McGraw, Esten Added To T.J. Martell Nashville Honors Gala

nashville-honors-gala-logoTim McGraw and actor Charles (Chip) Esten will take part in the T.J. Martell Nashville Honors Gala, to pay tribute to the foundation and its honorees for 2014. Esten (from ABC’s Nashville) will host the event, while McGraw will perform. They join previously announced artists Kenny Chesney and Darius Rucker, who will also appear at the gala.
This year’s honorees, which were announced earlier this month, are Nashville real estate visionary Mark Bloom, music industry icons Dale Morris and Mike Dungan, entrepreneur Beth Dortch Franklin and cancer research pioneer Scott Hiebert.
The T.J. Martell Nashville Honors Gala will be held March 10 at the Omni Hotel in Nashville.

Industry Hirings (1/28/14)

Layout 1Jerry Duncan Promotions has hired Jessica Mack as Secondary Promotions Manager. A recent Nashville transplant, Mack comes to Duncan Promo with five years of marketing and sales experience, having worked with Naked Juice Co. and Coca-Cola Co.
Mack graduated from Southern Nazarene University and worked at a Fortune 500 Company, Chesapeake Energy, for a few years before leaving to pursue a career in the music industry. Mack can be reached at [email protected]

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Krista Darting


Krista Darting has been named Director of Sponsorships at Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI). In her new position, Darting is responsible for securing and maintaining sponsorships for NSAI and the Tin Pan South Songwriter’s Festival.
The Silver Lake, Kan., native most recently worked as a Sr. Account Executive at AdStaff Media primarily on the Taco Bell and Gigi’s Cupcakes accounts. She also spent two years in Corporate Partnerships with the Orlando Magic as well as one season with the Kansas City Royals. Darting can be contacted at [email protected]

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Screen shot 2014-01-28 at 10.43.08 AMHearts Bluff Music has hired Ashley Hertzog and Tyler Sutphen. Hertzog takes on the role of Creative Manager/Executive Assistant. Her previous publishing stops include Combustion Music and My Good Girl Music.
Sutphen joins the company as Communications Manager. His experience began in Abilene, Texas, working with some of Hearts Bluff’s strategic partners before making the move to Nashville.
Hearts Bluff Music manages a $30 million music-publishing portfolio that includes over 10,000 titles, 50 No. 1 songs, and five Hall of Fame writers. Among the notable copyrights are Elvis‘ “Mystery Train,” Kool & The Gang’s “Celebration,” Jennifer Lopez‘s “Ain’t it Funny,” the theme to I Love Lucy; as well as Country hits such as “She’s Everything,” “Baby Blue,” “Austin,” “My Best Friend,” and “Waitin’ On A Woman.” For more info on the company, visit heartsbluffmusic.com.
Hertzog can be reached at [email protected], and Sutphen can be reached at [email protected].

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spin doctors logo111Spin Doctors Music Group has hired Jeff Scheese as Director Of New Business Development. Previous experience includes Muse Associates, Nashville, and he was an intern at XYQ Artist Management. Jeff is graduate of Belmont University and begins his new duties immediately. Reach out to him here [email protected]

CountryBreakout Awards To Honor Top Songwriter

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For the first time in the history of the CountryBreakout Awards, MusicRow will honor the songwriter who accumulated the most No. 1s from the previous year on the MusicRow Chart.

On Feb. 18, the invite-only 2014 CRS Meet & Greet and CountryBreakout Awards will reveal the Songwriter of the Year, and present long established airplay awards including Male Artist of the Year, Female Artist of the Year, Group/Duo of the Year, Breakout Artist of the Year, Independent Artist of the Year, Label of the Year, and Reporter of the Year.
A total of 44 songs reached No. 1 last year, based on reports from MusicRow’s panel of Country stations from across the U.S.
“I am pleased to align two bedrocks of our industry, publishing and radio, at this year’s CRS Meet & Greet and CountryBreakout Awards,” said MusicRow Owner/Publisher Sherod Robertson. “As the MusicRow Chart increases its momentum, it’s an honor to acknowledge a member of the publishing and songwriting community as leading songwriter of the year.”
Subscribe for your invitation to the ceremony, which will feature performances by Native Run (Show Dog-Universal) and Natalie Stovall and the Drive (HitShop Records).
In 2014, MusicRow introduced the No. 1 Challenge Coin to honor the artists and songwriters who have earned a No. 1 song on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart throughout the year. With each new chart, recipients will be chronicled in the “Charts” menu at MusicRow.com.

