McCoy, Neal

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Neal McCoy

Singer

Pride Acted as a Mentor

A Natural Showman

Charm and Energy Captured on Records

Selected discography

Sources

Country music singer Neal McCoy achieved huge popularity in 1994 with his third album, No Doubt about It, which was certified gold and rose to Number 13 on Billboards country chart. The album generated two Number One hit singles, No Doubt About It and Wink, as well as a third single, The City Put the Country Back in Me, that reached the Number Five slot on the music charts. McCoy had the distinctive honor of having a hit single, Wink, occupy the Number One position on the music charts for a month and remain on the charts longer than any other single in 1994.

McCoy was born Hubert Neal McGaughey, Jr., on July 30, 1960, in Jacksonville, Texas, where he spent most of his adult life. Because he found that McGaughey was difficult for people to pronounce, he changed his name first to McGoy in 1982, then to McGoy in 1991. Country music was not McCoys sole preference when growing up; he liked pop and disco sounds in addition to the Texas twang of Jacksonvilles brand of country music. He confided to the Cincinnati Posts Mary Jo DiLonardo that pop icon Michael Jackson was one of his main influences. Seeing such a young performer as Jackson, McCoy said, put the spark in me and made me think, Thats what I wanna do someday.

Pride Acted as a Mentor

McCoy sang in school and church choirs, musicals, and quartets throughout his high school years and, after earning his diploma, attended a junior college close to home. He tried his hand at various jobs in order to support himself before becoming a successful singer and musician. He sold womens shoes in a local mall, sang with a combo at local restaurants, and mowed lawns to make ends meet. In 1980 McCoy met his wife, Melinda, when she came into the shoe store where he worked. They married the following year, and several years later would have a daughter and a son.

In 1981, at the age of 21, McCoy entered a talent contest at the Belle Star nightclub in Dallas, Texas, where country star Janie Fricke served as a judge. She was employed at singer Charley Prides management company at the time and was sufficiently impressed with McCoy to introduce him to Pride. Pride saw McCoy perform at another local country music contest and quickly decided to take the young singer under his wing.

McCoys friendship with Pride proved to be fortuitous. McCoy was invited to open shows for Pride, which provided a much larger audience than he was accustomed to, and he began to perform before thousands of people on the weekends while mowing lawns for his livelihood during the week. When Pride left RCA Records

For the Record

Born Hubert Neal McGaughey, Jr., July 30, 1960, in Jacksonville, TX; changed surname to McGoy, 1982, then to McCoy, 1991; married, 1981; wifes name, Melinda; children: Miki (daughter), Christian Swade (son).

Introduced by Janie Fricke to Charley Pride; invited by Pride to be his opening act on a tour; signed by 16th Avenue Records; moved to Atlantic Records and released debut album, At This Moment, 1991; made television appearance on The Tonight Show, 1994; toured with group Alabama, 1995.

Addresses: Record company Atlantic Records, 75 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10019. Management Daniel Hexter, Management Associates, Inc., 3878 Oak Lawn Ave., Suite 620, Dallas, TX 75219.

in favor of a new Nashville label called 16th Avenue Records, McCoy was signed by 16th Avenue as well.

The new label did not fare well and let McCoy go after one year. The singer continued to tour with Charley Pride, and the two eventually parted amicably in 1990 after working together for almost six years. In 1991 McCoy signed with Atlantic Records. Company executive Rick Blackburn asked McCoy to change his surname to McCoy since fans were already pronouncing McGoy as McCoy. The singers early records, At This Moment, released in 1991, and Where Forever Begins, released the following year, generated scant fanfare, and McCoy feared a repeat of his dismal experience with 16th Avenue Records. Atlantic was just then breaking into the country music market with a new office in Nashville, and it was not until the label paired McCoy with a third producer, Barry Beckett, that the singers talent began to shine.

