After severing ties with Universal Records, White recorded a new album at Bradley's Barn, this time working with producer and bassist
Viktor Krauss. White extended his range as an instrumentalist for the project, adding piano, organ and xylophone tracks along with his usual guitar work. The resulting album,
Shades of Gray (2000), received high praise from critics and the songs "Average Joe" and "At The Alibi" were placed in rotation on several AAA radio stations, notably Nashville's
WRLT Lightning 100 FM. Bradley, meanwhile, had taken an A&R position at Acuff-Rose Music Publishing, and he signed White to a publishing deal. White toured in support of
Shades, including regular performances at: Nashville's
Exit/In, the
Bluebird Café, and 12th and Porter; New York City's the Lion's Den; and the Beachland Ballroom in Cleveland. In 2002, an independent song plugger heard White's song "Red Rag Top" on Lightning 100. She purchased a copy of White's album and gave it to country artist Tim McGraw, who recorded "Red Ragtop" for his 2002 release
Tim McGraw and the Dancehall Doctors. The song's lyrics, which touched on the topic of abortion, proved too risqué for some radio programmers, and the song was pulled from the playlists of some major country radio stations. The ensuing controversy made headlines in
USA Today,
The Tennessean, the
Cleveland Plain Dealer and other newspapers. White was interviewed by
Paula Zahn on
CNN where he defended the song as a simple true-to-life love story. Despite the negative reaction of some radio programmers and listeners, the song rose to No. 5 on the
Billboard country singles chart.[c] In 2013, the song appeared in the
Paramount Pictures movie "
The Guilt Trip." White followed up in 2004 with ''Tonight's Top Story'', which was also well received by the music press and garnered AAA radio airplay. The album was produced by Viktor Krauss and re-established White as a mordant storyteller and a capable tunesmith. After a seven-year hiatus during which White was married and divorced, he released
The Longing in 2011. Produced by White and Roger Moutenot (
Yo La Tengo,
Josh Rouse,
Jessie Baylin), the album presents a softer, early-1970s pop style and an emphasis on love songs, rather than White's typically more challenging subject matter. White's label, Better Angels Music, simultaneously released a video for the song "Perfect Stranger," which was filmed in
Paris by director Don Julien. In 2013, White released
Journal, a two-disc compilation of some of his best known songs. The album includes the song "Little Pieces of Plastic," which was chosen by the
Occupy Movement to appear on its 2012 release
Occupy This Album. White continues to be a regular performer in the multi-media show Freedom Sings, written and directed by
Ken Paulson, president of the Freedom Forum and former editor-in-chief of
USA Today. The show is a critically acclaimed musical tribute to the
First Amendment and has toured throughout the U.S. White has been a participant since 2003. ==Awards==