Aretha Franklin With The Symphony; ‘Motherhood’ At TPAC

Aretha Franklin will perform with members of the Nashville Symphony on Tuesday, June 30, at 7:30 pm. The “Queen of Soul” is known for classics including “Respect,” “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman,” “Chain of Fools,” “Baby I Love You,” and “Think.”

The event is part of the HCA/TriStar Health Legends of Music Series.

Tickets start at $89. Reach the box office at (615) 687-6400, or buy online at NashvilleSymphony.org.

aretha franklin

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Motherhood the Musical, written by Nashville songwriter Sue Fabisch, will play at TPAC’s Andrew Johnson Hall this Mother’s Day weekend, with performances May 6-17.

The humorous look at motherdom debuted as a workshop at the Nashville’s Darkhorse Theater in 2008 and was immediately picked up by producers. Since then it has been performed across the nation and around the world, including Scotland and Australia.

Tickets at tpac.org.

motherhood the musical

Eric Church Fights Counterfeit Merch

Eric Church. Photo: Jill Trunnell

Eric Church. Photo: Jill Trunnell

Eric Church has been granted a temporary restraining order to allow the seizure of counterfeit merchandise being sold outside his concerts.

He requested the injunction in U.S. District Court this week and also filed suit against unnamed defendants, listed as John Does, who are producing and selling unlicensed t-shirts and goods. He is seeking damages from the vendors.

According to the injunction, Church’s team can seize counterfeit merchandise being sold within a five-mile radius, 24-hour time period of his concerts.

Church is represented by Riley Warnock & Jacobson’s John Jacobson and Chris Vlanos, according to the Nashville Post.

Who Won NSAI’s 15th Annual Song Contest?

NSAI-Song-Contest-Presented-By-CMT-Submission-SubmitThe Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI) and Country Music Television (CMT) announced Derek Toomey and Jeff Silver have been awarded the grand prize in the 15th Annual Song Contest presented by CMT for their title “Drink It In.”

Industry panelists selected 10 finalists from 2,000+ entries for public voting on nsai.cmt.com throughout February 2015. The top prize receives a mentoring session with Warner Music Nashville recording artist Charlie Worsham, a one-year single song contract with Little Louder Music Publishing, publishing meetings with professional music publishers, live performances at The Bluebird Café and Musicians Corner, a three-day trip to Nashville, Tenn.

This year’s lyric-only winner is Char Cordova for “Chevy Bound For Lonely.” Among other prizes, Tia Sillers will mentor Cordova. All of the top songs and entrants can be seen at nashvillesongwriter.com.

The 16th Annual NSAI Song Contest will be announced later this year.

“Drink It In” Audio:

 

DISClaimer: A Return of Female Voices

Striking Matches album 2015Well, whaddaya know: There are seven female voices in this week’s column.

That’s big news for the week after they revealed that the LP Field headliners for this week’s CMA Music Festival will include only ONE solo female act, Wynonna. Even taking into account Hillary Scott of Lady A, Kimberly Perry of The Band Perry and Karen Fairchild and Kimberly Schlapman of LBT, that’s five women versus 33 men in group and solo spots. Thank you, country radio.

All of which makes me especially proud of the work being done by Trisha Yearwood, Jana Kramer and Cam on this week’s singles. Also of that by Sarah Zimmermann. Her lead voice in Striking Matches helps bring that duo a DisCovery Award.

But the Disc of the Day goes to a couple of guys. That would be the undeniable Brothers Osborne.

CLAIRE PETRIE/(C’est La Vie) You Never Can Tell
Writers: Chuck Berry; Producer: Jack Gale; Publisher: Arc, BMI; Playback (track)
-Newcomer Petrie attacks this Chuck Berry/Emmylou Harris chestnut with gusto. Whoever that is working out on the squeeze box and the fiddle also do an outstanding job.