A Natural Showman

Atlantic Records in Nashville eventually achieved enormous success with new stars Tracy Lawrence, John Michael Montgomery, and Confederate Railroad. Beckett, McCoys third producer, had done work for Confederate Railroad, and Atlantic hoped he could assist, guide, and ultimately market McCoy with similar success.

McCoy told the Chicago Tribunes Jack Hurst, Barry [Beckett] and I went out to dinner, just us two, and we really hit it off. Im pretty loud and obnoxious and outgoing and hes the opposite, so I really listened to what he had to say. Becketts approach was to let McCoy go into the studio and be himself, although he did help to make McCoy more commercially viable in the country music realm. Also, Becketts R&B backgroundhe had worked with Muscle Shoalsmelded perfectly with McCoys diverse musical influences, and together the two were able to choose songs that best suited McCoys voice. McCoy told The Tennesseans Robert Oermann, I dont write songs. Im not an instrumentalist at all, not a musician. Im an entertainer.

Atlantics Blackburn told Hurst, McCoys a natural entertainer, a guy who was working 250 dates a year without a hit, and you cant abandon somebody like that. Part of the reason Blackburn and Beckett stood by McCoy through the lean early years was McCoys ability to bring an audience roaring to its feet and clamoring for more music. The singers performances onstage were down-to-earth, natural, and marked by an appealing diversity. His raucous, knee-slapping laugh, Texas drawl, and polite demeanor served to endear him to audiences.

Charm and Energy Captured on Records

McCoy often intersperses pop standards, blues, swing, and big band with country fare during live performances, drawing upon such unlikely influences as Quincy Jones and James Ingram. He is also noted for making appearances without a set list; he prefers instead to tailor his material to a specific audience. The memorable antics, humor, Las Vegas-style acrobatics, and spontaneity in which audiences take delight had been honed while McCoy toured with Charley Pride.

Most Nashville record executives in the early 1990s were dropping aspiring country music stars after only a brief shot or two, but Blackburn and Beckett sensed that if they could stick with McCoy and find a way to translate his charm and energy while performing before an audience onto a record, they would have a hit on their hands. Blackburn told Hurst in the Chicago Tribune, We always thought he could maybe be our biggest act, and I had no intention of not staying with him.

When No Doubt about It was released in 1994, the country music market was already flooded with aspiring Nashville stars. McCoy felt that if his third album failed to generate notice, he should probably move to Las Vegas with his wife to pursue work as a live entertainer, instead of continuing to record albums. His fears and doubts were soon dispelled with the astounding success of three of the albums singles. No Doubt about It was effective in highlighting McCoys vocals in a deeper, more soulful manner. What kept the singer optimistic about the success of the recording was that, toward the end of the run of his second album, Where Forever Begins, a single titled Now I Pray for Rain had managed to crack the Top 20 of the music charts and peak at Number 19.

McCoy made his television debut on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in July of 1994. You Gotta Love That was released in January of 1995, with Beckett as the producer, and the albums debut single, For a Change, hit Number 33 in its fourth week on Billboards Hot Country Singles and Tracks chart. In July Theyre Playin Our Song held the Number Seven position, while You Gotta Love That was ranked at Number 39 on the albums chart. Also in 1995, McCoy embarked on a tour with the band Alabama. The singer told Billboards Peter Cronin, Im still not as home in the studio as Id like to be, but entertaining is really more important to me than the other aspects of this business. I live for that part.

Selected discography

At This Moment, Atlantic, 1991.

Where Forever Begins, Atlantic, 1992.

No Doubt about It, Atlantic, 1994.

You Gotta Love That, Atlantic, 1995.

Sources

Baltimore Sun, May 13, 1994.

Billboard, June 18, 1994; January 7, 1995.

Chicago Tribune, July 31, 1994.

Cincinnati Post, July 7, 1994.

Country Music Magazine, July 1994.

Tennessean, July 23, 1994.

Additional information for this profile was obtained from Atlantic Records publicity materials, 1995.

B. Kimberly Taylor