Casey Beathard

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Casey Beathard
Origin Spring Hill, Tennessee, United States[1]
Genre(s) Country
Occupation(s) Songwriter
Years active 1998-present
Associated acts Trace Adkins
Tracy Byrd
Kenny Chesney
Tracy Lawrence

Casey Beathard is an American country music songwriter. The son of former NFL general manager Bobby Beathard,[2] Casey has co-written singles for several country music recording artists, including Top Ten singles for Gary Allan, Billy Ray Cyrus, Trace Adkins, and Kenny Chesney. In 2004, he received Broadcast Music Incorporated's Songwriter of the Year award for his contributions.[1][3]

[edit] Biography

Beathard moved to Nashville, Tennessee in 1991 to find work as a songwriter. After finding work at various jobs in Nashville, he was eventually signed to a songwriting contract; his first cut as a songwriter was the title track of Kenny Chesney's 1998 album I Will Stand, which was released as a single that year.[2] (Chesney would later record "No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems", another Beathard co-write, in 2002.)[2] By the 2000s, many other country music artists would record Casey's material as well, including Trace Adkins, Gary Allan, Tracy Byrd, and Billy Currington. For his contributions as a songwriter, Beathard received a Songwriter of the Year award from Broadcast Music Incorporated in 2004.[3]

In 2006, he received his first credit as a record producer, when he co-produced the track "I Wanna Feel Something" on Trace Adkins' Dangerous Man album; this was also Adkins' first co-production credit.[4]

A year later, Beathard received additional honors from BMI as the co-writer of Tracy Lawrence's single "Find Out Who Your Friends Are", Lawrence's first Number One in eleven years, and the first single for his personal Rocky Comfort label.[5]

[edit] Themes

Several of Casey's songs are up-tempo party anthems, occasionally centering on alcoholic beverages. The latter theme is most evident on the three cuts recorded by Byrd -- "Ten Rounds with Jose Cuervo", "Drinkin' Bone", and "How'd I Wind Up in Jamaica" -- as well as Trent Willmon's debut single "Beer Man", and "The World Needs a Drink" by Terri Clark.[2] He has occasionally shown a more serious side to his songs as well, such as Billy Currington's "Walk a Little Straighter" and Billy Ray Cyrus's "Ready, Set, Don't Go".[2]

[edit] References