Big Machine Music, Red Bull Records Jointly Sign Nathan Barlowe

Pictured (L-R): Back Row: Greg Hammer, Managing Director, Red Bull Records; Dasmarie Alvino, Creative Sync Licensing, Red Bull Records; Front Row: Buffy Hubelbank, Music Publishing Creative Director, Red Bull Records; Nathan Barlowe; Mike Molinar, VP/General Manager, Big Machine Music. Photo: Big Machine Music

Pictured (L-R): Back Row: Greg Hammer, Managing Director, Red Bull Records; Dasmarie Alvino, Creative Sync Licensing, Red Bull Records; Front Row: Buffy Hubelbank, Music Publishing Creative Director, Red Bull Records; Nathan Barlowe; Mike Molinar, VP/General Manager, Big Machine Music. Photo: Big Machine Music

Nathan Barlowe has signed an exclusive songwriting agreement with Big Machine Music and Red Bull Records.

The agreement will expand upon previous arrangements both Big Machine Music and Red Bull Records had separately with Barlowe, a multi-genre songwriter, producer and musician.

Barlowe’s credits span from Taylor Swift and Steven Tyler to Jars of Clay. Barlowe’s sync placements include hit TV shows The King of Queens and The O.C., NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs and major motion picture, The Equalizer.

“I’m very pleased to expanded on our relationship with our friends at Red Bull and in a way that creates more opportunities for a writer as diverse and talented as Nathan,” said Mike Molinar, VP/General Manager of Big Machine Music.

“Big Machine Music is an incredible company and we are thrilled to be joining forces with them on a talented songwriter like Nathan,” said Greg Hammer, Managing Director of Red Bull Records.

“I am so proud to say that I am a writer at Big Machine Music. The company’s record of success speaks for itself,” said Barlowe. “The partnership with Red Bull publishing is another component that will increase exposure and lead to more songs being heard. I look forward to what we can all do together in the future.”

In his previous role, Barlowe was the principal songwriter for Red Bull Records’ electronic pop band Five Knives. Currently on the road this summer as a member of Keith Urban’s band for the Ripcord Tour, Barlowe plays “The Phantom,” a custom-made live mix and sample machine. Barlowe and his wife Sara welcomed the arrival of their first child, Waylon James Barlowe, last month in Nashville.

Ronnie Dunn Sets Release Date, Track Listing For New Album

Ronnie Dunn Tattooed Heart
Ronnie Dunn will release Tattooed Heart, his first album for Big Machine Label Group, on Oct. 21. Jay DeMarcus of Rascal Flatts produced 11 of the tracks. Tommy Lee James produced “Still Feels Like Mexico,” which features Reba McEntire.

The project’s current single is “Damn Drunk,” with special guest Kix Brooks. The album will be available for pre-order on Sept. 23.

“I had a lot of fun making this album. Jay and I really clicked in the studio and we were both really proud of the final product,” said Dunn. “I branched out of my comfort zone while writing and listening to a ton of music. At the suggestion of my daughter, I even recorded an Ariana Grande song. Ironically, it became the title of the album.”

Track List and Songwriting Credits for Tattooed Heart

1. “Ain’t No Trucks in Texas” (Tony Martin, Wendell Mobley, Neil Thrasher)
2. “Damn Drunk” with Kix Brooks (Liz Hengber, Alex Kline, Ben Stennis)
3. “I Worship the Woman You Walked On” (Bob DiPiero, Mitzi Dawn Jenkins, Tony Mullins)
4. “That’s Why They Make Jack Daniels” (Jim Collins, Tom Hambridge, Tony Martin)
5. “I Put That There” (Deric Ruttan, Jonathan Singleton)
6. “Young Buck” (Jaren Johnston, Jeremy Stover)
7. “I Wanna Love Like That Again” (Ronnie Dunn)
8. “Still Feels Like Mexico” featuring Reba McEntire (Tommy Lee James, Jon Randall)
9. “Tattooed Heart” (Antonio Dixon, Kenneth Edmonds, Sean Forman, Ariana Grande, Matt Squire, Leon Thomas, Khristopher Van Riddick Tynes)
10. “This Old Heart” (Jim Beavers, Jonathan Singleton)
12. “Only Broken Heart in San Antone” (Steve Bogard, Jeff Stevens)
13. “She Don’t Honky Tonk No More” (Ronnie Dunn, Nikki Fernandez)

Photos: 24-Hour Sun Diner Set To Open In Downtown Nashville In October

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

A 24-hour diner is planned to open adjacent the Johnny Cash Museum on Nashville’s Lower Broadway in October.

