Trackimage | Playbut | Trackname | Playbut | Trackname |
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12610565 | Play | Stuck | 03:26 Tools | |
12610564 | Play | I Still Believe in That | 03:23 Tools | |
12610563 | Play | Shake It Off | 02:57 Tools | |
12610568 | Play | Ain't No Stopping Her Now | 03:11 Tools | |
12610566 | Play | Red | 02:48 Tools | |
12610572 | Play | Green Light | 03:20 Tools | |
12610569 | Play | What Are We Waitin' For | 03:04 Tools | |
12610567 | Play | Country Girls Love | 03:48 Tools | |
12610571 | Play | Justice | 03:10 Tools | |
12610574 | Play | Driving Nails | 03:36 Tools | |
12610570 | Play | Look At Me Loving You | 03:09 Tools | |
12610575 | Play | That Made a Believer | 03:20 Tools | |
12610573 | Play | Get Your Farm On | 03:54 Tools | |
12610577 | Play | Picture This | 03:45 Tools | |
12610579 | Play | Taste of Class | 03:42 Tools | |
12610578 | Play | Heaven Is a Small Town | 03:56 Tools | |
12610576 | Play | Get Your Farm On (Shake It Off) | 00:00 Tools |
Ash Bowers was eight-years-old when he saw his future. The crystal ball was the family television set, and the vision came in the form of a movie his mother had rented—Great Balls of Fire, the film biography of Jerry Lee Lewis. He was growing up in a working-class family in Jackson, Tennessee, and he would need a lot more than dreams to make it to the country music capital 130 miles east on I-40. Determination came with his sometimes-tough upbringing. He played open mic nights until, at 20, he put together his first band. Just a year later, he was offered a Pacific tour through Armed Forces Entertainment that had listened to a three-song demo he and his band had cut in Jackson. Ash was encouraged to come to Nashville and soon after, was restricting his playing to weekends and spending his weeks commuting daily to Nashville. The kind of commitment it took to drive 260 miles a day, five days a week--it quickly paid off. Just a year and a half after he began commuting to Nashville, a CD of his material reached Broken Bow/Stoney Creek Records president Benny Brown, the result, a record and publishing deal. Ash Bowers has currently been writing for his album while working in the studio with legendary producer Buddy Cannon, known for his work with Kenny Chesney. Reba McIntire, George Jones and Willie Nelson, among many others, producing his forthcoming Stoney Creek Records debut album. Bowers’ songwriting skills display his uncanny knack for turning working-class dreams and realities into stirring and highly relatable music. His new single, “I Still Believe In That,” written by Bowers, Anthony Smith and Frank Myers, is an anthem for all things good. Overall, his upcoming album debut will provide a window into what makes Ash tick both as a musician and as a person. "Anybody listening to this record will get a good idea who Ash Bowers is and who I've been up to this point," he says, "and that's something I really wanted to do with this album. It's a real record." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.