Pat Green












































Pat Green
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It’s impossible to know your limits without testing them.

It’s a truth that Pat Green has employed in his career, one that has propelled him to repeatedly refashion his sound, his approach and his own perception of who he is.

He’s simultaneously a Grammy-nominated hit maker with an outsider reputation, a Texas inspiration and a mainstream country artist who can rock arena and stadium stages with the likes of Keith Urban and Kenny Chesney.

Each of those roles has its own place. But each of them is too small to define Pat Green, who after 15 years in the recording business has earned the right to be everything Pat Green can be. Without limitations.

“I’d much rather be me and comfortable in my own skin than trying to be five different guys to get to the top,” he says.

In fact, after building a reputation as an ace songwriter of his own material, Green is fighting even that limitation with Songs We Wish We’d Written II, a sequel to a 2001 album he recorded with longtime friend—and fellow Texan—Cory Morrow.

Stocked with music penned by the likes of Lyle Lovett, Tom Petty, Shelby Lynne and Jon Randall, the disc—Green’s first for the acclaimed Sugar Hill label—mixes country, rock and blues in a manner that defies categorization. Petty’s “Even The Losers” and Collective Soul’s “The World I Know” will be familiar to just about anyone who gives the album a listen. Others, such as Aaron Lee Tasjan’s quirky “Streets Of Galilee” and Todd Snider’s burning “I Am Too,” are introductions from the underground to a large majority of music fans.

Songs We Wish We’d Written II is an expansive step in Green’s ongoing development. By piecing together songs from a variety of writers, he was able to assemble an album that reflects the multiple genres that influence him as an artist. The source of the songs wasn’t as important as the quality of the music and its ability to connect with Green’s maturing sense of his craft.

“If you listen to my young music or anybody’s young music, it’s all over the place,” he suggests. “It sounds like that because the thoughts are all over the place. You were sleeping on mattresses on the floor, the TV was on a cinderblock – that’s all cool. That’s all we needed, then. Now, I’ve grown up a bit.  As my life has evolves, my taste for music continues to evolve with it.”

While Green was looking for songs for the album from outside sources, he was adamant about recording music that ultimately seemed designed specifically for him and his band. With drummer Justin Pollard co-producing, Green drew up an initial list of 10 titles and recorded them during a concentrated week of sessions in Austin. They tracked another five in Tyler, Texas, then culled the best to get the final 10 cuts on Songs We Wish We’d Written II, creating a cohesive package from disparate sources.

“We all just sat around discussing and if somebody’s idea would sound better than my idea, I’d get fixated on it,” Green says. “I would very much encourage them to bring an idea. For instance, the Walt Wilkins song ‘If It Weren’t For You,’ that was somebody else’s idea completely. There were all kinds of ideas going around from Genesis and Peter Gabriel, Colin Hay from Men at Work – all kinds of crazy stuff from the ‘80s. Of course, we ended up with Petty from 1979.”

They also ended up with a stellar list of guests. Collective Soul’s Ed Roland brings an authentic cynicism to “The World I Know,” Jack Ingram’s threads a snarling desperation into “I Am Too,” Cory Morrow adds a craggy earthiness to “If I Had A Boat,” and former Sons of the Desert member Drew Womack adds a smooth, Vince Gill-like presence as a backing vocalist on the driving “Austin.”

Monte Montgomery provides a thick, expressive blues voice on the Allman Brothers’ “Soulshine” and trades licks with Green’s guitarist, Chris Skrobot, in some of the most riveting moments on Written II, with their dueling lines careening like pinballs.

Skrobot also introduced Green to Aaron Lee Tasjan, who’s something of a new discovery on the album. Tasjan’s “Streets Of Galilee” combines a seemingly random parade of images into an escapist story while Tasjan makes a wry vocal appearance, adding an ethereal presence in the mold of AAA talent Brett Dennen.

“Aaron is a super guy, an amazing talent, and he has a band in New York called The Madison Square Gardeners, so he’s obviously a very funny, very clever human being,” Green assesses. “He’s definitely the kind of writer I really enjoy listening to.”

“Galilee,” “Soulshine,” “Jesus On A Greyhound” and the imagery in “Austin” combine to form a spiritual undercurrent on the album akin to the message of Green’s biggest hit, “Wave On Wave.” It’s appropriate – Green spent much of the last two years searching his conscience as he battles the prism of limitations that were created by his own successes in Texas, and on a national stage.

And in a way, Songs We Wish We’d Written II is the first chapter in the next act of his career.

“There’s a man inside of me now that didn’t used to live here, whereas there was only a boy before,” he says. “The boy was so strong and had done so much, so I’m kind of seeing things in a new way. The last couple years have really been an eye opener, much more intense and richer.”

