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Showing posts with label Blake Shelton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blake Shelton. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Blake Shelton wins "Over" the woman he loves

Blake Shelton falls in love with a brunette in a just-released music video for his newest single "Over," the fourth single from his sixth studio album "Red River Blue." Leading to its video premiere on CMT Friday, a special four-part webisode series was released to give fans a humorous glimpse at what goes into making a music video. In this new video, things start to heat up when the house Shelton's in is suddenly set on fire!
The mid tempo tune doesn't really fit Shelton's style or personality, but his performance is soaked in emotion, and as usual, he proves to be among the top vocalists in the genre. Lyrically, the Paul Jenkins and David Elliott Johnson-penned cut fails to send one’s imagination into overdrive like a great song should. It’s an extraordinary recording of an ordinary song. It's a safe choice for album that features some edgier and arguably better material.
Johnson explained that he wrote this song for his father in homage. "I wrote the song in an effort to reach my father through the medium we were both cursed by, music," he explained. "It is in our blood, our hearts, in our breath, in everything we do. The song's opening line, If I could, I would dare, feed your dreams and starve your fears, was the most personal line I'd ever written. It was the truth. The chorus, Tell me what I have to do to win you over, was one of the more painful I'd every written."
The song is about a man pleading to know what he has to do to win over the woman he loves. And the video itself illustrates the burn inside with a literal fire–which was set in the desert during sundown. The 36-year-old-to-be Oklahoma country music star is playing with fire in this new "Over" video, which was directed by his longtime collaborator Roman White. The singer joked, "I've used Roman a bunch of times, and I've never won video of the year. That's why I don't feel bad trashing Roman." Walking through the desert and setting a house on fire, Shelton sings his heart out with raging fire surrounding him, while the woman of his affection is miles away.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Blake Shelton Cuts Loose With "Footloose"

Oklahoma country music star Blake Shelton premiered the music video for the country-fied reboot of the hit "Footloose" on Thursday's show 'Entertainment Tonight,' for the first time since Michael Jackson's "Thriller" in 1983. "Footloose" was performed for the original 1984 film by music legend Kenny Loggins, and the film is about a town that has banned rock and dancing, will open in U.S. theaters on October 14.
Writer-director Craig Brewer helms a new take of the well-loved 1984 film, which was loosely based on real-life events that happened in 1980 in Elmore City, where students convinced the school board to let them organize the school's first prom, despite an 80-year-old city ordinance banning public dancing. The Oklahoma farming community marked the 30th anniversary of the first prom last year. Shelton tells The Boot. "When I open my mouth, what comes out is country. There's really only one way to approach it when you think of it that way: a fun, uptempo, catchy version just like Kenny Loggins did."
It's no surprise that a movie about dancing features a lot of dancing. However, the video for "Footloose" is incredibly middle American good time and fairly vibrates off the screen with high-octane dance segments from the movie. There's simply no room to compete. The 35-year-old singer wants to cut loose, but he wisely leaves the fancy footwork to others, and choosing instead to sing in a pickup bed and let the energy bubble around him.
The video started as a quiet night, but brings life to a sleepy drive-in theater, and turns into a raucous block party when "The Voice" coach exchanges pleasantries with the old man running the joint and then grabs his guitar and sings the iconic title song from the upcoming film standing in his truck bed, while a bunch of dancers embark on a well-choreographed routine around him. "Footage" and key scenes from the film, which also appears as loyal to the original as Shelton's remake of the theme song, are spliced throughout and it all blends seamlessly that looks just as great now as they did 27 years ago.