Lady Antebellum Singer Charles Kelley Releasing Solo Album, Expecting First Child In February

The stars will align personally and professionally for singer Charles Kelley in February: He is expecting his first child and releasing his first solo record apart from the country vocal group Lady Antebellum.

After years of trying to conceive, Kelley and his wife Cassie found out last year they would be parents just as the Georgia native started working on a different sound separate from his bandmates Hillary Scott and Dave Haywood. The album, “The Driver,” is due out Feb. 5; their baby, a boy, is due the same month.

“Some would say great timing and some would say poor timing,” Kelley, 34, said with a smile. “You can never predict when a baby is going to come, but I am so excited.”

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(Getty Images)

The trio announced at the end of their Wheels Up tour last year that
they would be taking a hiatus, but it will be a productive break for the
group. Scott, too, announced she is recording a gospel album with her
family during the time off.

On “The Driver,” Kelley explores his
own musical heritage and influences ranging from Southern rock to ’70s
folk singers on songs that he admits probably wouldn’t have been a fit
for the Lady A catalog. He channels Bob Seger on “Leaving Nashville,” a
piano ballad about the highs and lows of life on Music Row, and enlists
the legendary Stevie Nicks to duet on a cover of Tom Petty’s “Southern
Accents.”

“For me, as an artist, I do have other things that I am
into and styles of music,” Kelley said. “I just knew that if I never did
this, it would never see the light of day.”

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But it hasn’t been an
easy reinvention. He announced a solo club tour, but then postponed
several shows so he could finish the recording. And he learned he had to
reintroduce himself to fans.

“I am kind of a new artist again, and we really needed to get the word out there,” Kelley said of postponing the tour.

Kelley
admits that it has been a big change playing clubs again when Lady
Antebellum virtually skipped that step, starting out opening up in
amphitheaters and arenas for acts like Martina McBride, Keith Urban and
Tim McGraw. Their first two albums released in 2008 and 2010 went
multi-platinum, carried by songs like “Love Don’t Live Here” and the
crossover hit “Need You Now.”

“You get so used to hearing 15,000
people scream and sing your songs back that it’s a little jarring,”
Kelley said of his solo shows. “I have to walk off stage and go, ‘OK, I
am going for a different response here.'”

Kelley shines when he
sings solo, but he is an expert harmonizer on songs like the regretful
“I Wish You Were Here,” which features Miranda Lambert. And the title
song, a three-part harmony with Dierks Bentley and Eric Paslay, already
earned him a Grammy nomination for best country duo/group performance.

“In
an ideal world, I would love to hop back and forth between these two
projects,” Kelley said of Lady Antebellum and his solo work. “Both
worlds are equally exciting. They are just fun for different reasons.”

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