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Kristian Bush, right, and singer Jennifer Nettles are now the duo that makes up Sugarland — founding songwriter Kristen Hall left the group in 2006. Sugarland won the CMA Vocal Duo award last year, a category dominated by Brooks & Dunn for 14 years.
Kristian Bush, right, and singer Jennifer Nettles are now the duo that makes up Sugarland — founding songwriter Kristen Hall left the group in 2006. Sugarland won the CMA Vocal Duo award last year, a category dominated by Brooks & Dunn for 14 years.
John Wenzel, The Denver Post arts and entertainment reporter,  in Denver on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
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Listening to Kristian Bush talk about his band’s upward trajectory inspires enough convincing, aw-shucks optimism to fill an arena-sized washtub.

And why shouldn’t it? In a music industry pummeled by plunging CD sales and mutating business models, country-pop superstars Sugarland are a relative anomaly, a band that gathers awards and platinum discs by the muscular armload.

“You have to take chances, musically, and you have to take them in your business,” Bush said over the phone from Waikiki, Hawaii, fresh off an early-morning surfing lesson. “Everything we’ve done that was safe didn’t work out.”

While it’s debatable that Sugarland’s rock- and pop-leaning songs take any real creative chances, it’s undeniable that they have worked. The chart performance of Sugarland’s two albums, 2004’s “Twice the Speed of Life” and 2006’s “Enjoy the Ride,” reads like a how-to manual on radio domination.

That’s especially impressive considering the Atlanta-based act lost its third leg in 2006 when founding songwriter Kristen Hall hastily left. Now a duo composed of Bush and golden-voiced singer Jennifer Nettles, Sugarland has continued its ascent by learning from its elders — and employing that experience on its own headlining tour.

“We’ve had some great leadership from people like Kenny (Chesney) and Brooks & Dunn and Brad Paisley,” Bush said. “They’ve shown us that part of what you do is about sitting in your room and writing a song, but another part is standing in front of people and going through that emotion and sharing it with them. Jennifer and I both are interested in the value of an entertainment experience.”

Indeed, Sugarland’s headlining shows have taken cues from unlikely sources to ramp up the energy and spectacle. The band will likely not attempt it at the Red Rocks concert on Saturday, but recent shows have seen Bush and Nettles rolling atop the crowd in giant plastic hamster balls, a la indie rockers the Flaming Lips.

“I’m a big Flaming Lips fan and I thought, ‘Why not? Someone’s gotta do it.’ And you figure nobody in country music’s ever seen anything like that.”

The rock quotient also feels higher at recent Sugarland shows, thanks to the composition of Bush and Nettle’s backing band, which includes members of Better Than Ezra, Train and Bush’s former group, Billy Pilgrim.

“There’s no reason that a lot of touring country musicians can’t pick up where Van Halen left off,” Bush said. “It’s just that they don’t want to.”

Bush also pointed to Nashville’s tradition of mentoring as one reason Sugarland has enjoyed Grammy, CMT and CMA award wins — including wresting the CMA Vocal Duo award from Brooks & Dunn after that pair’s 14-year domination.

“It’s less torch-passing than a dramatic amount of encouragement. If I ever have a question I can call up Kenny Chesney or Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn and they’ll talk to me,” Bush said. “Competition is partly a construct of the awards.”

Genres like R&B also have a tradition of mentoring, and other country artists (including Brooks & Dunn) have employed high-tech spectacle in their stage shows. But Sugarland’s momentum is increasingly self-sustaining, especially as it plans another busy year with a new single this month, an as-yet-untitled album in September and its first-ever overseas tour in the fall.

“There’s magic involved in it,” Bush said, still reeling from the success of his first surfing lesson. “You can’t believe that the physics of it work out the way they do.”

If he were talking about Sugarland’s success in an otherwise dim industry environment, it’s likely no one would bat an eye.

John Wenzel: 303-954-1642 or jwenzel@denverpost.com


Sugarland

Pop-country. Red Rocks Amphitheatre, 18300 W. Alameda Parkway, with Pat Green. Saturday. 7:30 p.m. $39.50. 303-830-8497 or .

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