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Vince Gill
Creative outburst puts Vince Gill out frontBy Dan DeLuca
Inquirer Music Critic
NEW YORK - Among country music stars, Vince Gill has never been a supernova.

A sweet-voiced ballad and harmony singer, a guitarist esteemed by those in-the-know, and an affable guy who for years served as host of the Country Music Association awards, he's mainstream country's Mr. Reliable. Not Mr. Audacious.

So what was he doing onstage at the Nokia Theatre in Times Square this week, leading a big band through a startlingly good three-hour show in support of These Days (MCA Nashville ***½), his new - not double-, not triple-, but quadruple-disc - set of 43 songs?

Proving that he can.

"I've never been competitive with other people," says Gill, who will bring his 17-piece band, including former NRBQ guitarist Big Al Anderson, vocalist Bekka Bramlett, and a four-piece horn section, to the Keswick Theatre for a sold-out show on Friday. "But I've always been stupidly over-competitive with myself.

"If I get frustrated and mad, it's because of my expectations of myself," the soft-spoken, 6-foot-3 Oklahoman says. "I have a standard I want to play to."

For Gill, that goes for golf - he has a zero handicap - as well as for music. And the creative burst that became These Days - which features collaborations with Sheryl Crow, Bonnie Raitt and Diana Krall and is divided thematically into individually named discs devoted to moody ballads, horn-fueled roots-rock, honky-tonk country, and bluegrass - was spurred by his fear that, as he approached 50, he was beginning to lose his way.

Sitting in the midtown Manhattan offices of Sirius Satellite Radio after making stops at six of its stations, he has traded his pinstripe suit from the show for jeans and a rumpled shirt.

These Days, he says, wasn't intended to be the first four-CD set of original, all-new material released by a solo artist, though that's what it is. (Take that, Ryan Adams!) It started out as Gill's reminder to the world, and himself, that he was more than a glib awards-show host.

"After you have that run where they play everything you put out, and you're on top of the world, it starts to wane a little bit. And you start to doubt yourself," says Gill, who lives in Nashville with his second wife, the Christian singer Amy Grant (who joined him at the Nokia show for the romantic duet "Whenever You Come Around"), their 6-year-old daughter, Corinna, and three children from Grant's previous marriage.

"And I got to thinking: I want to be an artist. I'm a musician. That's how I want people to see me." (These days, they're seeing a lot less of Gill, who recently dropped 30 pounds. He jokes that he shies away from playing the fiddle on stage because "it makes me look like a have six chins.")

Gill didn't want being a funny awards host to be his legacy. "I always told myself if people are rolling their eyes, I'm going to quit. And truth be told, I was the one rolling my eyes. It was, 'Oh, no, not me again!'

"So I wanted to invest myself back into my music again. I don't think that I hadn't been doing that, but the perception was that I hadn't. That I wasn't as passionate about it."

After working years as a sideman for Ricky Skaggs, Rosanne Cash, Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell - and spending three years as the lead singer for Pure Prairie League - Gill recorded his haunting 1989 breakout hit song, "When I Call Your Name." But 15 years later, he had lost some of his focus. "There were times where, if I looked myself in the mirror, I honestly had to admit that I was doing it for the money," he says.

Gill got a big confidence booster in 2004, when Eric Clapton invited him to play at his Crossroads Guitar Festival in Texas, alongside B.B. King, Carlos Santana and others. Gill, who had turned down Mark Knopfler's invitation to join Dire Straits in 1989, hadn't had much opportunity to strut his stuff on his slicker N
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Genre(s): Country
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Web Site: http://www.vincegill.com
Wikipedia Link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince_Gill
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