Alabama To Perform With Nashville Symphony

Alabama. Photo Credit: Ed Rode

Alabama. Photo Credit: Ed Rode

Alabama will perform with the Nashville Symphony in 2016. The three-night stand is part of the symphony’s FirstBank Pops Series and is scheduled for Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 12, 13 and 14 2016 at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center.

As of now, this concert series is on sale as part of a subscription package only. Single tickets go on sale to the public June 27. Details here.

Other noteworthy concerts in the newly revealed Pops Series line up include The Music of the Eagles (Feb. 25, 26, 27, 2016), Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, The Best of Broadway, Pink Martini, Cirque de la Symphonie, The Irish Tenors, and Chris Botti. The price for a subscription to eight concerts starts at $414.

27th Annual Folk Alliance Conference & Music Fair Set For February

27th annual Folk Alliance Conference1The 27th Annual Folk Alliance Conference & Music Fair, set for Feb. 18-22 in Kansas City, Mo., will host 200 official showcasing acts, educational panels and workshops, exhibit hall vendors, late night showcases, networking receptions and more.

The program’s Winter Music Camp, to be held Feb. 19-21, will include performances from Bela Fleck, Sam Baker, Hal Ketchum, and others.

The featured speakers at this year’s conference include astronaut/folk singer Commander Chris Hadfield, two-time Grammy winner Rita Coolidge, President and CEO of the National Music Publishers’ Association (NMPA) David Israelite, audience diversification expert Donna Walker-Kuhne, singer and Flyers’ Rights advocate Dave Carroll, and folk music performer Sylvia Tyson.

The 27th annual Folk Alliance Conference & Music Fair will take place at the Westin and Sheraton Crown Center hotels in Kansas City.

For more information, visit folkalliance.org.

Black River Entertainment Celebrates Ronnie Milsap’s 72nd Birthday

Ronnie Milsap with Black River Entertainment's Gordon Kerr, Dawn Delvo, and Burt Stein. Photo: Getty Images

Ronnie Milsap with Black River Entertainment’s Gordon Kerr, Dawn Delvo, and Burt Stein. Photo: Getty Images

Black River Entertainment hosted a celebration at Ronnie’s Place Studio in Nashville for Ronnie Milsap’s 72nd birthday on Friday, Jan. 16. Guests were welcomed into the very studio that Milsap and several other Country legends have recorded music. The recently renovated space has been preserved to keep the unique atmosphere and vibe that is home to the recordings of many. Black River Entertainment CEO Gordon Kerr sat with Milsap over a year ago to get his consent on officially naming it “Ronnie’s Place.” According to Kerr, Milsap was excited about the honor but had just one request. “He wanted to sit in the studio and hear his music coming from the speakers inside the studio,” says Kerr. “Once we played it for him, he was good.”

Kerr welcomed the attendees by saying that the celebration was not only for Milsap’s birthday, but for the countless hours of music that has been made at that studio. He then presented Milsap with a plaque commemorating all the hits he recorded there, with each title written in brail.

As Milsap ran his fingers across the plaque, he named a few songs that were included and proceeded to express how great it was to be back at “Ronnie’s Place.” He thanked Kerr and his staff and expressed love to those in attendance, which included several of his family members.

Also on hand were members of the Country Music Hall of Fame. Starting Feb. 6, 2015, the exhibit “Ronnie Milsap: A Legend In My Time” will be featured and will run through August 2015.

A birthday cake created for Ronnie Milsap's 72nd birthday party.

A birthday cake created for Ronnie Milsap’s 72nd birthday party. Photo: Getty Images

Industry Pics: Arista Nashville, BMI, Momentum Label Group

Arista Nashville’s newest artist, Cam, performed new music including her debut single “My Mistake” for Sony Music Nashville employees and guests on Tuesday, Jan. 13.

Pictured (L-R): Michael Bryan (VP Programming iHeartMedia Nashville), Cam, Gary Overton (Chairman & CEO, Sony Music Nashville), and Lesly Simon (VP Promotions, Arista Nashville)

Pictured (L-R): Michael Bryan (VP Programming iHeartMedia Nashville), Cam, Gary Overton (Chairman & CEO, Sony Music Nashville), and Lesly Simon (VP Promotions, Arista Nashville)

• • •

Craig Wayne Boyd, the winner of The Voice, stopped by the Broadcast Music, Inc. Nashville office before getting ready to head out on tour, including a residency in Las Vegas opening for Rascal Flatts. The season seven winner was part of BMI songwriter Blake Shelton’s team and debuted at the top of the country charts with his single “My Baby’s Got a Smile on Her Face.” Boyd is hard at work on an album to be released in 2015.

