

David Nail
Growing up in a small southeastern Missouri town, David Nail might’ve chosen to follow
any of the dreams that drifted by like the riverboats on the mighty Mississippi:
but in the end, it was music that called his name. “I was definitely more into sports
growing up,” says the Midwest native. “I think I was expected to play in college,
but as I grew older I became more interested in music. After my senior year I had
a few small college offers to play baseball. My coach came to me and said ‘David,
you need to decide where you’re going to school,’ and out of the blue I just said,
‘Do you know anybody in Nashville?’” For singer-


first album from MCA Nashville, he neatly bridges the divide, laying claim to his
hometown roots while keeping a firm grip on the future, and all the deeply emotional
territory in between. “I feel like regardless of where you grew up, city, small town,
east coast, west coast or whatever, there’s something in this music that you can
relate to,” he says. “They might not all be exactly the same, but everyone has those
moments; the first time you left home, falling in love, losing love. That’s what
moves me, what I can dig into.” Nail, son of a former high school band director,
cut his musical teeth on a record collection that included Stevie Wonder, Elton John
and the Beatles. “Elton John was one of the main reasons I started singing, and is
still a tremendous influence,” he says. “I think he and the Beatles are probably
two of the greatest melody makers of all time.” Then he moved on to country: “I ‘discovered’
country music in the early 90’s along with everyone else my age,” he says. “But I
guess I kind of got more obsessive than everybody else. I found myself looking back
as far as the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, exposing myself to some of the biggest stars
of that era. It was then that I fell in love with Glen Campbell, who is still one
of my all-
Overwhelmed, he ended up moving back to Missouri in less than a year. Returning to
Nashville two years later, Nail became frustrated once again in early 2005 with the
lack of movement of his music career. David spent the next two summers helping an
old college buddy coach the Twitty City Knights, a select group of some of Nashville’s
best baseball talent. “I did it just to get away from the reality of what my career
had become at that time, and it was being around those kids that recharged my batteries.
It reminded me how free and easy life is at 17 and 18 years old and how truly blessed
I’d been, both growing up, and now, being able to chase my dream. I will forever
look back on that time and those kids for getting me back on track.” Shortly thereafter,
mutual friend Brian Wright, who’d recently become V.P., A&R, for both the MCA and
Mercury Nashville labels, introduced Nail to producer Frank Liddell, who 10 years
earlier had produced one of Nail’s all-
The result is a perfect match between singer and song, with that same church-
I was actually 21 before I saw the ocean for the first time. There were plenty of times I wanted to go on spring break with friends but didn’t get to. This song expressed what I always imagined it would’ve been like had I got to experience it.” With all that emotion going into his songs, he admits he’s a guy who’s always looking for the happy ending. “This is a confession – I’m a man of many extremes, whether working or playing,” he says. “I’m a songwriter, so I’m a sensitive guy. I long for the storybook life.” And it’s produced a lot of good material. “I think the really great singers and writers are able to dig a little deeper and find that other level of emotion,” Nail says. “And I think that’s what makes them better than the rest. I always pride myself on trying to find that place with every song.” And that he does with good friend and singer Miranda Lambert for “Strangers On A Train”. “The imagery of this song is so vivid. You can picture what it would look and feel like as a video.” “There are also songs that help you through life,” Nail admits. Title track “I’m About To Come Alive” carried him thru times where confidence was lacking. “When I first discovered this song it applied to my personal life. The further I got into making this album, it began to apply to my professional life.” And it’s that moment of raw emotional connection that Nail hopes to pass on to listeners.
“I’m more or less just trying to join the fray of good music,” he says. “People ask me all the time how I’d describe my music and I say ‘Well, I hope it’s good.’ Hopefully people will just enjoy it for being good music and take from it whatever it makes them feel.” Hard knocks and heartache, good times and bad, small towns and big cities – it’s all in his music. “They’re all aspects of life,” he says. “I’m still growing as both a person and artist, and will hopefully continue getting better in regards to both.”