Brett Eldredge

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Baby, It's Cold Outside (feat. Meghan Trainor) 00:00 Tools
Don't Ya 03:03 Tools
Beat of the Music 03:01 Tools
Mean to Me 00:00 Tools
Drunk On Your Love 00:00 Tools
Lose My Mind 00:00 Tools
A Holly Jolly Christmas 02:22 Tools
Christmas Time Is Here 03:30 Tools
Raymond 03:38 Tools
The Long Way 00:00 Tools
Wanna Be That Song 00:00 Tools
Love Someone 00:00 Tools
Somethin' I'm Good At 00:00 Tools
Castaway 00:00 Tools
Baby, It's Cold Outside 00:00 Tools
Bring You Back 03:07 Tools
The Christmas Song 00:00 Tools
On and On 00:00 Tools
One Mississippi 03:47 Tools
Glow 00:00 Tools
Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! 00:00 Tools
You Can't Stop Me (feat. Thomas Rhett) 00:00 Tools
Tell Me Where to Park 00:00 Tools
Gotta Get There 03:24 Tools
No Stopping You 00:00 Tools
Waited Too Long 04:00 Tools
It's Beginning To Look A Lot Like Christmas 00:00 Tools
It Ain't Gotta Be Love 03:04 Tools
Blue Christmas 00:00 Tools
Fire 00:00 Tools
Signs 03:54 Tools
Just a Taste 00:00 Tools
Go on Without Me 00:00 Tools
Lose it All 00:00 Tools
If You Were My Girl 00:00 Tools
The Reason 00:00 Tools
I'll Be Home For Christmas 00:00 Tools
Illinois 00:00 Tools
Haven't Met You 00:00 Tools
Time Well Spent 00:00 Tools
Superhero 00:00 Tools
Crazy Little Thing Called Love 00:00 Tools
Going Away For A While 00:00 Tools
Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas 00:00 Tools
Shadow 00:00 Tools
Cycles 00:00 Tools
Winter Wonderland 00:00 Tools
Heartbreaker 00:00 Tools
One Mississippi - Live from CMT "Listen Up" 00:00 Tools
Brother 00:00 Tools
Crystal Clear 00:00 Tools
White Christmas 00:00 Tools
Phone Call To God 00:00 Tools
The First Noel 00:00 Tools
Silent Night 03:57 Tools
What Christmas Means To Me - 2014 CMA Country Christmas Performance 00:00 Tools
What Christmas Means To Me (2014 CMA Country Christmas Performance) 03:01 Tools
Sleigh Ride 03:01 Tools
Silver Bells 03:01 Tools
You Can’t Stop Me (Feat. Thomas Rhett) 03:24 Tools
One Mississippi (Live from CMT "Listen Up") 04:10 Tools
O Holy Night 00:00 Tools
Do You Hear What I Hear? 00:00 Tools
The First Noel - A cappella 00:00 Tools
Dont Ya 03:03 Tools
Wanna Be That 00:00 Tools
Somethin I'm Good At 03:37 Tools
Aint Gotta Be Love 00:00 Tools
Don't Ya (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
You can't stop me 00:00 Tools
The First Noel (A cappella) 00:00 Tools
It Aint Gotta Be Love 00:00 Tools
Baby It's Cold Outside (feat. Meghan Trainor) 00:00 Tools
What Christmas Means to Me - 2014 CMA Country Christmas Performance; Live 00:00 Tools
Don’t Ya 00:00 Tools
Don't Ya (Official Music Video) 00:00 Tools
Bring You Back (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Don t Ya 00:00 Tools
One Way Ticket 00:00 Tools
Mean to Me (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Don't Ya - www.SongsLover.com 00:00 Tools
One Missippi (Live) 00:00 Tools
You Can't Stop Me Feat. Thomas Rhett 03:25 Tools
What Christmas Means To Me 00:00 Tools
Beat of the Music (Official Music Video) 00:00 Tools
Thirsty 00:00 Tools
Mary, Did You Know? 00:00 Tools
One Mississippi - Live from CMT's Listen Up 00:00 Tools
Lose My Mind (Official Video) 00:00 Tools
Beat Of The Music (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Brett Eldredge Don't Ya (Official Lyric Video) 03:01 Tools
Mean To Me (Lyrics) 00:00 Tools
The Long Way (Live at CMA Music Festival 2018) 00:00 Tools
Love Someone (Live at CMA Music Festival 2018) 00:00 Tools
Brett Eldredge - Don't Ya 00:00 Tools
Mary Did You Know 00:00 Tools
Lose My Mind Lyrics 00:00 Tools
Something I'm Good At 03:37 Tools
Don’t Ya 03:37 Tools
Shade 00:00 Tools
Baby, It's Cold Outside (Featuring Meghan Trainor) 00:00 Tools
Somethin' I'm Good At (Bonus Beats) 00:00 Tools
Mary, Did You Know 00:00 Tools
Crazy Little Thing Called Love (Live From C2C: Country to Country 2019) 00:00 Tools
Beat Of The Music [DJ STEEL ReMix] 00:00 Tools
You Can't Stop Me (Featuring Thomas Rhett) 03:24 Tools
You Can’t Stop Me 00:00 Tools
She Calls Me Raymond 00:00 Tools
Don't Ya (Official Lyric Video) 00:00 Tools
Do You Hear What I Hear 00:00 Tools
Drunk On Your Love (Country Show session, 28.02.2019) 00:00 Tools
Advertisement 00:00 Tools
Beat Of The Music (Live From C2C: Country to Country 2019) 00:00 Tools
Somethin' I'm Good At (Live From C2C: Country to Country 2019) 00:00 Tools
Wanna Be That Song (Live From C2C: Country to Country 2019) 00:00 Tools
Waited To Long 00:00 Tools
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Some life-changing moments are only apparent in retrospect. Brett Eldredge recognized his as it was happening. The Paris, IL, native was visiting Nashville for the first time early in his sophomore year at Chicago's Elmhurst College. He was at the Station Inn, an historic bluegrass/country venue where many of the greats of both worlds have played. His cousin Terry, a veteran of Dolly Parton's band and now a member of the Grascals, was playing with a band called the Sidemen, and a mesmerized Brett was in the crowd. "There was something so real and truthful about the songs they were playing," he says. “What happened next came as a shock.” "He asked me to come up on stage and told me to pick a song to play with the band," says Brett. I said, 'Amarillo By Morning,' and when I heard that fiddle intro, chills shot up my spine. I sang it for the crowd there and it was a magical experience. That was the point where I thought, 'This is it. This is something I've got to do.'" By the start of the next school year, he had transferred to Middle Tennessee State University and begun the round of writers' nights and writing appointments that led him eventually to a record deal. The talent that let him turn that dream into reality—the