Artists Added To Tortuga Music Festival

tortugaRock The Ocean’s Tortuga Music Festival is proud to announce the addition of more top performers to its already star-studded second year lineup. Joining headliners Luke Bryan and Eric Church will be Hank Williams Jr., Dierks Bentley, Brantley Gilbert, 38 Special, Parmalee and Eric Paslay. The festival returns to the sands of Fort Lauderdale Beach Park, Fla. on April 12 and 13.
“We said when we announced our initial lineup that we were looking to build on the talent of our amazing first year and raise the bar even higher,” says HUKA Entertainment co-founder and CEO A.J. Niland. “With the addition of these six incredible artists to the bill, we have undoubtedly assembled one of the most singular and exciting musical events of 2014.”
Festival tickets are currently on sale, with two-day general admission festival ticket prices starting at just $165. Complete festival details, including pricing for GA, VIP and Super VIP tickets can all be found at tortugamusicfestival.com.

Industry Pics (1/28/14)

Several Country artists joined together on Jan. 11 for ‘Concert for the Cause,’ a special show at the Ice House in Louisville, Ky., which raised over $200,000 for non-profit, Kids Cancer Alliance.
Hosted by “Listening Room” owner, Chris Blair, the lineup included headliner RCA Recording artist, Jake Owen, with special guests Frankie Ballard, Jana Kramer, Paul Overstreet, Jason Sturgeon, Ilya Toshinsky, Scotty Emerick, Josh Osborne, Ben Bradford, and Olivia Lane. Artists performed in an intimate acoustic setting. A live and silent auction also took place, as well as an after party with Dee Jay Silver.

Pictured (Back Row, L-R): Dennis Kurtz, Paul Overstreet, Josh Osborne, Ilya Toshinsky. Frankie Ballard, Jake Owen, Jana Kramer, Scotty Emerick, Chris Blair and Jason Sturgeon. (Front Row, L-R): Ben Bradford, Olivia Lane and Jay Mackin.

Pictured (Back Row, L-R): Dennis Kurtz, Paul Overstreet, Josh Osborne, Ilya Toshinsky, Frankie Ballard, Jake Owen, Jana Kramer, Scotty Emerick, Chris Blair and Jason Sturgeon. (Front Row, L-R): Ben Bradford, Olivia Lane and Jay Mackin.

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Warner Bros. Records guitarist-vocalist Frankie Ballard stopped by Nashville’s CMA Office on Jan. 21, to perform a few songs from his upcoming album Sunshine & Whiskey. His set included an acoustic version of his Top 15 hit, “Helluva Life” and “It Don’t Take Much.”

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Pictured (L-R): Chelsea Preisler, CMA intern; Carrie Tekautz, Membership and Balloting Assistant; Frankie Ballard; Brandi Simms, CMA Director of Membership and Balloting; and Brenden Oliver, Coordinator of Membership and Balloting. Photo by Kayla Schoen / CMA

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Kaitlyn Baker performed for music industry guests at S.I.R. Nashville on Thursday, Jan. 16. The 19-year-old singer-songwriter from Pound, Va., recently signed with Silvercreek Records and plans to release her first album on the label this summer. For more information, visit silvercreekrecords.com.
Pictured (L-R): Scott Arnold (manager/producer), Steve Pope (Silvercreek Records V.P.), Kaitlyn Baker, Stafond Seago (Silvercreek Records president) and Kaleb Payne (Silvercreek Records V.P.).

Pictured (L-R): Scott Arnold (manager/producer), Steve Pope (Silvercreek Records V.P.), Kaitlyn Baker, Stafond Seago (Silvercreek Records president) and Kaleb Payne (Silvercreek Records V.P.).

