详细介绍
If there’s one thing Deric Ruttan wants to portray with Up All Night – Deric Ruttan Live, it’s how much he loves ripping up the stage night after night with his band; guitarist Darren Savard, fiddle and mandolin player Denis Dufresne, bassist Travis Switzer and drummer Matthew Atkins. “With the lineup of guys I’m playing with, it really feels like a band – not just me playing with a bunch of sidemen. Not to brag on us, but I really feel our show is second to none. And the songs you hear on the live portion of this record, that’s the exact order we played them in that night. I had to take some out, but I didn’t shuffle the rest around at all – This is a natural representation of what we do live.”
Recorded at the Calgary Stampede on July 11th, 2011 Up All Night plays like a live greatest hits record, featuring songs written by Ruttan for his own records, as well his co-writes with other artists. Among them, ‘Lot Of Leavin’ Left To Do’ and ‘What Was I Thinkin’, two tracks made famous by Dierks Bentley and presented as part of a blazing nine-minute medley Ruttan kicks off with the Waylon Jennings classic ‘Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way’
Up All Night also includes four studio tracks chosen specifically to compliment his live set; including a re-mastered version of ‘Where The Train Don’t Stop’ from 2010’s Sunshine and three entirely new songs, freshly recorded in July 2011.
While Ruttan has always wanted to make a live record, initially he’d intended to use a variety of performances from multiple shows recorded during his 2010 Sunshine tour. “I decided to record the Stampede show on a whim two days before we played it. I just thought it would be fun. I didn’t even have time to listen to it until I got back to Nashville. I didn’t know if it was usable. But when I loaded up the tracks in the studio, I was really, really impressed. It was a wonderful night. You could just feel the pulse of the crowd and the band feeding off the energy in the room, so it just made sense to pull all the performances from that one show.”
Raw, uncompromising and relentlessly energetic – from the stomp and twang of set opener ‘Sing That Song Again’, through intimate offerings like ‘California Plates’ and amped up country rockers ‘When You Come Around’ and ‘Lovin’ You Is Killin’ Me’ – Up All Night showcases the band’s enthusiasm and substantial chops as musicians and Ruttan’s unique talents as a songwriter in equal measure.
For Ruttan, however, Up All Night isn’t just about celebrating his love of performing and his past work as a songwriter, it’s about showing fans where he’s headed as an artist. Consequently, choosing which new songs to record for Up All Night was challenging, he says. “That was the bulk of the work. I knew I wanted to put some new songs on the record, but because I only had three slots to fill, it was all the more important that they be really representative of where I am right now as an artist.”
Ruttan has a keen ability for capturing the people and places that populate his songs so clearly listeners can actually see them in their mind’s eye. In part, that’s a product of his earliest musical influences – artists such as folk icon Gordon Lightfoot, rock artists CCR and Bruce Springsteen, and groundbreaking, crossover country stars like Steve Earle. “I’ve always been drawn to songs that paint pictures in your mind as you’re listening,” Ruttan says. “It’s something I’ve always tried to do as a songwriter.”
Over time, Ruttan’s ability to paint such vivid lyrical portraits has led to opportunities to write with a growing list of his peers, including Aaron Pritchett, Eric Church, Doc Walker and Dierks Bentley. His success as a recording artist in his own right garnered him a JUNO nomination for Best Country Record in 2010 for Sunshine, as well as multiple nominations for the 2011 Canadian Country Music Awards, including Male Artist, Songwriter, Single and Video of the Year for ‘That’s How I Want To Go Out’. In addition, Sunshine’s lead single, ‘Up All Night’ was the most-played Canadian country single of 2010.