The Morning Brew with Chris Bennett

Pryor Baird: From Four-Chair Turns to Starting Over — A Country Climb Story

Chris Bennett Episode 66

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Pryor Baird's story unfolds like a country song itself—raw, authentic, and filled with both heartbreak and triumph. From the moment his three-year-old self watched his uncle play guitar and declared "that's exactly what I want to do," music claimed him completely. "You don't pick music, music picks you," Pryor reflects during our intimate conversation, a truth that has sustained him through remarkable highs and devastating lows.

Growing up between divorced parents' homes provided Pryor a rich musical education—blues, jazz, and classical from his mother's house; country, rock, and bluegrass from his father's. By elementary school, he was performing publicly, and by 2011, he'd packed up for Nashville with unwavering determination. Before his breakthrough on The Voice in 2018, Pryor cut grass, roofed houses, and waited tables—whatever it took to keep his dream alive.

His Voice journey resulted in a rare four-chair turn, placing him among only 25 contestants in the show's history to achieve this feat. The ultimate validation came when he stood in the sacred circle at the Grand Ole Opry earlier this year, earning two standing ovations in a profound full-circle moment that felt especially significant after his father's recent passing.

Yet just when things seemed to be falling into place, Pryor found himself in a Tuesday afternoon meeting where he lost his record deal, publishing deal, and management—all at once. Rather than surrendering to defeat, he's embraced this unexpected freedom to release music on his own terms, including the three powerful, unreleased songs we premiere exclusively in this episode: "Hard Days Win," "Favorite Heartbreaker," and "Good Time Don't Care."

"Hard things are hard because they're hard," Pryor philosophizes, "and if this was easy, everybody would be doing it." His standout lyric "Sometimes straight through is the only way around" serves as both personal mantra and universal truth for anyone facing seemingly insurmountable obstacles. Follow Pryor on social media and support his independent journey—this is an artist who embodies the very resilience his music celebrates.

Speaker 1:

From the Horn Auto Center Studios Chris Bennett and the Morning Brew. Good morning, it's the Morning Brew with Chris. Who's this?

Speaker 2:

Jan.

Speaker 1:

Jan the weatherman, holy moly, what do you got going on on this Thursday morning?

Speaker 2:

I've got seven baby kittens and that's a handful and a half. That's right.

Speaker 1:

So you had a stray cat, basically claim you as their owner and then, shortly after that stray cat had a bunch of kittens.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, seven of them, seven of them.

Speaker 1:

Have you been able to find new homes for any of them, or do they not want to move out of the house yet?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's too early yet I'm starting them to eat now, so the mom won't have to be feeding them as much.

Speaker 1:

Oh, nice, well sweet, you got a full house over there in Heber. What's the weather report for today?

Speaker 2:

A little overcast? I don't. I think we missed the storm. We got pretty good rain yesterday evening, afternoon and evening, but it doesn't look like we're going to get much more.

Speaker 1:

All right, but we need more rain. Well, Jan, what can I do you for this morning? Is there a song that you and the cats want to hear?

Speaker 2:

I would like to hear Chris Stapleton Midnight Train to Memphis.

Speaker 1:

Heck, yeah, we're going to rock out this morning and, Jan, stay tuned A little later we are going to be having our Country Climb Star of the Week with Pryor Baird from Nashville. He was on the Voice and I can't wait for you to hear some new music from him. I think you're going to like it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm looking forward to it, chris.

Speaker 3:

Bennett's Country Climb. Star of the.

Speaker 1:

Week. Originally from Orca, california, it's Pryor Baird joining us. Holy moly, pryor. Thank you so much for being on Chris Bennett's Country Climb on Q Country 92.5. How are you doing today?

Speaker 4:

I'm great my man Sitting here in rainy, hot and humid Nashville Tennessee.

Speaker 1:

Thank you so much for being a guest. You started playing at three years old. Is that correct? That's correct. How does that happen? Do you ask for a guitar? How do you start playing at three?

Speaker 4:

That's exactly what happened. I remember the first. Do you ask for a guitar? How do you start playing at three? That's exactly what happened. I remember the first time I ever heard a guitar and my uncle was playing and it's one of the first memories I have. I remember seeing the back of his head and the back of the guitar neck and I said I went and sat right in front of him in this little green chair and right then I mean it was just like yesterday.