LifeNotes: Folk Singer Pete Seeger Dies at 94

Pete Seeger

Pete Seeger


Folk singer/songwriter Pete Seeger died Jan. 27 at New York-Presbyterian Hospital. He was 94.
Born in 1919 in New York City to musicologist Dr. Charles Seeger and concert violinist Constance Edson Seeger, Pete Seeger developed interests in music and journalism.
After dropping out of Harvard University (he was in the same class as John F. Kennedy), Pete Seeger met and traveled with folksong writer Woody Guthrie in 1940, which inspired Seeger to pen his own songs. In 1942, Seeger was drafted into the Army and sent to the Pacific.
After a stint in the military, Seeger became a member of The Weavers in the early 1950s; the band’s recording of Lead Belly‘s “Goodnight, Irene” topped the charts in 1950. In the 1960s, Seeger became a musician on the forefront of protest music; he supported civil rights and various environmental causes.
Seeger adapted a Bible passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes into a No. 1 hit, “Turn! Turn! Turn!,” for The Byrds in the 1960s; the song was also recorded by Judy Collins as well as The Seekers. Other popular Seeger-penned songs include “Where Have All The Flowers Gone?,” which was a Top 40 hit for the Kingston Trio and a popular anthem during anti-Vietnam War rallies. He also adapted a gospel song to sing for union workers, creating the civil rights anthem “We Shall Overcome.” “If I Had a Hammer” was a hit record for Peter, Paul & Mary in 1962 and for Trini Lopez in 1963.
Seeger won three Grammy awards, including a trophy for Best Traditional Folk Album in 1996 for Pete, the Best Traditional Album honor in 2008 for At 89, and a trophy for his 2010 project Tomorrow’s Children: Pete Seeger and the Rivertown Kids and Friends. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006.
Most recently, Seeger performed as part of Farm Aid 2013.

Bentley Reveals 'Riser' Details

riser dierks bentley11Dierks Bentley is prepping for the Feb. 25 release of his seventh studio album, Riser. He tapped friends Kacey Musgraves, Chris Stapleton, The Cadillac Three’s Jaren Johnston and Charlie Worsham to sing and play on the project, which is a loose narrative of the last two years of his life.
It is Bentley’s first album since the death of his father and the birth of his first son, and is grounded by a strong sense of family and community, as evidenced by lead single “I Hold On.” Bentley co-wrote six of the album’s 12 tracks with some of Nashville’s most acclaimed writers. “It’s important to really know the writers and musicians you work with, to hang out with them and live in the same world,” Bentley explains. “I have such a romance with Nashville and this community. I drove across the country when I was 19 years old with a dream of just being invited to the party. It’s still wild to me that I get to work with and call so many incredibly talented people my friends.”

A thunderbird symbol is used on the album to represent strength, resilience and renewal.

A thunderbird symbol is used on the album to represent strength, resilience and renewal.


Riser was produced by Ross Copperman and Arturo Buenahora Jr. at Copperman’s home studio, Red Room. “It’s the sound in my head that I hear when I’m playing a live show,” Bentley describes. “You have one ear monitor in, one ear out, and the crowd’s there and your voice feels really great. There’s a certain amount of gravel to it because you’re tired, but you’re all jacked up on whatever you’re drinking and adrenaline, and the crowds and the fans are there and there’s this feeling, fists in the air—it’s that thing that’s hard to transfer into a studio environment. There’s a rawness.”
Bentley will kick off his Riser Tour May 9 in Charlotte, NC.
Riser track list:
1. Bourbon In Kentucky  (Hlilary Lindsey, Gordie Sampson, Ryan Tyndell) with background vocals by Kacey Musgraves
2. Say You Do  (Shane McAnally, Matt Ramsey, Trever Rosen)
3. I Hold On  (Brett James, Dierks Bentley)
4. Pretty Girls  (Jessi Alexander, Jon Randall, Dierks Bentley)
5. Here On Earth  (Ross Copperman, Ryan Tyndell, Dierks Bentley)
6. Drunk On A Plane  (Josh Kear, Chris Tompkins, Dierks Bentley)
7. Five  (Ross Copperman, Ryan Tyndell, Dierks Bentley)
8. Riser  (Travis Meadows, Steve Moakler)
9. Sounds of Summer  (Zach Crowell, Matt Jenkins, Adam Sanders)
10. Damn These Dreams  (Ross Copperman, Jaren Johnston, Dierks Bentley)
11. Back Porch  (Cary Barlowe, Jaren Johnston, Hillary Lindsey)
12. Hurt Somebody  (Matt Fleener, Shane McAnally, Mark Nesler) with background vocals by Chris Stapleton
The album is available for pre-order at digital retailers.

