Hillbilly Heart (21 page)

Read Hillbilly Heart Online

Authors: Billy Ray Cyrus,Todd Gold

Tags: #General, #Religious, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Personal Memoirs, #Music, #Biography & Autobiography, #Composers & Musicians

BOOK: Hillbilly Heart
13.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Achy Breaky Heart”

O
N JANUARY 20, 1992,
we shot the video for “Achy Breaky Heart” at Ashland’s majestic, old Paramount Arts Center. Although it required eighteen takes and we worked late into the night, the final version was perfect. I was really happy with it, and also with everyone who was in it. If you watch closely, you will see that the crowd included Tish, Brandi, my ex-wife, Cindy, and my sister, Angie. It might be the only music video ever made with both an ex-wife and a future wife in it.

In early March, the video came out. On the day it aired, I was playing—and living—at the Executive Inn in Paducah. Harold Shedd drove up from Nashville, and during a break between my first and second sets, we walked outside and he pointed up to the sky.

It was a starry night and we were out on the banks of the Ohio River, the backdrop for many of my life’s more significant moments. Harold looked up at the sky.

“You see all them stars up there?” he said. I stared up at the Milky Way, too.

“Yeah,” I replied.

“Well, you may not realize it, but you’re gonna be right up there with all them real soon… starting tonight.”

“Really? You think so?”

“Oh yeah,” he said, confidently. “A big star.”

But my reality was still inside that club. I did another two sets that night. Between them, I went back to my room and saw the video for “Achy Breaky Heart” on TV for the first time. It should’ve given me goose bumps, but the volume on my video sounded about 10 percent lower than it did in the other videos, and that upset me. This was my one chance, and I’d fought for it.

It turned out, my ears were correct. Joe and Jim and the others figured out that one of the dubs they’d sent to CMT did contain an error and wasn’t playing as hot as other videos.

Luckily, everyone who could hear loved what they heard. The moment Melanie Greenwood’s dance video reached clubs across the country, millions of people embraced “Achy Breaky Heart.” It hadn’t even made it to the radio yet! By the end of March, the song hit the
Billboard
’s Hot Country Songs singles chart—still without the single having been officially released yet. It was happening. All of us knew it. The fuse was lit and inching toward the TNT.

On April 3, I performed “Achy Breaky Heart” on
Nashville Now,
Ralph Emery’s prime-time show on TNN. Emery, the Country Hall of Fame TV host, provided the most important platform for country music, especially for a new artist. Like an unknown comic going on
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson,
it either launched your career or got you a pat on the back and a “Nice try, kid.”

From the moment I signed with Jack, and even back with Del Reeves, I badgered them about getting me on Ralph Emery’s show. “Just get me on,” I said. Now that it was going to happen, I obsessed about it. I talked about it with my mom and dad, Jack, and the guys in Sly Dog right up until the moment the director cued us to start playing, and then it was as if I had visualized the whole thing.

During those three and a half minutes, I felt the world shift under my feet. My dad had come to the show, and we talked in the parking lot afterward. He asked me what I thought. Grinning, I said, “Dad, I think the teeter just went to totter.”

The next day I played a show at the Paramount in Ashland. Before the show, I ran around out front and posed for a photo with the marquee over my shoulder in the background. It read:
SOLD OUT
. It might as well have said
BLAST OFF
. “Achy Breaky Heart” had all the magic I’d anticipated, and then some. In the weeks following the dance video, we had harnessed a perfect wave of momentum. It was No. 1 on
Billboard
’s Hot Country Songs for five weeks. It spent twenty weeks on the chart overall. It also went to No. 4 on
Billboard
’s Hot 100 and became the first country single to go platinum since Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton’s 1983 smash, “Islands in the Stream.”

The record company was deluged with calls, including one from someone at CMT in a happy panic. “What in the world have you done to us? The phones are ringing off the hook.” Another came from an angry plant foreman in Dothan, Alabama. “You’re going to have to tell us when this video airs because I can’t get my ladies out of the break room!”

That reaction was just the start. On May 19,
Some Gave All
was released and it was like the burning fuse had finally reached the dynamite. The album debuted at No. 1 on both
Billboard
’s country and pop album charts; within a week, more than a million copies were sold. The numbers it put up were not only impressive, they were, as Harold Shedd and Jack McFadden both told me, unprecedented. The album spent seventeen consecutive weeks at the top, went platinum nine times over, eventually sold more than twenty million copies worldwide, and became the biggest-selling debut album by a male artist ever.

And where was I when all this happened?

Hangin’ on, workin’ and runnin’ just as hard as I could to keep up with this rocket.

We were flooded with offers and deals, some for huge amounts of money. I only said yes to one concert right away, and I agreed to do it for free. It was the fifth annual Rolling Thunder motorcycle rally in Washington, DC, an event to honor prisoners of war and those labeled missing in action—in other words, those who gave all. I
considered their logo and flag—“You are not forgotten”—the very embodiment of “Some Gave All.”

The concert was at the foot of the Lincoln Memorial. Nearby was the Vietnam Memorial Wall. People and motorcycles, vets and their families, filled the National Mall. It was an amazing sight, thick with emotion. Rain came down steadily as I took the stage. I was bummed, thinking this moment could’ve been great if not for the rain; then I looked up and imagined those drops were tears cried for all the names etched on the wall.

“Cyrus,” I said to myself, “forget the rain. You get up there and give it everything you got.”

Don Von Tress, the writer of “Achy Breaky Heart,” joined me onstage, for the first of many times we played together. He was a two-tour Vietnam vet who’d served with the 101st Airborne and been part of more than 140 helicopter missions. Having him sing “Some Gave All” with me that day only made it more poignant.