Sun Diner will pay homage to Sun Records artists (including Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Johnny Cash) with music, creative menu names, decor and merchandise.

John Singleton from Sun Studio in Memphis attended a lunch preview for media on Friday (Aug. 19), while Kevin Keller, TC Restaurant Group’s Director of Operations, introduced dishes.

Located at 105 Third Ave. S., Sun Diner will offer breakfast all day, including its signature donut breakfast sandwich and chicken waffles.

The establishment is said to be currently hiring staffers.

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Sun Diner Cafe. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Industry Ink: Casting Crowns Tops 10 Million, ‘Nashville Insider’ Launches, Milton White Opens Fashion Office

Casting Crowns Tops 10 Million, Preps New Project

Casting Crowns

Pictured (L-R): Juan DeVevo, Megan Garrett, Brian Scoggin, Mark Hall, Chris Huffman, Melodee DeVevo, Josh Mix

Christian group Casting Crowns is celebrating over 10 million albums sold since its label debut in 2003 as it looks forward to a new studio album.

“It is a rare honor to be in a position to congratulate an artist on the milestone of selling 10 million albums in their career,” states Terry Hemmings, President/CEO Provident Music Group. “The fact that Casting Crowns has done so, and in a relatively short period of time, clearly speaks to the power of the songs and the message this band has communicated over the last 13 years. It’s a testimony to the impact of their hard work and dedication to ministry. We are so grateful to walk alongside Casting Crowns and be part of sharing their music with the world.”

The band’s upcoming studio album, The Very Next Thing, will release Sept. 16 on Beach Street/Reunion. The new project marks the group’s 15th release and eighth studio album.

Casting Crowns will launch the The Very Next Thing Tour this fall, presented by Compassion International and Museum of the Bible. The tour will feature label mate Matt Maher and special guest newcomer Hannah Kerr.

CJM Productions To Launch Weekly TV Series Nashville Insider

Caroline Cutbirth Hobby

Caroline Cutbirth Hobby

CJM Productions president Jeff Moseley will launch Nashville Insider, a weekly television series dedicated to reporting country music news and entertainment. Nashville songwriter and TV personality Caroline Cutbirth Hobby will host the series.

Initial airing will begin on Heartland TV, The Family Channel, AMG TV, AngelTwo/Dish TV, Keep It Country (U.K.), and Country TV (New Zealand).

“We’re very excited to have Caroline on board” says Moseley. “She brings her charm, energy, and in­ depth experience in the entertainment business to the show…she’s exactly what we want in a credible host.”

Cutbirth Hobby is a former member of the country music trio Stealing Angels. She is a songwriter, publisher, record label promoter, emcee, podcaster, and two­time competitor on CBS’s The Amazing Race. She is married to Michael Hobby, frontman of the country music group A Thousand Horses.

 

Fashion Stylist Milton White Opens Studio In Nashville

Milton White

Milton White

Fashion editor and stylist Milton White has teamed with Nashville-based The Fashion Office to open an office/studio at 4094 Hillsboro Pike, Ste. 204 in the Bradford Center. White returned to Nashville as the Style and Media Director of The Fashion Office, after years of working in New York City and Washington, D.C.

White’s work has been featured on Vogue.it (Vogue Italia), People.com, Papercut Mag and Design Scene as well in Country Weekly, People Country, Wherever, Nfocus, Nashville Lifestyles, Nashville Scene, Nashville Post, Native and Mocha Market magazines. Milton has dressed clients for the ACM Awards, Cannes Film Festival, CMT Music Awards, CMA Awards, New York Fashion Week and Swan Ball.

 

Exclusive: Compass Records’ Alison Brown Stays On Course

Alison Brown. Photo: Jim Gavenus

Alison Brown. Photo: Jim Gavenus

Alison Brown and Garry West were at a bar in Stockholm, Sweden, on break while serving as bandleader and bassist for Michelle Shocked when they began dreaming of creating a record label where musicians helped to promote the work of other talented musicians.

