The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1994, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Thursday, August 18, 1994              TAG: 9408180038
SECTION: DAILY BREAK              PAGE: E6   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY FRANK ROBERTS, STAFF WRITER 
                                             LENGTH: Medium:   71 lines

COUNTRY'S GREGG AIMS TO PRESERVE OLD FAVORITES

HIS FIRST ALBUM, the self-titled ``Ricky Lynn Gregg,'' was an up-tempo, let's-have-a-blast job.

``It sold over 300,000 copies,'' Gregg said during a phone interview from Skowhegan, Maine. ``I have a lot to be proud of.''

Gregg seems even prouder of ``Get a Little Closer'' - album No. 2.

``It has a different attitude and music,'' said Gregg, who plays at Country World and Billiards in Virginia Beach tonight. ``The first release only had two ballads. This one is a mix.''

It is a mix of tempo and the old and new. One surprise is his version of ``Silver Wings,'' an old Merle Haggard hit - ``about the third song I ever learned on guitar,'' said Gregg who has been playing that instrument since he could lift it.

Another oldie on the new album is ``After the Fire is Gone,'' a Conway Twitty ballad transformed into an upbeat piece.

It is the album's title tune, ``Get a Little Closer,'' that hit the charts with a bullet.

What's next from the release? The best guess is ``Dog House Blues,'' the piece most folks recommend as most likely to succeed.

Gregg, low-key on the phone but energetic onstage, promises the unexpected.

``About a quarter of the way through the show, we might go in another direction,'' he said. ``We may pull back or go forward with the tempo.''

Gregg is big in his native Texas, almost a nonentity in a few other areas.

``I'm real hot in one spot, unheard of in another,'' he said. ``That's why the road is so important - exposing my show to new people in different towns.

``I'm like a door-to-door salesman,'' Gregg philosophized. ``My music will pay off in the long run.''

So will his faith.

``Who knows where fate may take you? I believe God has a plan for me,'' Gregg said.

It is faith from the roots. His father was choir director of a small Baptist church.

Gregg is proud of his native American blood. His great grandmother was a full-blooded Cherokee. (His daughter's name is Cheyenne.)

The singer looks like something out of central casting - high cheekbones, headband, hair almost as long as Crystal Gayle's.

``My father took the Native American traits and passed it on to his five boys,'' Gregg said.

``Dad is 76 and still farming in Longview (Texas). He still does things the old way,'' he said. ``For instance, he still plants on March 13. That's part of Native American folklore.

``He's only seen me perform onstage three or four times,'' Gregg said. ``He's a religious man, stoic in his ways. He does watch me on television.''

Dad would be proud.

``I'm trying,'' Gregg said, ``to preserve this great country music.'' ILLUSTRATION: Photo byMARK TUCKER

Ricky Lynn Gregg's newest album is ``Get a Little Closer.''

CONCERT FACTS

Who: Ricky Lynn Gregg and Southbound

Where: Country World and Billiards, 2656 Lishelle Place, Virginia

Beach

When: Doors open at 6 tonight; the show starts at 8.

How much: $10 in advance, $12.50 at the door; available at the

club or Ticketmaster

Tell me more: 468-9939.

by CNB