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James Otto


Shake What God Gave Ya
HUMP90


James Otto Shake What God Gave Ya

  • CD1: 1. Are Ya With Me
  • CD1: 2. Groovy Little Summer Song
  • CD1: 3. Lover Man
  • CD1: 4. Soldiers & Jesus
  • CD1: 5. Love Don’t Cost A Thing
  • CD1: 6. Sun Comes Round Again
  • CD1: 7. Shake What God Gave Ya
  • CD1: 8. It’s A Good Time (For A Good Time)
  • CD1: 9. Just Like Sunshine
  • CD1: 10. Let’s Just Let Go
  • CD1: 11. She Comes To Me
  • CD1: 12. Good Things Gone Bad

Shake What God Gave Ya

James Otto may be 100 percent country, but he’s also got a heart full of soul. On his third album, Shake What God Gave Ya, Nashville’s breakout star puts his God-given lung power to work on a set of songs that make even more determined use of the old-school R&B grit in his powerhouse voice. “I look at my sound as somewhere between Nashville and Memphis,” says Otto, setting the new record’s compass point firmly on the map.

Although Shake What God Gave Ya marks the first time he’s explored the country-soul sound so devotedly on record, it won’t come as any shock to anyone who heard his earlier smash, “Just Got Started Loving You.” Which is a category that should cover just about every country fan, since that tune was declared the No. 1 country single of 2008 by Billboard. When it came time to craft a full-length follow-up, Otto took that ringing vote of confidence as license to lean more heavily on those influences this time around. In other words, he just got started being soulful.

“With ‘Just Got Started Loving You,’ the beat and groove of that song could easily have been ‘I got sunshine on a cloudy day…’—that kind of thing,” he says, jubilantly launching into a verse of the Temptations’ classic oldie “My Girl.” “And the fact that that went over at radio was an eye-opener for me, because it really opened the door for me to be able to do a lot more of that on this album. I never would have expected that it would have gone over the way it did. But I’m really thankful that it did. And hopefully the same people that loved that song will get a lot out of this record.”

Otto doesn’t just have to have faith that the new material will go over with audiences. A good deal of it has been road-tested, particularly on the 2010 triple-header tour he’s undertaken with Toby Keith and Trace Adkins. “I approached writing a lot of these songs with what I really wanted for my live show,” he says. That arena-ready thinking bred barnburners like the opening track, “Are Ya With Me,” which emphasizes his Southern rock side, and the divine mandate of the title song, “Shake What God Gave Ya,” which Otto says “has turned out to be the best live song we have—better than any of the hits—because it gets people off their asses and out of their seats.”

That’s not to say that it’s strictly a party album. “Soldiers & Jesus” could be seen as arriving in the lineage of “In Color,” the touching tale of a veteran that Otto co-wrote with and for his friend Jamey Johnson, which earned them Song of the Year trophies at both the CMA and ACM Awards, as well as a Grammy nomination for Best Country Song.

“Soldiers & Jesus” is no rote patriotic anthem. As the grandson of a Korean War veteran, the son of a drill sergeant who was in the military for 23 years, and as a Navy vet himself, Otto feels an intensely personal connection with the song’s message… which, he stresses, is not a political one. “Being a guy who considers himself a Christian, I think this song addresses a subject that needs to be addressed. One of the lines is, ‘There’s a left side, a right side, and then there’s the truth.’ Regardless of the politics that can often divide our nation … This song basically just wants to lay it out as Christians see it—that there’s only two people that ever gave their lives for you, and it’s soldiers and Jesus.”

And then, landing somewhere between a sober ballad like that and the crowd-baiting rockers, are the album’s exercises in slinky, sexy soul. Take the leadoff single, “Groovy Little Summer Song,” escapist fare “in the tradition of Carolina shag songs”—by which he means the ‘60s “shag” genre of east coast beach tunes, though you could be forgiven for favoring the other interpretation.

If you liked “Just Got Started Loving You,” you should really love its sequel, “Sun Comes ‘Round Again.” When I introduce this song, I say, ‘This song here is for all of y’all out there who thought ‘Just Got Started Loving You’ was foreplay and wanted the loving to go on all night long.’”

And Otto arguably saves the best for last by ending the disc with a duet with a legend who was an obvious influence on the entire project, Ronnie Milsap. “He came in and just sang his butt off and told musical stories all day long,” Otto beams. “It definitely was one of the greatest moments I’ve spent in the business, because I got to sit with one of my heroes and hear him sing one of my songs. It was a raise-the-hair-on-your-arms moment.”

There’s a long and storied tradition of this soulful influence in country music—just not so much lately. Otto’s self-appointed task was to contemporize a hybrid style associated with heritage stars like Milsap and Conway Twitty and add some Southern-rock edge to the easygoing soul. In this, he had the strong support of Warner Music Nashville president and CEO John Esposito. And as a collaborator he had revered producer Paul Worley, who was responsible for the Dixie Chicks’ 10-times-platinum albums, the biggest hits by Martina McBride and Big & Rich, and most recently helmed the biggest-selling album of 2010, by Lady Antebellum.

“We went straight after it this time, man,” says Otto. “My goal on this album was to make a country-soul album. My band and I were playing more of that kind of thing live, and it was really working for us. ‘Just Got Started Loving You’ was a perfect example of a great country-soul song, and I told everybody involved with this record, ‘Look, I want to have a whole album full of that, where it all sounds like it belongs on the same record.’ Like Ray Charles did Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music, going in to do a country record, we were going to come at that from the other side.”