|
1. Flat
on the
Floor
|
|
2.
All-American
Girl
|
|
3. So
Small
|
|
4. Just
a Dream
|
|
5. Get
Out of
This
Town
|
|
6. Crazy
Dreams
|
|
7. I
Know You
Won't
|
|
8. Last
Name
|
|
9. You
Won't
Find
This
|
|
10. I
Told You
So |
|
11. More
Boys I
Meet
|
|
12.
Twisted
|
|
13.
Wheel of
the
World
|
"God put us here on this carnival ride
We close
our eyes
never
knowing
Where it
will take us
next"
--Wheel of
the World
There is
the
whirlwind,
and then
there is the
young woman
at its
center. The
key to
Carrie
Underwood
may lie in
knowing
that, three
years down
the road,
the two
remain
separate.
For all the
awards, the
record
sales, the
chart-topping
hits, the
non-stop
schedule and
the
incessant
media
attention,
Carrie
remains
firmly in
touch with
the shy
Oklahoma
college
student she
was before
becoming a
star.
Through all
of it, she
retains a
genuine
likeability
that,
coupled with
her enormous
talent, goes
a long way
toward
explaining
the
phenomenal
nature of
her success.
And it
is indeed
phenomenal,
even when
measured by
the
achievements
of others
who have
found
success as
she did, via
American
Idol.
The show's
co-creator
and acerbic
judge Simon
Cowell had
predicted
during the
competition
that she
would win
and that she
would
outsell all
of
Idol's
previous
winners. He
was right on
both counts.
Carrie's
debut album,
Some
Hearts,
is the
biggest-selling
American
Idol
album to
date,
selling more
than 6
million
records in
the U.S.
alone. Her
debut CD,
Some
Hearts,
released in
2005, has
been the
best-selling
female
country
album of
2005, 2006
and 2007.
Carrie hit 1
with every
single she
has released
to date, and
has won two
Grammys as
well as a
host of
trophies
from the
AMA, ACM,
CMA,
People's
Choice and
Billboard,
among many
others.
Her own
favorite
metaphor for
the journey,
taken from
the Hillary
Lindsey/Chris
Lindsey/Aimee
Mayo song
"Wheel Of
The World,"
which closes
her eagerly
awaited
second
album, has
become the
project's
title.
"This
part of my
life has
been
absolutely
crazy," she
says, "and
to think it
all started
from one
little
decision I
made to get
on that
ride. That's
why
Carnival
Ride
works as my
album title,
because it
describes
the
wonderful
craziness
I've been
through over
the past
couple of
years."
Some
Hearts
was a
snapshot
that
captured a
moment,
dealing with
coming of
age and with
establishing
a foothold
in a wider
world. Its
success
speaks
volumes
about the
attractiveness
of its
message and
of the woman
who
delivered
it.
Carnival
Ride,
on the other
hand, is a
big-screen
movie,
wide-ranging
in theme,
cinematic in
scope. It
reflects
Carrie's
increasing
strength as
a vocalist,
her
continuing
emergence as
a
songwriter,
and her
growing
maturity as
an artist
and a
person.
"Last
time," she
says, "I
didn't set
out to talk
about a
specific
thing. I
just picked
songs that
reminded me
of home and
made me
think, 'Wow!
I can relate
to that,'
and by the
end, there
was a
theme."
Taking a
broader view
this time,
she drew on
her
instincts as
a fan in
selecting
songs that
range from
the
enchantingly
light-hearted
to the
deeply
inspiring.
"It's a
collection
of songs I
would want
to hear on
the radio,"
she says,
"and songs I
want to
sing. I
really hope
my fans will
get a little
bit more of
me out of
these
songs."
The
presence of
four songs
co-written
by Carrie
will help
them do just
that.
"All-American
Girl" turns
the story of
a baby girl
born to a
man praying
for a boy
into a
celebration
of
femininity.
