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Ira Dean Releases His New Album ‘I Got Roads' - Featuring Some Of His Famous Friends

Ira Dean Releases His New Album ‘I Got Roads' - Featuring Some Of His Famous Friends

Forbes15-04-2025
Singer, songwriter, and musician Ira Dean
Credit: David McClister Photography, LLC.
After many years as a singer, songwriter, and musician, Ira Dean's new album perfectly blends all of those talents. And he had the added satisfaction of doing it with some of his closest musician friends and fellow songwriters.
'I Got Roads' offers a collection of songs, most of which Dean co-wrote, looking back on his rich and vibrant life, and extraordinary career.
As a musician he broke through as a bass player for Tanya Tucker, as an artist, he co-founded the successful country music trio, One Trick Pony, and he's had cuts as a songwriter for Brooks & Dunn, Rascal Flatts, Aaron Lewis, and others. (Dean co-wrote Aaron Lewis' No. 1 hit 'Am I the Only One?)
He's played back-up for any and everybody, forged close friendship with legends like Johnny Cash and others, and for a long time, had a reputation for 'partying too hard" on the road.
'My life has been extremely colorful, and there's been light and dark,' Dean says. 'And I wanted to put it all out there. These songs are chapters in my life, the good, the bad, and the ugly.'
Songs like the reflective 'Missin' How It Used to Be' honoring his late mother, 'WWCD (What Would Charlie Daniels Do') which pays tribute to his friend and mentor, and '1 to Hank,' a nod to Dean's wild and crazy drinking days before he finally got sober."
When he decided to make the album, Dean called on some of his friends to join him. There are collaborations with Ronnie Dunn, Ted Nugent, David Lee Murphy, Uncle Kracker, and more.
'The making of this album has been amazing,' Dean says. 'I don't think I got a single 'no' when I started calling friends to record it. It's been very humbling. The whole experience has been great.'
Several of those friends like guitar virtuosos Vince Gill, Brent Mason, and John Osborne came together for a dynamic, fast-paced, electrifying homage to the iconic Telecaster. The song is called 'Tele-Man.'
'I've always wanted to do an all-star band, and I've tried and tried before, but it always included Vince Gill, and it never worked out with his schedule," Dean says. "I think getting everyone together for this song made music history because there have been many vocal collaborations with different artists, but nobody's ever done the Traveling Wilburys of country music. We finally did it.'
Not only did each of those master guitarists contribute to the song, they made time to appear in the music video.
'Tele-Man,' has something else you don't often see in country songs - lots of guitar solos. Dean says, as a songwriter, he can't count how many times he's been told to 'get rid of the solos.'
'They always tell you to cut the solo and make it a straight verse. But as a player, I care about the guitar solo. So, in this song everybody gets to shine. And Ronnie Dunn sings his tail off.'
Another track on the album called 'Everything' features Gretchen Wilson and serves as a tribute to Dean's wife, Jennifer.
He also honors friends and mentors, Johnny Cash and Charlie Daniels. Charlie has an entire song dedicated to him, while, if you listen, you'll hear Johnny mentioned in some of the lyrics elsewhere.
'I wouldn't be here today without those guys,' Dean says. 'They were driving themselves to gigs long before there was big money in it. And they went out of their way to help me. They didn't have to give me their heart or their time. So, it's the least I can do to let people know they meant a lot to me.'
Ira Dean
Credit: David McClister Photography, LLC.
Johnny and Charlie also cared enough to warn Dean decades ago, about his problem with drugs and alcohol, and encourage him to do something about it. When Dean eventually hit rock bottom, their words came to mind and helped guide him to make a much needed change. Today, he celebrates 12 years of sobriety, he's married, and says he's happier than he's ever been.
And, after a lot of hard work and determination, he's gotten to a comfortable place where he can play music without all of the partying.
'It was hard at first because drinking and perscription drugs were my go-to habit. But I know that stuff isn't the problem, it's me. I've got a lot of great friends that still get hammered and now I just laugh with them. It's like, man, you have fun, and I'm going to have fun on this diet coke. We're going to make great music and have some great laughs.'
Here Dean stops, laughs, then adds, 'And I'm going to remind you of some of the stuff you said…in the morning.'
He's also fallen in love with music all over again. So much so, at the same time he's releasing and promoting his own album as a singer/songwriter, he's out on the road playing bass guitar for Brooks & Dunn.
'Ronnie asked me, and I was honored,' Dean says. 'I checked my schedule and had all but one date open. So, I've been out doing arenas and stadiums. I get to sing harmonies with my favorite country singer, Ronnie Dunn, and play with a great band!'
He's excited for people to hear his new album and says he only hopes they'll listen to the old-fashioned way.
'An album is a body of work. Growing up we'd listen to a whole album, and you got to know the artist that way. I'm hoping people will start my album at the beginning and go along for the journey. It's a train ride, so don't get off mid-stop.'
He says the songs reflect a life well-lived with many lessons along the way.
'For the first half of my life I was the example of what not to do. This second half I want to be an example that it ain't over until it's over.'