My mom and Cletis stood in the wings. I remembered when she’d told me not to give “Some Gave All” to Charlie Daniels because it was my song. But as I watched the crowd, I realized it wasn’t my song. It was
their
song—and always would be.

Backstage, I was rehashing the set with Don when my mom appeared and gave me a hug.

“Billy, did you see it?” she asked.

“What?”

“During ‘Some Gave All,’ right at the last chorus, a bald eagle swooped down in front of the stage, then flew across the sky and over the Capitol.”

“Ruthie, I hate to burst your bubble,” Don said, “but that was a seagull.”

My mom shook her head.

“It might’ve been a seagull to you,” she said, “but it was an eagle to me.” We shared a laugh. It was a special moment and a special time.

I went back to Bronco’s Lounge for one last stand. My manager thought I was crazy to give up a week, when I could be making five figures or more, for a gig in a bar where I was likely to spend more buying drinks for old friends than I’d get paid. But I honored every commitment I had made before the record broke, and Bronco’s was one of them.

The
Toronto Sun,
of all places, loved that angle. The paper’s editor was a big Elvis Presley fan, and he sent a reporter to find out about this hillbilly who was being called the new Elvis. The reporter found me in a crappy hotel in Richmond, Virginia, saw what was going on, and busted the thing wide open. In fact, he coined the phrase “Cyrus Virus.”

But what’s great is all the different and surprising ways music touches people, all kinds of people, everywhere. There are no boundaries. And one night I heard a knock on my hotel room door. I looked out the peephole and saw this big old veteran standing outside. It was Raymond Bullock, the guy who would bring a limo-load of vets to the bar every night and have me play “Some Gave All.” I’d never seen him without his green beret on. Now he was holding it, along with his dog tags. After I said “Hi, what’s up,” he solemnly extended his hand and offered me both his beret and tags.

“Mr. Cyrus, I want to give you these,” he said.

“I can’t take those from you,” I replied.

“No, they’re yours,” he insisted. “The first night I heard you sing ‘Some Gave All’ was the first night since returning from Vietnam that I felt like I was home. I don’t need this stuff anymore.”

After Bronco’s, I knew it was time to climb into the rocket. I was ready. I rented a small apartment in Nashville so I’d have a place to dump all my stuff, but I barely remembered the address. The road became my home. I said yes to practically everything. In the last six months of 1992, I did at least two hundred dates… and probably more.
Good Morning America
? Sure thing.
Top of the Pops
in London? I’ll be there. A club in Fort Knox? No problem. Alabama, you want me to play at your June Jam in Fort Payne? Sure, tell me what time I go on.

In fact, it was in June, while I was on my way to that annual country music extravaganza, that a little controversy arose. Travis Tritt told some folks in the media that he thought “Achy Breaky Heart” was “frivolous” and he hated to see country music devolve into an “ass-wiggling contest.”

Trust me, I knew with “Achy Breaky Heart” it was either love it or hate it. There was no middle ground, not with a song that big. And I knew the media loves a good fight more than anything. I considered responding but my dad, who knew a thing or two or twelve about critics from being in politics, had his own suggestion. “Son, you take it as a compliment that you made someone so upset. You know every action has an opposite and equal reaction. You can’t have so many people out there love that thang without having someone hate it. So you don’t say nothin’. You just go about your business.”

Good advice. Then, without me even knowing beforehand, none other than Bruce Springsteen—the Boss himself—played “Achy Breaky Heart” at one of his shows and said, “I don’t care what anybody says. It’s a damn good little rock song.” You can only imagine how much that meant to me at the time.

And then Jack McFadden called to tell me that I’d received a letter from another supporter, a man whose gravelly voice and black boots carried a lot of weight: Johnny Cash.

The
Johnny Cash.

Here’s what the letter said:

Billy Ray,

I was very impressed recently to hear you give God the credit for your success. It’s good to be reminded where all goodness comes from.
Thirty-six years ago I was working with Elvis and saw him take the same kind of flak you’re taking now.
Congratulations on the way you’re handling it all. In your case, as in Elvis’, the good outweighs the bad.
Let ’em have it. I’m in your corner.

Johnny Cash

Nashville insiders were always reluctant to let new people into their circle, and I wasn’t much on schmoozin’. Some of them didn’t know what to make of a guy who was more comfortable in tennis shoes and cut-up T-shirts than black boots and a Stetson.

The tabloids got on my butt, too. One of them claimed I’d been a Chippendales dancer when I lived in California. Then, right after I signed up to open several dates for Dolly Parton, the
Globe
put the two of us on their cover, claiming we were lovers. That was funny. I hadn’t even met Dolly yet.

Before the first show, I asked Jack if he could arrange for me to meet her. I showed up at her dressing room with the tabloid in my hand. Dolly was wearing a beautiful blue dress that looked like it was made out of diamonds.

“Hi, I’m Billy Ray Cyrus,” I stammered. “I wanted to come say hi and apologize for this.”

I handed her the tabloid.

“Honey, don’t you apologize for that.” Dolly laughed. “That shit sells records.”

The tabloids did get one story right: On April 8, I became the father of Christopher Cody Cyrus. His mother was Kristen Luckey, a twenty-three-year-old waitress I met the previous summer when we performed at Cowboys in Myrtle Beach. They also reported Tish was pregnant, too. It was a double bubble of trouble.

Other books

Mariette in Ecstasy by Ron Hansen
Bad Bridesmaid by Portia MacIntosh
Girl Jacked by Christopher Greyson
You Drive Me Crazy by Mary D. Esselman, Elizabeth Ash Vélez
The Devil by Leo Tolstoy
Catch my fallen tears by Studer, Marion
Allie's Moon by Alexis Harrington