Speaker 1:

And I said, right then, I mean, it was just like yesterday, and I said that's exactly what I want to do. And then how?

Speaker 4:

long after you started like playing, did you realize you wanted to do this more than just a hobby. Uh, it was always like that. I never, I've never wanted to do anything else. I've never like I've done so many different things just to keep this train rolling. You know, I've always. You don't pick music, music picks you, you know. So it picked me when I was a kid and I just never slowed down.

Speaker 1:

How old were you when you played your first gig?

Speaker 4:

Let's see how old are you in. Let's see sixth grade. How old what are you? 10?

Speaker 1:

13?, no sixth grade. I got what are you? 10?, 13?, no sixth grade. Why got held?

Speaker 4:

back. Yeah, it must have been like 10 or 11. And yeah, I played man. It might've been. It was younger than that. I think it was fourth grade and I played Johnny B Good at our talent show.

Speaker 1:

What kind of music did you grow up listening to? Was music in the house a lot, yeah, so. My parents. What kind of music did you grow up listening to?

Speaker 4:

Was music in the house a lot, yeah, so my parents got divorced when I was really little and so I'd spend the time you know, 50-50 custody. I'd go to my mom's house for a week and dad's house for a week, and at mom's house we'd listen to, you know, blues and jazz and funk and reggae and classical. And then I'd go to my dad's house and it was nothing but country, rock and roll and bluegrass. So you know, I grew up with, you know, benny goodman and dizzy gillespie and lionel hampton and p fountain. And then I'd go to dad's house and it was george jones and merle haggard and lefty frazell and you know the stanley brothers and you know bill monroe. So it's all all the above.

Speaker 1:

um, what so? Uh you? So you're playing music in junior high. You started young and you decided this is what you want to do with your life. How old were you when you moved to Nashville?

Speaker 4:

I was 27. I was 28. Yeah, I was 28 years old 2011. March 6th I left home. March 10th I got here and I've been here ever since.

Speaker 1:

Heck, yeah, left home. March 10th, I got here and I've been here ever since. Yeah, and then, uh, in so 2011, you moved there. 2018, you get on the Voice. Yeah, yeah, how does so? What was life like before the Voice and how did you get that audition?

Speaker 4:

uh, life before the Voice. Let see, I was waiting tables, I was cutting grass, I was roofing houses, I was doing anything and everything I could to stay in the music business, to keep it going. I had a friend who was on the Voice season 13 the year before me and he came in second place. And when you do well on the show they'll ask you hey, know anybody on the show or you know outside that we could bring in here. That's talented, you know. And so I, uh. I got a call from them and said, hey, would you like to audition? I said, sure, I'll audition, but I'm not going to stand in line for, you know, 48 hours. And they said, no, come to uh, we'll have a private audition for you. So I drove down to Atlanta and I played at this killer studio down there I don't remember what it was or what it was called, but it was so fun and I sang three songs and they said you want to go to California? I said sure, and I think three weeks later I was on a flight out there and I was out there.

Speaker 4:

For gosh, they keep you there for six weeks and you're just sitting at the Burbank Marriott, right across the street from the airport. You're there forever and ever and ever. You can't go within a mile of the airport. And, man, I sat there and waited. You know, you sit by the pool, you work out, you read books, you just wait for something to happen. And then, finally, it's your turn to go to the blind auditions and you're there for I don't know five, six minutes. You're on stage, maybe, and got all four chairs to turn and they send you home the very next morning, and then it's a year-long process. So you're there, you, you know, on and off, on and off, on and off. But, man, it was an absolute blast and I would not be here today if it was not for the voice, that's for sure yeah, what was that feeling like to get all four chairs to turn it was, uh, it was pretty unbelievable.

Speaker 4:

I'll be honest, like I, you know, I never really thought of it like nobody's gonna nobody, nobody's going to pick me, like this is this is ridiculous and all four of them turn around. I was like, well, I'll be damned. So it was. Uh, it's pretty cool and I just found out not that long ago. Let's see, it's season 24. I think that they're on now and there's only been I think there's only been 25, four chair turns on the whole season and the whole like entirety of the show.

Speaker 1:

So pretty cool, yeah, and then so you have to go home and I assume, like I'm horrible at keeping secrets, I assume you have to keep this a secret that you turned all four chairs.

Speaker 4:

Oh, you got to keep everything a secret, Like you got to keep the secret that you were on the show everything.

