NASHVILLE, TN (Sony BMG Music
Entertainment) – Superstar
Alan
Jackson adds a pair of 2005 Country Music
Association award nominations to his credit this
week, bringing his career CMA nominations to an
amazing total of 72, which to date have earned the
three-time Entertainer of the Year a total of 16
CMA trophies. Nominated for Male Vocalist and
Entertainer of the Year, Jackson is in the midst
of his highly successful What I Do
Tour, as his latest single, 'USA Today,' continues
as one of the most added new singles at country
radio for the past three weeks.
From his Platinum-certified collection, What I
Do, 'USA Today' has brought wide praise, with the
Los Angeles Times raving, 'His 'USA Today,' an
up-tempo 'story of heartbreak and pain [and] a
picture of the loneliest man they claim in the USA
today,' has the makings of an instant jukebox
classic.' In a four-star review, the New York Post
celebrated, 'For the best songs on the disc, look
for the ones written by Jackson himself, including
… 'USA Today,'' while People magazine toasted the
track as 'the best periodical tribute since Kinky
Friedman's 'The People Who
Read People Magazine.'' Pegged by the Fort Worth
Star-Telegram as 'a playful turn about being
famously unlucky in romance, reminiscent of Buck
Owens' old 'Act Naturally,'' the song brings a bit
of Jackson humor to love gone wrong, as he stated,
'I thought that was kind of a different way of
looking at it, for a change.' With the tune's tale
of a man whose heartbreak made headlines, Jackson
surmised, 'If he's 'bigger than the latest crime,'
that's pretty bad.'
In a feature that ran in, well, USA Today, on
the day of the album release, Jackson admitted he
didn't plan to write a song about the paper, as he
said, 'It was about a guy who was the loneliest
guy in the whole country. The story kind of grew
into that paper thing after I said 'USA today.''
In the midst of his 2005 What I Do
Tour, the Georgia native has turned his attention
toward relief efforts in the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina, with proceeds from his September
8 concert in Columbus, OH benefiting the American
Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund. The Red Cross will
find further support as Jackson performs on
Country Reaches Out: An Opry Benefit for the
American Red Cross, to be held September
27 at the Grand Ole
Opry House in Nashville. The commercial-free event
will air live beginning at 9 PM ET on GAC – Great
American Country and its sister networks DIY and
FINE LIVING.
Jackson's Philadelphia-area concert on September
10 will serve as a further fundraiser for relief
efforts, as management at show venue the Tweeter
Center, along with Jackson and Beasley Broadcast
Group's 92.5 WXTU-FM Philadelphia, join together
to donate $1 each for every ticket sold at the
25,000-seat venue.
Also on September
10, Jackson will join the Rolling Stones, Neil
Young, Kanye West, Alicia Keys, Usher, the Dave
Matthews Band, 3 Doors
Down, Melissa Etheridge, Sheryl Crow, and an array
of remarkable artists pooling their talents for
the Katrina-inspired ReAct Now: Music
& Relief. A
four-hour concert event, the broadcast will air
simultaneously and commercial-free beginning at 8
PM ET/PT on CMT, MTV, VH1, and across all of the
MTV Networks.