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Garth Brooks, Trisha Yearwood talk working with the Carters for Habitat for Humanity and new music

FILE - Garth Brooks, left, and Trisha Yearwood appear at the 58th annual Academy of Country Music Awards in Frisco, Texas on May 11, 2023. The couple hosted Habitat for Humanity's annual Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Work Week Project, which began on Sunday. (AP Photo/Jeffrey McWhorter, File) (Jeffrey Mcwhorter, Associated Press)

LOS ANGELES ā€“ Two days into Habitat for Humanity's annual Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Work Week Project, hosted by Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood, and the country legends were feeling the burn.

ā€œWell, we're sore," Yearwood said, laughing. "Weā€™re all here for the same reason, which is to help everybody have a roof over their head. So, itā€™s a great cause. Itā€™s a great experience.ā€

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This year, the project is held at a large-scale affordable housing neighborhood in Charlotte, North Carolina. Construction began on Sunday, coincidentally marking Jimmy Carter's 99th birthday. It was celebrated with a ā€œHappy Birthdayā€ sing-along for the former president currently in hospice care at home.

ā€œYou learn several thingsā€ when working alongside the Carters," Yearwood said. "You learn that you better be working all the time ā€” if you look like you're standing there idle, President Carter will ask you if you need a job, if you need something to do."

ā€œThis work site without them, we're calling that 'being Carter-ed.' If you get caught without a job, youā€™ve been Carter'ed."

Brooks and Yearwood first became involved with Habitat for Humanity following Hurricane Katrina and were named Habitat Humanitarians in 2016. Yearwood says theyā€™ve built alongside the former president and first lady on every annual work project theyā€™ve participated in, with the exception of this one.

Yearwood also told The Associated Press she's working on new music, writing when the songs come to her, but there's no rush. ā€œWe got married almost 18 years ago to be together, to not be apart," she says. "So, whoeverā€™s touring the other one is there, whether theyā€™re on stage or not. So, we work together all the time.ā€

Brooks has spent a large part of the year performing at a Las Vegas residency, which will extend into 2024.

ā€œIt's a moment of magic for us. Always has been," he says of the shows. "Weā€™ve been pretty lucky in the fact that everything we do comes back to people loving people. Inclusion, inclusion, inclusion. This is the perfect example of it. If you come to Vegas, youā€™ll see a room full of it, and Iā€™m very lucky to get to play for those people.ā€

Habitat might prove to a musical inspiration as well. ā€œThereā€™s a pretty sweet rhythm so you can pick up some good old, good old hammer tracks here,ā€ he jokes.

"And itā€™s funny how youā€™ll find yourself just start to sing a song or hum a song to the rhythm of the atmosphere. So, itā€™s in our lives. You canā€™t escape it. And itā€™s fun to get to share it with these people.ā€


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