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Country Music Broke My Brain

A Behind-the-Microphone Peek at Nashville's Famous and Fabulous Stars

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Nashville is filled with stars and lovers and writers and dreamers. Nashville is also teeming with lunatics and grifters and dip wads and moochers. Gerry House fits easily into at least half of those categories. Someone would probably have to be brain-damaged or really damn talented to try to entertain professional entertainers over a decades-long radio show in Music City, USA.

Fortunately, House is little of both.

Host of the nationally syndicated, top-rated morning show, "Gerry House & The Foundation" for more than 25 years, he has won virtually every broadcasting award there is including a place in the National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame. Gerry also spent that time deep inside the songwriting and recording world in Nashville.

In Country Music Broke My Brain, Gerry tells his stories from the other side of the microphone. He reveals never-aired, never-before published conversations with country music's biggest names—Johnny Cash, Brad Paisley, and Reba McEntire to name a few—and leaves you with his own crazy antics that will either have you laughing or shaking your head in disbelief.

With exclusive celebrity stories, humorous trivia and anecdotes, and broadcasting wisdom, this book is a treat for country music fans or for anyone who wants a good laugh.
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2014
      A veteran country broadcaster mixes memoir with anecdotes and corny jokes. House, a nationally syndicated country DJ, has also written more than 40 songs recorded by country artists and has supplied jokes and scripts for numerous country awards shows. In the incestuous world of country music, he's a well-connected member of the family, and he shares some tales here that he never could on air (including one about Waylon Jennings driving with two kinds of blow). The author also tells some apocryphal tall tales--one about a roadie and another about a conniving couple named Buddy and Julie, apparently no relation to the Millers, recording artists who are married. "Nearly everyone I know in the music business is nice," he writes, and he's nice in turn to almost everyone, including Garth Brooks ("a genius at marketing [who] has figured out how to sell the same twenty songs over and over in different packages"), Kenny Rogers ("the Kenmeister"), Pam Tillis ("supernaturally talented"), Ray Stevens (another "genius") and the Oak Ridge Boys ("unique and wonderful people--gentle, caring and fascinating. And they are stunning showmen"). House also discusses Taylor Swift, who was initially so appreciative but then once gave him the brush off. He also doesn't much care for Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks--though few country insiders do. A typical passage: "Tanya Tucker has no editing button. If it occurs in her head, it's gonna come spilling out her piehole. I think she's hilarious because of that one fact. She's also hell on wheels." A typical joke: "I always think of Dolly [Parton] whenever I visit the Great Pyramids. I don't know why, I just do. They're enormous. The pyramids, that is." House doesn't take himself, country music or his book too seriously. Pass.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2014

      House, who describes himself as "possibly America's #1 Country Radio Personality," delivers a summing-up of his career as disc jockey, television host, songwriter, and confidant of Nashville's famous and infamous. In a tone that would not seem out of place on the "Blue Collar Comedy" tour, he regales the reader with anecdotes concerning the adventures of Johnny Paycheck's dentures (they end up in a fan's bouffant); vacationing with and without Reba McEntire; and Taylor Swift alternately gushing over him and snubbing him when she no longer needs his support. House balances the Nashville name-dropping with print versions of the comedic set pieces that have graced his airtime through the years. The overall tone is light. The autobiographical sections reveal a small-town boy from Kentucky who can't get over the fact that he runs into Shania Twain at the local Kroger's. VERDICT While contributing nothing substantial to country music scholarship or criticism, this volume should delight fans of House's radio show--and there are more than a few of them.--John Frank, Los Angeles P.L.

      Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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