Every time Chase Rice has himself figured out, he surprises even himself.Â
âIâm doing a puzzle right now,â the country star states in a state of disbelief during an interview with PEOPLE. âAnd I fâing hate puzzles. Itâs absurd. I got to go back to getting drunk every night.â
He laughs, but that occasional reality seems to be changing too, as Rice goes on to admit that he hasnât had a drink in a âcouple weeks.â âItâs been awesome,â the âEyes on Youâ hitmaker declares âIâm just trying not to drink during social settings. I need to learn how to actually be around people and not have to be drunk.â
As usual, Rice, now 39, is speaking his truth â and singing right along with it.
Take for example his new original song âCowboy Goodbyeâ â a lyrical sentimental silhouette featured on Riceâs new Live From Chiefâs EP, and a release that further proves that the diamond-certified songwriter from North Carolina has arrived at a time where heâs looking to lead with his heart rather than his ego.
âLately, Iâm really big on real stories to me or well-written stories that are probably true for somebody else,â says the newly appointed independent artist, who hopes the song will find itself on his upcoming record Eldora. âThis is obviously me going down that road. It is like the [North Carolina theme park] Tweetsie Railroad references. Itâs all real-life stories about my life, and itâs just how I felt.â
The touching song even includes references to a childhood love. âShe was my summer love,â says Rice of the girl named Jenny, who was 10 years older than him. âWe would be at church camp when I was a little kid, and Iâd walk around in my cowboy boots with jean shorts on and just thought I was cool as sâ. And man, I fell in love with Jenny. I loved her. Sheâd always give me hugs and stuff, and I was just a cute little kid.â
Jenny died is a car accident just a few years later.
âI played [âCowboy Goodbyeâ] for her parents this summer,â Rice says quietly. âSo yeah, itâs a real story and the truth about my life and where my life is at these days and all the goodbyes that have led to it.â
And as Rice gets older, the goodbyes seem to sting a bit more â especially the ones that led him to find himself at this moment where he faces life alone in many ways.
âIâm at that point in my life where Iâm not looking for love, but Iâm at least trying to get my ducks in a row to where if the right one comes along, Iâm ready,â says Rice, who is currently out on his Go Down Singinâ international tour. âAnd thatâs just part of growing up. I just donât want to wake up and be 50 years old and have all this to myself.â
Rice says heâs also wanting kids and hopes to become a father someday. âWhether it happens, or I am married or not, time will tell. But Iâd obviously like to do it with the right woman.â
He would also like to figure out the best way to share his music these days, especially as the music industry seems to get more fragmented and downright confusing by the minute.
âThat has been the frustrating part of the last two years because itâs the best music Iâve ever made,â explains Rice, indirectly referring to albums such as 2023âs critically acclaimed I Hate Cowboys and All Dogs Go to Hell and 2024âs Go Down Singin. âBut the masses havenât heard it. They donât know it exists. So how do we get people to really believe what Iâm doing? And the short answer for me is just keep doing it.â
He draws in a deep breath.Â
âYou look at âReady, Set, Rollâ and âDrinkinâ Beer. Talkinâ God. Amen.â and all those songs that were hits for me back the day and it keeps me wondering why that is what people want to hear, as opposed to the more quality, better music that Iâm making now?â
Rice concludes: âI donât have an answer for that, but Iâm not going to go back to what I was doing. This is who I am.â
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