As a celebrity biographer, Patsi Bale Cox has explored the lives and careers of country music greats Tanya Tucker and Loretta Lynn, among others. With her latest book, 'The Garth Factor: The Career Behind Country's Big Boom,' she writes from an insider's perspective few biographers can equal. And while many may feel they know the real Garth Brooks, 'The Garth Factor' offers the seasoned music journalist the opportunity to set the record straight on various unexplored -- or misunderstood -- aspects of the entertainer's unparalleled career.
Patsi first met Garth while she was writing artist bios and press materials for the Nashville-based Gurley & Company, which handled public relations for Capitol Records, the label that signed the Oklahoma native in June 1988. She continued to work with the superstar until the release of his Wal-Mart-exclusive collection in 2005.
"I did all the writing that had anything to do with his music," says the Kansas native, who moved to Nashville from Denver in 1983, and in addition to Garth, Tanya and Loretta, has written books on Ralph Emery, Tony Orlando and talk show host Jenny Jones.
Patsi and Garth have remained friends through the years, and while in Tulsa, Okla., for a recent book signing, she spent time at the home of the retired performer, his wife Trisha Yearwood and his daughters, Taylor, August and Allie.
The Boot sat down with Patsi to talk about 'The Garth Factor' and to learn more about the man who inspired this unique biography, including what he said when he found out the book was being written, and how a simple statement from him became one of the most misinterpreted of his career.
What do you remember about your first meeting with Garth?
I first heard Garth when [publicist] Cathy Gurley gave me an advance copy of 'No Fences' (Garth's second album, which would go on to sell 20 million copies worldwide). She told me to listen to it and then go to meet with him the next day at [manager] Bob Doyle's office. I listened to the album and then the next day went over to Bob's office around noon. I went in and didn't see anyone, so I called out. Finally I heard a voice yelling from the back, 'Come on back here.' I went to the back and there was Garth. Everyone had gone to lunch and the secretary was starving, so Garth told her to go to lunch and he'd spot her. So for the first 30 minutes we talked, he was answering the phone, taking messages from people's kids and whoever else called, and it cracked me up. Anyone who had heard 'No Fences' knew what a big record it was going to be. At this time 'The Dance' [from Garth's debut album] was huge, the video was out and it was a smash.
What made you decide that this was the time to write and release the book?
After [label head] Jimmy Bowen left Capitol, Garth asked me if I would continue to work with him, which I did. I got to know his music tremendously, and appreciate his conscientiousness in listening to songs to record, and his attention to sequencing the songs on his albums. He also asked me to work on his project with Wal-Mart, and in 2006, he wanted me to go through his archives and write things for his website. I wrote and wrote for a year-and-a-half for him, but he could only use a fraction of what I did. There was all the research and the story there. As I went through everything, I saw so many misconceptions, and I thought, 'I've got to put this into a book!'
Which aspects of Garth's career were high on your list of things to clarify, either because they had been misinterpreted or because the facts were just wrong?Garth made the statement [during an interview with Barbara Walters] that money was no longer an issue, because he had enough money for his kids and grandkids. People turned that into a negative. I feel that he made a working-class statement. It was silly, the reaction to what he said. I understood immediately what he was talking about. The fact that he didn't have to worry anymore about money meant that now his art could be free; he could take chances. It's a great freedom to have. But people made it into 'Garth says he's rich.' The other thing I think is important to know about Garth -- and I saw this nearly every day with him -- I saw he tried as hard as he could to be normal. He fought the "star" thing to the extent of separating himself out and calling it the "Garth Brooks" thing. I saw him all the time making sure he didn't get sucked into that black hole. That's Elvis Presley territory. It starts making you uncomfortable. He told me at one point, maybe in 1993, 'I'm getting sick of seeing myself on magazine covers, and if I'm getting sick everybody else is, too.'
What kind of memories did writing the book bring back for you?
After 'The Dance' had been out, a friend of mine lost her husband and that song was a huge influence on her. I told Garth about that and told him she was going to visit me. I picked her up at the airport, and we went to a party for Garth. I had not talked to him in a month-and-a-half, but when he saw us come in, he walked straight across the room and he said, 'Patsi, is this the friend you were telling me about?' I said yes, and he immediately talked to her in a wonderful way about her loss. It was a stunning thing for him to remember me talking about her and relate to it. There was nothing phony about that. It was a very caring thing.
What was Garth's reaction when he found out you were writing the book?
I told him, 'I don't want your immediate involvement; that would change everything. Plus If I criticize anyone, it's going to come from me, not you. It will be my perception, and they can come and talk to me and not you.' He said to me, 'I'm not going to tell you what to do.' I doubt that he was thrilled, but he wasn't unhappy about it. He wasn't going to tell me to do it or not. That was my decision. His only question on anything was reopening old things, and that's why he never talks about it. I've been around artists and done interviews with artists who are still very angry with what happened in their career. That's not his style, he would rather let bygones be bygones.
And what was his reaction after the book came out?
He emailed me and said, 'How does it feel to have to answer all the questions for a change?' I emailed him back and probably told him twice what he wanted to hear! I told him about some of the interviews and actually told him I was having fun, and that radio still loved him. And they do.
You stayed with Garth and Trisha recently at their home in Oklahoma. How was that trip?
