Nashville Songwriter by Jake Brown
The Inside Stories Behind Country Music's Greatest Hits

Jake Brown automatically makes a contribution to music literature. He interviews 20 country hit-crafters—writers behind indelible tracks from the last five decades—and he also connects with a number of important trends in the worlds of music and music criticism.
Literature on country music appears more rarely than it should. The taste-making music press ignored country for years … with the exceptions of safe artists like Willie Nelson or the occasional Nashville-inspired album by a non-country singer. This has finally started to change, and the genre at last begins to get the attention it deserves.
Commercial interests, of course, drive some of this recalculation: Tons of people listen to country. In the never-ending battle for clicks, the country audience holds a lot of purse power. But along with the bottom line, country’s increasing acceptability also reflects a long-overdue reappraisal of a critic-ally neglected genre.
Nashville Songwriter also fits in with another strand of revisionism that has been picking up steam in the last decade: works that shed light on the musicians and producers who play such an important behind-the-scenes role in so many genres of music. Think of Standing in the Shadows of Motown and Muscle Shoals —both documentaries about studio session musicians. More and more, listeners appreciate performing as one valuable skill and putting together a song that’s worth performing as equally noteworthy.
Nashville Songwriter benefits … and plays a part in the process as a focused book about making songs.
It’s hard to describe the artistic process. For this reason, many books about music give it short shrift. Not this one. Nashville Songwriter offers revealing and often entertaining tales behind a large number of specific tracks.
Casual country fans may get tired here. Twenty songwriters’ worth of stories feels like a lot of material, especially in the prolific world of Nashville. Some chapters read almost as listicles, though not especially technical ones (good news for those of us with minimal musical knowledge). In fact, at times the book could stand to be more technical. We may not have understood Keith Richards’s discussion of guitar tunings in his memoir, but those attempts at demystification were much appreciated.
Still, interesting tidbits surface throughout the book. We learn that a hit sometimes stems from a random spark of inspiration. The songwriter Craig Wiseman tells how a friend’s health scare led randomly to the title phrase in Tim McGraw’s smash “Live Like You Were Dying.”