Country tune a balm in pain-filled '16

Nashville-based songwriter Lori McKenna has been nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Country Song for her composition “Humble and Kind.”
Nashville-based songwriter Lori McKenna has been nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Country Song for her composition “Humble and Kind.”

Music is usually a reliable escape from reality, but between global tragedies and an acrimonious presidential election and deaths of iconic figures, it was extraordinarily difficult to escape the fever dream that was 2016.

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Tim McGraw didn’t hesitate when he heard Lori McKenna’s demo recording of “Humble and Kind.” His recording of the song has sold more than a million copies.

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Lori McKenna’s critically praised album The Bird & the Rifle includes her version of “Humble and Kind.”

Still, there was one song, quieter than almost anything else, that became a huge hit last year -- and it was one we sorely needed.

Tim McGraw's "Humble and Kind," written by top Nashville songwriter Lori McKenna, stands out from the ballads you usually hear on country radio, which often center on relationships. Yet "Humble and Kind" struck a deep chord when it was released last January, as it hit No. 1 on the charts and went on to sell more than a million copies. Nominated for Best Country Song at the forthcoming Grammy Awards, it also won Song of the Year honors at the Country Music Association Awards and from the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.

The song is exactly what it sounds like: a simple, thoughtful, acoustic-driven tune that gently suggests ways to make the world a little nicer.

"Hold the door, say 'please,' say 'thank you'/Don't steal, don't cheat and don't lie/I know you got mountains to climb, but always stay humble and kind," the chorus advises, before zooming out to the bigger picture. "When those dreams you're dreaming come to you/When the work you put in is realized/Let yourself feel the pride, but always stay humble and kind."

The verses dig deeper: "Don't expect a free ride from no one, don't hold a grudge or a chip and here's why/Bitterness keeps you from flying." Then, "Know the difference between sleeping with someone, and sleeping with someone you love/'I love you' ain't no pick- up line." Other lines urge listeners to visit grandpa, go to church, and open the windows on a hot summer day instead of cranking up the air conditioner.

McKenna admits the idea is fairly basic, and that's exactly what she envisioned. She wrote it in May 2014 at her house in suburban Massachusetts, sitting at the dining room table with her morning coffee after taking her kids to school. With her five children on her mind (ages 12 to 27), she thought about life lessons she wanted to pass on. She scribbled down a list; strummed a melody on her guitar; worked out the rhyming and phrasing; and by the end of the day, she had a song.

"Music in general ... wakes us up from things we didn't know we were feeling, or shuts down things we don't want to feel anymore," McKenna said. "I just hope in every song that I write, there's a line that makes someone stop for a second and think."

In the madness of last year's news cycle, the straightforward, positive lyrics were a welcome respite. They connected with many, including McGraw, the country superstar who has been friends with McKenna for years. (McKenna's career took off around 2005 when Faith Hill, McGraw's wife, recorded several of her songs.) McKenna sent McGraw an audio file of her singing the track. When she ran into him a few weeks later, he assured her, "Oh yeah, we're recording that song."

"Humble and Kind" not only wound up as a cut on McGraw's 14th studio album, Damn Country Music, but the label released it as the second single. The tune was bolstered further when Oprah Winfrey let McGraw use footage from her inspirational Belief series for the song's award-winning music video, which featured scenes of different cultures around the world to capture the "universality" of the message.

"I think, in the times that we live in, it's an important song, by itself, just by what it says," McGraw said in February at a radio conference in Nashville. The country star said that the lyrics hit him hard when he thought about his three daughters, one of whom just left for college.

"I just thought it was a song that needed to be heard."

Indeed, the track took off, and has been used for sentimental purposes (including weddings and high school graduations) as well as healing. After the horrific Orlando nightclub shooting in June, syndicated country radio personality Bobby Bones hosted a #MusicIsTherapy day on his show and invited artists to play covers. rising star Kelsea Ballerini chose "Humble and Kind."

"I think that's the song that encapsulates everything that people love about country music. It's a guitar vocal, it's stripped down, it's the truth. It's the kind of truth that almost makes you uncomfortable," Ballerini said. "I just love that [Lori] was bold enough to write that song and that Tim McGraw was bold enough to cut it."

Plus, the song (which McKenna recorded for her album, The Bird & the Rifle) was also a milestone for country music. "Humble and Kind" is the first solo-written song in four years to go No. 1, an increasingly rare feat when tracks with multiple co-writers rule the charts.

Now, the song continues to make an impact. Over the course of the year, McKenna said, people offered her suggestions of other instances where the song might be played.

Style on 01/01/2017

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