SESAC Nashville Music Awards Set For Nov. 2

SESAC-LOGO1Performing rights organization SESAC will honor top songwriters and publishers in the Country and Americana genres at the 2014 SESAC Nashville Music Awards, slated for Sunday, Nov. 2 at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.
This invitation-only event will tribute the popular songs of 2014, as well as honor the Songwriter of the Year, Song of the Year and Publisher of the Year.
“We love getting the festivities started for CMA Week with the SESAC Nashville Music Awards,” said Tim Fink, SESAC’s Vice President, Writer/Publisher Relations and the host of the awards. “It is always a privilege to honor some of the most successful songwriters and publishers in the Country and Americana genres. It’s always a busy and exciting week and we are ready for a great awards show.”
Among the artists previously honored at this event are Bob Dylan, the Avett Brothers, Jim Lauderdale, Thompson Square and Lady Antebellum.

Industry Photos (6/25/14)

ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp brought campers from around the country to Nashville this week, for several days of activities and excursions around Music City. The residential camp has the dual purpose of studying Williams syndrome while providing music enrichment through performance and education.
The Swon Brothers stopped by the Wildhorse Saloon to spend time and swap stories with the campers. The Band Perry took part in a songwriting session. “What we love most about Country music is the storytelling,” said Kimberly Perry. The trio created the song “Bright Eyes,” with contributions from the campers.

Pictured (L-R): Paul Barnabee, Sony Music Nashville; Colton Swon; Zach Swon; Hannah Martin, Manager, ACM Lifting Lives; Rondal Richardson, Entertainment Industry Relations Manager at Vanderbilt University.

Pictured (L-R): Paul Barnabee (Sony Music Nashville); Colton Swon; Zach Swon; Hannah Martin (Manager, ACM Lifting Lives); Rondal Richardson (Entertainment Industry Relations Manager at Vanderbilt University).


Pictured (L-R): The Band Perry pose with the campers at ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp 2014.

Pictured (L-R): The Band Perry pose with the campers at ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp 2014.

Watch a clip of The Band Perry’s songwriting session below:

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SAE Institute Nashville Audio Technology Program graduate Ray “DJ Orig” Riddle has been added as a co-star on Big Smo, A&E Network’s new reality series that chronicles the developing career of country rapper Big Smo. The series debuted on June 11.
“We’d been shopping a pilot for the show for around a year, and we’re thrilled to be on A&E,” says Orig, who is also the co-producer of Big Smo’s debut album Kuntry Livin’ on Warner Brothers/Elektra Records (released June 3). “Viewers will see the development of Smo’s sound – which combines country, Southern rock, and hip-hop – and how he balances the complex demands of his work with his family responsibilities.”
Orig began to DJ in 1994, and met Smo in 1996. At the time, Orig had developed skills with a sampler, drum machine, and four-track tape recorder. Orig began his Audio Technology Program studies in 2005, where he learned additional recording skills. After graduation in 2006, he did DJ gigs around Nashville and did interviews at Nashville studios.
“In my interviews at Nashville studios, I was told the same thing: find a band or an artist and use any gear that you have to help them sound better,” says Orig. “I decided to take that advice and focus on producing Smo to make his ‘hick-hop’ vision a reality.”

Orig with Big Smo

DJ Orig with Big Smo

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 The CRB board and CRS agenda committee recently enjoyed a special performance delivered by Red Bow recording artist, Chase Bryant. CRS 2015 will be held Feb. 25-27, 2015, in Nashville, Tenn.

Pictured (L-R): Beverlee Brannigan (CRB Board member/Journal Broadcast Group), Becky Brenner (CRB Board member/Albright, O’Malley and Brenner), Chase Bryant (Red Bow Records), and Carole Bowen (CRB Board member/WKIS-Miami). Photo: Aristo P.R.

Pictured (L-R): Beverlee Brannigan (CRB Board member/Journal Broadcast Group), Becky Brenner (CRB Board member/Albright, O’Malley and Brenner), Chase Bryant (Red Bow Records), and Carole Bowen (CRB Board member/WKIS-Miami). Photo: Aristo P.R.

