Female Producers, Engineers Join Change The Conversation Event

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BMI Nashville hosts Change The Conversation on Wednesday, Aug. 3. Photo: Beth Gwinn

While Nashville coalition Change The Conversation has brought widespread attention over the past couple of years to the lack of female artists gaining traction at country radio, the realm of music producing and engineering is still largely male-dominated.

On Wednesday night (Aug. 3), BMI’s Nashville office welcomed female producers and engineers Adrianne Gonzalez, Victoria Shaw, Lari White, Alex Kline, Shani Gandhi and Gena Johnson for a panel titled Women Behind The Board: A Conversation on Producing and Engineering. It was moderated by Dave Cobb, known for his production work with Jason Isbell, Lori McKenna, Sturgill Simpson, and Chris Stapleton.

Many women on the panel pursued full-time artist careers before shifting into the world of producing and engineering.

“I realized I didn’t want to hear myself sing anymore,” shared Gonzalez, who released several projects, both solo and as part of The Rescues. As a producer and engineer, Gonzalez’s work has appeared in many films and TV shows. “I started calling myself an engineer and producer because I had already produced my own music, so I didn’t think producing someone else should be that different.”

Producer/engineer Alex Kline was a member of The Lunabelles. The group had signed to BNA and released the single, “A Place To Shine.” Kline soon found herself on stages across the country, opening for labelmate Kenny Chesney. While on the road, she realized much of her time was spent not working on new music, but performing songs the group had already written.

“I enjoy creating each night, versus re-creating every night,” she said. Kline has had songs recorded by Ronnie Dunn, Lonesome River Band and Jess Moskaluke. Kline produced BMLG artist Tara Thompson’s latest album, and co-wrote Thompson’s first single, “Someone To Take Your Place.”

Pictured (L-R): Dave Cobb, Gena Johnson, AG,

Pictured (L-R): Dave Cobb, Gena Johnson, Adrianne Gonzalez, Alex Kline, Shani Gandhi, Victoria Shaw and Lari White. Photo: Beth Gwinn

Nearly all of the women on the panel mentioned they had been passed over for certain projects. Several noted they felt that a rejection often had more to do with the quality of the work, or with the working relationship with a label, manager or artist, rather than gender.

Gandhi, who has worked on projects by Frankie Ballard, Will Hoge and Sarah Jarosz, said she often “learns the most from losing.” Gandhi competes for the opportunity to work on various projects, turning in mixes that are compared with the work from male engineers. “Sometimes I feel my work is better, but they chose what they think is best. Other times, I’ll hear another person’s version and I’ll think they did a great job, and I’ll go to them and ask, ‘How did you do that?’”

“I think it’s more of a trust issue,” said White, who made history as the first female producer to produce a superstar male artist, when she co-produced Toby Keith’s 2006 project White Trash With Money. “The labels’ business model is worse than roulette. It’s dismal, so it’s natural to want to go with the producer who just produced a top song or top project.”

Keith heard White’s 2004 album Green Eyed Soul and asked if she would produce a couple of tracks for him. “Toby and I shared the stage as artists and sang a duet ‘Only God Could Stop Me Loving You’ [from White’s 1998 album Stepping Stone] so we had a friendship. It goes back to trust.”

Keith went to her Nashville studio and cut three songs in four hours. By lunch, he had asked her to re-book the musicians for additional sessions to work on the whole album.

White said, “It was a total experiment, but he told me he had had more fun in the studio than he had had in a while. Some of those tracks we worked on he had already cut twice and he wasn’t happy with it.”

“Music is not a democracy, ever,” Cobb interjected.

“You might make a product,” White agreed, “but it didn’t work for me.”

 

Change The Conversation session August 2016 Nashville Producers Engineer 2

Photo: Beth Gwinn

Cobb and the panelists also discussed the importance of making artists comfortable with them as producers.

“I get them to talk about their feelings and what they are going through,” said Gonzalez. “If they are pissed about something, use that. I could talk about feelings for hours.”

“Alcohol always helps a bit,” Cobb quipped. “I learned quickly that just taking them out to a bar and talking helps.”

Everyone on the panel agreed that the key to getting more work is to focus on quality work, rather than gender issues.

