NEW YORK — Allow Brian Kelley to reintroduce himself.
Best known as one-half of the country super-duo Florida Georgia Line, Kelley will release a solo album, ''Tennessee Truth," on Friday. It is a collection of 12 anthemic country songs ripe for a road trip and tailgate in equal measure.
For ''Tennessee Truth,'' produced by Dann Huff, Kelley says he aimed to ''dive into the music I grew up on — obviously the music I love and themes of just country living, rural living, hard work, good times, outdoors, love,'' he told The Associated Press from his home in Nashville.
Good songwriting, Kelley says, is a lot like fishing — you need patience. ''I wrote probably over 100 songs for this record."
Eight of the 12 songs on the album were written by Kelley, and he worked with whomever he could on others, trying to get outside his comfort zone. ''Every song gets you to the next song," he says.
''I think it's a fun record,'' he says, adding that the creative process was dependent on these tracks translating live.
Geography still plays a prominent role in the music Kelley makes. Throughout ''Tennessee Truth'' are beaches in Florida, farms in Nashville, his wife's family farm in Georgia. Hunting, sitting on the porch drinking sweet tea and eating peanuts, conversations with loved ones — that's the kind of life he hopes comes across on the album. ''Just being free,'' he says.
Fans looking for more coastal country from Kelley — like what was found on his pandemic album, ''Sunshine State of Mind,'' released in 2020 — will want to skip over to ''10 O'Clock On The Dock.''