JANA KRAMER/I Got The Boy
Writers: Tim Nichols/Connie Harrington/Jamie Lynn Spears; Producer: Scott Hendricks; Publishers: Warner-Tamerlane/Nichols Boys/Made for This/All for This/Sweet Jamie, BMI; Elektra (CDX)
-This gal has shown consistently excellent taste in songs. This time around, she’s chosen a superbly written ballad about a lady on the losing side of love. “I got the boy/She got the man,” is the hooky refrain. Sounds like a hit to me.

ERIC CHURCH/Like A Wrecking Ball
Writers: Eric Church/Casey Beathard; Producer: Jay Joyce: Publishers: Sony-ATV Tree/Longer and Louder/Sony-ATV Acuff Rose/Six Ring Circus, BMI; EMI (track)
-He’s coming off the road planning to make love so fierce that the whole house will shake and quake. The slow-burn arrangement and the dark echo on his voice keep you hanging on every line. Simmering.

CAM/My Mistake
Writers: Camaron Ochs/Tyler Johnson; Producers: Jeff Bhasker/Tyler Johnson; Publishers: none listed, BMI/ASCAP; Arista (CDX)
-The big pop production can’t bury the personality in her voice, nor the craftsmanship in this song. Extremely listenable and extremely promising, to boot.

TRISHA YEARWOOD/I Remember You
Writers: Kelly Archer/Ben Caver/Brad Rempel; Producer: Mark Miller; Publishers: Internal Combustion/Southside Independent/Year9/Universal/Centricity/Music Services, BMI/ASCAP; Gwendolyn/RCA
-My heart stood still. With understated force, Yearwood draws you slowly and inexorably into this masterful ballad of death and nostalgia. A simple strummed guitar and a sighing string quartet accompany her. And that’s all she needs.

STRIKING MATCHES/Hanging On A Lie
Writers: Justin Davis/Sarah Zimmermann; Producer: T Bone Burnett: Publishers: Justin Davis/Sarahzimm/Universal, ASCAP; I.R.S. (CDX)
-Zimmermann’s tart lead vocal is like a slap across the cheek. Davis chimes in with flawless harmony. The track has snap, crackle and backbeat in spades. Kiss-off attitude has seldom sounded so spunky and catchy. A winner.

JOHN KING/On Your Lips
Writers: John King/Justin Wilson/Michael White; Producers: Doug Johnson/John King; Publishers: Songs of Black River/Songs of Razor & Tie/Music of Parallel/Downtown DMP/Legends of Magic Mustang/Loud Bucks, ASCAP/BMI/SESAC; Black River
-King introduced this during the CRS convention. I was impressed with how cool and sexy it sounded live. The recorded version is almost as groovy, even if it does rock a bit too loudly and busily. Let the song speak for itself, boys.

RUTHIE COLLINS/Ramblin’ Man
Writers: Hank Williams; Producer: Curt Gibbs; Publishers: Sony ATV Acuff Rose, BMI; Sidewalk/Curb
-The electronic effects and goosed tempo in the arrangement take this miles away from the Hank original. Her pert, perky soprano does too. None of this is in sympathy with the lyric. Pass.

Brothers Osborne

Brothers Osborne

BROTHERS OSBORNE/Stay A Little Longer
Writers: John Osborne/TJ Osborne/Shane McAnally; Producer: Brothers Osborne/Brad Hill; Publishers: WB/All the Kings Pens/Universal/Smack Ink, ASCAP; EMI (CDX)
– Here’s another tune that had a CRS debut. I have seen these guys live in both band and duo situations and have been blown away each and every time. This relentless, driving, rapid-fire track is a star maker, for sure. Hang on for the brain-melting instrumental coda. Play on, brothers.

AMBER HAYES/Running Out of Memories
Writers: Amber Hayes/Bill DiLuigi/JP Williams; Producer: Bobby Terry; Publishers: Okie Girl/888/Rio Bravo/Blonde Leading Blind, ASCAP/BMI; A-OK (track)
-I like the lustrous quality and the confidence in her singing. Terry’s production is just right on this bopper, and the tune has lots of commercial potential. Worth your spins.