“I love being on the road, but there is a lot of downtime. That’s when we started to brainstorm,” Brown tells MusicRow. “We did the proverbial napkin sketch of a wheel with various spokes, with a vision of how would you achieve this life in music? By having the label and studio and touring and different assets. We launched the label at the end of that tour.”

The label Brown and West launched in 1995 is Compass Records. Over the past two decades, the label has promoted an array of bluegrass, Americana, Celtic, folk, Cajun and jazz releases from artists like A.J. Croce, Beth Nielsen Chapman, Dale Ann Bradley, Mike Farris, Larry Stephenson, Colin Hay, Michael Cleveland and Flamekeeper, The Infamous Stringdusters, Rob Ickes & Trey Hensley, as well as from Brown herself.

In 2004, Compass Records set up shop on 19th avenue in Nashville, in the former home of Tompall Glaser’s Hillbilly Central, which included an office downstairs and recording space upstairs. In the 1970s, Hillbilly Central boasted a creative output including John Hartford’s innovative 1971 album Aereo-Plain, Waylon Jennings’ classic Dreaming My Dreams, and country music’s first platinum album Wanted: The Outlaws.

“It wasn’t until after we bought the building that we learned that John, of whom I’m a huge fan as a banjo player, actually recorded Aereo-Plain here. That is one of the seminal records of early ‘newgrass’ music, and it was royalties from publishing ‘Gentle On My Mind’ that gave Glaser the opportunity to build the studio in the first place. So there is a really deep connection for us in this place that we didn’t realize at first. To have the studio upstairs and the staff downstairs, and see the synergy between those two things, created some unique opportunities for us as a company.”

COM-web-logoGrowing up, Brown traveled in bluegrass bands in the San Diego area with fiddler Stuart Duncan. However, as a graduate of both Harvard and UCLA Business School, Brown’s post-college work centered on investment banking and public finance.

“I never really thought I would become a musician,” says Brown. “My mom and dad were both lawyers and they were hoping I would be a doctor. When that didn’t work out, I was a banker. I expected for banjo to be a hobby.” However, she quickly realized was happier doing music. “I would always think about how I could carve out just a moment to think about music,” says Brown.

So she took a six-month hiatus and her timing was impeccable. Alison Krauss called, in need of a banjo player for one weekend. That weekend turned into a three-year stint (1989 to 1991) and the launch of a new career. Brown would go on to release several albums under the Vanguard label before launching Compass.

In 2001, she won a Grammy for “Leaving Cottondale,” her collaboration with Bela Fleck from her album Fair Weather. In 2015, she was honored with a distinguished achievement honor for her banjo prowess from the IBMA.

She says her unique position of being an artist, a producer, and a label executive allows her to make better creative and business decisions both in the studio and at the label.

“I do think that for me, knowing the business side informs what I do in the studio. I think some artists go into the studio just thinking about their music, the songs they’ve written and getting them recorded and putting them out there. When I’m making my own records or producing other people’s records, I feel like I bring the perspective of where the market is right now, to design an outcome. Before you start, imagine yourself 12-18 months down the road. What do you want to say has happened with this record? Then let’s work backward to make sure it has the hook so we can get these things to happen. It’s a great perspective and it works for me.”

Brown has stayed dedicated to that vision of promoting other artists. Compass issued 25 albums before it released a project from Brown. “It has never been a vanity label,” she says. “We’ve released probably 600 albums, and maybe 10 have been mine.”

The latest from Brown, 2015’s The Song of the Banjo, explores the instrument’s possibilities when mixed with updated interpretations of pop classics. Her expert banjo picking carries the melody on a rendition of Cyndi Lauper’s “Time After Time,” while the project also features guests like Colin Hay, Keb Mo and The Indigo Girls.

“Unless you are a banjo fan already, it’s hard to listen to the instrument and know what is happening because of all these notes. If you don’t know the melody of the tune, it’s hard to figure out what is so cool about it. We figured if we played a tune people knew, like ‘Time After Time,’ it gave them something to latch on to. They had a way in. They could listen to the banjo playing a song they already knew and could connect to. That was a lot of the goal with that record.”

song_of_the_banjoThe instrument has made a resurgence across the pop and rock spectrum in the past several years, with Elle King, Mumford & Sons, The Band Perry, The Avett Brothers, and Taylor Swift taking up the instrument.

