MusicDish e-Journal - September 2, 2010
MusicDish Advertising Network
» HOME » INSIDER SCOOP » CAREER TIPS » MUSIC SPOTLIGHT » MUSICDISH*CHINA
» INDUSTRY INTERVIEWS » NEWS BEAT » DIGITAL SKOOL » OPEN REVIEW » MUSICDISH EDELWEISS
Search MusicDish e-Journal (Advanced)
Subscribe To MusicDish e-Journal
About | Contact | Advertise | RSS | Submit Article | Submit News | Artist Development | Premium PR Distribution
Mi2N | MusicDish*China | MusicDish Network | MusicDishTV | Urban Music News Network

Interview With RL Castleman
Grammy Winning Songwriter of Allison Krauss' 'The Lucky One'
By Doak Turner
(more articles from this author)
2005-01-22
Comment | Email | Print | RSS

RL Castleman is a Grammy winning songwriter living in Nashville, TN. He has had seven cuts with Allison Krauss, including “The Lucky One,” off of her CD, The New Favorite, which won a Grammy for “Best Country Song.” Caslteman also has four songs on Krauss’ new CD, a title track on Chet Atkins’s Sneakin’ Around album, and a cut on an Alan Jackson CD, When Somebody Loves You.

[Doak Turner] Tell me about writing your great song, “The Lucky One,” that was recorded by Alison Krauss and won a Grammy.

RL Castleman I was at a guitar workshop in 1984, David Smallridge’s guitar Camp in Connecticut, They study all styles of guitar playing. The camp number is 1-800-234-NGSW. I wrote that song at that particular workshop. A friend of mine, Buck Brown, did a guitar/vocal demo of the song. We even did a live version of the song at a club where Allison recorded. When I was touring with Alison Krauss years later, around the year 2000, Buck had moved to Washington, DC. I called him and told him we were going to be playing Wolf Trap in Vienna, Virginia. He stopped by and handed me a cassette that had what he considered great old RL songs on it. I was listening to the cassette on the tour bus. When it came to the song “The Lucky One,” Alison asked, “What is that”? The rest is history. She changed it to 2nd person. I had originally sang it in first person.

[Doak Turner] Did Allison take writing credit on the song since she changed it?

RL Castleman No, she doesn’t do that.

[Doak Turner] You wrote the song “Forget About It,” which Allison recorded a couple years earlier. Tell me about that song.

RL Castleman It was the title track to a previous album with Allison. I wrote “Forget About It” around 1985, maybe even earlier.

[Doak Turner] How did she hear that great song?

RL Castleman Allison’s husband had a surprise birthday party for her around 1999. That was the first time I had ever met Allison. Of course at the party, I stuck a guitar in my hand and that was one of the songs that I sang that night. Allison said she had to record that song! She also recorded “Let me Touch You for a While.”

[Doak Turner] What is the story behind “Let Me Touch You for a While”?

RL Castleman That song was also written in the ‘80s. Someone even had a live recording of that when I recorded it at the famed The Bitter End in New York City back in the ‘80s. That song was also on that cassette I mentioned previously.

[Doak Turner] Your connection with Allison was with her husband – right?

RL Castleman I met Pat Berguson, [Allison’s future husband], in Connecticut at the Guitar Workshop and we got to be friends. He said that we should put together a band and play The Bitter End. We did that as The Checkered Past Band. Chet Adkins had come to the Guitar Workshop with his friend John Knowles, who used to transcribe for Chet. John works for the Country Music Hall of Fame. I had a previous connection with Chet through an album that he had produced for Homer and Jethro called Songs My Mama Never Sang. Listening to Chet records was the inspiration for me to fingerpick a guitar. I brought that album up to Chet and Jethro, who was Chet’s brother-in-law. We hit it off. I gave him a copy of a demo tape that I had made and Chet passed it on to his manager. His manager and I got hooked up and moved to Nashville in 1989. After I was here for a while, Chet recorded an instrumental song of mine called “Sneakin’ Around,” that was the title track of the album, the first cut I ever had. Chet and Jerry Reed did the song on the album. I had played a song for Pat Berguson. I took Pat Ferguson to meet Chet. Pat ended up moving to town. He knew Allison’s brother, who hooked him up with Lyle Lovett. Pat ended up marrying Allison, which ended up my getting my songs cut to begin with, which led to other success in the business.

[Doak Turner] You had those songs that were 20 years old and Allison cut them. Now she has a new CD and what has happened for you on her new CD?

