http://nz.entertainment.yahoo.com//090629/5/d384.html
Monday June 29, 03:00 PM
Country conversion: Tracy Lawrence goes Christian
NASHVILLE (Billboard) - Country singer Tracy Lawrence's
life has had an interesting trajectory, from hero to hellraiser
to heaven-bound family man. The latest chapter is chronicled on
"The Rock," his first Christian album.
The self-released album debuted at No. 4 on Billboard's Top
Christian Albums chart and No. 20 on Top Country Albums earlier
this month.
Even before Lawrence debuted in 1991 with the No. 1 hit
"Sticks and Stones," he made headlines when gunmen tried to rob
him and his girlfriend. He fought back -- allowing the girl to
escape -- and was shot four times, delaying his Atlantic
debut.
Lawrence became one of the most successful artists of the
'90s, known for hits like "Alibis," "Paint Me a Birmingham" and
"Time Marches On." But he also developed a rough-and-rowdy
reputation. He made headlines again in 1997 when his wife filed
charges for battery following a marital spat. They divorced,
and he took time away from the spotlight to straighten out his
life.
Lawrence says that he'd wanted to do a Christian record for
several years, but "I haven't been in the right place
spiritually. I didn't feel I could do the album justice."
Now remarried with two children, Lawrence has returned to
the family values of his childhood. "Having kids brought me
back around to that place," he says. "And my career is thriving
again. It seemed like it was the right time."
Instead of recording a collection of classic hymns,
Lawrence chose originals. "I wrote a few things for the album
but only put one on there called 'Dear Lord,"' he says. "I did
a three-month search for new material and was overwhelmed and
inspired by the caliber of songs I found."
The lead single, "Up to Him," speaks to the struggles of
America's working class. "When I recorded this music last year,
I had no idea the country was going to be in the shape that
it's in financially," Lawrence says. "In retrospect, it seems
like I've never done a more appropriate album for the times."
Lawrence has been doing in-stores at Wal-Marts and
Christian retailers as well as press, including an interview
with the Gospel Music Channel. "Oh yeah, the questions were
asked," Turner says, noting that Christian gatekeepers
questioned his rowdy past and current motivation.
"My wife and I joined a Methodist church five or six years
ago," Lawrence says, "and it's been extremely healthy for me
getting close to people within the organization and close to
the pastor. It's brought a great peace to my life. It's just
been a very healthy few years for me, a lot more so than the
first 15 of my career."
(Editing by Dean Gooodman at Reuters)
(please visit our entertainment blog via www.reuters.com or on
http://blogs.reuters.com/fanfare/)
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