Just as I would have predicted, he arrived at the airport to get me in his pickup. Trisha is working on a new cookbook, so I was treated to some of the recipes she and her mother Gwen are testing. She prepared the best spaghetti casserole I have ever eaten, along with Garth's famous garlic bread. I saw no music memorabilia in Garth and Trisha's house -- no platinum records or awards. It's a family-friendly home with pictures his daughters have drawn on the fridge. The girls were all there, and they are such tremendous young women. Smart, talented, mature. [Garth's first wife] Sandy stopped by, and it was good to see her. These are clearly people who all like each other and have their daughters' well-being at the top of their priority list.






Reader Comments(1 of 2)
joleea3at 9-05-2009
`I don't think he tried to stay normal as possible. Just as soon as he got very popular he dropped his wife (Sandy) like a log. He tore his family apart and marriage is for life. That is if possible. I think he and Trishia did Sandy wrong.
crystalat 9-05-2009
I LIVE RIGHT HERE IS OKLAHOMA, I ALSO HAVE A FAMILY MEMBER THAT IS FRIENDS WITH SANDY BROOKS.. SHE HAS ALWAYS BEEN DONE RIGHT BY. SHE IS THE ONE WHO DID WRONG BY HIM. UNTIL HE COULDNT RAISE HIS GIRLS THAT WAY ANYMORE.. HE STILL BAILS SANDY OUT..I DONT THINK YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT. AND TRISHA IS TRYING TO HAVE A NORMAL LIFE WITH HIM. SANDY IS BETTER WITH THEM APART, AND THEY ACTUALLY GET ALONG. SO WHAT IS WRONG WITH HAPPY ENDINGS..JUST BECASUE ITS NOT PICTURE BOOK, DOESNT MEAN IT DOESNT WORK OUT FOR THE BEST.
I LIKE GARTH, TRISHA, AND SANDY JUST FINE. THE WAY THEY ARE NOW.
IF YOU WANT TO FIX SOMEONE, FIX SOMEONE THAT IS BROKEN.. LIKE BRITNEY SPEARS!
annamarieat 9-05-2009
garth brooks is a well rounded fella. he caresalot about others and his music is great. cant wait till he unretires himself.
annamarieat 9-05-2009
what the heck you know??couldnt have just dumped her if they are still friends today. get with it, you dont have to hate someone you once loved!!
Shelleat 9-05-2009
Life is what it is! If the happiness and laughter is gone that is worse for the kids. Now they are all friends and there lives seem to be good.
Like I said "IT IS WHAT IT IS"
I LOVE ALL HIS MUSIC.
Maryat 9-05-2009
If all 3 get along, then wheres the problem?
hugo24601at 9-05-2009
I wish I could say I didn't have to worry about money, must have been a freeing experience.
missyat 9-05-2009
I seperated from my husband 2 years ago. We still talk every day and raise our 2 kids together. There was just to many things that happened in our marriage that had hurt me and I had to move on. There was physical abuse and my husband was interested in someone else for a while. It was best for my kids and my self to move on with our lives instead of trying to make it work. My husband never would listen to me when I lived with him and would be very abusive when I tried to talk to him. Since I left him he has did a lot of soul searching that he would not have done had I stayed. We are friends and help each other out in times of need. We are going to start the divorce soon. My kids have adjusted really good because there dad and I are still friends. So I am happy that Garth and Sandy can be the same way instead of putting the kids through a lot of conflict.
socialoat 9-05-2009
Yay Garth & all that - I wanna hear more about KEVIN FOWLER and his new single coming out "BEER SEASON"!!!
mtlowemanat 9-05-2009
I think Garth Brooks is a jackass. When compact discs first became popular, in about 1986, his lawyers tried here in California to OUTLAW private sales of CDs. They were trying to get the Legislature to make it a FELONY. So if you sold a CD to a friend you could be locked up right next to Charlie Manson. I think Garth Brooks deep down inside is a greedy creep and I will never buy any of his music.
Allisonat 9-05-2009
I know Garth's lawyer very well because the attorney is MY attorney. He did not try to make it illegal to sell a CD to your friend. What my attorney was trying to do was prevent PIRATING of CDs (making a copy yourself and sell the copy). Perhaps you got busted for doing that very thing, so that's why you hate Garth? Hmmm...
I've met Garth many times. He's as down to earth and unpretentious as anyone can get. Very polite, intelligent, and has a wicked sense of humor. He says his job is as an entertainer; he's not a celebrity or star. He has (had) a job he loves and it made him happy. More power to him.
Loriann P. Lancyat 9-06-2009
Are you nuts? Garth is probably the least greedy artist out there! He is a very smart business man, but that doesn't mean he is greedy. How many artists do you know of that will only charge $18 for a concert ticket, regardless of where the seat is? This was at the height of his career! I wasn;t very pleased when he and Sandy split up, but I didn't know the circumstances then and I still doin't, but if he and Sandy have gotten past it and have remained friends, then who are we to judge them?
Ronat 9-05-2009
I went to OSU in Stillwater with Garth in the mid-80's, and saw him play at bars, dives and such. How I wish I would have sat in with his band!
Garth was a marketing major, and he did a brilliant job of marketing himself at a time when the rest of the country seemed curious about country music. He ain't no George Jones, but he's a good 'un!
Best wishes to him and his family!
mtlowemanat 9-05-2009
I think Garth Brooks is a jackass. When compact discs first became popular, in about 1986, his lawyers tried here in California to OUTLAW private sales of CDs. They were trying to get the Legislature to make it a FELONY. So if you sold a CD to a friend you could be locked up right next to Charlie Manson. I think Garth Brooks deep down inside is a greedy creep and I will never buy any of his music.
Fearless Leaderat 9-05-2009
I used to love those movies he made with his brothers Moe & Larry......