Fame & Fortune interview: Country
singer Aaron Tippin
Retirement set, his charity shows he 'stands
for something' |
| By
Tamar Alexia Fleishman Bankrate.com |
|
Country-music
star Aaron Tippin's songs really mesh with American audiences: "You've
Got to Stand for Something" became a top 10 hit in 1991 during
the first Gulf War. This was a great achievement, considering he
had only just signed with RCA in 1990. "Where the Stars and
Stripes and the Eagle Fly" hit the right note with the public
after Sept. 11, reaching No. 2 on the charts. As patriotic as Tippin
is, many of his popular songs are edgier and have a honky-tonk quality:
"There Ain't Nothin' Wrong With The Radio," "Working
Man's Ph.D." and "Kiss This."
A South Carolina native, Tippin's family is full of
aviators on both sides of his family, both the men and the women.
He is married with three children and prefers to spend his free
time with them.
Bankrate:
Tell me about your wine-making hobby.
Aaron Tippin: I've
just crushed grapes to make a really good bottle of white wine.
My wife got me into it. I only drink red wine or Sprite. It's all
I have use for. I'm very hands-on; I thought, if someone else can
do it, I can do it. There's a grower here who grows muscadine grapes.
I have visited California, learned how they make wine; but I stay
here in Tennessee. If you're in the music business, you ought to
get close to Nashville.
Bankrate:
Do you market your wine commercially? It seems many entertainers have delved
into the food industry. Aaron Tippin:
No. It's just for fun. Maybe someday. I've learned that you can't run something
with the side of your hand. Bankrate:
You were a commercial pilot at age 20. Who did you fly for?
Aaron Tippin: Multimedia,
I was a corporate pilot flying around Greenville, S.C.
Bankrate: For many
guys, being a pilot is the ultimate career. What made you switch to music?
Aaron Tippin: It wasn't
voluntary. You're right, it is the ultimate career. My dad, every
man in the Tippin family, were pilots. My uncle worked for KLM.
I even had an aunt in the business. Being a country singer was the
last thing on my mind. But when the energy crunch hit, I started
looking for something else to do. The second-best thing I liked
doing is singing. I quit my job, moved to Nashville. I took a job
as a welder there. I won a contest, "You Can Be a Star"
and Jeannie C. Wright heard me and told me I should go into the
business. I was an "overnight success," it only took five
years. I was playing honky tonks at night.
Bankrate: Do
you think that knowing you had security and a professional background made you
more confident in dealing with music executives? Aaron
Tippin: No. For a while, I was probably hurting myself! I am logical, an
aviator. I'm not emotional. I probably hurt people's feelings. Creative people
are sensitive. You have to watch how you say things with them. With the contracts,
you really need a music lawyer; things are just too big now. They put things in
there that you're not going to see yourself for several years.
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