If there is
a bit of
autobiography
in the
song--Carrie
is the
youngest of
three
daughters--there
is even more
in "Crazy
Dreams," an
ode to "long
shots" and a
celebration
of the fact
that "even
crazy dreams
come true,"
something
she knows
better than
almost
anyone.
"Last Name"
is a bit of
pure fun
celebrating
reckless
abandon, and
is one of
two songs
Carrie wrote
with Hillary
Lindsey. The
other is the
album's
first
single, "So
Small," a
song that
announces
the new
project as a
major step
forward.
With "So
Small"
Carrie
focuses on
what's
important in
life and not
worrying
about the
small
things. It
also focuses
on the
strength of
her voice
and
personality,
instilling
it with
freshness
and
relevance.
Lindsey,
who co-wrote
"Jesus, Take
The Wheel,"
and Carrie
have become
fast friends
since
meeting when
a group of
songwriters
gathered at
a songwriter
retreat in
Nashville
after her
Idol
win to
help Carrie
write and
select songs
for Some
Hearts.
In addition
to "Wheel Of
The World"
and the pair
of songs she
wrote with
Carrie,
Lindsey
co-wrote
"Get Out Of
This Town,"
a bit of
upbeat
restlessness,
"Twisted,"
about a
relationship
on the edge,
and "Just A
Dream," a
powerful
song dealing
with the
effects of
war on a
young
bride-to-be.
Carrie's
emergence as
a songwriter
on
Carnival
Ride
is another
of the
album's
revelations.
She brought
together
another
group of top
Nashville
tunesmiths,
including
Brett James,
Luke Laird,
Kelley
Lovelace,
Aimee Mayo,
Steve McEwan
and others
for a second
writers'
retreat.
This one
held at the
Ryman
Auditorium,
the most
famous
former home
of the Grand
Ole Opry,
throwing
herself into
the creative
process and
expanding
greatly her
confidence
as a
songwriter
and her
depth as a
creative
force in
modern
country
music.
The
process of
writing with
and looking
through the
catalogs of
the cream of
Nashville
songwriting
helped make
Carnival
Ride
the strong
artistic
statement it
is.
"We had
so many
great songs
to choose
from it was
really hard
to narrow it
down," she
says. "We
set the bar
really high.
Songs that
would be
hits
hands-down
might not
have made it
onto the
album
because one
was a teeny
notch
better."
The
strength of
those songs
helped
propel the
subsequent
recording
sessions.
"We
really took
the first
part of the
year to make
sure we had
the best
material we
could
possibly
find," she
says, "and
then we went
in every day
to the
studio,
which is
something I
really love
to do. It is
a very
controlled
environment.
Mark
[Bright, her
producer] is
so easy to
work with.
He'll
encourage me
to play
around with
vocal
approaches
because, at
the end of
the day,
it's my
voice, and
the song is
something
I'll be
doing on
stage every
night. He
trusts the
instincts I
have and I
trust him.
That makes
us a good
team."
Holding
the entire
package
together is
the passion
and
believability
fans came to
know and
love on
American
Idol
and which
haven't
dimmed a
bit. The
combination
grew out of
a lifelong
love of
country
music
nurtured in
her hometown
of Checotah,
Oklahoma.
"I had a
very happy
childhood
full of the
wonderful
simple
things that
children
love to do,"
she says.
"Growing up
in the
country, I
enjoyed
things like
playing on
dirt roads,
climbing
trees,
catching
little
woodland
creatures
and, of
course,
singing."
She sang in
church, then
in grade
school
musicals and
area talent
shows,
winning a
savings bond
here, a
trophy
there.
"After
high
school," she
says, "I
pretty much
gave up on
the dream of
singing. I
had reached
a point in
my life
where I had
to be
practical
and prepare
for my
future in
the 'real
world.'"
She
attended
Northeastern
State
University
in
Tahlequah,
OK, where
her sorority
sisters at
Sigma Sigma
Sigma
sorority
worked to
bring her
out of her
shell.
"They
always tried
to make me
sing at
everything,"
she says,
"but I was
too
embarrassed.