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Its reviews were similarly positive to the original iterations of the series, receiving a 90 score (out of 100) for the PlayStation 5 version on review aggregator site Metacritic. Remaking more sequels Less than five years later – and earlier this month – Activision released the follow-up fans have been waiting for: Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 + 4. Like its predecessor, the game combines remakes of two games in the original, four-game THPS series – this time, the latter two games – and received generally favorable reviews from critics, per Metacritic. The newest game includes new music, new levels and new skaters in addition to bringing back old soundtrack hits, original levels in their upgraded format and many of the original skaters as well. Hawk said he had a good amount of say in the songs that were in the updated soundtrack, an important thing to get right given how much of a staple music was in the original games. He said almost every song suggestion he made was included in the new soundtrack. "Including my stepson's band T.C.M.F. with the song 'Result,'" Hawk said. "It totally fits. And if you didn't know I was related to him, you would think, 'Oh yeah, that song belongs there.'" If he had to pick favorites from the new soundtrack, Hawks says they'd be "Damaged Goods" by Gang of Four and "Gift Horse" by Idles. For the new levels, Hawk said he didn't have as much of a say, but he has a feeling he knows where at least one of the ideas came from. One of the new levels, "Water Park," draws inspiration from a 2019 video from Thrasher Magazine showing Hawk and other skaters doing tricks around a drained water park. "A few years ago, I did skate a water park and that was well documented, and then suddenly that was an idea for the game," Hawk said. "I'm not saying that that's exactly the chronology, but I think it had a lot to do with it." Another level addition, "Pinball," allows the player to skate through a giant pinball machine that a larger-than-life-sized version of Hawk is playing. When it came to the skaters, Hawk loved being able to include many of the same original skaters from the original games. Said Hawk: "The idea that we had all the same cast of characters – in that 1 + 2 remaster and now in 3 + 4 – and they all still skate! You know what I mean? Like that's an amazing legacy, and we can make them age appropriate. "Someone asked me recently like, 'Is your character your age?' I'm like, 'He is, because I'm still skating!'" There are also plenty of new additions to the roster of skaters in the new game, including two-time street gold medalist Yuto Horigome, two-time street medalist Rayssa Leal and even a few fictional characters: Michelangelo of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and the Doom Slayer from the Doom video game series are both playable characters. Hawk says he'll usually play as himself in the games but occasionally branches out to use other skaters to explore their unique tricks. One other skater, in particular, often gets some extra play above the others. "I would say if I'm not playing my character, then I'm playing my son Riley," he said. Tony Hawk on skateboarding at the Olympics Outside of helping in the development of remaking the video games he lent his name to, Hawk has been something of a global ambassador to the sport of skateboarding. He was an early part of the push to get it included in the Olympics in the first place. "I was advocating for it from the get-go when I knew that it was even in the realm of possibility and in conversations with the IOC (International Olympic Committee)," he said. "I attended plenty of meetings. I actually flew to Lausanne (the IOC's home in Switzerland) at one point. I went to the youth games. I was trying everything I could to raise the profile and to show that it would be a great addition. "And then when it finally did get added as as a sport and as a medal category, that's when I backed out honestly. Once I knew it was in, I didn't want to be part of the machine. I just wanted to help it guide it there in the in the early days." The International Olympic Committee (IOC) first voted to include skateboarding in the Summer Olympic Games in the 2020 iteration in Tokyo. Skateboarding was also an event in the 2024 Paris Games and is set to take place once again in 2028 in Los Angeles. In each of the first two editions of Olympic skateboarding, Hawk was there each time not only as a witness, but as a participant. "It's the coolest. It's like the best of all worlds, because I get to go see it, I get to participate," he said. "Like I got to ride the course both in Tokyo and Paris before the skaters. "I get to to watch from the sidelines and I don't have to judge. It's been amazing to see and to see the the amount of interest and growth and hype that it has received." Hawk noted that a large part of that interest and growth has been most noticeable with young women and girl skaters in recent years. He told an anecdote about his own vertical ramp contest – Tony Hawk's Vert Alert – struggling to get girls to sign up to fill up their side of a bracket just for the first iteration of the event four years ago. "It was kind of like, 'Any girl that even could skate ramps at all, you're in,'" Hawk said. "And now the field is huge and we have to hold qualifying way beforehand. "And I mean just in the case of like someone like Arisa Trew, she she did a 900 (Tony Hawk's signature trick consisting of two full, 360-degree rotations with an additional 180) last year. It's amazing. It's amazing that how just in that five years, how exponentially it's grown." In addition to helping bridge the gender divide in skating, Hawk said the Olympics have also been a massive part in bringing the sport to a more global audience. He pointed to countries like China and Uganda, places where skating was not as popular or didn't even really exist in decades past. "There was never skating in China before the Olympics, and now they have training facilities and actual skaters and places where kids can go and learn," Hawk said. "And that's huge." Uganda now has a "thriving skating scene" as well, says Hawk. And even though the country didn't participate in the skating event for the Olympics, there's still more attention on skateboarding there because of the recent iterations of Summer Games. If there's one thing Hawk would change about the Olympic skateboarding events, it's that he wishes they included a vert event: competitions with halfpipes and large, vertical ramps. Hawk specialized in those events during his career – a vert competition at the fifth X Games is where he pulled off the first-ever 900 in 1999. Instead, the only two skateboarding events at the quadrennial Games are "street" and "park" skating, which feature small courses with obstacles for the skaters to use for various tricks. Hawk called himself the "gnat in their (the IOC's) ear" while trying to push for a vert event in the Olympics. Though he understood the reasoning it wasn't included in the original, 2020 Tokyo Games – a lack of vertical ramps worldwide would have made holding qualifying events a challenge – he's still hoping – and pushing – for its inclusion in a future iteration. Hawk said he hasn't been contacted (yet) about helping set up any of the events for the 2028 Games, which will take place in Los Angeles, not far from Hawk's hometown of San Diego. But he has already offered help with setting up a vert event. "I have offered up my ramp and my presence. If they want to put vert in in any context, here's a free vert ramp," he said. "Put it wherever you want and I'll be there."

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