Party: Wade Bowen
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Ask Wade Bowen what distinguishes his music, and after mulling the notion for a minute, his answer is basic and
direct: “Intensity.” That’s because Bowen sings and writes with passion and fervent commitment about the matters
that count in life with a depth of thought and palpable emotionality that hits listeners where they live and feel. And
that fervor is matched by rich melodies and lyrical and musical hooks that grab the ears and imagination and don’t
let go.
It’s a talent that’s made Bowen a leading light on the thriving Texas music scene and launched him into realms
beyond with a sound built upon a rock-solid country foundation that also draws inspiration from the wide spectrum
of music he loves, be it rockers like Led Zeppelin and Aerosmith or critically-acclaimed roots singer-songwriters
like Patty Griffin and Paul Thorn or his personal musical icon Bruce Springsteen. And now with If We Ever Make It
Home, Bowen delivers a tour de force collection of songs of inspiration, hope and deep feeling.
If We Ever Make It Home begins with an upbeat twist on the heartbreak song on “You Had Me At My Best,” the
album’s first single. A bracing as well as touching positivism informs such songs of abiding love and emotional
support as “Turn On The Lights” and “From Bad To Good,” both of them drawing from Wade and his wife Shelby’s
struggle to overcome her postpartum depression. The haunting “Ghost In This Town” and the rocking “Nobody’s
Fool” and the bright nightlife lights of “Missing You” offer prescriptions for overcoming departed lovers and
heartache while “Trouble” and “Daddy and the Devil” offer cautionary tales about life’s temptations. The sweet first
kiss of “Why Makes Perfect Sense” brings out Bowen’s romanticism, and the title track and “Somewhere
Beautiful” cap the set with transcendent song prayers for peace and happiness. As its title implies, If We Ever
Make It Home is a lyrical and musical journey that is as fulfilling as the end result of the destination.
“My last album, Lost Hotel, was about soul searching and finding a new direction in my life,” Bowen explains.
“This record is about being happy with your life, even within all that’s going on inside and around us. It reflects my
hope that there’s a better future for us all and finding a better place, a peaceful place, while the world seems as if
it’s going in the other direction. It’s not a record you can listen to once and get everything it’s about.” On it, Bowen
collaborates with writers like hit-maker Jim Beavers and fellow Texans Radney Foster and Randy Rogers and
also ropes in numbers written by some of his favorite fellow songwriters.
Produced by J.R. Rodriguez, If We Ever Make It Home matches Bowen’s strongest set of songs yet with musical
contributions by guitar stars David Grissom (known for his work with John Mellencamp and Joe Ely) and Jedd
Hughes and such Music City A-plus team session players as Tom Bukovac, Kenny Greenburg, Dan Dugmore and
Aubrey Haynie, as well as guest vocal appearances by acclaimed singer-songwriters Ashley Monroe on the title
cut and Chris Knight on “Daddy and the Devil.” It’s music that enriches the lives and souls of those who hear it as
much as it does for its creator, providing a perfect soundtrack for both Saturday night out on the town delight and
Sunday morning contemplation and reflection.
Born and raised in Waco, Texas in a family that loves music, Wade Bowen’s creative imagination was captured
early on by his father’s Guy Clark albums as well as his mother’s love for Elvis Presley and the mainstream
country music that his sisters enjoyed. Although he wrote poetry and prose from an early age and was always
singing to himself, it was sports that dominated his high school years: football, baseball, track, golf and swimming,
“everything that they would let me play,” he recalls.
Given his first guitar at age nine, Bowen finally picked it up in earnest at 17 when the depth of Guy Clark’s
songwriting and the work of rising Texas star Robert Earl Keen “hit me like a brick in the face.” From then on his
guitar became his new best friend, and he immediately began writing his own songs. Once he hit college at Texas
Tech University to study marketing, it was only natural that he followed “the old school rule of rock’n’roll — get
some friends together and start a band,” as he puts it. The resulting group — dubbed West 84 for the highway
Bowen traveled between home in Waco and school in Lubbock — were soon packing his fellow students into the
bars, thanks to the appeal of his budding songwriting talents. By the time Bowen graduated, his band matriculated
into the booming Texas music movement and quickly repeated their success across the Lone Star State.
Eventually becoming known under the banner of his own name, Bowen eschewed grabbing for the brass ring of
stardom to instead build an enduring relationship with his listeners by playing some 250 shows a year, which he
continues to do today. “It seemed to make much more sense and be so much more fun to me to have some
success by playing on the road. It’s such a great way to do it and it shows you every aspect of a career,” he
notes. “I’m a big fan of Bruce Springsteen and how he did it before he became nationally known. It’s fun to build it
from ground zero and watch it grow.”
His self-released 2002 album Try Not To Listen consolidated his Texas success as its title tune went Top 10 on
the Texas Music Chart. The statewide sensation generated by his live shows led the following year to The Blue
Light Live, an in-concert album that spent most of the next two plus years as a Top 10 selling disc on
LoneStarMusic.com, the leading online retailer in the Texas music scene. Earning Album of the Year and Male
Vocalist of the Year honors in 2004 from MyTexasMusic.com, Bowen’s burgeoning success won him a deal with
Sustain Records.
With Lost Hotel in 2006, the groundswell Bowen had stroked in the Lone Star State took his single “God Bless
This Town” to the top of the Texas Music Chart while its video was a Top 20 debut on CMT and spent several
weeks at #1 on CMT’s Pure Country 12 Pack countdown in the company of such stars as Alan Jackson and Brad
Paisley. The vibrant buzz he had started in Texas also spread further as he hit the national road on the Lee Ann
Womack and Friends tour and expanded his fan base for his live appearances into the Midwest and Southeast.
Bowen’s prowess as a songwriter led to co-writing “Don’t Break My Heart Again” with Pat Green, the lead single
from Green’s Top 10 Lucky Ones album, and “When It All Goes Down” with his brother-in-law Cody Canada of
Cross Canadian Ragweed on the band’s Garage album. He has also collaborated as a writer with Texas legend
Ray Wylie Hubbard — who made a cameo appearance in Bowen’s “God Bless The Town” video — and
Nashville-based Texpatriate Radney Foster as well as such fellow rising stars on the Lone Star music scene as
Randy Rogers, Brandon Rhyder and Bleu Edmondson. His writing talents also recently won Bowen a publishing
deal with Sea Gayle Music.
Living on the cusp of the Texas Hill Country in New Braunfels and now the father of two sons, Bowen is
determined to stick to his guns and create music with meaning and continue to sharpen his aim for getting to the
heart of any matter that inspires him personally and creatively. “I feel like what I am good at is taking something
that’s in my head or that I want to write about and creating music that means something to people,” he explains. “I
like for everything to not be taken for granted. But I’m also not always serious, and when I play live, I want the
audience to have as good a time as I do making music for them.”
And it’s all a lifelong endeavor that’s embedded in Bowen’s heart. “I just keep doing what I am doing and stick to
it,” he concludes. And in the process he brings us all back home alongside him.
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