November, 16 2002 CMT.com
Garth Brooks announced his
impending retirement from country music in
October 2000, he had become, in just nine
meteoric years, the best-selling solo artist
in the history of recorded music. In the
United States alone, his albums had sold
more than 100 million copies. Brooks' live
concerts were equally pace setting. During
his 1996-1998 concert tour, he played 350
shows in 100 cities and sold more than 5.3
million tickets. He sold more than 1.8
million tickets in 1996, prompting the trade
magazine Amusement Business to rank it as
the top country music tour of all time.
Garth Troyal Brooks was
born on Feb. 7, 1962, in Tulsa, Okla., and
raised in Yukon, Okla., just outside of
Oklahoma City. His parents are Troyal
Raymond Brooks and the late Colleen Carroll
Brooks. Colleen Carroll recorded for Capitol
Records in the 1950s and performed with Red
Foley on the Ozark Jubilee.
Brooks attended Oklahoma
State University in Stillwater, from which
he graduated in 1984 with a degree in
advertising. Drawn to country music by his
admiration for George Strait, Brooks became
a popular regional performer during his
college years, both as the leader of a
country band and as a guitar-picking
soloist.
After an abortive one-day
trip to Nashville in 1985, Brooks returned
permanently in 1987. The following year, he
signed a recording contract with Capitol
Records. His first single for Capitol --
"Much Too Young (To Feel This Damn Old)" --
was released in March 1989, and his first
album, Garth Brooks, in April. Although his
second single, "If Tomorrow Never Comes,"
went to No. 1, Brooks spent his first year
in the shadow of fellow Class of '89 member
Clint Black. Brooks' appeal began to grow
with his fourth single, "The Dance," and its
accompanying music video. Both these
vehicles revealed a sensitive, introspective
and philosophical side that seemed instantly
attractive to younger fans. Then, in late
1990, came his raucous single, Friends In
Low Places, and his second album, No Fences.
From then on, Brooks began breaking
boundaries and taking the rest of country
music with him. No Fences became Brooks'
first No. 1 album and went on to sell more
than 16 million copies.
In 1993, Brooks performed
the national anthem during pre-game
festivities at the Super Bowl to an
estimated television audience of more than 1
billion people in over 87 countries. "We
Shall Be Free,"his award-winning music
video, premiered during the telecast.
Combining news footage with cameo
appearances by Elizabeth Taylor, Lily
Tomlin, General Colin Powell, Eddie Murphy,
Whoopi Goldberg, Michael Bolton and Amy
Grant, among other luminaries, the video and
the song it was based on were pleas for
tolerance and brotherhood.
As evidence of his
cultural importance, Brooks began appearing
on the cover of major magazines, among them
Rolling Stone, Forbes, Time, George,
Entertainment Weekly and The Saturday
Evening Post. In 1994, Playboy named him
"the King of Pop Music." He was interviewed
by Barbara Walters for one of her ABC prime
time television specials and by Jane Pauley
for Dateline NBC. A frequent performer on
The Tonight Show With Jay Leno, Brooks has
also guested on Saturday Night Live (and
twice hosted the show), The Oprah Winfrey
Show, Late Night With Conan O'Brien, Live
With Regis & Kathie Lee, The Rosie O'Donnell
Show, Donny & Marie, The Howie Mandel Show,
Today, Good Morning America, The Early Show
and others.
Ropin' the Wind, Brooks'
third album, released in September 1991, was
the first ever to debut at No. 1 on both the
Billboard Top 200 Album Chart and the
Billboard Country Album Chart. The Chase
(1992) and In Pieces (1993) were the second
and third albums to do so. Sevens (1997) and
Double Live (1998) also accomplished this
feat.
Brooks' television credits
include eight specials for NBC: This Is
Garth Brooks (first airing January 1992),
This Is Garth Brooks, Too! (first airing May
1994), Garth Brooks -- The Hits (January
1995), Tryin' to Rope the World (first
airing December 1995), Garth Brooks: Ireland
& Back (first airing March 1998), Garth
Brooks Double Live (November 1998), Garth
Brooks In . . . the Life of Chris Gaines
(September 1999), and Garth Brooks & The
Magic of Christmas (December 1999). On Aug.
7, 1997, Brooks drew the largest crowd ever
to attend a concert in New York's Central
Park. Garth Live From Central Park, airing
on HBO, was the highest rated original
program on HBO in 1997, as well as the
most-watched special on cable television in
1997, drawing 14.6 million television
viewers. The special beat all broadcast
competition in the time period as well as
three of the four major networks combined,
according to Nielsen ratings.
Over the course of his
career, Brooks has received virtually every
accolade the recording industry can bestow
on an artist. In addition to his Grammys,
American Music Awards, Country Music
Association awards, Academy of Country Music
awards and People's Choice trophies, he was
named artist of the '90s at the 1997
Blockbuster Entertainment Awards and artist
of the decade by both the American Music
Awards in 2000 and the Academy of Country
Music in 1999.
In 1999, Brooks took a
daring and ultimately self-injurious
artistic risk by creating for an album in
the alter ego of rock star Chris Gaines.
Brooks commissioned special songs for the
album, used veteran rocker Don Was as his
producer and took on special vocal
mannerisms for his fictional character. He
even gave Gaines a long and colorful
history, complete with a discography of "hit
albums." Critics were almost universally
vicious, both before and after the album
made its debut, and Brooks was left with a
project that failed to come close to the
sale of his other albums. To date, Garth
Brooks In . . . the Life of Chris Gaines has
sold more than 2 million copies, spectacular
by the standard of most artists, but not by
Brooks'.
At the time he announced
his retirement, Brooks said he would record
one more album, after which he planned to
concentrate on parenting and screenwriting.
Garth appeared Sunday
afternoon (January 18th, 2009) in a
free concert with others at the Lincoln
Memorial celebrating Obama's election as the
44th President of the United States.
Garth brought the house down singing "I
Wanna Shout."