MusicRowPics: Lindsay Ell

Lindsay Ell Artist Visit

Lindsay Ell Artist Visit


Stoney Creek Records artist and Calgary, Alberta, CAN native Lindsay Ell recently visited the MusicRow office to perform for MusicRow‘s staff. The triple-threat guitarist, singer and songwriter’s ace musicianship has earned her stage time with several of music’s best guitarists.

Ell’s interest in music came early, from participating in bluegrass camps to picking up piano at age six, and then guitar at age eight. At age 13, Ell was discovered and befriended by Canadian guitarist, singer and songwriter Randy Bachman, who became a mentor to the aspiring guitarist. “He would play all of these jazz chords, and I wanted to know what he was playing,” says Ell. “Later, I got into Stevie Ray Vaughan, Eric Clapton and Jimmy Hendrix, so it gave me a different place to pull from as a songwriter, too.”
As word of Ell’s musical talent and formidable axe grinding skills spread, her list of musical supporters and collaborators expanded to include Buddy Guy, CJ Vanston (Spinal Tap, John Mayer), Russell Broom (Jann Arden), Bill Bell (Jason Mraz, Tom Cochrane), Shawn Mullins, Chris Isaak and more. She has opened for Guy, Keith Urban, and is currently performing for crowds overseas as part of The Band Perry‘s We Are Pioneers World Tour.
“The crowds there are incredible, because by the time you get to the second or third chorus, they are singing the songs with you,” says Ell. “They go out and listen to your music and learn it before they even come to the show.”
Ell brought along several guitars for her three-song performance, which included “Don’t Take Me Home,” “Good For Me,” and her current single, “Trippin’ On Us,” which was penned by Ell along with Vicky McGehee and David Fanning.
Ell has called Nashville home for three years, and says she’s developed a kinship with the Nashville music community.  “I felt at home here instantly,” she says. “It’s like everyone speaks the same language.”
For more information, visit lindsayell.com.
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Sidewalk Records Promotes Hartigan

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Lori Hartigan


Sidewalk Records has promoted Lori Hartigan to Vice President of Promotion.
Hartigan had served as the National Director of Promotion for Sidewalk since joining the Curb Records imprint in August of 2013. Her previous stints include the executive management team at Rodeowave Entertainment, and 19 years at Arista Nashville, where Hartigan helped launch the careers of artists Brad Paisley, Carrie Underwood, Alan Jackson, Brooks & Dunn, Diamond Rio and more.
CEO of The Curb Group, Jim Ed Norman states, “It is a distinct pleasure to announce Lori’s promotion. It is also extremely gratifying when exemplary leadership can be recognized in this fashion and Sidewalk is honored to have her directing the efforts of our promotion team. We take great pride in knowing an industry veteran and tenacious champion of music has joined our family.”
Sidewalk Records GM, Wayne Fricks, adds, “It is with great confidence that we announce Lori to head up Promotion for the label in this exciting time of growth for Sidewalk Records.”
Says Hartigan, “I’m thrilled to get the chance to lead Sidewalk’s promotion team in exposing and developing our fresh and talented new artists, Dylan Scott and Morgan Frazier.”
Hartigan now resides in Nashville, Tenn.

The Producer's Chair: Michael Knox

michael knox
By James Rea
Don’t miss Knox’s fourth appearance at The Producer’s Chair on Thursday, Jan. 30, 6 PM at Douglas Corner.
Is there anything that Michael Knox can’t do? Since Knox helped propel Jason Aldean to superstardom, he has become one of the most sought-after producers in Country music. Aldean’s “Night Train” was Knox’s twelfth No. 1 single and Thomas Rhett’s “It Goes Like This,” marks Knox’s thirteenth No. 1.
His body of production work also includes Trace Adkins, Big SMO, Ludacris, Montgomery Gentry, Bush Hawg, Randy Owen, Josh Thompson, Frankie Ballard, Hank Williams Jr., and music production on the hit TV series Nashville.
Some of Knox’ more recent accomplishments include the 2011 CMA Album of the Year, Jason Aldean’s My Kinda Party; 2013 ACM Vocal Event of the Year, “The Only Way I Know” by Aldean, Luke Bryan and Eric Church; 2012 ACM Single Record of the Year and Vocal Event for Aldean and Kelly Clarkson’s “Don’t You Wanna Stay.” He was nominated at the recent Grammy Awards for Best Country Album (Aldean’s Night Train).

