ALAN JACKSON INDUCTED INTO NASHVILLE SONGWRITERS HALL OF FAME
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Oct. 17, 2011) Country music superstar Alan Jackson received yet
another honor last night as he was inducted into the prestigious Nashville
Songwriters Hall of Fame as a 2011 Songwriter/Artist inductee at the
41st Anniversary Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Dinner and
Induction ceremony.
Jackson was officially inducted
by Capitol Records Nashville President and CEO and long-time friend Mike
Dungan. Afterwards he addressed the audience, “Denise and I packed up a U-haul
and moved to Nashville and I didn't know a publisher from a producer. I was
stupid enough not to be scared. I have written songs about the ups and downs of
married life, songs for the working man, a song about when my daddy died, when
my first child left home - I just write whatever I feel. I never wrote a song
to get a Grammy or Country Music Award. All of these things are just life and
that is what country music has always been to me.”
Taylor Swift and The Wrights paid
tribute to Jackson’s songwriting during the event, held at the Renaissance
Nashville Hotel. Swift performed “Where Were You (When the World Stopped
Turning),” and The Wrights offered a medley of the hits “Good Time,” “Remember
When,” “Chattahoochee,” “Don’t Rock The Jukebox” and “Here In The Real
World.”
The Wrights, Jackson, Taylor
Swift, Mike Dungan Photo By: Bev
Moser
Jackson is one of today’s most
prolific songwriters – his straightforward, honest and sincere lyrics reflect
the essence of country music and speak to the common man. He has
written/co-written 24 of his 35 #1 hit singles. This places him second only to
Merle Haggard in country music history as artists who have written or co-written
#1 songs they have also recorded. Jackson is in the elite company of Paul
McCartney and John Lennon among songwriters who’ve written more than 20 songs
that they’ve recorded and taken to the top of the charts.
Jackson’s songs are distinguished
by straightforward, honest and back-to-basics Country sincerity. Included in
his 24 number-one songs for himself are “Remember When,” “Good Time,” “Drive
(For Daddy Gene),” “Don’t Rock The Jukebox,” “Where I Come From” and the career
highlights “Chattahoochee” and “Where Were You (When The World Stopped
Turning).” “Chattahoochee” won a CMA Song of the Year award. “Where Were You
(When the World Stopped Turning)” won Song of the Year honors from the CMA, the
ACM and the Grammys. He was ASCAP’s Country Songwriter of the Year in 1993,
1994 and 1998; Jackson was ASCAP’s Country Songwriter/Artist of the Year in
2002, 2003, 2008 and 2009; and in 2010 he was honored with the prestigious ASCAP
Founders Award. Jackson was NSAI’s Songwriter/Artist of the Year in 1991, 1992,
2002, 2007 and 2008. In addition, he has penned or co-written hits for other
artists, notably the #1 songs “A Better Class Of Losers” (Randy Travis) and “If
I Could Make A Living” (Clay Walker).
The Georgia native is a
three-time CMA Entertainer of the Year and a member of the Grand Ole Opry – in
fact, he’s one of the most-honored singer-songwriters of the last 20 years, with
a total of two Grammys, 16 CMA Awards and 17 ACM Awards to his credit. Jackson’s
songs span 13 studio albums, three hits collections, two holiday albums and a
critically-acclaimed gospel album with combined global sales of nearly
60-million. He was inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame in 2001. One of
country music’s most-prolific songwriters, Jackson’s latest hit is “Long Way to
Go,” the first single from his forthcoming debut album on EMI Records Nashville
and his own ACR (Alan’s Country Records) venture. Recent credits also include
“You’d Be Lonesome, Too,” from the new Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams
project, spearheaded by Bob Dylan. Jackson completed the song based on original
unfinished lyrics by the legend.