November/December News

Tis' the season for country music artists' to begin winding down their respective concert tours and our man Clay is no exception. However, there is some unfinished business in the upcoming weeks including Clay's annual pilgrimage to Las Vegas, NV. In addition to performing the national anthem at the National Finals Rodeo, Clay and his band will perform three consecutive nights at Sam's Town Hotel and Casino beginning Thursday, December 7. CMT Hit Trip also has plans to spend a few days taping Clay's activities and performances in Las Vegas for a Hit Trip segment scheduled to air around the release of Clay's new album. We'll let you know more soon.

In the meantime the 2000 tour continues with more shows featuring Clay with Alan Jackson. Clay began his touring career with Alan in the summer of 1993. Tickets are now on-sale for shows at the Corel Center in Ottawa, Ontario on Friday, December 1, and Copps Coliseum in Hamilton, Ontario on Saturday, December 2.

Even on the road Clay continues to concentrate on completing his next album which is expected to be released in March, 2001. Songwriters Steve Bogart and Jeff Stevens recently joined Clay on his bus during a swing through Missouri and Wisconsin to cobble together ideas for hit songs. Clay did take a little time out while in Wisconsin Dells, WI and invited his songwriting guests and entire band to see The Legend Of Bagger Vance, the new golf-themed feature film directed by Robert Redford and starring Will Smith and Matt Damon.

Clay Walker says the best is yet to come Clay Walker has good reason to smile. "This past year has been the greatest year of my life," he declares. "It's been the greatest family-wise, spiritually and physically. I am happier now than I've ever been. Things are perfect." In five fast-paced years, he racked up a wagon-load of chart-topping songs, which are packaged in Clay Walker: Greatest Hits.

"It's really strange for me to have a greatest-hits album. It just feels like it's not my time yet," he says.
The album contains 12 of Clay's previous hits, including "What's It to You," "If I Could Make a Living," "Who Needs You Baby," "This Woman and This Man," "Then What?" and "Live Until I Die." It also features two new songs. One of them, "Ordinary People," is already moving up the charts. "Thanks to radio and tremendous fans, I've had lot of hit records, and I'm grateful," Clay says. "That gives me the opportunity to put an album together that has successes on it. I just wish there was another name for it than 'greatest hits.' It sounds boastful and I don't feel that way."

Clay, who lives on a 650-acre ranch in Brenham, Texas, with wife Lori and daughter MaClay, 2, says he's enjoying better than a good life thanks to "his greatest gifts."

Greatest Gift No. 1: His upbringing "Mom and dad were very affectionate. That's why I adore receiving and giving back affection. "When a fan comes through the meet and greet line and asks, 'Can I hug you?' I'll tell them, 'Yes, but it can't be a little one, it has to be a big hug.' It's amazing how good a hug makes me feel.

"Thanks to my parents, my values are God, my family and then the business. Without those first two values, the latter would not be so rewarding."

Greatest Gift No. 2: His family "My wife and my daughter are my world. Until I became a husband and then a parent, I didn't fathom the richness of my life. "When I lay down at night and just before I fall asleep I think about how blessed I am. I think about how fortunate I am that my little girl is next to me in her bed and that she's dreaming about good things."

Greatest Gift No. 3: His health "I feel great. I'm as active as I ever was. I'm probably more active now than before I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. "There are things out of my control and there are things within my control. I am taking care of everything that's in my control. For example, I take a medicine called Avonex every week. It helps control the attacks related to MS. Lori gives me the injections. "Multiple sclerosis sounds so serious. But there are so many people battling truly serious problems, such as leukemia, cancers and other life-threatening conditions that I don't expect sympathy. Prayers are good, though. "MS can be very debilitating. But, you know, I just don't see myself in a wheelchair. "My vision of me includes a normal life. I am absolutely positive my greatest accomplishments in music and in life are ahead of me -- and that's extremely exciting." -- Larry Holden

Copyright � 1998 The Seattle Times Company Posted at 09:38 a.m. PST; Thursday, March 26, 1998 Heartthrob Clay Walker has made the most of it

by Patrick MacDonald Seattle Times staff critic Concert preview: Clay Walker ; Clay Walker is a country-music heartthrob.

The handsome Texan, 28, is in the honky-tonk tradition and does plenty of chip-kicking country dance numbers. But what makes him stand out from the bumper crop of young country singers is the way he bares his soul in aching love ballads such as "Where Do I Fit in the Picture," in which his voice cracks as though he's about to cry.

That 1993 hit has special significance in the Northwest because the popular video for it was shot in Pioneer Square, the Pike Place Market, the Moore Theatre and other Seattle sites.

The song was on his debut "Clay Walker" album, which went platinum after scoring such hits as his breakthrough mid-tempo dance song, "What's It To You," and the fiddle-powered, nostalgic "Live Until I Die."

Walker has been on a roll ever since, with hits such as "Hypnotize the Moon" (the title cut from his second album), "My Heart Will Never Know" and "This Woman and This Man" (both from his third "If I Could Make a Living" album). His second and third albums also went platinum.

Walker's career was at its height in 1996, when a dark cloud moved in. After some frightening episodes affecting his speech, balance and coordination, it was discovered that he was in the early stages of multiple sclerosis. He was candid with fans about the chronic, debilitating disease of the central nervous system, explaining that it will eventually cripple him. But he has vowed to continue to perform as long as he is able.

So far, there are few noticeable signs of his condition, although he has cut back on his activities, both to safeguard his health and spend more time with his wife and young daughter.

Walker's current hit is the lively, Jamaican-flavored "Then What?" The song is spiced by the pinging sound of steel drums, which makes it stand out on country radio. The single is from his "Rumor Has It" album, released last year.

Walker's songs have always had a strong pop element, because that's what he grew up on. His father loved country music and played guitar, but young Clay was more interested in rock and R&B.

Growing up in a mostly African-American section of Beaumont, Texas, he was influenced by black artists, most notably Lionel Richie. He was also a fan of James Taylor and Bob Seger.

He learned to play guitar at 9 and started writing songs at 15. A high school talent contest, in which he was the only white contestant, was a turning point. Singing a country song to a mostly black audience, he got a standing ovation and won first prize. He has said that he realized at that moment, as the applause washed over him, that he would be a singer-songwriter. As he got older, he drew closer to country music, inspired by the songwriting in new country as well as his family background.

While playing clubs at night, he worked by day in a Goodyear rubber plant. He treasures the hard hat and boots he wore on that job. He takes them along on tour and props them up in a prominent place in his dressing room. If he should get nervous around show time, which he sometimes does, they remind him of his dream and how far he has come.






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