Pictured (L-R): Michael Knox and Thomas Rhett.

Pictured (L-R): Michael Knox and Thomas Rhett.


As Senior Creative Director at Peer Music for the past three years, Knox’s stats have gone through the roof. “We’ve had a lot of cuts and a lot of big singles over the past two years,” he said. “Neil Thrasher and Vicky McGehee are our writers on Randy Houser’s ‘How Country Feels.’ I signed both of them. I brought in Michael Tyler and Jaron Boyer. I hired Kim Wiggins to help do the song-plugging and run the creative department, then I signed Rachel Farley and Shaun Ames of Bush Hawg.”
And with Senior Creative Director Shalacy Griffin, Knox launched production/management company Music Knox, with the signing of Rachel Farley (Red Bow), Bush Hawg, and Knox’s latest discovery Michael Tyler.
Knox is in his second term on the CMA Board, he serves on Grammy Special Committees and he was recently appointed to the ACM Board.
The Producer’s Chair: Other than a shortage of time, what is your biggest challenge?
Michael Knox: Juggling family and work is the toughtest. I’ve got 17 and 13 year old kids, and I’ve been with my wife for 27 years. So it’s tough because I feel as if I’m in my prime and I want to give 150% to my job. The business struggle is not being able to exercise what I do. I still have to go through somebody else in order to achieve something. I can find Elvis Presley today but, I can’t get him to be Elvis without going through other channels.
Who has been your mentor, when it comes to producing?
The guy that I’ve learned the most from is Peter Coleman. I met Peter in the early 90s, when I started cutting demos. When I decided I wanted to be a producer, I wanted to find an engineer that heard things like I heard it because at the time I wasn’t an engineer. I engineered a lot in college but I got away from it and started realizing that I didn’t want to limit the artist’s abilities to my abilities. Sometimes they want something that I can’t do. Some engineers and producers that can’t do that will talk them out of it and then they don’t get to go down that route. My goal was to find a team of people where we can accomplish different things. Peter did The Knack’s ‘My Sharona,’ Blondie, Pat Benatar and he was Mike Chapman’s engineer back in the early days on ‘Kiss You All Over, all the way to ‘Hot Child in the City.’ That’s what I wanted my country to sound like. Then when I bumped into Peter in the early 90s, I thought, imagine what his alternative rock sounds could do with my commercial ears. I was looking for an arena-rock situation at that time because we didn’t have it. Peter taught me how less is more. If you find yourself using a lot of tricks, you might want to examine the artist you’re working with.
What is the most important aspect of producing records in today’s climate, that all producers, in all genres are realizing?
If you don’t have a ‘real’ artist, your work’s cut out for you. The challenge is to find an artist that you’re intrigued by and want to know more about it. As long as we’re cutting singles and not cutting records, we’re going to have that problem finding artists. An artist can take you on a journey through 12 songs. A great singer, who is probably a better singer than the artist, doesn’t intrigue people. We’re selling millions of singles, but we’re not selling millions of albums and that requires people who can tell the difference between a great singer and a great artist.
How instrumental are you in directing the artist’s vocal performance in the studio?
It’s my job to know who they are by watching them perform live and making sure that I capture that in the studio. Their live performance is what gets them signed. If they go on ‘David Letterman’ and sound different than their recordings, we’re screwed.
What is the network like among Nashville’s top producers?
It’s competition when you don’t know each other. Now that I’m on the CMA and ACM boards, and on the Grammy’s Special Committees and I’m hanging with these guys on a day-to-day basis, I know we’re not in each other’s space. Once you get to know them, you understand that you all do very unique things. The only times we’re competing with each other is when A&R people are putting three or four producers on a record. When we get together, we’re like a bunch of kids. We’re always cutting-up and having fun because we know the inside humor of everything.
What is the most important aspect of artist development?