Speaker 1:

And then do you go back to cutting grass and waiting tables while you're waiting to go back. Oh my gosh, how hard is that it was.

Speaker 4:

It was, it was terrible and it was during. You know, I don't know if you've ever been to nashville or anywhere in the south in the summertime it's, it's pretty brutal. And, uh, I was cutting grass at the Cool Springs Galleria Mall with a push mower and I had a blower on my back, a push mower, a 55-gallon bucket and a weed whacker and you know the islands that are like in the parking lots. That was my job, man. I had to mow those things every day and I'd do that from sunup literally to sundown, and then from there I would go wait tables, or I would go, and first I was busing tables and then waiting tables, and I ran a construction company for a little bit, so I was doing that re-roofing houses and that was terrible.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, yeah. And meanwhile you know you got this huge opportunity waiting for you and then you're on that national stage. How does that change your life? You probably don't have to go back to mowing grass or waiting tables. Well, I mean.

Speaker 4:

I didn't, thankfully, you know, I'll never forget where I was. I was at Honor Bar in Beverly Hills, which you're not supposed to go within a mile of the hotel, and Beverly Hills is nowhere near Burbank. And we went over there and I was sitting at the bar with my buddy, caleb at the time, and I've had about I don't know three or four Negronis, and I called my boss and when he answered the phone he said you're not coming back, are you? And I said no? And I had a company car, I had a company credit card, I had health insurance, I was making great money and I said I'm giving it all up, man, I'm going to try and make this thing work. And it's worked out better than I ever even imagined.

Speaker 1:

A lot of cool stuff has happened after the show. Last was it last year. You got to perform at the Grand Ole Opry. I did it January 24th. Yeah, oh my gosh, and how does that come about? And tell us about that experience.

Speaker 4:

Well, what's really cool as I think personally cool is, I made a promise to myself when I moved here that I would never go backstage to the Ryman or the Opry until I ever got a chance to go there and I always wanted to go and I always wanted to go backstage and I'd had many opportunities to come and see some people play and friends of mine, you know, come hang out. My friend, she's one of the backup singers there. So I'd been invited and I was like you know, I'll never, I'm not going to do that until it's my turn. And when I got the call from, I got the call from Blake Shelton and call from uh. I got the call from blake shelton and um, facetime me and they played.

Speaker 4:

They played a joke on me. We're supposed to be there for one of my uh, old managers birthday lunch and he's like you know, since I got you on the phone, you know what do you think about playing the opera? And I was like, yeah, right, you know it's not funny. And then it was a real thing and I mean it's a dream come true, you know to stand in that circle and I'll never forget my dad died not that long before then and it was one of those moments where it's like this is one of those full circle moments. You know, no pun intended, but to stand in that circle it was unbelievable, absolutely dream come true.

Speaker 1:

What was the crowd's reaction?

Speaker 4:

Oh, it was unbelievable. It was a packed house. I got two standing ovations, you get to play two songs, and it was outstanding. I had lots of family and lots of friends and even people I didn't know, of course, and yeah, it was a standing ovations and we had a great time.

Speaker 1:

Man, great party afterwards and good time, dude that gives me goosebumps Two standing ovations at his grand old opera debut. So you've had a lot of ups and recently I saw on your instagram recently you had some changes happen. Do you want to talk about what changes have, uh, recently happened? We talked about the highs.

Speaker 4:

now let's talk about the nitty gritty yeah, big time, big time changes and uh, I feel like, uh, big changes are what make big changes in your life, you know, and I lost my record deal, I lost my publishing deal, I lost my management, all in one meeting, all in one day, all at one time. And, what's really funny, it was a tuesday at three o'clock and I used to be in a duo and we were getting ready to go on tour with some really big acts and he called me at two o'clock or three o'clock on a Tuesday a few years ago and quit and I was like Tuesdays and three, you know, tuesday at three, are just they're not for me, man, but yeah, I lost it all and I, it's just one of those things.

Speaker 4:

It's life, it happens. I'm not the first person. It's happened to. You know. It's like getting your heart broke. I'm not the first person to get my heart broke. It happens to people all the time.

