Dierks Bentley Blogs About Playing a Festival in France

Hey everyone, Sorry it’s been a couple days since our European tour ended. Between the jet lag and immediately playing three U.S. dates, includingLollapalooza, I have been just trying to recover and regroup! Let me recap the France showand the end of our trip …
We flew from Norway to France and as I was saying in the previous blog, it was a long travel day … Starting in Seljord, traveling to Oslo, then to Lyon, France (via Munich, Germany), then a drive to Craponne, France. Getting to the festival grounds, though, really made everything all right. A beautiful location for a festival, up in the hills and overlooking some amazing landscape. Again, plenty of cowboy hats and jeans and Western style of clothing. Kind of feels like you are playing a festival somewhere in the mountains of California … until people start talking! It was back to using the most basic words of communication like “hello” (bonjour) and “thank you” (merci).
Everyone at the festival, though, was easygoing and helpful. It was apparent right away that they had been doing the show for a while and that it was going to be a great night. We did our soundcheck and I did a couple of radio interviews as well as a press conference. I took some video footage of that, as it was my first time doing one with an interpreter. They’d ask her a question, she’d ask me, I’d tell her and she’d tell the press folks. Not sure what all gets lost in that process! Probably a lot. But she was a big help.
I kept trying to find her, especially when I had the bright idea that I’d write some French words down on paper so I could speak to the crowd that night. I had her help me with “I know we don’t speak the same language, but we all love the same kind of music … country music!” When I went to say it that night, I can’t imagine how mangled it sounded. The audience cheered though and so I think I at least got the sentiment across. I also said, “This next song is about beer,” when I introduced “Domestic Light and Cold” … and that also got a big response! I think they said there were about 10,000-15,000 people there. We had a blast playing. It’s hard not to be thinking the whole time, “Wow, we are playing a show in France right now” the whole time you are up there … It’s a long way from Lower Broadway.
After the show, we hung out for a pretty long while. I signed autographs until about 1:15 and then spent some time with the other bands, including the Honky Tonk Farmers. They put on a great show and we had a blast afterwards. They are big on homemade wine and fondue. I found it to be a pretty good combination myself! I crashed hard that night and was really looking forward to the next three days of just getting to be a regular tourist.
We spent the first day off in Le Puy, an amazing old town with a statue of the Virgin Mary sitting high on a peak over looking it. Also a church built in 500 A.D. on another peak … I took a bunch of pics which I’ll post on dierks.com next week. In looking at my pictures from the trip, most are of old churches and buildings and stuff that kind of blows your mind, as it’s really old. You don’t have to work very hard to imagine medieval times, as a lot of the stone structures from this time period are still around.
After a day there, we headed to Paris on the bullet train, where we spent a day and a half. We probably walked 5 miles a day over there, just taking it all in. Great coffee, good wine, lots of cheese and bread and lots to see and think about. One of the first things we all talked about when we regrouped and started heading towards the airport is how crazy expensive it is. A pint of beer was about 15 dollars. Gas is about 8 bucks a gallon. With the dollar being as weak as it is, and with stuff just costing more over there anyway in general, no one really came home with too many souvenirs! But lots of great pictures and memories.
It’s hard to describe the feeling of seeing the USA from the air when you’re coming back from another country. It just feels like home I guess, which is the best feeling in the world. And it makes the whole country, not just individual states or cities or towns, feel like your hometown. We landed at Chicago, got on the bus and … headed to Columbus, Ohio, for a show! What did you think? That we would be taking some time off?! Are you crazy?!
So that’s it … Hope I’ve been able to share some insights about the tour and also about the trip. We were lucky to get a chance to do it and we look forward to going back to Ireland, and England and Norway and France … and to some new places as well. Anywhere people want to hear our kind of country music.
God bless, dierks





