs a song about being happy with what life has given you.
âIt says if tomorrow is just like today, thatâs awesome, which is something that we rarely give gratitude for,â Hayes explained, ticking off a list of things we worry and wish for rather than appreciate who we are and what we have. âI know it says it in a very flippant, trite way, but itâs like âI live in strip mall land and if I live there tomorrow, letâs go. Thatâs good. Thatâs where we live.ââ
Throughout his 14-year career, Hayes has tackled tough subjects like sobriety and breakups with a slight wink-wink that says everything will be OK. His song âAAâ is about a guy trying to do right by his wife and kids, wrapped in sentiments about keeping his daughters away from pole dancing and his sons out of jail while he tries to keep himself out of AA.
âThey are not happy lyrics, but thereâs a sense of that ... letâs sing along and there is a hope in them,â he said.
Hayes has a lot to be hopeful for, he says, from becoming sober eight years ago to raising six children â âthe most beautiful mess we ever madeââ with Laney, his wife of 20 years. But he also has tragedies, including the death of a daughter shortly after she was born in 2018.
âWeâve lost a kid; weâve passed a dead child back and forth and looked in each otherâs eyes and buried her with our family,â said the 44-year-old Hayes. âWe have experienced the bookends of life and so after all that is said and done, Iâm a very hopeful person. There are things that I donât ever want to experience again.â
But Hayes, like his pop music counterpart Andy Grammer (âKeep Your Head Up,â âHoney, Iâm Good,â âFine By Me,â âJoyâ), has been able to find hope in heartache.
âWhen it all comes down to pen and paper and Iâm writing a song, I do find myself going, âIâm not your typical, tortured, tormented soulâ,â he said. âI donât think I just wake up and decide, âIâm gonna have a positive attitude among all this pain and suffering that we have known.â But I do feel like God has given me the ability to look at what I do have and kind of see, in slightly some perspective, where I go, Iâm appreciative. I have a really good life.â
His show Friday, the fourth stop on his summertime âSame Drunk Tour,â will be his first in Tucson. Tenille Arts open the show at 8 p.m. at the AVA, 5655 W. Valencia Road. Tickets ($28-$76) are available through casinodelsol.com.
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