“Kenny came to the studio very casual in a track suit and when Dolly came in she was all done up and glamorous. “It was the first song Kenny and Dolly Parton had done together since ‘Islands in the Stream.’ We recorded at Ocean Way studios in Nashville,” Brown says. “We don’t want to look like we’re opportunistic, but if they’re good songs, then the fans should hear them.”īrown confirms he and Rogers also cut “Tell Me That You Love Me,” a duet with Dolly Parton that was unreleased until it also appeared on the Time-Life set. “I don’t know if we’re going to put them out,” he says. As far as releasing all the songs, Dungan says it is too soon to make any decision. He believes that Rogers and Brown cut around five tracks, which the label is gathering together to review. Garth Brooks on Kenny Rogers: 'I Can't Think of Anybody Who Taught Me That Much': Exclusive “I don’t want radio to feel like we’re jamming on them.” “I don’t want it to look like we’re trying to take advantage of Kenny’s passing,” he said. While Capitol Nashville’s radio promotion team is working the song to radio, the idea is for fans to enjoy the music more than anything else. “I don’t know what was going on in his head when he cut it.” Discussions about releasing the song followed, and after finding in it the vault - which took about three days - the label sent it to radio. “He really says goodbye in that song,” Dungan says.
Levitan brought up “Goodbye,” which deals with losing a loved one. I wanted to make sure he sounded the best he could.”įollowing Rogers’ death, Dungan reached out to Rogers’ current manager, Ken Levitan, expressing condolences to him and to Rogers’ family. Kenny’s voice is stellar and he is just so iconic.
The game was released on June 22, 2017, the thirteenth game of the series. Mystery Trackers: Memories of Shadowfield. “I put a lot of work into making sure we got the best vocals. Mystery Trackers: Queen of Hearts is the twelfth installment in the series. Jim brought it to us and we thought ‘why not? Lionel writes perfect melodies for Kenny’s voice.'”īrown remembers the recording sessions fondly. With FullStory, we are able to walk stakeholders through the actual pain points shoppers are facing. By combining the quantitative and qualitative in real time, FullStory’s platform eliminates the blind spots in your data. “He thought it would be a good song for Kenny and gave it to Jim Mazza. Make smarter digital decisions based on user experience data. “Lionel originally wrote the song for someone in his family but wasn’t recording at the time,” Brown recalls.