Speaker 4:

And hard things are hard because they're hard and if this was easy, everybody would be doing it. So it's like how bad do you want this? And I've never wanted anything else. So it's dig deeper. And not to mention, you know, I know these things that happen not just me but to people in life like these are where the good things come from. This is where the, this is where the uh, you know, the sun shines through the clouds and things, things get better, but they get worse before they get better and they get harder and um, so this is just uh, at the bump in the road, man, you know nothing I can't handle, and there's a lot of, you know there's, there's a lot of things that happen to a lot of people and you can give up. And if you give up, that's a hundred percent guaranteed you're going to fail, and if you just keep going, who knows what's going to to happen. So I'm just keep on doing what I've always been doing.

Speaker 1:

It's got me this far so far, so I'm going to keep on with it and see what happens in situations like this, I've heard of people say you could look at it like you know, things happen to you or things happen for you, and so this can be. You know, this isn't a prime example of something that could be happening for you, because you are a prolific songwriter, you've written a lot of songs and, and when you're under management and when you have other people involved, they kind of get a say in what music goes out Correct, absolutely. And so now that you are independent, you're free as a bird, get to pick, uh, what we get to hear and your favorites, right, yep, yep and then playing I can't wait, I can't wait.

Speaker 4:

You know, and it's like you said, man, things happen for you like the fact that we didn't put these songs out, the fact that they didn't want to put the songs out, is great now, because these are my most favorite songs, these are the songs that I play all the time. It's like, hey, okay, you're okay you're lost.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to put them out and you're going to see what happens, and one of them is basically your theme song right now Hard Days Win baby.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, tell us about this song. I wrote this song with a couple of buddies of mine and we wrote two songs that day. We actually wrote that song that day, but I had an idea called I just said I was broke down in my truck and that's another song that we wrote but I was literally in my truck crying. I had just lost my fiance of nine years and you know, I lost my duo partner and I lost my dad and it's like just everything was just beating me down. I was like man and I said these hard days are winning. And when I said it I looked up and the guys were looking at me. I was like, yeah, we should write that Don't let the hard days win.

Speaker 4:

And that's what it's about, man. It's real life. It's my story. It's not just my story, it's everybody's story. Everybody's got hard times, no matter what, doesn't matter who you are. If you don't bullpucky like everybody's, everybody's got something, man and again, give up, it's a hundred percent failure guaranteed. If you don't, who knows what'll happen? You got to keep going. Don't let the hard days win, man. Sometimes straight through is the only way around.

Speaker 1:

Well, how about we play it here right now on Q Country 92.5 in our small town? I think that's a great idea. It is an honor for me to introduce to the mountain Pryor Baird with his hit song Hard Days. Win on Q Country 92.5.

Speaker 5:

to pour in or rain, or that bump in the road that you're trying to get over, because life has a way of getting in the way. It's a heartbreak poured over whiskey. I can't take much more of that. When the weight of the world gets too heavy, let it roll right off your back, sometimes gonna get a little lonely, sometimes gonna weigh you down.

Speaker 3:

Sometimes, when you get down to it straight through the only, we'll be right back. Don't let them hard days win. Don't let them hard days win.

Speaker 5:

Now, everything's gonna be all right. It's what you gotta keep telling yourself. Don't let a storm cloud up your mind.

Speaker 3:

You gotta keep your head up when you're going through hell, cause sometimes it's gonna get a little lonely, sometimes it's gonna weigh you down. Sometimes, when you get down to it Straight through's the only way around when that voice in your head starts talking. Well, don't let that devil in. It might be small, it might be big, but whatever it is, don't let the hard days win.

Speaker 5:

Keep going, keep rolling, keep getting down on your knees. I said keep believing and keep breathing, it'll all come around.

Speaker 3:

Just take it from me, cause sometimes gonna get a little lonely, sometimes gonna weigh you down and sometimes, when you get down to it Straight through's the only way around that voice in your head starts talking. Don't let that devil in. Yeah, it might be small, it might be big, but whatever it is, don't let the hard days win.

Speaker 1:

Don't let them hard days win. Don't let them hard days win. Holy moly, that song is amazing. That was Prior Bird with Hard Days Win. I love that line. Sometimes, straight through is the only way, right. That's right. I love that song. When will that be available for our listeners to get their hands on?

Speaker 4:

Soon as possible. I've got to figure out how to get it all out there and do all the paperwork and get all the legal stuff done so I can get it out there.