LifeNotes: Americana’s Impresario Billy Block Passes

billy block

Billy Block, one of the founding figures of the Americana music movement, died on Wednesday afternoon, March 11, 2015 following a battle with cancer. He was 59.

Noted for his irrepressible salesmanship, unflagging positivism and unbridled enthusiasm, the ebullient Block was a champion of Americana music before the genre even had a name.

Best known as the creator and host of the weekly “Billy Block Show”/”Western Beat Barn Dance” in Nashville, he was a multi-faceted music-industry figure who was also a promoter, a songwriter, a record producer, an artist manager, a session drummer, a record-label entrepreneur, a bandleader, a recording artist, a music journalist and more.

When asked, “What do you do?” Block would respond, “What do you need?”

Among the stars who appeared on his show early in their careers are Jason Aldean, Florida Georgia Line, Lady Antebellum, Ashley Monroe, Keith Urban, Miranda Lambert and Kacey Musgraves.

With an Opry-style structure of revolving performers, the weekly show was a platform for many styles of roots music. The glue that held it together was Block’s genial emcee work, plus his leading the versatile house band that backed all the performers.

Instantly recognizable with his shock of white hair and ever-present smile, he was a hero to thousands of aspiring artists in Music City. His show has been called “The Ellis Island of Nashville” because of his reputation for welcoming newcomers and unsigned acts.

In addition to having his weekly club show and its radio program, he also founded Americana’s first TV series, a periodical, a record label and a weekly blues showcase, hence his notoriety as “Americana’s First Impresario” or “The Godfather of Americana.”

William Donald “Billy” Block began his career as a teenager in Houston, Texas. He was the drummer on early records by Freddy Fender. In 1978, he toured as a member of Billy Joe Shaver’s band.

He also toured and/or recorded with B.W. Stevenson, Townes Van Zant, Roy Head and Delbert McClinton in Texas. In addition, he became the Houston editor of Buddy: The Texas Music Magazine.

Block relocated to Los Angeles in 1985. Two years later, he became the drummer for “The Ronnie Mack Barn Dance” at The Palomino nightclub, broadcasting on KCSN radio.

In L.A., he worked for Disney as a bandleader, singer and dancer. As an actor, he appeared in national TV commercials for Miller Beer and Kentucky Fried Chicken, as well as Disney’s theme parks.

He was the roots-music correspondent for six years for L.A.’s Music Connection magazine. As a member of The Zydeco Party Band, he recorded three albums during his years on the West Coast. He was also the bandleader for a local, late-night TV variety/talk show.

In 1991, he started his “Western Beat” monthly showcases at an L.A. coffeehouse, broadcasting on KIEV radio. Jim Lauderdale, Lucinda Williams and Buddy Miller were among the artists who performed at this. He consistently embraced musicians who were outside country music’s commercial mainstream, becoming a cornerstone personality for what later became known as “alt country” or Americana music.

In 1993, his band The Bum Steers traveled to Music City to compete in the Jim Beam Country Talent Search. He subsequently became the West Coast correspondent for MusicRow magazine.

He married singer Jill Rochlitz in 1993. Two years later, the couple decided to move to Nashville, thanks to a job offer from MusicRow for him to become the magazine’s sales representative.

In February 1996, he launched his weekly “Billy Block’s Western Beat Barn Dance” show. The first one featured Duane Jarvis, Walter Hyatt, Jim Lauderdale, Kristi Rose, Fats Kaplan and Billy Montana. It has been staged every Tuesday night, ever since.

The Sutler Saloon, Zanie’s, The Exit/In, Cadillac Ranch and The Mercy Lounge have all hosted this show. It has been broadcast on WSIX, WKDF, Lightning 100 and other Nashville stations and has been syndicated to more than 150 radio stations elsewhere. The radio show was billed as “Billy Block’s Western Beat Roots Revival,” since broadcasters balked at the phrase “Barn Dance.”