Shaw, a superstar songwriter in her own right, placed high value on quality during the five years she spent developing the superstar trio Lady Antebellum. She began working with then 16-year-old Hillary Scott, even before Scott began collaborating with bandmates Charles Kelley and Dave Haywood. After the trio formed, Shaw encouraged them to keep writing. “My goal was an album of single-worthy songs,” Shaw said.

The women also praised the work of Change The Conversation for highlighting the lack of females on the radio and behind the scenes in certain sectors of the music industry.

“When you bring attention to it, it holds their feet to the fire,” said Gonzalez.

Shaw says that the lack of females on country radio represents an opportunity and a challenge to female artists to work harder, to excel at their craft, and to make themselves more unique as artists.

“The female artists that are successful and on radio are unique and they are good,” said Shaw. “Women, we have to be better. We have to be better, but what’s so bad about that?”

Brent Cobb Continues Publishing Deal With Carnival Music

Brent Cobb. Photo: Don Van Cleve

Brent Cobb. Photo: Don Van Cleve

Singer-songwriter Brent Cobb has renewed his deal with Carnival Music. Cobb signed the first publishing deal of his career with Carnival in 2009.

Cobb has written songs for a growing cadre of Nashville heavy hitters, including Little Big Town’s “Stay All Night” and “Pavement Ends”; “Tailgate Blues” by Luke Bryan; Kenny Chesney’s “Don’t It”; Miranda Lambert’s “Old Shit”; “Grandpa’s Farm,” recorded by both Frankie Ballard and David Nail; “Go Outside and Dance” by Eli Young Band; and Kellie Pickler’s “Rockway.” Lee Ann Womack, the Oak Ridge Boys, Charlie Worsham, and others have all cut his songs as well.

Produced by his cousin Dave Cobb (Jason Isbell, Sturgill Simpson, Jamey Johnson, Chris Stapleton), Cobb’s album Shine On Rainy Day (Low Country Sound/Elektra Records) drops Oct. 7.

“Historically, it is the song and the songwriter that pump the blood through country music. Brent is a songwriter who stuck to his principles and followed no trends. He has written songs with lyrics, melody, and purpose, and that earned him a following that’s growing,” Carnival Music’s Frank Liddell says. “The most exciting thing may be that he just keeps getting better. All of us at Carnival are honored and fired up to be part of the continuing journey that is Brent Cobb.”

“We’ve been together a pretty good while,” Cobb says. “Carnival is more than just my publisher. We’re family—every quirky last one of us. I’m very proud to be a part of it.”

Justin Moore Teams With Waffle House For New Album Promotion

Justin Moore.

Justin Moore.

Justin Moore will make appearances at Waffle House restaurants in select markets to promote his new album, Kinda Don’t Care. The project is scheduled for an Aug. 12 release on The Valory Music Co.

His visits will be announced on his Twitter account and Waffle House’s Twitter account. In addition, anyone who plays a Justin Moore song on a Waffle House jukebox using the TouchTunes app will receive two free credits. The restaurants will also feature Moore on in-house posters and will sponsor a flyaway sweepstakes to one of his concerts.

“I’ve been eating at Waffle House since before I can remember,” said Moore. “It is a go-to stop of mine on tour so I am excited to share my post-show rituals with my fans. I’ve been working hard on the new music and can’t wait for everyone to hear it.”

“We are honored and excited to a part of Justin’s album release celebration,” said Shelby White, President of Waffle Records. “Music is a very important part of the Waffle House experience for our customers and associates, and this partnership is a great way for Justin and the Waffle Nation to connect.”

Presidents Of NSAI, ASCAP Decry DOJ Consent Decree Decision

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NSAI President Lee Thomas Miller and ASCAP President Paul Williams have formally expressed their negative view of the Department of Justice’s ruling regarding the consent decree and 100 percent licensing.

Although the Department of Justice’s intentions were revealed in June, the official ruling was posted to their website on Thursday (Aug. 4).

Miller’s dissension was sent to MusicRow in a press release while Williams’ views were shared in a letter sent to ASCAP members.