During the
summers I
mustered up
enough
courage to
sing at the
Downtown
Country
show--a
Branson-style
show that
included
singing,
dancing and
comedy. It
was mainly
there that I
learned what
it was like
to be in
front of a
crowd."
She
majored in
broadcast
journalism,
her sights
set on a
career in
television
news. Then,
in her
senior year,
she saw news
reports of
tryouts for
American
Idol's
2005 season.
"People
always told
me that I
should try
out for the
show, but I
never
thought I
would be
able to
handle it."
When her
mother
offered to
drive her to
St. Louis
for tryouts,
though, she
decided to
go. That, of
course, set
in motion
the
whirlwind.
"I
remember
certain
things--Saturday
Night Live
was really
cool," she
says. "It
was great to
be added to
the list of
such great
iconic
artists who
have
performed on
the show
before. And
of course,
being on
stage at the
Grammys--that
was an
amazing
moment.
Who'd have
thought? But
each one
runs
together.
I'd love to
revel in the
moment a
little more
sometimes."
Still,
it is a mark
of Carrie's
level-headedness
and
determination
that amid
the demands
of a star,
she made it
a goal to
complete her
college
degree. Even
among the
madness of
winning
American
Idol in
May 2005,
recording
and
launching
her debut
album in
November
2005, she
finished her
credit hours
and earned
her B.A.,
graduating
magna cum
laude in May
2006. And
while she
has grown a
little more
accustomed
to the elite
circles in
which she
sometimes
travels, now
and then she
can tap into
the fan she
has always
been, as
when she met
Randy Travis
not long
ago.
"I've
loved him
ever since I
was little,"
she says.
"So, it was
kind of
like, 'Wow!
This is the
person I
hoped would
take home
the awards
when I
watched as a
little
girl.' It
was kind of
a crazy day
and I guess
my emotions
were running
a little
high when I
got to meet
him. I met
him and he
was so nice,
and I
started
crying. I
never know
what to do
with people
when they
cry when
meeting me,
so I was
thinking,
'Gosh! I'm
one of those
people now!
I'm being
completely
silly,' but
it was just
the way it
happened."
Her version
of Travis's
hit "I Told
You So"
appears on
Carnival
Ride.
She
appears on
Brad
Paisley's
album
5th Gear,
joining him
on "Oh Love"
as her reach
continues to
expand. She
recorded an
original
song called
"Ever Ever
After" for
the Disney
movie
Enchanted
and filmed a
music video
for the
project. Her
versatility
is such that
she has
covered the
work of
artists
including
the Eagles
and Bob
Wills on the
Grammys,
Fleetwood
Mac on
Fashion
Rocks,
and she made
the
Pretenders'
classic
"I'll Stand
By You" her
own in a
version that
raised money
for the
"Idol Gives
Back"
charity
effort. As
part of her
involvement,
Carrie
traveled to
South Africa
to visit and
perform for
schools,
orphanages,
hospices and
health care
centers in
and around
Johannesburg.
In
2006, Carrie
performed
over 150
shows on
tour with
Kenny
Chesney and
Brad Paisley
as well as
headlining
her own
dates. She
ended the
year
headlining a
USO Tour
during the
Christmas
holiday
season and
performing
for U.S.
troops in
Kuwait and
Iraq.
Carrie,
known for
her love of
animals, is
also a major
supporter of
the Humane
Society of
the United
States.
Such
charitable
efforts are
yet another
indication
that, in a
world where
celebrity is
often about
mere
self-indulgence,
Carrie
brings as
much grace,
style and
substance to
her life as
she does to
her stage
performances.
She has
quickly
become one
of country
music's most
effective
and
best-loved
ambassadors,
using her
success as a
springboard
for good.
Now, with
the release
of
Carnival
Ride,
we are
reminded
once again
of the rich
talent that
underlies
that
humanitarian
spirit, and
of the
bottom line
when it
comes to the
popularity
of this
remarkable
young woman