MusicRowPics: Erica Nicole

Erica Nicole visit

Erica Nicole visit


Georgia native Erica Nicole performed recently for the MusicRow staff. Her current single, “I Listen To My Bad Girl,” has garnered the singer-songwriter a Top 20 hit on the MusicRow CountryBreakout Chart.
“The support I’ve had from MusicRow reporting stations has been incredible,” Nicole said before showcasing her warm, earthy voice on the song “Thank You.” She followed with an acoustic performance of “I Listen To My Bad Girl.”
Nicole has been welcomed with arms wide open by MusicRow reporting radio stations, which led to an increased recognition of Nicole’s music by fans in many radio markets–as well as some impromptu, intimate performances.
“I was in New York to do some interviews, and I went to this cafe for lunch,” Nicole recalled. “One of my band members came up to me and said a cashier in the cafe recognized me and loved ‘I Listen To My Bad Girl.’ My band member told her we’d play it for her, right there in the cafe.” Nicole and her band set up and performed for the approximately 50-60 diners in the cafe.
Nicole gifted the MusicRow staff with sock monkey slippers, which have become well-known around MusicRow reporting stations. “I wore these after a long day of walking in stilettos during Country Radio Seminar this year,” said Nicole. “Some radio attendees loved them, so I gave slippers to the staff at every radio station I met with on my radio tour. It became a cute way to stand out.”
Nicole is in the studio working on her forthcoming album, produced by Kent Wells, which will include “Thank You.” “[Wells] challenges me to be a better artist, a better vocalist,” she says.
For more information, visit ericanicolemusic.com.
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Weekly Register: Willie Nelson Rides In At No. 1

willie nelson 2014Willie Nelson’s album Band of Brothers debuted at the top of the Country chart, marching in with sales of 37K. His first album of mostly new material since 1996 scored his highest position on the Billboard 200 (No. 5) since Always On My Mind peaked at No. 2 in 1982. It is his first No. 1 Country album since The Promised Land hit the top spot in 1986.
The top 5 Country albums this week belong to: Nelson (37K), Miranda Lambert (34K), Brantley Gilbert (26K), Luke Byran (14K) and Florida Georgia Line (12K).
Lana Del Rey’s Ultraviolence, produced by Nashvillian Dan Auerbach, debuted at No. 1 overall, selling 182K. Sliding in to No. 2 is Sam Smith with 166K.
Tracking Tracks
Kenny Chesney’s cool comeback, “American Kids” spurred 39.5K downloads to debut at No. 7 Country. Sam Hunt enticed 22K clicks of his new single “Leave The Night On.” Kacey Musgraves sung her way to 10.5K downloads of “The Trailer Song.”
Luke Bryan’s “That’s My Kind of Night” crossed the 2 million threshold. Lee Brice’s “I Don’t Dance” boogied past the half-million mark, selling 44K this week.
Hangin’ in the Top 5 Country are: FGL “This is How We Roll” (62K), Dierks Bentley “Drunk on a Plane” (61K), Lady Antebellum “Bartender” (60K), Jake Owen “Beachin’” (60K) and Bryan “Play It Again” (56K).

WeeklyRed062514

Natalie Stovall and The Drive To Play For U.S. Navy

Photo: Natalie Stovall and the Drive

Natalie Stovall and the Drive with the helicopter crew on a previous overseas trip.


Natalie Stovall and The Drive are preparing for their sixth trip with Navy Entertainment and are set to perform a series of shows in Asia this summer. The servicemen and women serving abroad will be entertained by the band who have also played shows in the Middle East and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. For lead singer Natalie Stovall, each trip is a personal mission because she is the daughter of a retired Army Colonel.
“There is nothing like the shows we do for the men and women who serve this country,” says Stovall. “They are so grateful for us making the trip, and we are so grateful for their service. It is just an awesome atmosphere to play in.”
Navy Entertainment brings over 400 shows a year to the men and women of the US Navy and their sister services deployed around the world.
Natalie Stovall and The Drive is expected to release its debut album this year on HitShop Records.

Underwood, Lambert, Houser, Little Big Town Ready New Videos

carrie mirandaCarrie Underwood and Miranda Lambert caused a stir at two recent awards shows, when they performed their new duet, “Somethin’ Bad,” during the Billboard Music Awards and the CMT Music Awards. Now, the feisty female singers have teamed up for a new video. Underwood and Lambert play on a familiar “good girl/bad girl” theme in the action-packed clip, with both donning dark wigs and prim outfits for their daytime office gigs. After hours, the duo has some not-so-legal plans, suiting up in black masks and bodysuits to steal a hefty sum of precious jewelry, and escape just before a fiery explosion.
Wednesday morning (June 25), CMT, MTV and VH1 simultaneously premiered the new clip for the song, which is the second single from Lambert’s album Platinum.