Pictured (L-R): BMI’s Perry Howard and BMI songwriter Craig Wayne Boyd

Pictured (L-R): BMI’s Perry Howard and BMI songwriter Craig Wayne Boyd

• • •

On Wednesday, Jan. 7, Momentum Label Group’s Rachele Lynae made a stop at the Cumulus Radio offices in Atlanta where she celebrated her birthday and the Jan. 19 release of her new single, “Whole Lotta Nothin’.”

Pictured (L-R): John Kilgo (Cumulus), Cat Collins (in2une), Jamice Jennings, (in2une), Rachele Lynae, Mike Mcvay (in2une), Dale Connone, (in2une)

Pictured (L-R): John Kilgo (Cumulus), Cat Collins (in2une), Jamice Jennings, (in2une), Rachele Lynae, Mike Mcvay (in2une), Dale Connone, (in2une)

Third Coast Talent Signs James Carothers

Pictured (L-R): Seated: Debbie Moore, James Carothers, Carrie Moore-Reed. Standing: JoAnn Berry (Manager) and Perry Howard (BMI Director,Writer/Publisher Relations)

Pictured (L-R): Seated: Debbie Moore, James Carothers, Carrie Moore-Reed. Standing: JoAnn Berry (Manager) and Perry Howard (BMI Director,Writer/Publisher Relations).

Country newcomer James Carothers has signed an exclusive worldwide booking agreement with Nashville-based Third Coast Talent. His current CD, Honky Tonk Land, features seven original songs. Carothers will showcase several of those tunes during the DRX Showcase stage at 3rd & Lindsley tomorrow evening (Jan. 20) beginning at 6 p.m. CT.

“It was important to me to get back to my roots,” says the Tennessee native about his recent move to Nashville. “And this is still where the rubber meets the road on the business end of things.”

MusicRow magazine’s Robert K. Oermann, who recently reviewed Carothers’ single “I Must Be Alive,” saying, “This moaning ode to a lost love has a super deep resonance and burning passion. As a song, it’s quite well crafted, with admirably dynamic melodic range as well as sturdy lyrics.”

TackleBox Films Adds Carey Nelson Burch As Executive Producer

Carey Nelson Burch

Carey Nelson Burch

TackleBox Films owner Shaun Silva and Head of Production Kevin Wilson have added Carey Nelson Burch in an Executive Producer role.

Burch previously worked William Morris Agency, where she represented Shaun Silva in 2005. Under her own banner, My Own Shingle, Burch has a roster of producers, screenwriters, authors and filmmakers that she will bring into the TBF fold.

“So much of our industry is based on connecting the dots between like-minded creatives and industry leaders, this is a major strong point for Carey,” says Shaun Silva.

Burch replaces Nicole Flammia, who recently joined Big Machine Records.

Burch can be reached at [email protected], or by phone at 615-340-9555 (office) or 615-430-3363 (cell).

LifeNotes: Bluegrass Song Great Dixie Hall Passes

Pictured (L-R): Perry, Dixie Hall, and Jody Williams. Photo: Alan Mayor

Pictured (L-R): Perry Howard, Dixie Hall, and Jody Williams. Photo: Alan Mayor

Award-winning bluegrass songwriter and former top country-music journalist Dixie Hall has passed away at age 80.

The wife of Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Tom T. Hall died on Friday, January 15, following a long illness. She and her husband won Songwriter of the Year honors from SPBGMA (the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music in America) for 10 consecutive years. She also co-wrote songs with Jeanette Williams, Billy Smith and Country Music Hall of Fame member Maybelle Carter, among others.

Dixie Hall founded the record label Blue Circle Records, the publishing company Good Home Grown Music and a recording studio. In the 1960s, she was the editor of country music’s biggest periodical.
Born Iris Violet May Lawrence in a town near Manchester, England, she wrote poetry as a youngster. During the 1950s, she became a country-music fan and began working as an overseas representative for Tex Ritter, Starday Records and other Nashvillians.

She moved to Music City in 1961 and was adopted by the legendary Maybelle Carter. Iris Lawrence adopted “Dixie Dean” as her Nashville pen name. She and Carter co-wrote the Johnny Cash songs “A Letter From Home” and “Troublesome Waters.”

Bobby Cyrus with Tom T. and Dixie Hall. Photo: Bev Moser

Bobby Cyrus with Tom T. and Dixie Hall. Photo: Bev Moser

Also as “Dixie Dean,” she co-wrote the 1965 Dave Dudley hit “Truck Drivin’ Son-of-a-Gun.” Under this same byline, she wrote celebrity profiles for the Music City News fan magazine and eventually became its editor. She met Tom T. Hall at a BMI awards banquet in 1964. They married in 1968. For many years, she raised and trained award-winning basset hounds while her husband became a country superstar.

