INSIGHT Magazine April Issue | Page 10

“Writing is my favorite thing. I absolutely love what a song can do to people,” White says. “I’m just a small town guy from Hokes Bluff, Alabama that’s gonna write about the outdoors and write about my dogs and write about the fish I catch and the trouble that I have and the travels that I’ve been blessed to go on.” White says he’s like “a hamster on a wheel” when it comes to writing new material. “If I see a tree I’ll rhyme tree 50 different ways: tree, bee, sea, believe . . . I used to drive my poor mom crazy and drive my wife crazy now because it’s all about rhyming and about making things make sense, and they’re all puzzles.” Talking about his new music, White says “I’m going to be proud of my family and put their mess ups and screw ups in there too . . . You go to anybody’s Thanksgiving dinner table and you realize that everybody’s got a crazy uncle Bob or crazy aunt Marcy or whatever it is, and those people are in my songs. I think that’s what makes music real.” While White’s music is relatable and easy listening, his lyrics tell a deeper story than what’s on the surface. For example, the line “Nobody’s talking but we’re all on the phone” from “Back to Free” paints the familiar picture of a room full of people with their noses stuck in their phones. White says we need to “disconnect to reconnect”. “I think the coolest thing in the damn world is to cut your phone off and build a fire and sit around it with your dogs or your wife or your kid or significant other and tell stories.” That image of family and friends sitting around a fire is the basic concept for the brand White is creating. “We’re so fast- paced now . . . I think it’s important to slow 10 down,” he says. “Look at all the stuff we’re dealing with psychologically that we didn’t deal with 20 years ago . . . It’s so hard to be truly happy in this world. I’m looking at kids that are 13 and 14 that are my nephew’s age and they got all this stuff they’re competing with . . . it’s just like, just chill out. Get on your 4-wheeler and go ride and go fish and go figure out how to catch a squirrel and that’s the music.” “I would love to have a hit, a huge hit on the radio, but I want to build something bigger for the Kingdom and myself,” White says. “I can’t wait ‘til that day where my platform is big enough to where I can go out there and start music programs - and that don’t have to wait, that’s what we’re doing now - but I’ve watched Zac Brown do some pretty massive stuff in and around the state of Georgia and that’s what I do it for. I love it.” April 2018 INSIGHT