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Photo: Tiiu Loigu

Photo: Tiiu Loigu


Randy Houser saddles up in his forthcoming video clip for “Like A Cowboy,” which was directed by Dustin Rikert. Houser spent a week shooting the clip a various locations around Tucson, Ariz., including the Old Tucson studios, where westerns including Tombstone, Three Amigos, Arizona, and more were filmed.
The video’s cast includes William Shockley (Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman) and Tim Murphy (Sons of Anarchy), as well as 50 head of cattle, helping to bring to life an 1800s period piece.
“Like A Cowboy” will premiere on CMT and CMT.com on Saturday, June 28 at 9 a.m. CT.
The trailer for the clip can be seen below:

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Screen shot 2014-06-25 at 12.19.12 PM1Little Big Town premiered the video for their latest single, “Day Drinking,” Wednesday morning on people.com. The video was shot near Miami Beach, features the group using a Friday afternoon traffic jam as an excuse to leave their worries (and car) behind them and hit the beach a little early. Little Big Town’s sixth album, Painkiller, will release in fall 2014.

“Day Drinking,” written by Little Big Town’s Karen Fairchild, Jimi Westbrook, Phillip Sweet and co-writers Barry Dean and Troy Verges, was produced by Jay Joyce and features Fairchild on lead vocals.

DISClaimer: Messina, Houser Deliver Solid Songs, Superb Vocals

randy houser slider

Cowboy Up! Randy Houser

When you get right down to it, I’m still a sucker for a great singer and/or a well-crafted song.

These are the things that made me a country fan in the first place, and they are still what I love about the genre. They are also the things that power the two best singles of this week’s listening session.
Both Jo Dee Messina and Randy Houser powered past the major-label releases with efforts that are both solid slabs of songwriting and superb vocal performances. Randy Houser’s flame-thrower vocal delivery, in fact, earns him a Disc of the Day.
All three of our DisCovery Award contenders are female—RaeLynn, Kayla Adams and our winner, Ali Dee. I’m all ears: Send more.
KAYLA ADAMS/Sober & Sorry
Writer: Kayla Adams/Billy Atherholt/Pete Nanney; Producer: Marlon “Dean” Scanlon; Publisher: Kayla Adams/Atherholt/Shootin Straight, BMI; SSM (615-254-2053)
—It’s another one of those modern country compositions that substitutes attitude for melody.
RANDY HOUSER /Like a Cowboy
Writer: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Stoney Creek (ERG) 
—Randy sings his face off on this power ballad about life on the rodeo circuit. The metaphors about a relationship are well drawn, but even if they weren’t, his leather-lunged, barn-burning delivery will make you a believer. What a hoss.
MERLE HAGGARD & MARY SARAH/Fightin’ Side of Me
Writer: Merle Haggard; Producer: Kent Wells & Freddy Powers; Publisher: none listed, BMI; 144 E (CDX) (www.marysarah.com)
—She sounds completely ridiculous singing these lyrics in that childish voice. The Hag seems comfortable riding along on the country-rock track. But there’s no escaping how “dated” the song is.
ROBBY JOHNSON/Feel Good Song
Writer: Robby Johnson/Frank Myers/Jill Spencer/Michael Gresham; Producer: Frank Myers & Jimmy Nichols; Publisher: Maleva/Ole/Contrast/Brand, BMI/SOCAN/ASCAP/SESAC; OMR (CDX) (www.robby-johnson.com)
—He’s trying awfully hard to sound rough and tough on this quasi-shouted, lead-foot stomper. I’d like it better if he would just sing.

