NASHVILLE, Tenn. ā Singer-songwriter Luke Combs is making big leaps this year in his unprecedented rise to the top of country music, both personally and professionally.
The North Carolina-born singer, who holds a Billboard record with 14 consecutive No. 1 country airplay singles with hits like āBeer Never Broke My Heartā and āBeautiful Crazy,ā graduated from arenas to selling out football stadiums this year.
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But as the 32-year-old Combs was preparing to sing in front of a packed-out Nissan Stadium during last monthās CMA Fest, he had something more personal on his mind.
Inside his truck parked at the stadium was a hospital bag, waiting for word that his wife, Nicole, was ready to deliver their first child. As it turned out, Combs became a first-time dad with the birth of their son, Tex Lawrence Combs, on Fatherās Day.
āWhen we walk off stage tonight, itās like the next journey is being a parent, you know?ā Combs said, while backstage at Nissan Stadium earlier in June. āThatās like my sole focus after this.ā
The reigning CMA entertainer of the year has spent the last decade concentrated on getting to where heās at now. But as heās ascends a peak most country artists will never reach, his mind is on the unknowns of being a new parent.
āIāve never operated in any other way in the last 10 years besides trying to be the best I can be at this thing I do now,ā Combs reflected. āSo trying to figure out the balancing act of those two things is mildly stressful, but also really exciting.ā
His aptly titled new record āGrowinā Up,ā out now, shows Combs recognizing what a transitional period itās been for him. āDoinā This,ā the lead song, is an autobiographical reflection on the idea that even if no one had discovered him, heād still be singing in a bar in a no-name town on a Friday night.
āIt was never about the amount of success or how many awards you have,ā he said. āYou just appreciate being able to do it at all.ā
Whatās kept him grounded despite scaling up is his loyalty to the people who believed in him at the beginning, as well as bringing along those he felt deserved a chance in the big leagues. He's the kind of guy who records songs he wrote with his guitar tech, Jaime Davis, and then cut a duet he wrote with fellow superstar Miranda Lambert. His manager, Chris Kappy, had never managed an artist before he convinced Combs to let him represent him.
āA lot of those band members, a lot of those players that are playing the stadium are the same ones that were playing the clubs with him at the beginning,ā said Randy Goodman, chairman and CEO of Sony Music Nashville.
Goodman said when he signed Combs, the young singer already had a strong fan base who were packing out shows.
āWhat he had even in that moment was a seasoned aspect of it, a maturity, a self-awareness about his instrument, his voice and the songs that he was singing and the connectivity,ā Goodman said.
This yearās tour only features three stadiums, the first shows in Denver and Seattle earlier this year and one on July 30 in Atlanta, so itās become a test run for what is likely many more stadium gigs to come. Combs admits that heās been more on the cautious side than some of his team when it comes to booking stadiums.
āIf the failure happens, itās on like such a grander, like more public display than like if you were to fail in a bar,ā Combs said with a laugh.
He also wanted to have time to finish the album and focus on bringing the best songs to whatever venue he was playing.
āWe donāt have any pyro. We donāt have any fire. We donāt have any bells and whistles,ā he said. āIf you canāt live and die by the song in this business, then itās not going to last. And I think thatās so paramount to what we do. Thereās always a moment in the show thatās me and a guitar. Itās been that way since we played in bars, and itās still that way in the stadiums.ā
In a format that has been slower than others to shift from traditional radio to streaming as the primary music discovery tool, Combs has excelled at both. And heās watching streaming numbers very closely as he plots out those setlists.
āIām not too proud to look at analytics,ā he said. āItās not hard to go, āWell, the fans are listening to this song more than theyāre listening to that one.āā
Goodmanās goal in the coming years is to put Combs on the global stage. Heās already made inroads by touring in the United Kingdom and Europe pre-pandemic, and fans there have found him primarily through streaming, Goodman said.
āI see Luke, in the near term, doing in the rest of the world what heās beginning to do right now in the United States, and that is play venues, arenas and stadiums that heretofore most country artists would have never even thought possible,ā said Goodman.
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Follow Kristin M. Hall at twitter.com/kmhall