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Mark Chesnutt is an American country music
singer. Although his first hit, 1990's "Too Cold at Home," was extremely
neotraditional, subsequent songs were more mainstream Contemporary Country.
Chesnutt surprised many fans in late 1998 when he recorded a cover of
Aerosmith's recent hit, I Don't Want to Miss a Thing. As reported on
American Country Countdown, Chesnutt first heard the song when his teenage
daughter changed the presets on his truck radio. Chesnutt's version of this
song was a #1 country hit for two weeks in February 1999, and peaked at #17
on the Billboard Hot 100.
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Neo-honky tonker Mark Chesnutt parlayed a solid grounding in classic country
into chart-topping stardom during the '90s. Born in Beaumont, TX, in 1963,
Chesnutt grew up listening to his father's extensive country-record
collection (Bob Chesnutt had been a locally popular singer who never hit it
big, and thus worked as a used-car salesman). Chesnutt learned both guitar
and drums, and made his professional singing debut with his father's band at
age 15 on the local club scene. He even dropped out of high school for a
time to pursue music, but later reconsidered and got his diploma; meanwhile,
his father began taking him to Nashville for recording sessions. During the
'80s, Chesnutt released singles on local labels like the San Antonio-based
Axbar (where he also issued a full album, Doing My Country Thing) and the
Houston-based Cherry. He also served as the house headliner at the Beaumont
club Cutter's, where his band often featured future star Tracy Byrd. After
around a decade of dues-paying, positive word-of-mouth finally helped
Chesnutt land a record deal with MCA. Chesnutt's debut album, Too Cold at
Home, was released in 1990, and the title track became his first hit,
climbing into the country Top Five. With a style that blended George Jones,
Merle Haggard, and Bob Wills, Chesnutt went on to score four more Top Ten
hits from the album: the number one "Brother Jukebox," "Blame It on Texas,"
"Your Love Is a Miracle," and "Broken Promise Land." By the time that string
ran out, Chesnutt had finished his follow-up, 1992's Longnecks & Short
Stories. It gave him four more Top Five singles in "Bubba Shot the Jukebox"
(one of Chesnutt's signature songs), "Old Flames Have New Names," the chart-topping
"I'll Think of Something," and "Ol' Country." Chesnutt kept his hit-machine
status going on 1993's Almost Goodbye, which gave him three more chart-toppers
in the title track, "It Sure Is Monday," and "I Just Wanted You to Know."
1994's What a Way to Live offered the number one "Gonna Get a Life" and the
number two "Goin' Through the Big D." For 1995's Wings, MCA briefly
resurrected its Decca country imprint and made Chesnutt the flagship artist;
while the album wasn't the hit factory of its predecessors, many critics
dubbed it one of Chesnutt's most eclectic and consistent sets. Seeking to
restore his commercial momentum, MCA issued Greatest Hits in 1996, and the
new song "It's a Little Too Late" went all the way to number one. 1997's
Thank God for Believers found Chesnutt back on MCA Nashville, and produced a
number two hit in the title cut. For 1999's I Don't Want to Miss a Thing,
Chesnutt flirted with crossover material, namely the titular Diane Warren
ballad that became a big hit for Aerosmith. Praised by many critics for its
relative subtlety, Chesnutt's version topped the country charts for a month,
and even reached the pop Top 20. Despite that success, the album's other
singles didn't perform as well, and his 2000 follow-up album Lost in the
Feeling was something of a flop in comparison to his past work. Chesnutt and
MCA subsequently parted ways, and he signed with Columbia for 2002's Mark
Chesnutt, which sold decently but didn't quite mark a return to past
glories. |
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MARK CHESNUTT PICTURES |
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