Ali Dee

Ali Dee


LITTLE BIG TOWN/Day Drinking
Writer: Karen Fairchild/Philip Sweet/Jimi Westbrook/Barry Dean/Troy Verges; Producer: Jay Joyce; Publisher: Warner-Tamerlane/Little Big Town/Songs of Universal/Creative Nation/Country Paper/Pulse Nation/Magnolia Beach, BMI; Capitol Nashville (CDX) 
—From the moment the mandolin chops begin, your ears perk up. Then the whistling interjections pop in during the choruses. Audio addiction. A summer smash.
KENNY CHESNEY/American Kids
Writer: Rodney Clawson/Shane McAnally/Luke Laird; Producer: Buddy Cannon & Kenny Chesney; Publisher: Big Red Toe/Farm Town/Big Loud Bucks/Universal/Smack Ink/Creative Nation/Twangin and Slangin, ASCAP/BMI; Columbia/Blue Chair 
—Kenny’s return to disc is a relaxed-sounding bopper with a summertime vibe. The lyric paints portraits of young folks trying to shed their innocence that most of us can relate to.
RAELYNN/God Made Girls
Writer: RaeLynn/Nicolle Galyon/Lori McKenna/Liz Rose; Producer: Joey Moi; Publisher: Super Big/Big Machine/Prescription/Kobalt/I Take the Bull By the Horns/Warner-Tamerlane/Songs of Crazy Girl, ASCAP/BMI; Valory 
—The song is extraordinarily well written. The production is packed with catchy audio hooks. But her singing voice is so girlie and chirpy, it almost sounds like a cartoon. A fine single, albeit one that takes some getting used to.
ALI DEE/Just a Broken Heart
Writer: Maren Morris/Chase McGill/Carrie Manolakos/Ichabod; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Ali Dee (www.alidee.com)
—Her drawling accent is her charming calling card. It helps her deliver this loping, loose groover with enormous panache. “No, that knife in my back ain’t sharp/It’s just a broken heart,” she shrugs. The twanging production, whistling passages and merry instrumental support are as ear catching as her performance. A complete winner.
JO DEE MESSINA/A Woman’s Rant
Writer: Jo Dee Messina; Producer: Jo Dee Messina & Julian King; Publisher: Dreambound, ASCAP; Dreambound (track) (www.jodeemessina.com)
—I have always loved her feisty personality, and this performance is the most perfect distillation of it to date. The country-rock band cooks with gas while she spews out the lickety-split lady’s lament with a boat load of wit and sass. A super single.
MISS JEANIE/Fool Chain
Writer: David Davidson/Judy M. Rodman/Kristin Maryka Wilkinson; Producer: Lonnie Spiker; Publisher: Black Lagoon/Warner-Tamerlane, BMI; Miss Jeanie (track) 
—You’re kidding, right? I’m expected to review this? I’m sure she’s a lovely person, but her singing, um, leaves a lot to be desired.

Publishing Signings on the Row

David Meyers

David Myers


By: Laura Hostelley
Steve Rice, Vice President of Centricity Publishing, has announced the signing of Christian songwriter David Myers. The West Virginia native recently won Puckett’s Rising Star competition in Franklin, Tenn. and has also penned three songs on the upcoming Satellites and Sirens album.
“I’m so excited to be joining a family that believes in their artists, songwriters, and staff,” said Myers of his new home. “The pursuit to deliver truth to the world is what I admire most about Centricity.”
Myers joins a roster including Seth Mosley, Jason Gray, Unspoken and others.
 

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Pictured (L-R): ASCAP’s Michael Martin, Helene Cronin, Debbie Zavitson, ASCAP’s Kele Currier

Pictured (L-R): ASCAP’s Michael Martin, Helene Cronin, Debbie Zavitson, ASCAP’s Kele Currier


Debbie Zavitson, owner of Debbie Z Entertainment, has signed Helene Cronin to the singer/songwriter’s first publishing deal. Cronin has performed her song, “Lucky Me,” about a soldier being deployed, on Fox television’s Huckabee show and during many military functions.
“I am so excited to have Helene join our family of writers and look forward to working with her for many years and can’t wait for everyone to discover her,” Zavitson said of her new writer. “She is truly a very special talent.”
Zavitson represents Curb Music Publishing, Jay Lazaroff, Helene Cronin, Paul O’Connor, Doug Johnson’s catalog and Madison Marie Armor.

Don Light Memorial Service Scheduled

Don Light

Don Light


A memorial service for late music industry leader Don Light has been scheduled for July 9 at 6:30 p.m. in the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Ford Theater.
Participants in the service will include the Oak Ridge Boys, Bill Gaither, Vince Gill, the Goodman Revival, Marty Stuart, Peter Cooper and host Ray Stevens, as well as other special guests. Valet parking will be available.
Light passed away June 17, at the age of 77, leaving behind a wide-ranging legacy comprised of establishing the first Gospel music booking agency, co-founding the Gospel Music Association, and discovering Jimmy Buffett. Read more at MusicRow.com.