Western Beat Records was launched in Nashville with a 1996 CD by Block’s band The Bum Steers. A year later, Jill Block released her debut album on Western Beat, billed as “Pork Chop Kelly.”

Billy Block began publishing his Western Beat newsletter at this same time. He also continued his journalism via columns in Music City News, The Gavin Report, Blink and other periodicals. In 1995, Gavin became the first magazine to publish an Americana music chart.

In 2000, Western Beat with Billy Block became Americana music’s first TV series. It aired on CMT and featured Rodney Crowell, Kathy Mattea, Hal Ketchum, Kim Richey, Ralph Stanley, BR5-49, Jason & The Scorchers, Trisha Yearwood, Joe Ely, Joy Lynn White, Michael McDonald, Lee Roy Parnell, Jon Randall and others.

Block also launched weekly live webcasts of “Western Beat.” The live event’s title was eventually simplified to “The Billy Block Show.” In recent years, he augmented his show’s weekly Tuesday night presentations by creating a blues-oriented Thursday-night series called “Capt. Billy’s Whiz Bang” at Puckett’s Boat House in Franklin.

In addition to scheduling artists for his own weekly events, Block at one time also booked talent for such venues as The Basement and B.B. King’s Blues Club.

In 2008, he created “Silver Stars.” This is a talent competition for artists 60 years old and over. Staged annually at the Ryman, it is done in conjunction with the insurance firm Cigna-HealthSpring.

Billy Block was the announcer at Hillsboro High football games. He was a moderator of panels during the Americana Music Festival. He managed Hayseed Dixie and other artists, often producing and recording them for his Western Beat label. He graduated from the Leadership Music program in 2000.

Throughout all this, Block furthered his reputation as a standout musician. His percussion work has been heard on recordings by such artists as Steve Cropper, John Scott Sherrill, Little Milton, Tony Orlando, The Walt Wilkins Band, P.F. Sloan, Garnett Mimms, Essra Mohawk, The Woodys, Frank Black, Rick Vito and many others.

Billy and Jill Block’s pop-rock group The Big Happy released its debut CD in 2005. In 2014, the Mardi Gras party band Ya Ya released its debut album, with Block as its drummer.

His enduring “The Billy Block Show” is now in its 19th year, and “Silver Stars” recently celebrated its sixth anniversary.

Despite the staggering amount of work he did, Block was always upbeat. “If you see someone without a smile, give ‘em one of yours,” was his oft-quoted motto.

The impresario was diagnosed with stage IV metastatic melanoma in late 2013. He had beaten cancer twice before this.

Since the new diagnosis, multiple benefits have been staged for his medical expenses. Thanks to aggressive and innovative therapy, he rallied in mid-2014, and his many tumors shrank. But this was a temporary reprieve.

He went into hospice care on Tuesday, March 3. During his last morning at home, he told Jill that their room was full of angels and that he knew where he was going.

“The miracle is that Billy’s love and spirit can now permeate through the world,” says Jill Block. “We are all his legacy and his miracle, as long as we continue to share his love with each other….Be listening. The Beat goes on.”

He is survived by his wife Jill and by sons Rocky, 18, and Grady, 15, plus sons Michael Hughes, 19, and Shandon Mayes, 17, for whom Billy and Jill Block are legal guardians. Also surviving are brother Jay Block and sisters Francine Beckman and Nancy Block, all of Houston.

His drum kit will be donated to the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum. There are plans for Block’s Americana archives to be donated to the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Donations are encouraged to The Block Family Fund, Wells Fargo Private Bank, 3100 West End Ave., One American Center, Suite 530, Nashville, TN 3203, attention Bradley Gallimore.

Funeral arrangements will be announced soon.