RL Castleman She recorded “Restless” that I wrote for her new CD called Lonely Runs Both Ways. Another song that I wrote called “Gravity” is on the CD. I wrote that song in ’90 or ’91, and a cut off my record called “Crazy as Me,” which was my title track. Then a funny thing happened on another song. She called me from LA and says, “RL I got this idea for a song that I want you to write.” I said I do not normally do things like this, but I’ll take a whack at it. She said the title is “It Doesn’t Have To Be This Way.” It is about two people that do not have a relationship that are breaking up. Of course I asked what happened and how does that work. I was sitting at the house one morning, about six a.m., picked up a guitar and came up with this thing. I wrote it in about maybe twenty minutes. Made a guitar vocal and called her. She said she loved the song. She recorded that song on the album for a total of four cuts on the latest Allison Krauss CD! I went from one cut on an Allison CD, to two cuts on the next to now four songs on the current album, Lonely Runs Both Ways. I guess that the next challenge for me with Allison is to for her to do a complete record of Robert Lee Castleman songs (Laughter)! Her next CD will be great!

[Doak Turner] You have written these songs, you played them. How did you end up pitching these songs to her?

RL Castleman “Restless” was on a CD that I gave her and told her to listen to a bunch of songs to see if there is anything that she liked. She called me up and said she had to have “Restless” and “Gravity.”

[Doak Turner] Did she help you get your record deal with Rounder a couple years ago?

RL Castleman Yea – that goes back to the night at her birthday party mentioned previously. I played for the crowd for about 45 minutes to an hour with her husband Pat. She called Ken Irwin the next day at Rounder Records and told him that he has to make a CD with me. That happened real quickly.

[Doak Turner] So you had a record and she took you on a tour.

RL Castleman We had about thirty dates that I opened for her. It was her and I and a driver and a nanny to watch her little boy. Another bus had the road crew and the band. It was a barrel of laughs.

[Doak Turner] Can you tell me about writing a song or two, starting with “The Lucky One”?

RL Castleman It is just about a guy that has a positive outlook on life. He sees the glass half full than half empty. “I’m the lucky one so I have been told - free as the wind blowing down the road - Loved by many, hated by none - you would say I am lucky if you know what I’d done.” He has a checkered past and has been lucky. One of the inspirations was from a movie. I like to watch movies and read books and get inspired to write. It did win a Grammy, so I am the lucky one.

[Doak Turner] What were you doing when you found out about the Grammy?

RL Castleman I was a OTR – over the road – Long Hall Trucker. I started driving in 1985 to put food on the table. It has taken me 50 some years to receive any accolades in the business.

[Doak Turner] When did you first hear the song on the radio?

RL Castleman I was sitting in my truck in Severville, TN, with a load of scrap metal that I was getting ready to unload. The cell phone rang and it was Allison. She was so excited, telling me that my song was nominated for a Grammy. Here I am in dirty, filthy clothes, been up all night driving from the coast in Alabama to get to Sevierville. I had been up about 20 hours when she told me I got nominated for a Grammy for “Best Country Song of the Year.” I near soiled myself (Laughter).

[Doak Turner] Did you ever have any other artists call you when you were on the road?

RL Castleman Alan Jackson called me one day to tell me he wanted to record a couple of songs on mine. He recorded “Stay Here” and also “Kind of like a Rainbow” off my record. He only put “Stay Here” on his CD, When Somebody Loves You.

[Doak Turner] What was your famous quote about your Grammy trophy?

RL Castleman Peter Cooper from the Tennessean asked me what I was going to do with the Grammy Award. I told him that will look good on the hood of my truck. You are not supposed to have a job after winning a Grammy, you know. If you have 18 Grammy’s like Allison, you really have to work hard at not working (laughter).

[Doak Turner] Let’s talk about the new single, “Restless.”

RL Castleman I was in jail in Martinsburg, WV. I had been arrested for public intoxication or drunk driving. Spent the wonderful evening in jail. My first wife-to-be decided that she did not want to be my first wife after all. I became emotional, drowned my sorrows. The lyric, “Honey I know that you’ve been alone some - why don’t you phone some, ‘cause I love you” came from that night in jail. It was the first time that I had come up with a lyric without a guitar. I wrote the lyric for a simple music piece, and added music later. I did a demo in Hagerstown, MD, and that is what she heard. That was written in around 1981.

[Doak Turner] How did you keep track of all these songs over the years?

RL Castleman There are a lot of songs that people have kept over the years. I have forgotten about many of them and maybe someday someone will bring an old tape to me of way back then. That is the way “The Lucky One” was heard! I do not have a system. If I write a song that is a hit at my house, for however long it takes me to wear it out, I just keep the tape around the house. I give it the whistle test. If I can whistle it, it’is good. I remember hanging with Chet Adkins one night in Nashville. We were at The Cockeyed Camel, a bar out on Highway 100 around Bell Mead. We were walking out halfway during a guy’s show that night and Chet asked what I thought of the guy’s songs. I said that the music was so complicated that I could not remember any of it. Chet said, “Well as long as he keeps doing that I won’t go out of business (laughter).”

[Doak Turner] What would you tell any songwriters?

