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Vince Gill and Paul Franklin Celebrate Grammy Inclusion, Talk "Sweet Memories" Recording Ray Price Songs

The 66th Grammy Awards will honor the best recordings, compositions, and artists from October 1, 2022, to September 15, 2023, as chosen by the members of The Recording Academy. The 66th Grammy Awards will air February 4, 2024 on CBS.

Vince Gill and his friend Paul Franklin are seated on a tufted couch in Gill's Nashville home recording studio, surrounded by guitars and Gill's 22 Grammy trophies. It's a comfortable space for the pair – it's where they worked on their first collaboration in a decade, "Sweet Memories: The Music of Ray Price & The Cherokee Cowboys."

Recently, the album 's single nabbed Gill his 48th Grammy nomination. The singer couldn't be happier that it's recognizing his work with Franklin. The pair are nominated for Best Country Duo / Group Performance for "Kissing Your Picture (Is So Cold)" from their album, "Sweet Memories: The Music of Ray Price & The Cherokee Cowboys."

"What I am most proud of is being nominated with Paul," Gill said. "His friendship and musicianship is unparalleled."

Franklin added: "After decades of playing music with my friend Vince, never in my wildest dreams did I imagine a Grammy nomination. This is too cool!"

The 66th Grammy Awards will honor the best recordings, compositions, and artists from October 1, 2022, to September 15, 2023, as chosen by the members of The Recording Academy. Voting in the final round is open now and ends on January 4. The 66th Grammy Awards will air live from Los Angeles February 4, 2024 on CBS.

While working together on "Sweet Memories: The Music of Ray Price & The Cherokee Cowboys" was a joy, the process wasn't easy. But it paid off. Available now, the collection features the Country Music Hall of Famer and the Steel Guitar icon sharing their reimagined versions of Price's songs, including "One More Time," "I'd Fight The World," "Danny Boy" and "Kissing Your Picture (Is So Cold)."

"I'm a Ray Price fiend, but I never knew he did 'Sweet Memories,'" Gill said. "I never knew he'd done 'Weary Blues,' a Hank Williams song. Several of these things I never knew. It was fun to find that out."

Leaning back into his couch with a proud grin, Gill said people were often surprised at their obscure song choices, but that part of their goal was to aid in music discovery.

"I've talked to people that have known Ray Price for their whole lives," Gill said. "They say, 'I never heard him do that one. I never heard him do that one.' We've stumped some pretty big knowledgeable folks."

When the players dreamed up the collaborative concept over a decade ago, Gill and Franklin set some parameters. They only wanted to cover artists to whom they had a personal connection. They wanted to pay tribute to two artists on each album, with half the songs going to each. They considered George Jones, Conway Twitty, Jimmy Dickens, Buck Owens, Merle Haggard and Price. They didn't want to highlight each artist's biggest hits, instead choosing to lean into songs Gill and Price considered overlooked but brilliant.

"With (their first collaboration) 'Bakersfield,' it was hard to find obscure Merle Haggard songs," Franklin explained. "In talking about this, we wanted to do what people didn't expect."

The men didn't suffer the same stumbling blocks with "Sweet Memories." As they dove into the listening process, Gill quickly discovered that he wanted to dedicate an entire album to Price's little-heard sonic gems.

"We kept finding songs, and I said, 'Let's just do it all Ray,'" Gill said. "Paul said, 'Man, it's good with me.' So, away we went."

WSM radio personality Eddie Stubbs often served as their historian and guide on "Sweet Memories." Gill called Stubbs from Australia while he was on tour with The Eagles when Stubbs played a song he'd never heard before. Gill remembers he asked, "What in the Hell is this? Who is that? Why have I never heard it?" Gill made a habit of calling Stubbs, asking him to play something he'd never heard. Stubbs obliged, and Gill took notes. Then, when it came time to solidify the track list for their Ray Price album, he and Franklin sat down with lists of more than 100 songs. They wanted songs showcasing their instrumental skills that could be reimagined and elevated by their licks. The men sorted and critiqued each selection until they landed on the 11 tracks they recorded.

Gill is also pleased that he and Franklin incorporated songs written by classic country royalty that, in addition to Price, includes Hank Cochran, Hank Williams, Sr., Marty Robbins, Mel Tillis and Willie Nelson.

Just as Gill and Franklin were getting their second collaboration moving forward in 2019, COVID-19 struck and stalled the project – the main reason there are 10 years between albums. They used the extra time to hone ideas for the collection. They listened closely to melodies along with the lyrics, and Franklin said he reveled in the nostalgia that came with it. While Franklin didn't grow up listening to these exact songs, he did live in the same era of musicianship. Recording "Sweet Memories" transported them back decades and enabled them to insert their influences into the classic songs.

Gill and Franklin enjoy creating tribute projects because it's an opportunity to remember the musical artistry that made them want to be musicians. Franklin calls it the "satisfaction of revisiting an old memory." Gill considers "Sweet Memories" as much of a musician's album as it is a singer's album.

"I'll sing, and then we'll get to play," he said. "That was kind of the mindset behind it all."

The hardest part for the men is knowing people will listen to "Sweet Memories: The Music of Ray Price & The Cherokee Cowboys" and compare their versions to Price's originals. That isn't the point of the project.

"The obvious thing that people are going to, unfortunately, say when they hear something like this, 'Oh, it's not as good as the original,'" he said. "They'll say, 'I like the original way better. I like the melody of the original way better.' This is just intended to be inspired by us to begin with."

Gill also knows that some people will think he and Franklin are arrogant for covering the songs because they mistakenly believe the men thought they could do them better. But that was never the point, either.

"These are a lot of things that we love," he said. "I think the audience that's our age and older, they're going to love this stuff. That's a given because they don't get to hear much music like this anymore. It's just not quite the flavor of the day like it was in its day. They may also be the ones that are the most crusty. I've heard it and seen it in comment sections a million times, and they just miss the point. The intention behind this is reverence."

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