The main thing that I see in artist development is trying not to make the artist something they’re not. I’ve had that work against me a few times early on, where I saw them as something else and I really drove them that way because it sounded better, but it never lasted because, once go-time happens, they can’t sell it. The main job that I have is, instead of telling them what I think they should do, it is listening to what they want to do and help them get there.
Not every relationship is the right relationship. Have you ever headed down that road with an artist and decided to put the brakes on?
When I was at Warner/Chappell, there were a couple of acts and I loved their voices and I signed them and once we got to know each other, we were so off pace with what each other wanted to do, we had to part ways. I’ll take all the blame for things like that because I should have paid attention a little longer, before I invested the money.
Developing artists costs money. Who pays the tab?
With my acts, I’m usually putting up that money. That’s why I don’t work with a lot of acts. Once I start spending my own money, then I believe in it. Your ultimate goal is to go and get a label to partner with you, or sign them at a publishing company and get a budget from them, which is what we’re doing here at Peer.
Why did you get into management?
The main reason I got into management was to keep control of the creativity of where the artist is going. I’ve developed a lot of talent and been part of a lot of things that have gotten screwed up. Our main objective is to make sure the artist knows where they’re going and what they’re doing, whether they’re on a radio tour or sitting around the house. You have to make sure that all elements are on the same path. It’s hard being the bad guy, who goes in there to shake it up and that’s the toughest part for me but, a lot of managers are business focused and we’re trying to keep things creatively focused.
Is being an artist a preferred pre-requisite for a publishing deal these days?
They tend to lean that way right now. I’ve shown them that you don’t have to write to sell 10 million records. Jason has only written five or six songs that we cut. A lot of people are looking for those because they feel that they can control the copyright more but I still believe that Nashville is the home of the songwriter, so that’s not a deal-breaker for me.
In the past, we’ve talked about your interest in running a label. Would you prefer to run an existing label, or start your own label?
I would prefer to be in charge of the creative or A&R department of the label. That’s my strength. Look at MCA back in the ‘90s. The Tony Brown/Bruce Hinton thing was probably one of the better models you’ll ever see. You had a true creative guy and a true business guy and they never got in each other’s way. I’ve been in publishing and artist development, but I haven’t done the label thing yet and I need that to go full circle in this business.
Which hat do you enjoy wearing the most?
It’s finding the artist and developing them into what they can be. I’ve been working with Michael Tyler since he was 14 and have watched him grow. He’s 20 now. Rachel Farley was 13 and now she’s 18. I’ve spent six years with Bush Hawg and I’m now at 16 years with Jason Aldean (five years before he got his deal with Broken Bow). I get a big kick out of them getting to where we’re trying to go because I know they busted their butt to get there. To watch that is amazing. It doesn’t matter if it’s a songwriter or an artist. I love developing the talent and watching them grow.
BMI, ASCAP, Broken Bow Records and Music Row gathered at Nashville’s The Pub in the Gulch to toast the team behind Jason Aldean’s No. 1 song “Night Train.” The song was co-written by Michael Dulaney and Neil Thrasher. Pictured (back row, l-r): peermusic's Kevin Lamb, Broken Bow Records' Benny Brown, producer Michael Knox, Warner-Tamerlane's Alicia Pruitt, BMG Chrysalis’ Kos Weaver, and Broken Bow Records' Jon Loba; (front row, l-r): BMI's Jody Williams, co-writer Michael Dulaney, Jason Aldean, co-writer Neil Thrasher, and ASCAP's Mike Sistad. Photo credit: Rick Diamond

BMI, ASCAP, Broken Bow Records and Music Row gathered in October 2013 at Nashville’s The Pub to toast the team behind Jason Aldean’s No. 1 song “Night Train.” The song was co-written by Michael Dulaney and Neil Thrasher. Pictured (back row, l-r): peermusic’s Kevin Lamb, Broken Bow Records’ Benny Brown, producer Michael Knox, Warner-Tamerlane’s Alicia Pruitt, BMG Chrysalis’ Kos Weaver, and Broken Bow Records’ Jon Loba; (front row, l-r): BMI’s Jody Williams, co-writer Michael Dulaney, Jason Aldean, co-writer Neil Thrasher, and ASCAP’s Mike Sistad. Photo credit: Rick Diamond