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After a lost record deal, Scotty McCreery rebounds

Country singer who won American Idol bets it all on one song and gets a payoff
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Scotty McCreery was the American Idol winner in 2011.

NASHVILLE 鈥 Two years ago, country singer Scotty McCreery found out he lost his record deal with Mercury/Interscope while shooting an episode for American Idol, the show he won in 2011. He had come back to mentor new contestants on the show, which was then on Fox, but his own career was at a precipice.

鈥淚 was trying to put on a happy face while I was filming,鈥 the 24-year-old singer with the baritone voice said. 鈥淭hat was a rough week.鈥

McCreery, who is from North Carolina, had started his career on a high at 18 by becoming the youngest male artist and first country artist to debut his first album on the Billboard 200. Although his albums sold well, McCreery leaned toward the more traditional side of the genre, when bro-country and party songs ruled the airwaves.

He managed to get some Top 10 radio hits with See You Tonight and Feelin鈥 It, but he also dealt with the bias that many talent-show competitors run up against in the music industry.

鈥淚 think we鈥檝e had to work hard to establish ourselves away from American Idol, to not just be the TV guy, but to be the country-music artist that writes songs and tells stories and can sing songs,鈥 said McCreery, who adds that he has always been proud of his Idol beginning.

He has even returned to the new season of Idol, now on ABC, as a mentor.

But McCreery feared that after losing his record deal, he was losing the rights to the songs he had recorded while he was still signed. In particular, he wanted to get back a song called Five More Minutes, which he wrote after losing his grandfather in 2015.

McCreery spent a year negotiating the purchase of those songs, still out touring as an independent artist and even releasing a memoir.

鈥淚n Nashville, in particular, if you get dealt a fatal blow like what we got dealt in 2016, you don鈥檛 often get a second chance,鈥 McCreery said. 鈥淪o I knew if we were going to bet my career on anything, the resurgence of my career, I am going to bet on Five More Minutes.鈥

McCreery鈥檚 rebound play worked. He released Five More Minutes last year while still unsigned. The song became an emotional part of his live shows, earning standing ovations.

He signed to independent Nashville label Thirty Tigers Records, which pushed it to the top of Billboard鈥檚 country airplay chart this month, just in time for Seasons Change, which came out on Friday.

It鈥檚 hard to imagine staging a career comeback at 24, but McCreery considers his new record an introduction of sorts.

鈥淔eels like I am starting fresh,鈥 he said. 鈥淔eels like I am starting over almost. Like this is the beginning of my career, almost to a sense. I feel like at 24 I know who I am a lot better than back in the day and I know how to express that through my songs.鈥