Signings: Little Extra Music, Red River Entertainment

Little Extra Music president Lisa Ramsey Perkins has signed songwriter Tia Sillers to a worldwide publishing agreement. Sillers has written hit singles for Alan Jackson, the Dixie Chicks, Kenny Wayne Shepherd and others. She co-wrote “That’d Be Alright” (Alan Jackson), “There’s Your Trouble” (The Dixie Chicks), “Heaven, Heartache and the Power of Love” (Trisha Yearwood), among other tunes.

“Tia Sillers is such an amazing, soulful and prolific writer,” said Ramsey Perkins. “Her streak of award winning, hit songs, speaks for itself. Grammys, ACM and CMA Song of the Year for ‘I Hope You Dance,’ and the list goes on! The talent and energy she brings to our company is unparalleled. We couldn’t be more excited to have her a part of our Little Extra Music family!”

Little Extra Music was started by Lisa Ramsey Perkins in 2013 and offers full-service music publishing as well as independent A&R and consulting for select clients. Others signed to the roster include Carolyn Dawn Johnson, Will Bowen, Kylie Sackley, and Kelsey Anna.

Little Extra Music

Pictured (L-R): Lisa Ramsey Perkins, Little Extra Music; Clay Bradley, BMI; Tia Sillers

 

Singer-songwriter K.T. Oslin has signed with Red River Entertainment, and is set to release the new project Simply, her first album in 15 years. The album will feature new arrangements of hits including “Younger Men,” “80’s Ladies,” and “Hold Me.”

Pictured (seated, L-R): Attorney Orville Almon, Jr., K.T. Oslin. Standing (L-R): Producer/arranger Jimmy Nichols, Chuck Rhodes, Red River Entertainment/Nashville

Pictured (seated, L-R): Attorney Orville Almon, Jr.; K.T. Oslin. Standing (L-R): Producer/arranger Jimmy Nichols; Chuck Rhodes of Red River Entertainment/Nashville

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chris Tomlin Announces ‘Worship Night In America’ Dates

chris tomlin worship night in americaGRAMMY® Award winner Chris Tomlin will launch Worship Night In America to bring people across the country together for a time of worship and prayer for the nation.

Tomlin will be joined by several prominent worship leaders and pastors including Louie Giglio, Max Lucado, Matt Redman, Kari Jobe, Rend Collective, Israel Houghton, Matt Maher, Phil Wickham and Hillsong’s Reuben Morgan.

Events will take place Aug. 8 in New York City’s Madison Square Garden, Aug. 13 in Denver’s Red Rocks Amphitheater and Aug. 15 in Sacramento’s Sleep Train Arena.

“This is a vision God’s put on my heart,” Tomlin said. “I feel like this is going to be very special, and I’m praying this is something that breaks open some revival in our country.”

Tickets go on sale March 20. Click here for more information.

Exclusive Q&A With Fusion Music’s Daniel Miller

daniel miller headshot11Daniel Miller brings a strong background in management and live events to his current role as CEO/managing partner of Fusion Music, where his team represents David Nail, Native Run, and Amber Carrington, and in partnership with Red Light Management, Lady Antebellum and Ryan Kinder.

Miller sat down with MusicRow for an article which ran in the February/March issue. Here is the rest of his interview:

How did you get involved in the music business?

I grew up in a small town called Bowling Green, Missouri, north of St. Louis. I identify with country music because of that first access through country radio in Missouri, and going to county fairs and watching concerts. I left there 18 years ago, so Nashville is home to me now.

I started in the business in 1998 working for Schatzi Hageman’s Hot Schatz Public Relations. It was a really small company, just she and Wes Vause and myself. I helped with tour press on everybody from Waylon Jennings to Trace Adkins.

Then I went to work for Simon Renshaw’s management company, when it had a Nashville office. The Dixie Chicks were about to launch their second album and first major tour, so I handled VIP ticketing and working with box offices and promoters on the Fly tour in 2000.

As the Chicks tour was winding down, Tim and Faith were getting ready to go out on their first Soul2Soul Tour. Borman managed Faith Hill, so I joined Joni Foraker as her assistant at Borman in September 2000. I was part of the day-to-day teams in an assistant capacity for Faith, Lonestar, and Keith Urban. When Tim and Faith went on tour again, I set up all the VIP ticketing and expanded their fan club bases through ticketing and packages.

