Canaan Smithis a self-proclaimed perfectionist.
“I’ll hammer away at everything I hear,” Smith, 42, tells PEOPLE. “I’m just an artist in that respect. I’m super insecure at the same time as I’m somehow confident. It’s a weird combination, but welcome to my life and my headspace.”
But at the beginning of April 2024, as the Virginia native began working on his new albumChickahominy, Smith says he made the conscious decision to creatively loosen his grip a bit.
“I’ve had to trust other ears,” Smith says of working with an entirely new creative team on the new album scheduled for release on Friday, Jan. 24. “I’m having to trust other people, and all in all, this process has been beautiful for me.”
Canaan Smith.Niko Saladis
Niko Saladis
It’s an ever-changing process that Smith has found himself entrenched in from the moment his second single “Love You Like That” went to number one in 2014. In the years that followed, the country music singer/songwriter found himself on and off the charts with songs such as “Hole in a Bottle,” “Like You That Way” and “This Night Back,” but ultimately made the decision to leave his record label in 2019.
“The last thing I want to do is jump in as a 42-year-old and try to self-promote myself shamelessly 24/7. I can’t do it. I’m a songwriter. I’m not a content creator,” he adds.
Smith continues, “I’ve got other things in life that are way more important that need my attention,”
“I just want to put out cool s—," he says. “I’m tired of worrying about how I am going to make this and how is this going to make me money? I just want the music to come from a place of inspiration and core beliefs — my kids have changed my motives.”
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Indeed, Smith says his priorities shifted greatly the moment he and wife Christy first welcomed their children into the world.
“They have given me more confidence as a human, so that spills over into confidence as an artist,” Smith says of the direct affect that5-year-old Virginia Roseand 2-year-old Ramsey Canaan has made on his career.
“It’s the craziest thing. Children will give you freedom and they’ll take away your freedom, all at the same time. Everything that I thought was in my control anyhow, is not anymore. And because of that, the art that I get to make now is more inspired than put together.”
Letting go of the fear now serves as an unspoken theme ofChickahominy.
“I need freedom from the perfectionism and the bondage of this town,” Smith says. “It can be such a help and such a hurt. That’s why we took it elsewhere.”
In fact, the entirety ofChickahominywas cut in the Tennessee suburb of Murfreesboro, while also using a band Smith had never worked with before previously.
“I stepped away from the ‘should dos’ and did it more the inspired way,’ he says. “I wanted to feel more far away from the norm as possible.”
So, theAmazing Racealum went back to his core with songs such as “Chickahominy,” which tells the story of his home, long before the bright lights of fame found him.
“The Chickahominy was a river that was sort of on the elusive wrong side of the tracks in my hometown,” explains Smith. “’Chickahominy’ was easy to write because it’s a combination of knowing how I want my music to sound these days and knowing myself better than I think. I’m starting to allow those instincts to not be snuffed out and just go with it.”
Songs such as “No Mercy,” “Bad News” and “See You Again” also has Smith delving deep into both his deepest faiths and his own mental health.
“I’m trying to sift through that, and I think sharing that honestly with people helps create the best songs, and its these songs that mean more to me than any hit song will ever mean.”
Chickahominywill be available for purchase on Friday, Jan. 25.
source: people.com