“I think it is fantastic and long overdue, but if you think of it from a broad historical perspective, which is something I think about a lot, the banjo was the most popular instrument in America in the late 1800s. That’s what everybody played. Middle class parlors all had banjos in them. It was America’s instrument. In a sense, seeing it creep back into the mainstream is seeing it creeping back to where it was in the first place.”

She adds, “When I was working on Song of the Banjo, that was part of the statement I was trying to make. In the 1900s, the banjo got stereotyped in bluegrass music and all the possibly negative connotations some people might have about that music, which I don’t share at all obviously, but it got pigeonholed. But it was only 50 to 75 years before that nobody would have pigeonholed it that way.”

As music has shifted and evolved since Compass’ opening in 1995, so has the commercial space for marketing music. As CDs have been overpowered by streaming, the company has also adapted to the new demands of music marketing.

“The fragmentation of the marketing, it’s made it harder in some ways,” says Brown. “It used to be if we had an artist profiled on All Things Considered, we’d see 5,000 units shipped the next day on the back of that. Now, everything has less impact and there doesn’t seem to be the same silver bullet for delivering your message. So as a result, the artist has to be on their game with social media to deliver content and messaging on a daily basis to keep blowing wind into the sails. It’s great that those avenues for discovery exist, but it makes it more challenging to get your message heard.”

To that end, Brown relies on her Compass team of marketing and promotion aces, as well as each artist’s managers and agents to create a comprehensive strategy.

“One of the things we stress is that an artist’s infrastructure is incredibly important in helping us to be able to help that artist achieve success. Early on, in a much more open market, we put out some first records by some incredible artists. We were able to get them some exposure, but even back then, it worked better when the artist was moving as fast as the label. Anymore, that’s just completely essential.”

 

Industry Pics: Dolly Parton, Derik Hultquist, Runaway June

Dolly Parton and SiriusXM Premiere ‘Pure & Simple’ Album Special 

Pictured (L – R): Danny Nozell, Manager, CTK Management; Dolly Parton; Jeremy Tepper, SiriusXM; Kirt Webster, Publicist, Webster PR.

Dolly Parton‘s new album Pure & Simple will be available Friday, Aug. 19, the same day Parton’s SiriusXM special is airing on Willie Nelson’s SiriusXM channel, Willie’s Roadhouse! The special will debut on Friday at 11 a.m. ET and 6 p.m. ET.

Additionally, SiriusXM has declared next Friday, Aug. 26 “Dolly Day,” on Prime Country and will air the Dolly Parton: “Pure & Simple” special on the Prime Country channel at 9 a.m. ET, 3 p.m. ET and 10 p.m. ET.

 

Derik Hultquist Promotes Southern Iron Album at the Recording Academy’s Nashville Office

L-R: Bri Buchanan Alicia Warwick, Courtney White, Ashley Ernst, Christina Scholz, Laura Crawford, Derik Hultquist, Susan Stewart, Nathan Pyle and Frank Liddell

Pictured (L – R): Bri Buchanan, Alicia Warwick, Courtney White, Ashley Ernst, Christina Scholz, Laura Crawford, Derik Hultquist, Susan Stewart, Nathan Pyle, Frank Liddell

Carnival Music’s Derik Hultquist visited the Recording Academy’s Nashville office to play a few songs from his album, Southern Iron.

 

Runaway June Promotes New Single “Lipstick” at Big Time With Whitney Allan

Pictured (L - R): Jackie Stevens, Hannah Mulholland, Jennifer Wayne, Whitney Allan and Naomi Cooke

Pictured (L – R): Jackie Stevens, Hannah Mulholland, Jennifer Wayne, Whitney Allan and Naomi Cooke

BBR Music Group artist Runaway June visited Big Time with Whitney Allan in Los Angeles this week to promote their new single, “Lipstick.”

Maren Morris, Alicia Keys Set For ‘CMT Crossroads’

Pictured (L-R): Alicia Keys, Maren Morris

Pictured (L-R): Alicia Keys, Maren Morris

Maren Morris will collaborate with Alicia Keys on an upcoming episode of CMT Crossroads, which is set to air on Dec. 2 at 10 p.m. ET. The set will be taped in Nashville.

