When he accepts awards, gives interviews or talks about himself on his recent DVD "Night Train to Georgia," country superstar Jason Aldean sure seems humble, soft-spoken and businesslike.
But put him in the recording studio or onstage and Aldean turns up the volume and cranks up the craziness.
Take his second consecutive winter visit to the Twin Cities, a crazy move for a Georgia native.
"I didn't have a say-so," said Aldean, who will perform Friday at Xcel Energy Center. "They [his agents and promoters] book the tour. I typically try to stay in the South through the winter. Most of the venues up there [North], you drive the bus right into them so I never have to go outside. So it's no big deal."
Aldean is facing competition Friday from a massive outdoor party, the 2014 Hockey City Classic, featuring the Gophers men's and women's hockey teams at TCF Bank Stadium — the first major open-air games at the leading university in the State of Hockey.
"I will be skipping out on the hockey game," he said. "Party inside."
Aldean is always willing to go outside the box, however.
Take "1994," his hit from last year that celebrates country star Joe Diffie. Remember him? He had a run of hits including "New Way (to Light Up an Old Flame)" and "Third Rock From the Sun" in the 1990s. The tune has muscular guitars, rapped verses, sing-songy choruses and a refrain that repeats "Joe, Joe, Joe Diffie" as if it's a takeoff on Kriss Kross' 1992 rap hit "Jump."