Reports of Hootie & the Blowfish's demise in the wake of
frontman Darius Rucker's country music success this year have been
greatly exaggerated, according to Rucker himself.
"To be honest with you, we're not even split up right now, and
we're not really thinking about splitting up," Rucker tells
Billboard.com. "We have four shows coming up in March. But it was
more the group wanted to stop touring every summer, to not go on
the road every summer just 'cause we can. People wanted to do other
things with their lives.
"We're still a band. Even if something were to happen and we didn't
play for years, we would still consider ourselves a band. We've
been doing this more than half of our lives."
Rucker also predicts that the Blowfish, whose last album, "Looking
for Lucky," came out in 2005, will "make a record some time down
the road. It's not going to be this year or next year, but I'm sure
we will."
The singer, meanwhile, has plenty on his plate thanks to "Learn To
Live," his second solo album and first country venture, which
spawned the hit "Don't Think I Don't Think About It," the first
country chart-topper by an African-American artist since 1983.
Rucker, who prepared 60 songs for the project, says he can't wait
to start working on the follow-up.
"I'm ready to start writing and ready to record," Rucker reports.
But, he adds, his label, Capitol Nashville, "has a lot of single
ideas for this record, so we're just gonna play it by ear. I'm just
gonna keep putting out singles as long as they want and stay on the
road."
Rucker will perform his song "If I Had Wings" at tonight's
"Christmas in Washington," which will be broadcast on TNT. In 2009
he's doing a three-week tour with Brad Paisley and Dierks Bentley,
and he's in talks for "a really big" summer tour that, for the
moment, he "can't say anything about. But it's a really great tour.
It's gonna be fun and really exiting, and I really hope it
happens."