In PEOPLE's exclusive clip from the May 22 premiere episode o fClint Black's upcoming series,Talking in Circles, Rucker sits down with the fellow country star to discuss how he transitioned to country music when he signed to Capitol Records Nashville in 2008.
"We were in a meeting, the very first meeting about the record when i was finishing it up. I said to him, 'What do you do if you're the low guy? What do you do if you're the new guy?' Rucker, 55, recalls to Black, 59. "And they were like, 'Well you do a radio tour. But we didn't think you would do that.' And I said, 'Light it up.' We went to almost every radio station in the country."
"For me it was, if we're gonna do it on this level, I was going to give it all I had," says Rucker. "I knew the best way I could do that was to let everybody that were the people playing the songs to know that I know I'm not anything in this genre. I'm just trying to get on the radio like everybody else. If you play my song, great. If not, hey man we had a beer, it was cool."
"We went around with that attitude, and people liked the song," Rucker recalls of his country single "Don't Think I Don't Think About It," which catapulted the star to becoming the first Black black artist to chart a No. 1 country hit since Charley Pride in 1983.
"And that was really cool," Rucker tells Black.