The award-winning bluegrass artists have a very special guest star in the music video for their latest single “Silver Eagle.”
Fresh from winning their first International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) Bluegrass Music Award — for Music Video of the Year, their rousing take on “The Auctioneer” — The Kody Norris Show is back with another amusing and entertaining video for the latest cut from their Highfalutin Hillbilly album. And this time, they’ve brought along for the ride a very special guest.
“Silver Eagle” spins a tale about a romantic triangle, with lead singer Kody Norris and his fiddler wife Mary Rachel Nally-Norris cast as a couple torn apart by a homewrecker played by — well, would you believe country music great T. Graham Brown?
“Yeah, how about that?” Kody marveled during a telephone interview. “Graham’s been such a great friend to The Cody Norris Show. And especially anytime we’re at the Opry, he’s always just got a welcome smile and a good warm howdy and handshake.
“When we were doing this video, there’s one line in the song ‘Silver Eagle’ where it talks about a ‘super singer.’ And in my world, if there’s ever been a super singer, it’s T. Graham Brown. He’s as good as anyone ever to step behind a microphone in my opinion. And just a wonderful human to go along with it. When he was willing to collaborate with this — man, we were just over the moon about it. And let me tell you — he sure wears a rhinestone suit pretty well.”
“I sure did have fun filming this video,” Brown added. “They are really a fun bunch to be around. Also, it was the first time I ever got to drive a Rolls Royce. I hope everyone enjoys what we all did together.”
And how did Mary Rachel feel about being the woman at the center of a romantic triangle?
“Well, Kody did tell me, ‘I guess if you had to run off with somebody, I would want it to be T. Graham Brown.’”
But seriously, folks: “It was actually really a fun day on the shoot. It was a hot, hot day, but Graham made it interesting, and kept everybody kind of cool. We call him the King of Cool. So every time you touch him, he cools you off.
“We’re glad that he’s a part of this. And it just shows that bluegrass and country can mesh at the end of everything. Sure enough.”
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