Cold Coronas, Canadian bacon pizza, Beatles music -- sounds like somebody's recipe for a party, doesn't it?
Those are among the ingredients mentioned in country superstar Brad Paisley's current hit, "American Saturday Night." With its rockin' beat, some people may interpret the song as simply an invitation to party. But Paisley meant it as a different way of looking at patriotism.
"As we wrote this song, I started thinking about what really makes this country great, and it's the fact that we are sort of 'the greatest hits,' the best of the best," he said. "Whatever we are, we assimilate. Nothing, outside of Native American culture, is indigenous here. We're all from somewhere else way back in our lineage, and it's kind of a neat place to think that we've somehow made this work."
Paisley said he always wanted to write a patriotic song, but he didn't want it to be a jingoistic chest-beater.
"Let's get a little deeper than that," said the 37-year-old West Virginia native of Scottish, Irish, Italian, German and Cherokee heritage ("I'm a total mutt"). "I also wanted to make it fun -- the kind of song you want to rock out to because this is the best place to party in the world."
Does Paisley's multi-culti American Saturday Night Tour -- which comes to Xcel Energy Center on Saturday -- play differently on the seventh night?
"I think it does," he said last Saturday before going onstage in Wichita, Kan. "Thursdays are these days when people feel the impending workday the next day. Fridays, they don't but they just worked all day. There's something about a Saturday night that is the peak of the week. People are just a little more ready to let go whatever it is they need to let go of and have a good time."
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