depth of his writing and the sheer power of his smoky and expressive baritone—are both apparent in his first single. "Raymond" is the poignant tale of a nursing home employee mistaken by a patient with Alzheimer's for her deceased son, who was killed at war. It is a song whose inspiring reaffirmation of their mutual humanity is affecting listeners deeply. The single rings true for Eldredge as his Grandmother currently struggles through the disease. "There are a lot of things I'll play live where people will say, 'I like that,' or 'That's a really cool song,'" Brett says, "but when I do this one, I get the chance to tell people how special a thing it's been in my life, and it always touches someone. A lot of people know someone with Alzheimer's and people react in a really emotional way to it." Brett has earned a reputation as much for the strength of his writing as for his world-class voice. He and co-writer Pat McLaughlin landed a song called "I Think I've Had Enough" on Gary Allan's latest album, Get Off On The Pain, and one of his frequent collaborators is Country Music Hall of Famer and Grand Ole Opry stalwart Bill Anderson. "He's one of my favorite people to write with," says Brett. "I love the fact that he believes in country music so much, because it's something I really believe in. My dream, as I find my place in country music, is one day to be an Opry member." Brett heard all kinds of music growing up, and became a particular fan of the classic pop singers he heard in his grandfather's car. "I heard a lot of Frank Sinatra, who is still a favorite of mine, and Ray Charles and Bobby Darin," he says. "When my mother convinced me to sing 'Mack The Knife' at a talent show, I got hooked on singing in public." That was in Paris, a town of 9,000 with "cornfields and factories and lake right in the middle." Brett, his older brother and his parents—a traveling grain salesman and a nurse—lived on the lake and, says Brett, "We were on the water every day, from the time I was so little they could pull me on water skis in a paddle boat until I left for college at 18." Sports were a big part of his life, and he played basketball, baseball and football in high school. He also sang everywhere he could, often the Big Band music of Sinatra, earning spending money and learning to work a stage. His appreciation for country music became a passion when he turned 16 and he and a friend rode around listening to a Brooks & Dunn greatest hits album. "There was something about it that just struck me," he says. "I couldn't get enough of it. Ronnie Dunn is one of my favorite singers of all time—I love the soul in his voice—and one of the main reasons I got into this in the first place." Brett spent two years in Chicago, where his older brother lived, performing with a school jazz band and with a Big Band around the region. "One of the coolest gigs," he says, "was at the Field Museum, I was singing in front of a 12-piece band under this huge Tyrannosaurus Rex statue near some mammoths. It was quite the experience." Then came that fateful visit to Nashville and his transfer to MTSU. He studied classic country stylists like Ray Price and George Jones, and later Vince Gill, absorbing everything he could. "I was driving back and forth Nashville every day from Murfreesboro, which is thirty miles away," he says. "I had a guitar Terry had given me, which was originally a gift from Dolly, and I'd pretty much lock myself in my room and make myself learn songs. I would play writers' nights all around Nashville. There might be two people, there might be 40 or 50. I'd go play my songs and see what people liked and what they didn't. I'd screw up royally in front of them, but I learned." He earned a degree, which, he says, "made Mom and Dad happy, and then I moved on to what I really wanted to do. A staff writer for hit producer/publisher Byron Gallimore heard him at a writers' night and introduced him to Byron, who signed him. "I wrote for about two years, developing my craft and writing with everyone I could. In the beginning, Byron just let me kind of find myself, because that takes a while. As you write more you starting homing in on what you sound good on. Eventually, Byron said, 'You've got something here' and we went in and started cutting songs. We did a showcase, and Carole Ann Mobley from Warner Music Nashville said, 'We've gotta sign this kid'. Mobley and Craig Kallman then signed Brett to Atlantic Records, making him the first official signing for the new imprint. As he worked with his band tightening his show, he was offered a particularly gratifying gig. "I opened for Blake Shelton at The Ryman and it was the coolest experience. I flew back from this house gig and all of a sudden I'm thrown into playing the Mother Church of Country Music, something I always dreamed of doing. I was operating on almost no sleep, but stepping out on that stage where everybody who's anybody in country music has been meant the world to me." He remains active in sports, playing basketball and volleyball and playing on an intramural softball team in Nashville, and rooting for the Cubs and Bears. Meanwhile, he is dedicated to improving his craft. "As a songwriter," he says, "my aim is to portray a little bit of me and my life along with the stories of other people and turn them into something that can really touch somebody's heart and soul. We sit down on Music Row every day and write songs and every once in a while a song like ‘Raymond’ comes from such a real place. I hope it's that real to other people and that I can make them feel the way I felt when I wrote it and when I sing it." Judging from audience reaction, that’s exactly what he’s doing. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.