Keys is a 15-time Grammy winner, actress, author, entrepreneur and activist. In May, she released “In Common,” a song from her sixth studio album, due out later this year on RCA Records. Keys will join Blake Shelton, Miley Cyrus and Adam Levine on the judges’ panel of NBC’s The Voice when the show’s 11th season premieres on Sept. 19.

Columbia Nashville artist Morris released her major label debut, Hero, in June. The album’s debut single, “My Church” was certified platinum by the RIAA. Continuing her success with the latest single, “80s Mercedes,” Morris is currently on Keith Urban’s Ripcord World Tour in addition to her own headlining dates.

Kelsea Ballerini Raises $5K For Music Makes Us With Star-Studded Bluebird Performance

Pictured (L-R): Trent Dabbs, Ingrid Michaelson, Tegan Marie, Kelsea Ballerini, Dave Barnes, Tristan McIntosh, and Luke Laird. Photo: Robert Chavers

Pictured (L-R): Trent Dabbs, Ingrid Michaelson, Amelia Eisenhauer, Kelsea Ballerini, Dave Barnes, Tristan McIntosh, and Luke Laird. Photo: Robert Chavers

Black River Entertainment’s Kelsea Ballerini hosted an intimate “pop up” concert for fans, dubbed “In The Round with Kelsea Ballerini & Friends,” on Wednesday (Aug. 17) at Nashville’s Bluebird Cafe. The Bluebird show lived up to its name, as Ballerini welcomed Dave Barnes, hit songwriter and producer Luke Laird, and Ingrid Michaelson for the performance. She also brought along Trent Dabbs and newcomer Tegan Marie for a turn at the mic, as well as two Nashville School of the Arts students (and American Idol season 15 alums) Tristan McIntosh and Amelia Eisenhauer.

Ballerini even performed a rendition of “Dibs” for fans waiting in line outside the Bluebird Cafe. All proceeds from the event will be donated to Music Makes Us, a program led by Metro Nashville Public Schools, the Mayor’s office, as well as the music industry and community leaders, to aid music education programs around the country. The Bluebird Cafe also auctioned a guitar signed by the evening’s performers, which brought in $2,100, bringing the total donation from the concert to $5,000 for Music Makes Us.

“I discovered my love for performing through my music program in high school and know the impact of discovering your passion through initiatives like Music Makes Us,” Ballerini said. “I was so excited to help raise awareness for music in schools alongside my friends Ingrid Michaelson, Dave Barnes, Luke Laird, and Trent Dabbs. They all have a passion for music education so it made perfect sense for us to join forces!”

Cirque du Soleil Brings ‘Avatar’ To Nashville Arena Through Sunday

Toruk

Toruk

Cirque du Soleil brings Toruk – The First Flight to Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena from August 24-28, 2016. The live, multimedia event is inspired by James Cameron’s Avatar.

The production elements produces a visually stunning experience that matches and perhaps exceeds shows seen in Las Vegas by transforming Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena into a new world. The actors and dancers perform jaw-dropping moves throughout the show as the story unfolds.

Through a fusion of visuals, puppetry, stagecraft and cinematic score, Toruk is narrated by a “Na’vi Storyteller” and populated by characters.

The tale is set thousands of years before Avatar. When a natural catastrophe threatens to destroy the sacred Tree of Souls, Ralu and Entu, two Omaticaya boys on the brink of adulthood, fearlessly take matters into their own hands. Upon learning that Toruk can help them save the Tree of Souls, they set out together with their newfound friend Tsyal, on a quest in the Floating Mountains to find the mighty red and orange predator that rules the Pandoran sky. Prophecy is fulfilled when a pure soul rises among the clans to ride Toruk for the first time and save the Na’vi from a terrible fate.

Purchase tickets for any of the performances here.