The statements are the result of the Department of Justice’s ruling to keep 75-year-old ASCAP and BMI consent decrees intact, while also implementing a new requirement mandating that each PRO license songs in their respective repertoires on a 100 percent basis, upending the long-standing industry practice of fractional licensing. The change is expected to create significant logistical and legal challenges for PROs, publishing companies and songwriters.

The full commentary is listed below:

Lee Thomas Miller, President NSAI:

“I cannot emphasize strongly enough how ludicrous this DOJ ruling is. NSAI has had multiple conversations and meetings with the DOJ. When I met with the assistant Attorney General, who is behind this, I graphically explained to her and her team the damage that the current, archaic music licensing and rate setting process is having on the songwriters. I then told her that her 100% licensing plan will threaten the last stream of income we have. I am disgusted that they are proceeding with this hostile attack against the smallest business in America- the songwriter. Please know that we at NSAI will not be silent. We do not accept this. Songs do not fall out of the sky. They are created slowly through years, sometimes decades, of life experience and pain and joy and hope and practice and failure and a tireless dedication to the learning of a craft that gives birth to a multi-billion dollar industry, an industry which would not exist without the songwriter. This is not a third world country where the government can impose unjust rule over members of the working class. We pay taxes. We generate commerce. We establish, drive and change culture. The government is wrong on this and I think they know it. I promise you we will be proclaiming it from every podium we can find. We will fight today and we will fight tomorrow because we have nothing to lose.”

Paul Williams, President, ASCAP:

Dear ASCAP Member,

Today, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) released its official public statement regarding its review of the 75-year-old ASCAP and BMI consent decrees, which govern how songwriters and other music creators collectively license their work for public performance.

Unfortunately, rather than updating the antiquated framework of laws that govern how songwriters license their work and tackling some of the biggest challenges facing the music industry, the DOJ chose to avoid a solution at this time and maintain the current decrees. The DOJ also announced that it plans to upend decades of industry practice by imposing new “full work” or “100% licensing” requirements on the PROs, despite very public opposition to this proposal.

ASCAP and BMI believe that the DOJ got this wrong, and we will not rest in our mission to fix the problems the DOJ decided not to solve. ASCAP and BMI together are pursuing a joint strategy to overturn the DOJ’s decision and modernize the outdated consent decree system. As part of this joint effort to generate change on two major fronts, ASCAP will lead the push for legislation in Congress to address the outdated consent decrees in favor of legislative solutions that make sense for the future of American music and BMI will challenge the DOJ’s decision on 100% licensing in federal rate court. ASCAP and BMI are in full support of one another’s efforts.

More than a million American songwriters, composers and music publishers, like you, depend on collective licensing through ASCAP and BMI to earn a living. As an organization of music creators, we believe in a level playing field for all songwriters and composers, whether they are members of ASCAP or not. The DOJ decision requiring 100% licensing will create challenges for all music creators, whether they are represented by ASCAP, BMI, or by one of the smaller performing rights organizations.

Fixing this will be a long process, however, so I urge you to stay with us. ASCAP has strength in numbers. When we stick together and speak in a strong, united voice, we make an impact. We will need everyone to step up, stay focused and take action.

ASCAP is going to keep fighting on your behalf for the reforms songwriters need in order to succeed now and in the future. In fact, the DOJ opened the door for us to do just that.

In its public statement, the government clearly acknowledges that the PROs provide an invaluable service in the marketplace and that the consent decree system is not working as well as it could.

The DOJ also conceded that a real, long-term resolution of the challenges songwriters face may require Congressional action. We wholeheartedly agree.

Fortunately, ASCAP has been working closely with other music industry stakeholders for some time to educate key members of Congress in both the House and the Senate about the unique challenges faced by music creators in the new music economy, and we already have a strong base of support in both parties. We will work closely with our allies to develop the framework for legislative proposals to be introduced in the next Congress.

We will have much more to share with you in the coming days, and we will let you know how you can help. ASCAP is proud to stand with songwriters and all music creators on the frontlines as we push for changes that will move our laws, our organization and our entire industry forward.