That’s a large statement – Green’s life and career have already been filled with rich experiences. He’s co-written songs with Willie Nelson, Brad Paisley, Jewel and Rob Thomas. Appeared on such national TV shows as Austin City Limits, Jimmy Kimmel Live! and The Late Show With David Letterman. Been hailed by Billboard, USA Today, Esquire, People and Country Weekly. Toured with the likes of Kenny Chesney, Keith Urban and the Dave Matthews Band. And become a concert force in his own right, regularly selling out venues from Los Angeles to New York, where he’s now sold out his last seven appearances.

All of that is impressive. But it’s also history. As much as he appreciates it, Green puts it in his place on his cover of “Even The Losers,” where he highlights a lyric that Petty obscured in the original: “It’s such a drag when you’re living in the past.”

Green may be recognized for those past achievements, but he doesn’t intend to be limited by them as he continues to progress creatively. And that progress will come by simply testing what it means to be Pat Green.

“I want to be me,” he says. “There are so many people who live with so many masters in their lives. I really just need one.”

Date Venue City State Note
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07/12/2011 - Pat Green Talks About The Business Of Music - Read More
04/06/2011 - Going Green: Country Singer Pat Green Headlines Polo on the Prairie  - Read More
02/16/2011 - Pat Green Finds Contentment  - Read More
12/09/2010 - It's a Green party at Billy Bob's Texas - Read More
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06/02/2003 - Pat Green Q&A - Read More
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Average Rating : 0              Total Reviews: 1214


Pat Green  05/07/2007            
James
It is nice to know that I am not the only one dissapointed in Patty's behavior and piss poor attitude. I just saw the money hungry cry baby Sunday. He kept on complaining that his song isn't number one. To make it all worse the trader broke into a U2 song in the middle of Wave on Wave. As a side note, Robert Earl Keen played Saturday and blew the crowd away. Enjoy the rise to the top Patty. Just look out when no one is there to catch your bare feet.
Pat Green  04/26/2007            
McKinney
pat your the reason i love country music!!! YOU ROCK!!!! Pluse your so CUTE....My fav song is galleywinter
Pat Green  04/24/2007            
DALLAS
Pat your amazing!!! My first concert of yours was awesome i had a blast you were probably the best concert i have been to in my whole life and nothin can top you...i am going to the backyard the 28th and i am so excited PAT GREEN RULES!!!!!
Pat Green  04/19/2007            
stokes
i wish there were like 0 stars pat green you suck man you sold us out hear in texas nashville sucks man and so do you so screw all of the people that like him
Pat Green  03/17/2007            
fletcher
Pat Green needs to have a greatest hits cd with some of his older songs. songs from his first cd up to his three days cd.
Pat Green  03/15/2007            
Houston, TX
Saw Pat for the first time at the Rodeo this year. It reached an all time low when Jack Ingram got on stage and san "Lips of an Angel" I guess the Beat Up Ford band and the Dancehall Dreamer are no more. I would however, like to thank those two for moving the Texas Music Revolution forward. Now, theres a whole slew of quality artists to fill the gap that those two pop clowns left behind
Pat Green  03/11/2007            
hmm
Its just a shame that someone with that much influence on Texas Country has shifted to the dark side. Regardless ill still be cruisin down 287 listning to John wayne and Jesus, Carry on, rusty old american dream, and dancehall.
Pat Green  03/04/2007            
ibanez
this isn't about pat green in the past. it's about here and now, this new album, this new nashtrash stuff. i still listen to his older records and probably always will, and it still makes me feel like i'm back in texas again. new stuff is trash trash trash.
Pat Green  03/03/2007            
Justin
Pat Green's new album Cannonball is definitely a nashvegas sound... but you have to remember who this guy is. He sang us "Songs About Texas". I want everybody posting here to try living in a crap-hole state like New York for two years (after having spent your whole life in New Braunfels) and tell me then you don't get homesick when you hear Pat Green singing... Y'all don't have a clue. "Sell out" or not... he knows what being a Texan is about.
Pat Green  02/25/2007            
N8TV TXN
Pat Green was, and is, a great singer from Texas. Granted, his best albums were George's Bar, Dancehall Dreamer, and Carry On. However, Pat will always be from Texas, no matter how much he hangs out with singers in Nashville. He worked his way up by word of mouth and through the bar scene. As a guy who was born and raised in Texas myself, but was transplanted by the military to California, I was waiting for the day that I didn't have to just tell others about Pat, but that they could go to the local store, and find his album, and give it a listen themselves. He finally made it. It's just a shame that the new doesn't resemble the old. Keep on keepin on.
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