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Gary Allan has returned to performing live shows for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic closed down concerts, but he didn t have any easy road back. In a new interview, the singer reveals that he lost his voice repeatedly while rehearsing for his new run of dates.
After the long, unwanted break from shows, Allan tells
Taste of Country Nights that he got ready for touring by practicing with his band for two months before his first show back. The musicians practiced four nights a week, and he says he lost his voice every night until the Saturday before it was time to play for an audience.
Gary Allan has returned to performing live shows for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic closed down concerts, but he didn t have any easy road back. In a new interview, the singer reveals that he lost his voice repeatedly while rehearsing for his new run of dates.
After the long, unwanted break from shows, Allan tells
Taste of Country Nights that he got ready for touring by practicing with his band for two months before his first show back. The musicians practiced four nights a week, and he says he lost his voice every night until the Saturday before it was time to play for an audience.
Gary Allan has returned to performing live shows for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic closed down concerts, but he didn't have any easy road back.
Gary Allan is releasing his first full-length album in eight years on Friday (June 25), but that doesn t mean he s been sitting around idle. Though it s been nearly a decade since his last project,
Set You Free, Allan tells Taste of Country in a recent phone interview that he s been working on new music off and on for that entire time.
The veteran country singer, whose hits include Nothin on But the Radio, Every Storm Runs of Rain, Watching Airplanes and more, has actually worked on three different projects over the last eight years, finally culling all of the tracks into a 13-song collection that features multiple producers and very different styles. The result is