Lonestar
is an American country music group consisting of Cody Collins (lead vocals, acoustic guitar), Michael Britt (lead guitar, background vocals), Keech Rainwater (drums) and Dean Sams (keyboards, melodica, background vocals). Collins, who had formerly been in another country group called McAlyster, replaced former lead vocalist Richie McDonald, who left in November 2007 for a solo career. John Rich was also the group's bass guitarist and second lead vocalist until 1998, when he was fired from the group. He left for a solo career, before joining Big Kenny in the duo Big & Rich in 2003. Since Rich's departure, Lonestar has not had an official bass guitarist.
Lonestar made its debut on the Billboard
country music charts in 1995 with the Top 10 single "Tequila Talkin'". Since then, they have amassed a total of twenty-seven singles on the country charts, with nine of those singles reaching Number One. Their biggest hit was 1999's "Amazed", a crossover hit that reached Number One on both the country charts and the Billboard Hot 100, becoming the first single to do so since Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton's "Islands in the Stream" in 1983. The group has also recorded eight studio albums and a Greatest Hits compilation. Three of their albums have been certified gold, while three more have been certified platinum or higher.
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Career
Beginnings
Lonestar began in 1992 as a band named Tenassee. This name was derived from the fact that all five members were natives of
Texas, and met in
Nashville, Tennessee's
Opryland USA theme park.
[1] [2] The original lineup consisted of
lead singer/
rhythm guitarist Richie McDonald (
Lubbock),
lead guitarist Michael Britt (
Fort Worth),
drummer Keech Rainwater (
Plano),
keyboardist Dean Sams (
Garland), and
bass guitarist/co-lead vocalist
John Rich (
Amarillo). Before Lonestar's foundation, Rainwater played drums in another country band called
Canyon, which charted in the country top 40 with "Hot Nights" in 1989.
[3] By 1992, Texassee changed its name to Lonestar. The band first played at a concert in Nashville in 1993 and signed to
BNA Records by 1995.
Lonestar
Their first single for
BNA Records, "
Tequila Talkin'", reached a peak of #8 on the
Billboard
Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. It was followed by the release of their
eponymous debut album.
Certified for gold sales by the
RIAA, the album also produced the band's first Number One single in "
No News", as well as the #8 "
Runnin' Away with My Heart", #18 "Heartbroke Every Day", and the #45 "When Cowboys Didn't Dance".
In 1996, Richie McDonald also sang background vocals on
Mindy McCready's Top 20 single "Maybe He'll Notice Her Now", for which he received chart credit. This song and "Heartbroke Every Day" (the only single on which John Rich sang lead) overlapped on the charts.
Crazy Nights
In 1997, the band released its second album,
Crazy Nights
. Two of the singles from this album — "Say When" and "
Come Cryin' to Me", the latter of which was their second Number One — were co-written by Rich, while the 1998 single "
Everything's Changed" was co-written by McDonald. Shortly after the release of "Everything's Changed", Rich was fired from the band
[4] and went to pursue a solo career on BNA, which would later prove unsuccessful. By the early 2000s, he paired up with
Big Kenny (who had also been an unsuccessful solo singer) to form the duo
Big & Rich.
Lonely Grill
Lonely Grill
, the first album not to include Rich, was released in 1999. Its first single, "Saturday Night", failed to reach Top 40. However, it was soon followed by the ballad "
Amazed", which became the group's biggest crossover hit. Having spent eight weeks at Number One on the country charts, "Amazed" would later reach Number One on the
Billboard Hot 100 as well,
making Lonestar the first country act to top both the Hot Country Songs and Hot 100 charts since 1983, when
Kenny Rogers and
Dolly Parton accomplished the same feat with "
Islands in the Stream".
[5] All of the other singles from
Lonely Grill
("
Smile", "
What About Now", and "
Tell Her") reached Number One as well, and the album was certified 2× Multi-Platinum by the RIAA.
Lonely Grill
was followed in 2000 by a Christmas album called
This Christmas Time
I'm Already There
I'm Already There
was the title of Lonestar's fourth studio album. Released in 2001, this album continued in a more
country pop oriented direction. The lead-off single (which was the
title track) spent six weeks at Number One, followed by "
With Me" at #10, "
Not a Day Goes By" at #3, and the
Mark McGuinn-penned "Unusually Unusual" at #12.