Dixie Hall reactivated her songwriting in the 1990s. Tom T. Hall wanted to retire, but she urged him to continue writing by becoming his collaborator. This is also when she established their record label, song-publishing company and recording studio, all headquartered at their Williamson County home, Fox Hollow.

She subsequently wrote or co-wrote more than 500 recorded bluegrass songs. They were sung by a who’s-who of the genre, including The Grascals, Special Consensus, Junior Sisk & Ramblers Choice, Don Rigsby, Josh Williams, Lorraine Jordan & Carolina Road, James Monroe, Dale Ann Bradley, Chris Jones & The Night Drivers, Little Roy Lewis and Paul Williams.

She produced the all-female ensemble Daughters of Bluegrass. The group’s Pickin’ Like a Girl record was totally comprised of Dixie Hall songs and won an award from the IBMA (International Bluegrass Music Association) in 2010.

Carlene Carter included Dixie’s co-written “Troublesome Waters” on her 2014 CD Carter Girl. Miranda Lambert placed Dixie’s co-written “All That’s Left” on her million-selling 2014 CMA Album of the Year winner Platinum.

Dixie Hall’s funeral will be private, according to The Tennessean. Tom T. Hall reportedly plans a celebration of his wife’s life and music at a later date.

Dolly Parton Inks Development Deal with NBC

Dolly Parton

Dolly Parton

NBC has signed a development deal with Dolly Parton. NBC will develop several two-hour television movies based on the songs, stories, and life of the singer-songwriter. The deal is in conjunction with production partner Sam Haskell of Magnolia Hill Entertainment and Warner Bros. Television.

“I am so excited to be involved with my friend Bob Greenblatt, who produced the Broadway version of ‘9 to 5: The Musical’ with me, and my longtime friend and former agent Sam Haskell. We want to create projects for NBC that are both fun and inspirational with a family audience in mind,” said Parton.

“I don’t know anyone in the world who doesn’t love Dolly Parton, and the idea of developing television movies inspired by her incredible life and the stories she has sung about for decades is exciting to all of us at NBC,” said Robert Greenblatt, Chairman, NBC Entertainment.” I hope we will create some uplifting movies that the entire family can enjoy together, a genre of programming that still seems largely untapped on television.”

Over the past 40 years, Parton has 41 albums that have reached the top 10 in the country charts – the most for any artist – as well as 25 albums have either been certified gold, platinum or multi-platinum. In addition, 110 singles have reached the country charts. She has won 10 Grammy Awards, 10 Country Music Assn. Awards and 7 Academy of Country Music Awards. In fact, Parton has been nominated for 46 Grammys as both she and Beyonce are the most Grammy-nominated women of all time.

She was twice nominated for an Oscar for her original songs “9 to 5” and “Travelin’ Thru,” for the film Transamerica. As an actress, Parton was nominated for three Golden Globes (two for “9 to 5,” one for “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas”) and won two People’s Choice Awards.

Tyler Waugh Joins Blaster Records Promotion Staff

Tyler Waugh

Tyler Waugh

Blaster Records Vice President of Promotion Bob Reeves has appointed Tyler Waugh to the label’s promotion department as Regional Director of Promotion, handling the Northeast. Waugh officially joined the staff today (Jan. 16), working out of the label’s new Nashville offices.

A graduate of the University of Southern California’s School of Music in 2000, Waugh began his professional career as an alternative music marketing specialist for BMG Distribution before transitioning to promotion duties with rock independent Roadrunner Records and, subsequently, RCA/Arista/J Records. Waugh relocated to Nashville in 2008 with Arista Nashville, segueing to Streamsound Records in 2013 for regional and national promotion duties.

Waugh can be reached at (615) 870-2040 or via [email protected].

Blaster Records was founded in 2007 and is distributed by RED Distribution.

Fruition Songs Adds Webb, Fike, Reed & Reilley

Fruition SongsNew publishing house Fruition Songs has signed on to represent the catalogs of singer/songwriters Laurie Webb, Cyndy Fike, Laura Reed and Jim Reilley.

“Our company is about making music that matters. I am extremely proud of the catalog of songs we have built.” said Fruition Songs Managing Partner Ashley Worley.

Webb, aka LollieVox, was a staff writer at Curb Music Publishing, earning a cut with LeAnn Rimes and several film placements before popping through as an artist with 2005’s “Aren’t You Clever.”

Fike hails from Texas but recorded her solo debut album as Miss Oneida in Nashville with engineer Mark Nevers.

Reed recently signed a publishing deal with EMI/Sony ATV, and was honored with a 2014 NIMA award as Best R&B Solo Artist.

Reilley moved to Nashville in 1998, and has penned songs recorded by Vince Gill, Hal Ketchum, Sam Bush and more.

Fruition Songs is spearheaded by veteran creative executives Worley and Rachel Kice, with entrepreneur Brad Baack.