Ben Folds' Open Letter: RCA Studio A To Be Sold

RCA Victor

A photo from the studio’s early days, including Michael Nesmith from The Monkees and Norbert Putnam.

Artist Ben Folds, owner of Grand Victor Sound studio at 30 Music Square West, reports that the studio’s historic building is being sold to a commercial real estate developer. (MusicRow delved into the studio’s legacy in 2012.) Today Folds released the following open letter about the pending sale:

Dear Nashville,
Last week, on the day that would have been Chet Atkins’ 90th birthday (June 20, 1924), my office received news that the historic RCA Building on Music Row is likely to be sold. This building, with the historic RCA Studio A as its centerpiece, was Atkins’ and Owen Bradley’s vision and baby, and had become home to the largest classic recording space in Nashville. Word is that the prospective buyer is a Brentwood, TN-based commercial development company called Bravo Development owned and operated by Tim Reynolds. We don’t know what this will mean to the future of the building.
First off, kudos to the estates and descendants of Atkins and Bradley for doing their best to keep the building alive. They’ve owned the property all these years and could have at any point closed it up or mowed it down. Sadly, it’s what happens in the name of progress.
Studio A, which turns 50 years old next year, has a rich history. Here are just some of the artists and groups who have made hits here:
Peter Bradley Adams, Gary Allan, Brent Anderson, Anika, Arlis Albritton, Asleep at the Wheel, The Beach Boys, Ben Folds Five, Tony Bennett, Amy Black, Jason Blaine, Blind Boys of Alabama, Joe Bonamassa, Wade Bowen, Eden Brent, Jim Brickman, The Brothers Osborne, Rachel Bradshaw, Brentwood Benson, David Bullock, Laura Bell Bundy, Ken Burns, The Canadian Tenors, The City Harmonic, Steven Curtis Chapman, Chocolate Horse, Brandy Clark, Brent Cobb, Jesse Colter, Elizabeth Cook, Wayne Coyne, Margaret Cho, Billy Currington, Matt Dame, Danae, Ilse DeLange, Rebecca de la Torre, Steve Earle, ESPN, Jace Everett, The Fabulous Headliners, Dani Flowers, Danny Flowers, Colt Ford, The Frog Sessions, Eleanor Fye, Cami Gallardo, Billy Gibbons, Sarah Gibson, Vince Gill, Alyssa Graham, Peter Groenwald, Harlan Pepper, Harper Blynn, Connie Harrington, Hunter Hayes, John Hiatt, Faith Hill, JT Hodges, Adam Hood, James House, Sierra Hull, Alan Jackson, Joe Jackson, Casey James, Jenny Jarnigan, Jewel, Jamey Johnson, Josh Jones, Kristin Kelly, Kesha, Anna Krantz, Ben Kweller, Lady Antebellum, Miranda Lambert, Sonny Landreth, Samatha Landrum, Mark Lanigan, Stoney LaRue, Jim Lauderdale, Frank Liddell, Lifeway, Meagan Lindsey, Longmont All Stars Jazz Band, Lyle Lovette, Luella and the Sun, Tayla Lynn, Amanda Palmer, John Pardi, Rich Parkinson, Alan Parson, Charlie Pate, Kellie Pickler, Pistol Annies, Pretty Lights, Mike Posner, Sean McConnell, Scotty McCreery, Kate Miller Heidke, Ronnie Milsap, Miss Willie Brown, Danny Mitchell, Allison Moorer, Kacey Musgraves, Musiq Soulchild, David Nail, the Nashville Symphony, Jerrod Neimann, Willie Nelson, Joe Nichols, Sierra Noble, Natalie Noone, The Oak Ridge Boys, Jake Owen, Rainfall, Johnny Reid, Thomas Rhett, Lionel Richie, The Robertson Family, Henry Rollins, Shannon Sanders, Jader Santos, Alejando Sanz, Mondo Saez, Kate Schrock, Bob Seger, Sera B., Brian Setzer, Nikki Shannon, William Shatner, SHEDaisy, Jordyn Shellart, Joel Shewmake, Sleeping With Sirens, Jake Shimabukuro, Mike Shipp, Kevin Shirley, Anthony Smith, Joanna Smith, Dr. Ralph Stanley, Chelsea Staling, Steel Magnolia, Tate Stevens, Jay Stocker, Rayburn, RED, RockIt City, Jeff Taylor, Justin Towns Earle, Josh Thompson, Those Darlins, Josh Turner, Bonnie Tyler, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban, Ben Utecht, Phil Vassar, Venus and the Moon, Andy Victor, Amanda Watkins, Chuck Wicks, Hank Williams Jr., Williamson Country Youth Orchesta, Alicia Witt, Lee Ann Womack, Word Entertainment, and Charlie Worsham.