Speaker 1:

Heck yeah I can't wait for it. Uh, let's uh go ahead and play another one. Uh, from our new country music best friend, prior baird. Uh, this one is favorite heartbreak. Is that favorite heartbreaker? Yeah, oh, favorite heartbreaker, yeah, favorite heartbreaker. Uh, where did this song come from? Uh, tell us a little bit about this story oh, man, I was.

Speaker 4:

I was fortunate enough to be in a room with uh marv green, who's one of the greatest songwriters of all time, and drake white, who's a phenomenal artist as well, and the three of us wrote this song and man it's just one of those things. You know, sometimes magic happens, man, and this was a magic moment and it happened and it's fantastic, I love it?

Speaker 1:

Was this a real person or just a songwriting metaphor um song there is a line in it that is true.

Speaker 4:

There is a. Uh. There's a girl in my hometown that did get a jean jacket of mine. I know she still has it give it back awesome.

Speaker 1:

well, you know what? Let's fire up another song from prior baird. Uh, this one is called favorite heartbreaker on Q Country. Two, five Time to jam again, let's go.

Speaker 5:

Here we go. She was walking along, flip-flops in her hand. Gulf cold breeze cut across the sand.

Speaker 3:

It was just a passing smile, but then again it was way more than that, caught a trace of coconut and jasmine in the sun.

Speaker 3:

I was seventeen holding hands with the one that got away with more than my blue jean jacket bet you still has it. But we all take a ride in a time machine and you land right in the middle of a memory. Take a sunset sip of the times you had when love was so good but it hurt so bad. You smile for a minute and shake your head, cause you know all about those unanswered prayers. Yeah, we all find the right one sooner or later, but we all have a favorite favorite heartbreaker. If, for some, all it takes is a face in a crowd or the taste of the way the key goes down, for some it's a free phone and a beat-up show A bitch every day. She's got summertime skin and I need you on her lips. We'll be right back.

Speaker 3:

Take a ride in a time machine and land right in the middle of a memory. Take a sunset sip of the times you had when the love was so good that it hurt so bad. You smile for a minute and shake your head, cause you know all about those unanswered prayers. Yeah, we all find the right one Sooner or later, but we all got the favorite Favorite heartbreaker. Hey, yeah, favorite heartbreaker. Yeah, no matter how high the fall could take. We all got our favorite heartbreakers, yeah. But we all take a ride in a time machine and we land right in the middle of a memory. Take a sunset to see all the times you had. Thank you, we all find the right one sooner or later, but we all have a favorite, yeah, favorite heartbreaker. Yeah, we all got that favorite heartbreaker, no matter how high or far it takes.

Speaker 1:

Come on favorite. Heartbreaker. Holy moly, another great one. How long ago did you write that one? How long has that one been sitting on the shelf? A couple of years, a couple of years? Well, I'm glad to get it off the shelf and get a little dust off that bottle Me too. That's an awesome one, and this is another one. We just need to follow prior baird for all music updates, because you're going to be releasing this stuff and you need our support. That's right. That's right, absolutely. We have a third and final song. We are talking to our best friend, prior baird. He is an amazing musician, out of California originally, but currently out of Nashville. This next one it's called Good Time, don't Care. Tell us a little songwriting story about this one. Oh man.

Speaker 4:

I had this lick and I played it forever and ever and ever and I could never find out what it was. And I walked into Seagal with a guy named Chris Dubois, who's phenomenal, and another guy named Lynn Hutton, who's absolutely fantastic, and I said, boys, let's write a song to this. And they said, what about Good Time Don't Care? And I was like I love the sound of that, so we wrote it and it was just one of those. Again, magic happens, man. You know, that's the thing about songwriting it is magic. And you walk in with just an idea and you walk out with something like this, and I love the song, I play it every night and it's one of my favorites. And a good time don't care goes for everybody, because a good time don't care when it happens or where it happens.

Speaker 1:

Well, a good time is going to happen right now, and I don't care, you can't stop it. Here's another one from Prior Baird this is good times, don't care. On Q, country 92.5. The only place you could hear this baby.

Speaker 5:

Well, I probably should have just gone home. Probably shouldn't be in here. Probably shouldn't shoot tequila y'all. I probably ought to stick to beer. Probably shouldn't have done this cigarette. What the hell give it here. Yes, I know I quit six months ago, but a good time don't care. Well, I probably ought to slow my roll and I probably ought to close my tab. Probably shouldn't run my mouth Y'all. I probably ought to call a cab. Probably shouldn't ask that girl to dance, Cause that's her boyfriend over there.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it is, I'll see you next time If I wake up hurting With my jeans and boots, stay on long. It don't care If I'm late to work. All my hard-earned money's gone. I could shoot out the lights, start a fight, spend the night Locked up in a jail somewhere, yeah cause a good time.

