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By Phil Sweetland Music and Radio contributor, The New York
Times NASHVILLE – When Len Snow’s debut single “Country’s What I Choose” soared to the top of the Billboard Country
Singles Sales Chart for 8 weeks in 2006, it was the perfect example both of Snow’s immense musical gifts and his massive work
ethic.
The Ohio native wrote the up-tempo hit, produced and sang the recording, and then, with the help of the FYE
chain of stores, sold it himself. “I got the bar code on the single, then I actually went to 170 FYE music stores and played
live at each one,” Snow says. “We were selling between 80 and 300 CDs per store, and I signed every single one of ’em.”
This uncanny willingness to go the extra mile has been Len Snow’s way of doing business his whole life.
He was the
seventh of eight kids in a very musical family. Len’s late father – who remains his greatest hero 10+ years after his
passing – worked full-time days as an optician and part-time nights as the leader of a Country band. Snow has fond memories
of carrying amps and gooseneck mic stands to his Dad’s shows at Moose Lodges and wedding receptions. The father taught the
son a few chords on the guitar, but young Len had another passion: BASEBALL. Starting at age 6, Snow was a gifted third baseman
and catcher who led all Toledo prep players in hitting, earned a full scholarship to the University of Toledo, and was drafted
by the independent Newark Buffaloes. But in his very first game as a professional, Snow collided with his left fielder on
a pop fly. It “blew my foot all to pieces,” he says, and thus his baseball career slammed to a halt. Len decided
that it was time to settle down and he got married and had two wonderful children Lance and Luke. The marriage lasted 5 years
and it was time to part ways with the boy’s mother. Len rekindled his passion for music and songwriting. The divorce didn’t
break the family to bits thought. Len remains a large part of the boys’ lives.
Life went on, carrying Snow to the
Wine Country in Northern California and into the arms of another woman who, needless to say, was a major influence in his
songwriting career. “That woman gave me all the pain and heartbreak material I could handle in two and a half years!” The
painful, yet necessary, breakup of that relationship led him to write all 12 songs for his debut album, including the title
cut “Country’s What I Choose.” Len was hired to play weekends at a local winery. “I saw my Dad’s life opening before
my eyes,” he says. But Snow took it even further, cutting the album and signing with a veteran music attorney, Beverly Robin
Green, who has worked with clients including the Doobie Brothers, the Grateful Dead, Warner Brothers Pictures, and Disney
Pixar.
Len took the ultimate step of moving to Nashville in 2006. His songwriting has boomed. Snow wrote all 10
songs on his upcoming album “80 PROOF” himself. He is very active on the touring circuit, and has become a favorite of Country
Radio stations, including Citadel’s K-100 in Toledo and KUBB Country in Merced, California.
After an Ohio show, Brian
Duggar of the Toledo Blade wrote: “I hope Len Snow makes it. He’s the hometown boy. He’s got movie star looks, a great stage
presence, a solid voice. He’s easy to like. He wrote all 12 songs on his (debut) album, most of those written after getting
‘kicked in the stomach’ by the love of his life. Len’s got a tear-stained legal pad filled with lyrics that poured out
of him.”
We just know that somewhere, Len’s Daddy is smiling.
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