10 Things To Know about Toruk – The First Flight

  1. 40 video projectors illuminate approximately 20,000 square feet, more than five times the size of a standard IMAX screen.
  2. Puppeteers are equipped with microphones and make their own animal sounds.
  3. The Tree of Souls is inflatable with branches covered in thousands of LED lights.
  4. The stage is 85 by 162 feet.
  5. The show’s performance area is based on the Fibonacci spiral. This shape is determined by the ancient number sequence in which each number is the sum of the two preceding numbers. According to these proportions, the Tree of Souls would be in the exact spot at the heart of the spiral.
  6. Hometree is 80 feet wide by 40 feet high.
  7. Four different blue base skin tones were created for the Na’vi people. The base skin fabric, an optical white synthetic fiber, was silkscreened to create the muscle and stripes. The bioluminescent effect is created using a product that reacts to the light filters used in the show.
  8. The flowers of the Tawkami costumes require 437 yards of fabric and 120 fishing rods.
  9. Some costumes are made with parts of hammocks.
  10. There are 115 costumes in the show, an average of 3.3 costumes per artist. The costume department produced more than 1,000 items in all, including shoes, headpieces and necklaces.
Toruk

Toruk

 

Toruk

Toruk

CMT On Tour Teams With Cole Swindell For Fall Tour

Cole Swindell Down Home Tour CMT Presents

Cole Swindell has partnered with CMT On Tour for his third annual Down Home Tour, which will again be paired with the release of a collection of new music.

The 2016 outing will be billed as CMT On Tour Presents Cole Swindell Down Home Tour. This 17-date headlining tour will launch Oct. 26 at Cain’s Ballroom in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and will run through Dec. 16 at Greenville, South Carolina’s Blind Horse Saloon. More tour dates will be added soon. Various dates will feature openers Cole Taylor, Travis Denning, and Jon Langston.

As with Swindell’s previous Down Home tours, a new collection of music will be released in conjunction with the outing. Down Home Sessions III EP will release digitally on Oct. 28 via Warner Bros./Warner Music Nashville.

“I can’t wait for my Down Home Tour this year, and am really excited to partner with CMT this time,” said Swindell. “The fans in these cities and towns have been behind me since I first played in these clubs—supporting me in every way. Sending me Facebook messages and Tweets. They have called radio stations to request my songs and spent their hard-earned money to buy my CDs and concert tickets. I have always looked at this tour as a way to get back ‘Down Home’ where they gave me my start and just to say thank you.”

This marks the 15th annual tour for CMT. CMT On Tour launched in 2002, and has included artists such as Miranda Lambert, Trace Adkins, Bryan, Keith Urban, Brett Eldredge, Thomas Rhett, and more.

CMT ON TOUR Presents the COLE SWINDELL DOWN HOME TOUR dates:

Oct. 26: Tulsa, Okla.; Cain’s Ballroom (ft. Cole Taylor/Travis Denning)
Oct. 27: Wichita, Kan.; The Cotillion Ballroom (ft. Cole Taylor/Travis Denning)
Oct. 29: Odessa, Texas; Dos Amigos (ft. Cole Taylor/Travis Denning)
Nov. 4: Oxford, Miss.; The Lyric Oxford (ft. Jon Langston)
Nov. 9: New York; Terminal 5 (ft. Jon Langston)
Nov. 11: Norfolk, Va.; The Norva (ft. Jon Langston)
Nov. 12: Silver Spring, Md.; The Fillmore Silver Spring (ft. Jon Langston)
Nov. 17: Fort Walton, Fla.; The Block (ft. Cole Taylor/Travis Denning)
Nov. 18: Lake Buena Vista, Fla.; House of Blues (ft. Cole Taylor/Travis Denning)
Nov. 25: Houston; House of Blues (ft. Jon Langston)
Nov. 26: Fort Worth, Texas; Billy Bob’s Texas (ft. Jon Langston)
Dec. 2: Saint Paul, Minn; Myth Live Event Center (ft. Jon Langston)
Dec. 3: Milwaukee;Eagles Ballroom (ft. Jon Langston)
Dec. 9: Providence, R.I.; Lupo’s Heartbreak Hotel (ft. Jon Langston)
Dec. 10: Boston; House of Blues (ft. Cole Taylor/Travis Denning)
Dec. 15: Knoxville, Tenn.; Cotton Eyed Joe’s (ft. Cole Taylor/Travis Denning)
Dec. 16: Greenville, S.C.; Blind Horse Saloon (ft. Cole Taylor/Travis Denning)