Speaker 5:

Don't care. Now I probably ought to eat a little something and I probably ought to just sit down, but they're starting up karaoke y'all. I probably shouldn't sing right now, but I just checked that song list out and I'll be damned if they got the chair Living on a prayer.

Speaker 3:

I'm pretty sure I'm slurring my words. Yeah, but a good time, don't care. No, it don't. It. Don't care if I wake up hurting with my jeans and boots still on it, don't care if I'm late to work. All my hard-earned money's gone. I can shoot out the lights, start a fight, spend the night locked up in a jail somewhere.

Speaker 5:

Y'all cause a good time, don't care. Come on Now I probably swear I'm gonna quit drinking. Probably gonna change my mind, cause when I go out next weekend Y'all have to think about a good time. It don't care if I wake up hurting with my jeans and boots.

Speaker 3:

Stay on long. It don't care if I'm late to work. All my hard-earned money's gone. I can shoot out the lights, start a fight, spend the night locked up in a jail somewhere y'all but a good time, don't care.

Speaker 1:

Well, now let's just stay and party right here. Y'all cause a good time, don't care. A good time, don't care. Heck yeah. Cry your beard yeah, a good time, don't care, heck yeah. Briar Baird Good Times, don't Care. For the first time right here on Q Country 92.5. That was another amazing song and it led me to an idea for a game called Good Time or Don't Care, with Briar Baird.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to give you a thing and you tell me if that sounds like a good time or eh no, don't care. With prior baird, I'm going to give you a thing and you tell me if that sounds like a good time or eh no, don't care. I love that. Wearing Crocs in public Don't care, don't care. Lying dancing at a wedding Don't care. Really, you don't think that's a good time. Hot dog eating contest Good time, oh, that is a good time. Hot dog eating contest Good time, oh, that is a good time. All right, tiktok country dance trends Don't care.

Speaker 1:

Shirtless selfies on Instagram Definitely don't care. Going on a cruise with your parents yeah, that'd be a good time, that'd be a good time. Socks with sandals? Don't care. Bringing your guitar to the bonfire Good time, heck yeah. Getting recognized at the airport, don't care. Fan tattoos of your lyrics. Good time Heck, yeah, that was good time, or don't care, with Prior Baird, and it's been amazing hanging out with you today and loved playing your new music. How can the Q Country Nation support Prior Baird? What do you need from us? What's coming up next for you?

Speaker 4:

man, literally the Instagram and the social media we're following, streaming the music on any platform that you get your music, just stream it as much as you can Call your local radio stations, anything and everything that you can do prior beard wise, that's how you do it, man. Follow me on all the social media platforms Instagram, facebook, tiktok. Hell, even if you got MySpace, you know you can bring that back. Priority. R-i-o-r-b-a-i-r-d.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we're so excited for your journey and can't wait for you to release this new music, and it means so much to me that you shared this music straight from Nashville, straight from you, straight to us here in our little small town, and I wish you the best of luck, our little small town, and I wish you the best of luck and whatever you need from us. When you're ready to release this, you let us know so a cute country nation can get behind and give you a little push chris.

Speaker 4:

Thank you so much, man. It's been an honor and a privilege to be on here with you. Thank you for what you do, thanks for being a small town radio station and thanks for getting fired up about country music, man heck.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, this has been chris bennett's countryimb Star of the Week.

Speaker 4:

Hell yeah.

Speaker 1:

Good morning. It's the Morning Brew with Chris. Who's this?

Speaker 2:

Jan.

Speaker 1:

Jan from Heber, aka Jan the Weatherman, back. Holy moly, how are you liking our Country Climb Star of the Week, pryor Baird. He's great Heck, yeah, you love country rock. How loud did you have this turned up when you were jamming out to Pryor Baird? Heck, yeah, go ahead and let Pryor Baird know what you think of his music Great Heck, yeah, pryor Baird. You have a fan, jan the Weatherman. So glad you love our Country Climb Star of the Week, jan.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he's great Heck.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, prior Baird is Jan from Heber approved.

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