I had no idea of the extent of legacy of this great studio until I become the tenant of the space 12 years ago. Most of us know about Studio B. Studio A was its grander younger sibling, erected by Atkins when he became an RCA executive. The result was an orchestral room built to record strings for Elvis Presley and to entice international stars to record in one of these four Putnam-designed RCA spaces in the world. The other three RCA studios of the same dimensions – built in LA, Chicago and New York – have long since been shut down. I can’t tell you how many engineers, producers and musicians have walked into this space to share their stories of the great classic recorded music made here that put Nashville on the map. I’ve  heard tales of audio engineers who would roller skate around the room waiting for Elvis to show up at some point in the weeks he booked, stories about how Eddy Arnold recorded one of the first sessions in the room that included the song “Make The World Go Away,” about Dolly Parton’s recordings and mixes here (Jolene, etc), of The Monkees recording here, and so on. Legendary songwriter John D. Loudermilk and his bride were serenaded by a session orchestra hired by Atkins who were recording there for an artist. He recalled that they danced all the way to the loading doors and into their wedding limo, reminiscing about the beautiful floor tiles which still line the entire space. He co-wrote countless numbers of songs with Atkins and many others in this studio.
To this day, Studio A remains a viable, relevant and vibrant space. In recent years these artists and filmmakers have recorded or worked here, to name a few: Sara Bareilles, William Shatner, Kacey Musgraves, Jewel, Brian Setzer, Ken Burns, Kesha, The Beach Boys, Wayne Cohen, Tony Bennett, Willie Nelson, Kellie Pickler, Hunter Hayes, Charlie Worsham, David Nail, Jamey Johnson, Joe Bonamassa, Word Music, Gary Allan, and me..
While we Nashvillians can feel proud about the overall economic progress and prosperity we’re enjoying, we know it’s not always so kind to historical spaces, or to the legacy and foundation upon which that prosperity was built.
My motivation for spending over a million dollars in rent and renovations over these past 12 years was simple. I could have built my own space of the same dimensions with that kind of investment. But I’m a musician with no interest in development or business in general. I only want to make music in this historic space, and allow others to do the same. I’ve recorded all over the world and I can say emphatically that there’s no recording space like it anywhere on the planet. These studio walls were born to ring with music. I just wanted to keep it alive.
Before the news of the sale I had been in recent talks with other entities on how we could collaborate on allowing visitors to Music City to see the space firsthand and hear its rich history, while also making sure that it stays busy making music history of tomorrow. No one can say now what will become of that idea.
Selfishly  I’d  like to remain the tenant and caretaker of this amazing studio space. I love it. But if I must let it go in the interest of change, my only hope is that it remain intact and alive. A couple of years ago my co-manager, Sharon Corbitt House, promised the late, great producer Phil Ramone, while he was in town recording Tony Bennett and an orchestra LIVE in this space, that she would do what she could to keep the studio doors open. Ramone had watched the former New York RCA studio transform into office space for the IRS and couldn’t bear to see the last of this incredible acoustic design fade away.
So here’s where we’re coming from. Historic RCA Studio A is too much a part of why such incredible business opportunities exist in 2014 in Nashville to simply disappear. Music City was built on the foundation of ideas, and of music. What will the Nashville of tomorrow look like if we continue to tear out the heart of the Music Row that made us who we are as a city? Ultimately, who will want to build new condos in an area that has no central community of ideas or creatives?
We are Music City – the only city in the world truly built on music.
My simple request is for Tim Reynolds or whoever the next owners might be of this property, before deciding what to do with this space, to take a moment to stand in silence between the grand walls of RCA Studio A and feel the history and the echoes of the Nashville that changed the world. I’d like to ask him and other developers to listen first hand to the stories from those among us who made the countless hit records in this studio – the artists, musicians, engineers, producers, writers who built this rich music legacy note by note, brick by brick.
I don’t know what impact my words here will have on anything. But I felt the need to share, and to encourage others who also care about preserving our music heritage to speak up as well.
I believe that progress and heritage can co-exist in mutual respect. Maybe this time we can at least try to make the effort.
Yours,
Ben Folds