Age: 25
Hometown: Maryville, Tenn.
Lives: Nashville
Single: âGetting Over Youâ
Twitter: @JackieLeeMusic
Website: jackielee.com
THE SCOOP
Born 185 miles outside Nashville in the small city of Maryville, Tenn., Jackie Lee heard Music City calling his name at a young age. With music in his bloodâhis dad is a professional musicianâJackie got his start singing in church. After moving to Nashville at age 17, Jackie began honing his sound. The now-25-year-old recently released his current single, âGetting Over You,â the first song from his upcoming debut album. As Jackie continues putting the finishing touches on the studio album, heâs also gearing up to hit the road in March as part of Dan+Shayâs Obsessed Tour.
SING BEFORE YOU CRAWL
âMy first singing engagement, I was three years old. I sang at my aunts wedding. My dad had me doing music from the time I could crawl. Music is something that I have alwaysâliterally my earliest memories have to do with music. I was two years old and my aunt, my dads sister, sent me a videoâI had just turned two and I could barely speak. Iâm sitting there with my dad and I had my little guitar and weâre singing songs, and I could remember all the lyrics to the songs, but I couldnât read or write. I could barely speak but I remembered the lyrics to the songs.â
REMEMBERING MOM
âI could talk about Mom [who passed away in 2016] all day long. Sheâs a wonderful person that cares about everyone and really wants to see the best come out of people and expects nothing less than the best. This kind of sums up my mom: In high school, I went to a school that was in the city, it wasnât event the school that I was zoned for, but I went there originally for the music program. The football team ended up being pretty good too so I played football. I went to a school where a lot of kids didnât know how they were going to get to school or get home. Didnât know what they were going to eat. Didnât know what they were going to wear. Didnât have deodorant. Didnât have toothpaste. From seventh grade to my senior year in high school we probably had about 35 kids live with us on and off. My mom had such a heart for people, and she loves people. When I think back about some awesome times in my life she always demanded that I respect myself.
JACKIEâS FIVE MUST-HAVES ON THE ROAD
- My Mophie charger because Iâve been on many airplanes and my phone has died and I cannot call an Uber.
- I have a bible that is broken up into single days that you read about 10 minutes a day. You can read the whole bible in a year. Iâve been doing that this year.
- My girlfriend [Taylor Dye of Maddie & Tae] got me a brown travel Frye bag that I love so much. Like a little satchel thing. I always carry that with me.
- Earphones. I can never leave the house without my earbuds
- A hat, Iâll definitely bring a hat. I always have an extra hat in my bag.
âI think thatâs been the biggest struggle in my personal life is having self confidence. Thatâs one thing that my mom always had was confidence in herself. She knew that she was a good person. She knew that she cared about people.
ââGetting Over Youâ was one of the last songs of mine that she ever heard. Iâll put it like this, sheâs heard it but I never got to play her in person the final version of âGetting Over You.â When I started to go down this path of really exploring who I wanted to be without anyone elseâs opinion, thatâs when I started to settle in on a sound.â
THE STORY BEHIND âGETTING OVER YOUâ
âI went into the writers room with Brent Anderson and Paul DiGiovanni [who is producing Jackieâs debut album]. Brent is a very funny, goofy guy. Heâs one of my best friends. We were there for about 40 minutes, 45 minutes and I could tell the he wasnât himself. I was like, âHey man, you okay?â He said, âNo man, Iâm a little heartbroken.â I was like, âWell, you want to go get a beer at 10 am?â He was like, âNo, I want to write this out.â I was like, âWhat happened?â He said, âMy girl and I broke up last night.â He started going through text messages on his phone of what they were saying the night before. I saw a lot of text messages I wish I would not have seen. He got to a text message that said, âWell Brent, if you think getting over me was hard, try getting over you.â We kind of had been beating our heads against the wall, trying to find something to write about that day, and he said that and we all three immediately were like, âAh, thatâs it.â We started writing it. We wrote the first verse. Then we wrote the chorus, and I was like, âMan, we havenât messed this up yet, this is pretty cool.'â
THE SOUND OF NEW MUSIC
âIâm super excited about what we got [for the new album]. [Producer] Paul [DiGiovanni] really brings his pop influence for sure. I love singing large melodies. I love singing soulful melodiesâR&B. âGetting Over Meâ is the perfect blend of all of that. Itâs got the more edgy pop sound, but it works on country radio because thatâs where I identify. I want it to be fun too. Music is music. I want people to be able to jam. For a long timeâ I take this as a complimentâbut for a long time people were like, ââOh, your voice, you just need to sing ballads all the time.â I donât want to be an artist that they have to pass out pillows everywhere I go to sing because Iâm going to sing an hour and a half full of ballads. I want every song to have, a fun bounce. Whether itâs a happy song, sad song, whatever. I feel super happy with what we have done so far.â
ON THE ROAD WITH DAN+SHAY
âItâs going to be a lot of fun. I was stoked [when I found out]. We were on our way to Memphis to do Country Cares and my manager got a call from their manager. Iâve never been on a tour. It was the first experience of that and it made me really happy. I love being on the road. I love getting to see places in general. Whenever I get to a new city I love to go do something that that city has to offer. Also to be on tour with Dan and Shay I really love their music as a fan. I hope their fan base likes what I do.â
MY GIRL
âSheâs awesome [Taylor Dye of Maddie & Tae]. Sheâs so wonderful, sheâs such a sweet person. As great, or as sucky I guess as it is that we donât get to see each other as much as weâd like to, sheâs also the person that I can get off the road and maybe have a few frustrations that someone that doesnât hit the road doesnât understand and they want to talk about it. We donât have to with one another unless we want to. We can just come home and unplug and not have to worry about it. I feel like you give so much on the road, itâs unfair sometimes when youâre in a relationship, that you donât have anything left to give. Itâs also good to sit down on the couch and not have to say anything. We both give each other that space to do that.â

ON THE HORIZON
âEveryday my management team hits me up with something new we got on the books. The summer is filling up. Weâre doing a lot of festivals. Weâre really busy until Stagecoach at the end of April. Iâm opening up the main stageâsolo acoustic. I wouldnât trade any experience Iâve had so far in Nashville with the way I feel now. Everybody has their own path, everybody has their own journey. I know that Iâm still at the very beginning of mine. I look at everything that Iâve done so far as pre-production of setting up the rest. Iâm super excited about this year.â