Gill acknowledges "I Gave You Everything I Had"
Gill is honoring this 50-year career milestone by curating a series of EPs to be released over the course of a year. Thematically titled "50 Years from Home," the first EP of the series is "I Gave You Everything I Had," out Oct. 17.
"I have this treasure trove of songs," Gill said, "and I started wracking my brain about how I could find a way to really celebrate this music."
Gill has culled from over 100 songs he has written, either by himself or with overs over the past few years.
All sole compositions by Gill, "I Gave You Everything I Had" contains six brand new songs as well as one recording from his award-winning catalog, in this case, "Go Rest High On That Mountain," which includes a new third verse.
"I'm really trying to find songs that sit well with each other, that are cohesive," he said, "and then something from my catalog that complements the other tracks."
Gill helped design of each EP cover by choosing an instrument from his personal collection to be featured. On "I Gave You Everything I Had," he has chosen to use a photo of his 1942 Martin D-28 Herringbone guitar purchased in 1975 by selling a Martin given to him by his parents, and using his entire life savings.
"The more I've done it, the more I've learned how to do it better - how to be more patient, where not to waste my time, what to do and not to do, to be willing to edit myself and keep digging. Experience is experience; there is no shortcut. This is what comes from doing this for 50 years," Gill said.
He said the songs were "all very personal. I love the emotion of music; that's what I go to it for. It stirs something inside me that I can't describe. I just feel it, and the songs I do and the way I sing them and the way I play them, tries to convey those emotions."
Produced by Gill, the songs feature pedal steel virtuoso Paul Franklin, fellow guitarists Tom Bukovac, Jedd Hughes and Jack Schneider, keyboardist John Jarvis, multi-instrumentalists Stuart Duncan and Jim "Moose" Brown, banjo player Russ Carson, with Gill's wife of 25 years, Amy Grant, and daughters Jenny Gill and Corrina Gill singing background vocals. The songs were recorded at Gill's The House studio.
The title track and "Made Me" are about Gill's journey in music, gentle, acoustic-laden paeans. With "Her Heart" Gill honors Grant's kindness and welcoming spirit toward everyone who crosses her path. "I Hope Everybody Lives to Be 100," meanwhile, is a country flavored wish that Gill wrote shortly after John Prine passed away. The EP is interspersed with mortality. The aching "Benny's Song" is specifically about the morning Benny Garcia, Gill's oldest friend and longtime guitar tech, passed away, "When a Soldier Dies," is written from the viewpoint of the ones left behind.
"The more I've done it, the more I've learned how to do it better -- how to be more patient, where not to waste my time, what to do and not to do, to be willing to edit myself and keep digging. Experience is experience; there is no shortcut. This is what comes from doing this for 50 years."
The track listing is:
"I Gave You Everything I Had" (Vince Gill)
"I Hope Everybody Lives To Be A Hundred" (Vince Gill)
"Her Heart" (Vince Gill)
"Made Me" (Vince Gill)
"Benny's Song" (Vince Gill)
"When A Soldier Dies" (Vince Gill)
"Go Rest High on that Mountain" *extended version (Vince Gill)
More news for Vince Gill
- 11/10/25: CMA honors Gill with Willie Nelson Award
- 10/17/25: Young, Majcen, GIll, Wilson unveil new music
- 07/27/24: "When I Think of Christmas," think of Gill, Grant
- 03/22/22: Gill tours again
- 12/17/21: Gill, Guyton team up for "American Underdog" soundtrack song
- 07/01/21: Acuff fiddle finds home at Country Hall
- 03/14/21: Prine, Carlile, Dan + Shay win GRAMMYS
- 05/13/19: Gill announces new album
CD reviews for Vince Gill
At this point in his career, Vince Gill could just as well have entitled this "Tried and True." He's not chasing trends - pop country or bro country - of chart-geared songs. He's too old for that, and at this point anyway, Gill knows what works for him.
And there is quite a lot that works on his first solo album since 2011's "Guitar Slinger." (He did release the excellent "Bakersfield" with Paul Franklin in 2013). Gill prefers a more soulful approach, ...
It's hard to believe, considering what Vince Gill has accomplished over the past three decades, but the triple threat singer-songwriter-guitar picker may be in the most creative, productive stretch of his lengthy, remarkable career. Five years after Gill's Grammy-winning 4-album 43-song box set "These Days," his latest 12-song release again finds Gill tapping every ounce of his immense talents. The title song sums up his reputation as an ax man worthy of playing Eric ...
To put this release into perspective, it would take Axl Rose the better half of a century to issue the same amount of material. Fortunately, Vince Gill is about as prolific as they come these days, and this daring four-disc release only is further proof of that. Each disc is divvied up depending on his mood, with the opening "Working On A Big Chill" album being "The Rockin' Record."
And this album sets things off right with the lovely mid-tempo and groovy title track. ...
©Country Standard Time • Jeffrey B. Remz, editor & publisher • countrystandardtime@gmail.com
About • Copyright • Newsletter • Our sister publication Standard Time