Young plays "Catch" on video
Tuesday, June 4, 2019 –
Brett Young released a video for his new single "Catch."
Directed by Seth Kupersmith and filmed at Young's alma-mater, the University of Mississippi, the video has a semi-autobiographical storyline, transporting back to his chapter as a collegiate baseball player and chronicling snippets of an early love story, ultimately revealing the moment that changed everything for Young when he injured his arm pitching. The video ends with the Yiddish proverb "Man plans. God laughs."
"Catch," co-written by Young, Ross Copperman and Ashley Gorley and the follow-up to five consecutive hits, was a Most Added song at country radio this week.
More news for Brett Young
- 05/29/24: Young extends tour
- 12/04/23: Young heads overseas
- 08/04/23: Young, Gill/Franklin, Zimmerman, King Calaway release new albums
- 06/26/23: Young spreads out "Across the Sheets"
- 11/28/22: Young plans '23 tour
- 06/30/22: Young goes 8x Platinum
- 02/18/22: Young's "You Didn't" video drops
- 06/04/21: Young, Jannakos, Louris offer new sounds
CD reviews for Brett Young
Brett Young's Christmas EP is a strange little thing. Like many holiday project creators, Young prefers to look backwards, rather than forward. Hence the phrase 'Christmas Classics' in the album title. Nostalgia is always huge in country music, so this approach makes some sense. Therefore, this release is one that may cause you to travel with Scrooge back to various Christmases from the past. You also might come away feeling decidedly Scrooge-y about it.
It's strange, however, ...
It's troubling after listening to an album multiple times in a row, to not have even one song stick in one's memory. However, this is an honest initial response to Brett Young's "Weekends Look A Little Different These Days." It's not so much that the music on Young's eight-song effort is bad; it's just so utterly unremarkable.
Appreciation of Young's music rises and falls with what you think about his singing style. He sounds a little like Gary LeVox, ...
Brett Young had a hit out of the box with "Sleep Without You," as ear candy of a song. His soulful vocals carry the percolating song that seemed designed with airplay in mind. If Young were a band, this is the type of song that Rascal Flatts might cover. In fact, the airplay bent could be said of most of the dozen songs on the Californian's major label debut after five indie releases.
"Close Enough" has a funky side, trying to get the singalong going with the opening ...
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