The Day

When Tyler Hilton lived on Taylor Swift’s houseboat

- By MARK KENNEDY

Tyler Hilton is an actor who is also a musician and he knows what you’re probably thinking: Do we really need another actor who is also a musician?

“If it wasn’t me and I heard someone’s, like, ‘Oh you should check out this record, this guy’s an actor,’ I’d be like, ‘Doesn’t sound that cool,’” Hilton said. “I don’t necessaril­y want to hear music from a guy who’s an actor. Actors don’t seem that interestin­g to me as a musician. And yet that’s just the deal.”

Hilton has managed to straddle the gap between profession­s since he burst onto the scene in 2005 at 19 playing Elvis in “Walk the Line” opposite Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoo­n. He later combined music and acting by joining the “One Tree Hill” cast for several seasons, starting in season two.

Both sides of Hilton’s talents are available this winter. The music part is his new album “City on Fire,” out in January, and the acting part happened when he reconnecte­d with some “One Tree Hill” stars for the Lifetime TV movie “The Christmas Contract,” which premiered Nov. 22, his 35th birthday.

The TV movie isn’t a terrible stretch — he plays a character named Tyler Hilton who shows up to play a few songs, including “Don’t Feel Like Christmas” and a dark, moody bluesy one from his new CD called “Get Down.” The film is an original story that features series regulars Hilarie Burton, Robert Buckley, Danneel Ackles and Antwon Tanner.

“‘One Tree Hill’ ended up being the biggest thing that I’ve done,” he said. “It’s affected people in such a crazy way. And even though some of the other movies I’ve been in have won awards and been more prestigiou­s, there’s something about that show that really got into the pop culture psyche.”

He’s also excited for fans to hear his new music, a more authentic sonic representa­tion of what interests him, namely everything from bluegrass to flamenco. He spent a frustratin­g 10 years with Warner Bros. Records before charting his own course.

“I think they saw a tall guy with blue eyes and they kept trying to hammer me into like a pop direction. And I wanted to make everyone stoked,” he said.

“I listen to this record now and I’m so happy. So many records I’ve done the past I listened to and I go, ‘I mean, if that’s what we’re all agreeing on, let’s do it.’ And this one? I would give this record as a Christmas gift.”

It’s an impressive album with varied song styles, including the searing rock of the title song, the romantic “When I See You, I See Home,” and the country-ish “Overtime.” He wrote it while filming two failed TV pilots. “All of a sudden, this music is just coming out because I’m not thinking about it,” he said.

A cool video for the CD’s title track was made by someone very close to Hilton — his wife, the actress and director Megan Park. She calls him an “old soul” who has lately found freedom and is doing his best work.

“He’s gone through such a transforma­tion as a person in the last five years, and I think he let go of a lot of preconcept­ions and labels put on him and the type of music he thought he had to put out,” she said. “He’s gotten back to the roots of why he got into music.”

Hilton may have played a jerk on “One Tree Hill,” but he’s charming and self-depreciati­ng in person. He grew up in a musical family adoring Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters but didn’t look the part. “There’s nothing bluesy about a 6-foot-4, lanky tall white guy from Palm Springs, California, the golf capital of the world,” he jokes.

Funny stories seem to pour out of him, like the time he lived on Taylor Swift’s houseboat in Nashville. “Whoever’s in control is writing the strangest story for me imaginable,” he said, laughing.

He ended up under one of TayTay’s roofs after she reached out as a 15-year-old to say she was a fan and invited him to be in one of her videos. “She was automatica­lly different right from the get go. I was like, ‘This girl is a genius,’” he said. Years later, her family offered him a home when he moved to Nashville.

His music may have led to acting or his acting fuels his music, but Hilton isn’t ready to abandon either: “Truth is, I love both and I’ve just decided to pursue both because it’s like something I really love doing so I’ve kept at it.”

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP, FILE ?? Tyler Hilton will give a concert at the Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center in Old Saybrook on March 1.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP, FILE Tyler Hilton will give a concert at the Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center in Old Saybrook on March 1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States