You worked on some of the biggest tours in country music history. How does that experience in live entertainment help you today?

I got into the music business because I was so intrigued by live events. When I would go to concerts I was fascinated by all the people that were involved, trying to figure out how this massive production travels from city to city, and what it takes to sell tickets and put on the show.

The one thing you can’t replicate is the live experience. Most people can record a good sounding album with today’s technology, but it’s pretty hard to fake it in a live setting. So, I want to work with artists who are able to convey their stories in the live setting to their audience for a really long time.

Having a background in publicity and getting a message out to people is really important. It is also helpful to understand the ticketing process, box office operations and the technology, especially for popular tours that sell tickets really quickly. We want everyone to have the opportunity to buy a great ticket and hopefully prevent scalping. We want to engage fans and for their whole experience to be great. I also learned how to take care of family, friends and industry that want to come to the show. Everything I’ve done has touched on some element of the live experience, and always will.

How did you start working with Lady Antebellum?

After a few years at Borman, I wanted to start with an artist from the very beginning and help put together a team and evolve their career. One of the assistants at CAA invited us to a show at 3rd and Lindsley to see Lady A. I walked up to Charles [Kelley] and jokingly said, “I don’t really understand the name, but I love your music and think we can help.” So we spent seven years launching that project which went incredibly well. Then once we got to that point [of success], I wanted to realize one of my own personal goals.

As hard as it was, I stepped away from a project I loved and had put so much time into, and a company that I enjoyed being part of. I was about to turn 40 years old and I figured that if I was ever going to step out, that was the time to do it. Then late last year I got a surprising call from Coran Capshaw saying that Lady A was making a management change. He asked if I would be interested in re-engaging with them in this new capacity and we worked it out.

How did you go about growing Lady A’s career overseas? 
[Lady A received the 2012 CMA International Artist Achievement Award and is currently on the European leg of their headlining Wheels Up 2015 Tour]

We started early on in Canada. I’m a huge believer of their music market because the audience embraces artists who go there. Next, we played the country festival in Gstaad, Switzerland, maybe in 2009. We knew that Lady A’s musical direction lent itself to a global audience, so almost every year since the beginning of their career, we’ve tried to go to Canada and the U.K. They’ve been to Australia, New Zealand and eight or nine different countries in Europe. It has worked really well.

One of the best pieces of advice they ever received was when they opened for Bruce Springsteen in Hyde Park in London a couple of years ago. Bruce told them that in the early ‘70s he played Europe and said he would never go back. But he returned the next year, and the next year. The audiences grew every time and he knew that he would always have a career there because the international fans are so passionate.

The U.K. audience is sometimes better students of music than we are in the States. They pay attention to lyrics, songwriters, album credits and musicians. About two years ago at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, Lady A was singing an album track that was not a single and the audience was singing along so loudly they were almost overpowering the P.A. The band was amazed.

In July 2012 Lady Antebellum took a break from the European leg of their headlining world tour to open for Bruce Springsteen in London’s Hyde Park. (L-R): Jason Gambill (guitar, Lady Antebellum), Dave Haywood, Bruce Springsteen, Hillary Scott and Charles Kelley. Photo: Adam Boatman

In July 2012 Lady Antebellum took a break from the European leg of their headlining world tour to open for Bruce Springsteen in London’s Hyde Park. (L-R): Jason Gambill (guitar, Lady Antebellum), Dave Haywood, Bruce Springsteen, Hillary Scott and Charles Kelley. Photo: Adam Boatman

What has surprised you about running your own company?

I didn’t expect to spend as much time on the operations—dealing with budgets, insurance, payroll, building maintenance. I also spend a lot of time with attorneys and agreements. I want to spend my time creating opportunities and helping artists achieve their dreams. If I spent too much time on that other stuff, the artists are the ones who suffer and that’s defeating the point.