RL Castleman To always be tenacious, never give up chasing the dream. It is a great job if you can make a living at it. Reflect the times and places that you have been. That is hard to get away with at times. I never write a song about sailing on a battleship, because I do not have any experience with that particular thing. Einstein said to make things as simple as possible, but never simpler. Every line should be as strong as the one before and after. The DJ on the song cannot play the song back to explain the songs. If I write a song and now it is not that great of a song, but there is one line in the song, I will keep that line for another song. Twenty bad songs may have the elements to write one great song. The trick is to write a song that doesn’t say anything, yet says everything. To have someone say, “How did you know that I feel like that”? I hate direct things. If you notice, Allison very seldom cuts songs that talk about a specific times or events or items. She does not say the name of a town or a truck or specific things. It has to be timeless. Her songs could be written today or in the ‘20s. She loves to be obscure, not current. She will not talk about computers, caller IDs – she changed a line in one of my songs that mentioned caller ID.

[Doak Turner] When you are writing songs, do you ever write and say it is an Allison song?

RL Castleman I know her voice so well and I can put her voice to my song and hear her singing it. I know her phrasing, what she likes and does not like, to know how to channel it to her. She may not like that song, but she will listen to my songs, which is great.

[Doak Turner] RL, thanks a lot for your time. I know you probably better get back to your home studio and get to work on Allison’s next CD, which will contain all songs written by YOU!

For more information and to contact the author, and to sign up for the author’s newsletter, click on the author’s name at the top of the page.


Home » Industry Interviews » Interview With RL Castleman
Permalink:http://www.musicdish.com/mag/?id=9970
Email |Print |Comment |RSS

back | top


MusicDish Advertising Network

Industry Interviews

» An Interview With A Raven's Sorrow

» R&B Sensation Kayla Bliss Sets The Record Straight

» An Interview with Recording Artist Susan Hickman

» Robert Hunter Talks About Working With Jim Lauderdale

» 'A Reality Tour' Live CD Q&A With Bowie

Industry Interviews Directory



» [2010-09-01] NY Times Covers AES NY Section's Electric Lady Studios 40th Anniversary Salute; Over Eighty Music Industry Pro's Were In Attendance, And Thousands Of Viewers Witnessed The Two-hour+ Event

» [2010-09-01] How The Music Industry Changed; The Days Of Creating A Song, Getting It Played On The Radio, Sold Within Stores, Touring And Making A Ton Of Cash Has Basically Dried Up

» [2010-08-31] Electric Shadows Shorts Films At Beijing's Peng Hao Theatre On Sep 5th; The Disposable Film Festival Was Created In 2007 To Celebrate The Artistic Potential Of Disposable Video

» [2010-08-28] Boundless Multi-Media Series: City Inside A Broken Sky II By Kung Chi Shing; Artists From Hong Kong, The United States, Australia And Japan Share Their Life Experiences

» [2010-08-28] IDream Studios And The Day Studio Music Rose Again; Home Studios Are No More Than Computers, Digital Programs And Cheap Mics, Crammed Into Small, Acoustically "dead" Rooms

» [2010-08-27] FEYST World Tour Brings Six Malaysian Music-Makers To Shanghai World Expo 2010; The Highlight Of The Tour Includes Performances At The Expo 2010 Shanghai China In Celebration Of Malaysia's 53rd Independence

» [2010-08-26] Tomas Doncker To Play Shanghai World Expo American Pavilion; Global Soul Musician Tomas Doncker Will Perform At The American Pavilion As Part Of His "Small World" Tour

» [2010-08-25] Net Neutrality For Musicians; What's All The Fuss And Which Side Should You Be On?

» [2010-08-25] Halie Loren: Doing Jazz Her Way From Alaska To Japan; Like Many Musical Entrepreneurs, Halie Takes A Hands-on Approach To Every Aspect Of Her Career

» [2010-08-25] Time To Pay The Piper; Instead Of Campaigning And Paying Lobbyists To Advocate Their Position, The NAB Should Sit Down With The Label

» [2010-08-25] Wireless Telecommunication Market In China; The Market Potential, Communication Equipment And Telecommunication Services In China

» [2010-08-23] Industry Viewpoints: Indian Copyright Act 1958 Revisited; Perceptions On The Copyright Amendment About To Take Place In India
MusicDish Advertising Network

follow MusicDish on
Follow MusicDish on Twitter

Mi2N Music PR


Exotic Erotic Ball & Sonicbids Team-Up To Offer 2 Prime Gigs To Indie Bands


Announcing Seth Glier's "Light It Up, Let It Go" Tour Fall 2010


"A Charity Record" Released To Raise Awareness, Donations & Knowledge In The Crusade Against Abuse


DigiMusicBids.com Gives New Power To Indie Musicians


One Week Left To Enter First Ever Data-Driven Songwriting Contest From Hypebot.com


Brazilian And Latin Sounds Romance Brooklyn's Pete's Candy Store On Sept. 14th




Websites: Mi2N | MusicDish*China | MusicDish Network | MusicDishTV | Urban Music News Network
Services: Submit Article | Submit News | Submit Video | Artist Development | Premium PR Distribution

Copyright © 1997-2010 MusicDish LLC., all rights reserved.
About MusicDish e-Journal | Contact Us | Advertise | RSS | Internships