I'm Already There
was also certified platinum.
From There To Here: Greatest Hits
2003 saw the release of a greatest hits compilation entitled
From There to Here: Greatest Hits
. This album reprised the greatest hits from their first four studio albums, in addition to producing two new singles in the Number One "
My Front Porch Looking In" and a #8-peaking cover of
Marc Cohn's "
Walking in Memphis".
Let's Be Us Again
Let's Be Us Again
was released in 2004. This album produced three singles in its title track (#4 on the country charts), as well as their final Number One in "
Mr. Mom". The third single, "Class Reunion (That Used to Be Us)", peaked at #16, however, and
Let's Be Us Again
did not sell as well as
I'm Already There
.
Coming Home
Coming Home
followed a year later. Only two singles were released from this album: "
You're Like Comin' Home" (#8 on the country charts) and "I'll Die Tryin'", both of which were previously recorded by the Canadian country band
Emerson Drive on their 2004 album
What If?
. "I'll Die Tryin'" also became the group's first single since 1999's "Saturday Night" to miss the Top 40.
Mountains
Mountains
, their final album for BNA, sold even more poorly than
Coming Home
did, and like
Coming Home
, it only produced two singles, including its #10
title track (co-written by
Larry Boone) and the #51 "Nothing to Prove".
[6] In March 2007, Lonestar was dropped from BNA's roster, due to their declining sales. Guitarist Michael Britt attributes the group's downfall in the mid-2000s to the label's choices in singles, saying in an interview with
CMT, "I think we painted ourselves into a corner… They started putting out a bunch of family-type songs. I think that really pigeonholed us. The majority of the band didn't really want to continue doing that same thing. But that's what kept getting put out."
Departure of Richie McDonald
200px
Lead singer Richie McDonald also announced that he would be leaving the group at the end of 2007 in search of a solo career. Cody Collins, who formerly recorded on
MCA Nashville Records in the band
McAlyster, was confirmed as his replacement.
[7] Lonestar's first compilation with Collins as lead singer was a
Christmas music compilation titled
My Christmas List
, available exclusively at the restaurant and gift shop chain
Cracker Barrel.
[8] Since his departure from Lonestar, McDonald has charted two solo singles of his own: "How Do I Just Stop" and "Six-Foot Teddy Bear", both of which reached #51 on the country charts. The latter was released on
Stroudavarious Records.
The Future
The group's first single to feature Collins on lead vocals was "Let Me Love You", which was released in early 2008 on the Co5 label. The song only managed to chart to #50 on the country music charts. It is the first single from their upcoming album
The Future
.
Band members
Current
- Michael Britt - lead guitar, background vocals (1992-present)
- Cody Collins - lead vocals (2008-present)
- Keech Rainwater - drums, percussion (1992-present)
- Dean Sams - keyboards, harmonica, melodica, background vocals (1992-present)
Former
- Richie McDonald - lead vocals, rhythm guitar, piano (1992-2008)
- John Rich - bass guitar, lead and background vocals (1992-1998)
Road band
- Kevin Von Der Hofen - bass guitar, vocals
- Rob Tyler - fiddle, mandolin, acoustic guitar
Crew Members
- Mark Chamberlain - Tour Manager
- Alex Krompic - Lighting Director
- Jerry Gamble - Stage Manager
- Scott Fowler - Guitar Tech
Discography
Albums
- Lonestar (1995)
- Crazy Nights (1997)
- Lonely Grill (1999)
- I'm Already There (2001)
- From There to Here: Greatest Hits (2003)
- Let's Be Us Again (2004)
- Coming Home (2005)
- Mountains (2006)
- The Future (2009)
References
- allmusic ((( Lonestar > Biography )))
- Lonestar: Biography
- The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits
- The Big and Rich Story: Big and Rich Bio
- Billboard's Hottest Hot 100 Hits
- Song Selection Derailed Lonestar's Success, Guitarist Says
- Lonestar’s New Guy: Young Cody Collins replaces Richie McDonald as Lonestar’s lead singer—what does it mean for the band?
- Cody Collins Named Lonestar's Lead Singer