What do you tell an artist who wants to change producers, agents or other team members?

It depends. We’re never quick to make changes, unless we feel like the career is stifling or the relationship itself is damaging. If the relationship naturally comes to an end, or feels like it’s no longer the right match, then we look at it. That kind of disruption can throw off an artist’s psyche, so we are really careful to not recommend big shifts unless there is a problem or creativity has run out.

How often do you turn down artist endorsement deals?

We’ve turned down a lot, often because they want to portray the artist as something other than a musician or artist. They want them to be a spokesperson for their brand, or dress up in a crazy costume or hold a product they wouldn’t use. If it doesn’t align with advancing their musical career, it’s not worth it. There are also a lot of deals that would compete with what we do with country radio or another partner. A paycheck attached to a deal that is damaging to a relationship and a career isn’t worth it.

Have any of your artists hosted a destination concert event?

It seems like destination events are more common than they used to be. It’s for a segment of the fan population that wants a bigger experience. They want to be able to have a fun vacation, and if you add music by their favorite artists it enhances the whole experience.

We don’t do a lot of them because sometimes they’re difficult to travel to—which means you’re committing a big amount of time. If it’s during a touring season, that knocks out the ability to play other dates. But sometimes it works out great. Lady A recently did two nights in Cozumel. The boat was docked the whole time, so they would go on the ship, perform and come back off. It was November after the CMAs, and they were winding down the year. For those type of events, usually the schedule isn’t grueling and it doesn’t create a conflict that would keep them out of the market. We can usually play a market once a year. The artists don’t earn significantly more money but it’s a good way to create a work vacation for bands, crew, staff and spouses who work really hard. It’s nice to be able to be pay people to be in an exotic location.

First Round of Performers Revealed For 50th Annual ACM Awards

acm 50th logoThe first round of performers has been announced for the 50th annual Academy of Country Music Awards.

Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley, Garth Brooks, Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney, Eric Church, Miranda Lambert, Reba, Blake Shelton, George Strait, Keith Urban, Florida Georgia Line, Sam Hunt, Thomas Rhett and Cole Swindell will make appearances during the broadcast.

The ceremony, co-hosted by Bryan and Shelton, will air live from AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas on Sunday, April 19, 2015 at 8:00 PM – 11:30PM ET/delayed PT on the CBS Television Network.

Additional highlights include reigning ACM Entertainer of the Year and Artist of the Decade, George Strait, who will debut new music during the broadcast. Also, Reba will return for her first ACM performance in five years.

Lambert leads the awards this year with eight nominations, followed by Bentley with seven nominations, and Florida Georgia Line with five nods. Bryan, Chesney and Church each earned four nominations.

This year’s fan-voted ACM New Artist of the Year Presented by Kohl’s counts Hunt, Rhett, and Swindell as final nominees.

New Documentary to Highlight The Wrecking Crew

The Wrecking Crew

Following the Academy Award-winning success of the documentary 20 Feet From Stardom, which put the spotlight on the careers and lives of prominent background singers featured on some of the greatest songs of the 21st century, a new documentary will highlight the renowned group of musicians known as The Wrecking Crew.

The Wrecking Crew played on hit records for The Beach Boys, Frank Sinatra, Sonny & Cher, Elvis, Nat King Cole, Herb Alpert and the Byrds, for Motown Records, and as part of Phil Spector’s “Wall Of Sound.” Country star Glen Campbell was among the musicians that made up the group, before going on to find solo success.

The new documentary The Wrecking Crew was produced and directed by Denny Tedesco, son of Wrecking Crew guitarist Tommy Tedesco.

The Wrecking Crew will open in select theaters and VOD, beginning March 13. Viewings are scheduled at West Los Angeles’ Nuart Theatre and New York’s IFC Center 5 on March 13, and Nashville’s Belcourt Theatre will show the film on March 31.

Watch the documentary’s trailer below.