
“You’re doing a juggling act,” she explains. “You have to take off your performance hat and be a mom. I’m not really good at multi-tasking. A lot of moms can multi-task their butts off. But I’m just not one of those people.”
In 2005, Jamie released her second album Brave on Capitol, Nashville. That album produced the hits “Trying To Find Atlantis” and “Somebody’s Hero,” which is being used by American Greeting Cards for Mother’s Day. The song is a salute to mothers that don’t get recognized for the tough job they have.
“The lyrics pertain to being a full-time mom,” Jamie explains. “You know you are a cook, a taxi driver and everything you do is a sacrifice for your kid. But what you get back out of that is an unbelievable feeling. Not like you are doing it for nothing. Sometimes, you do feel like you never switch off.”
Jamie still spends a lot of time with her old roommate and songwriting partner Roxie Dean. Roxie is a mother of an 18-month old little girl. They are working on a children’s book and CD together.
“You spend hours when they are really little ones watching ‘Wiggles’ and ‘Doodlebops,’” Jamie says. “There is a lot of great stuff out there, don’t get me wrong, but the music is lacking. I feel like we can really do something here because we love seeing the enjoyment on the kids’ faces and we really just get into it.”
The project is being called “The Giggle Gang.” Jamie describes it this way, “There will be a book about each character and then a song about the character. What they are doing, where they are and what they have to do with The Giggle Gang. It’s like a television show in the works, but the books are described as if the show is already on TV.”
A future filled with promise…
What’s next for Jamie O’Neal?
She says she is working on two new albums – one she describes as classic country and the other is a project for 1720 Entertainment, with whom she recently singed a new record deal.
The classic country album, Jamie says, is something she’s wanted to do for a while.
“We went into the studio and did them in my own way,” Jamie says. “I just wanted to do something different, but to pay homage to the heroes I grew up listening to and the songs that moved me. Of course, when you do your own music, there is nothing in your head to compare it to and revert back to. But with the classics it’s like major pressure. I’m like listening back to the originals and going gosh, I’m never going to be able to get this.”
The other album is a new project for 1720 Entertainment. One of the songs, “Field of Daisies,” gives advice to young girls. The song is about developing a sense of self-worth. Another cut (written with Roxie) “Soldier Coming Home,” has a bit of a twist.
“We civilians could learn so much from the troops and how they treat each other and how much respect they have for family and not taking for granted how long we have each other in this life,” Jamie explains. “We should treat everybody like they are soldiers coming home.”
Jamie does reach out to our nation’s troops and has done a couple of USO tours. The soldiers, she says, are incredible. “When you see how long they are deployed, how tough they have it and what’s remarkable, they never complain. They do an amazing job.”
Living in Williamson County has provided the perfect environment for Jamie. She and Rodney can record in their high-tech basement studio with Aliyah close by, along with the rest of her family. Dad Jimmy lives in Bellevue with wife Pat, and mom, Julie, has her own company Julie Murphy Special Events.
For this star, it’s all about creative freedom.
“I think that’s why Keith and I had success,” she says. “Because it was just he and I making the decisions and cutting the songs we loved, and putting it out there. But you know, you do everything you do for that hour and a half that you are on stage. That’s what we love.
“And, when you write a song, so you can go on stage and perform it, and hopefully by then it will be on the radio and fans will sing along with it. You travel for hours, you work for years, and it all comes down to that short performance that you do on stage. And, hopefully, the audience shows up and likes it!”