Sincerely,

Paul Williams

Richard Bennett Earns Recognition As CMHoF Nashville Cat

Pictured (L-R): Back row: Buddy Miller, Bergen White, Duane Eddy, Billy Sanford, Steve Gibson, David Briggs, Michael Rhodes. Front row: moderator Bill Lloyd, musician Nick Bennett, honoree Richard Bennett, musician Sean Weaver, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum's Abi Tapia.

Pictured (L-R): Back row: Buddy Miller, Bergen White, Duane Eddy, Billy Sanford, Steve Gibson, David Briggs, Michael Rhodes. Front row: moderator Bill Lloyd, musician Nick Bennett, honoree Richard Bennett, musician Sean Weaver, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Abi Tapia.

Famed guitarist Richard Bennett was honored as a Nashville Cat by the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum on Saturday (July 30). The distinction is presented to notable studio musicians.

During an event at the museum, Bennett discussed his career and performed several original songs.

Bennett played with Neil Diamond in the 1970s and 1980s, and many others, including Rodney Crowell, Emmylou Harris, Vince Gill, Steve Earle, and Marty Stuart.

Former Nashville Cat honorees Buddy Miller, Bergen White, Duane Eddy, Billy Sanford, Steve Gibson, and Michael Rhodes attended in support of Bennett.

Pictured (L-R): Bill Lloyd, Richard Bennett

Pictured (L-R): Bill Lloyd, Richard Bennett

Josh Miller Jointly Signs To Warner/Chappell, Cornman Music

Pictured (L-R): Front: Nate Lowery, Cornman; Miller; Kelly Donley, Safford/Motley; Scott Safford, Safford/Motley. Back: Bradley Collins, BMI; Ben Vaughn, Warner/Chappell; Ryan Beuschel, Warner/Chappell; Brett James, Cornman; Jody Williams, BMI; Shea Fowler, Cornman

Pictured (L-R): Front: Nate Lowery, Cornman; Miller; Kelly Donley, Safford/Motley; Scott Safford, Safford/Motley. Back: Bradley Collins, BMI; Ben Vaughn, Warner/Chappell; Ryan Beuschel, Warner/Chappell; Brett James, Cornman; Jody Williams, BMI; Shea Fowler, Cornman

Warner/Chappell Music and Cornman Music have signed a worldwide co-publishing agreement with songwriter Josh Miller.

A self-described member of the “mixtape generation,” Miller’s music combines elements from the various genres of music he grew up listening to: country storytelling, pop melodies, and R&B phrasing. This marks the first time Miller has been signed to a music publisher.

Cornman Music was founded in 2007 by Grammy Award-winning songwriter Brett James and launched in partnership with Warner/Chappell Music.

ASCAP, BMI Align To Fight DOJ Consent Decree Interpretation

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ASCAP and BMI have united in a joint campaign against the Department of Justice’s interpretation of their respective consent decrees, and to advocate for consent decree reform.

BMI has initiated the process of challenging 100 percent licensing in federal court. Meanwhile, ASCAP will take the lead for the two PROs to pursue a legislative solution to continue fractional licensing, as well as other remedies for what the two performing rights organizations call outdated consent decree regulations.

After nearly three years of formal review, on June 29, the Department of Justice announced its decision to decline an update to the consent decrees that have regulated how ASCAP and BMI operate since 1941. The DOJ also implemented the new requirement that mandates each PRO to license songs in their respective repertoires on a 100 percent basis, in contrast to the longstanding industry practice of fractional licensing.

BMI sent a pre-motion letter to Federal Judge Louis Stanton, advising him of a proposed motion to interpret and potentially modify its consent decree. The letter includes requests to determine that BMI’s consent decree allows for the long-standing industry practice of fractional licensing, or, alternatively, an order by the court modifying the decree to allow for fractional licensing. The letter also requests a reasonable transaction period after a final ruling, if compliance with the DOJ’s interpretation is required.

A full copy of BMI’s pre-motion letter is available here.

Elizabeth Matthews, ASCAP CEO, stated: “The DOJ decision puts the U.S. completely out of step with the entire global music marketplace, denies American music creators their rights, and potentially disrupts the flow of music without any benefit to the public. That is why ASCAP will work with our allies in Congress, BMI and leaders within the music industry to explore legislative solutions to challenge the DOJ’s 100% licensing decision and enact the modifications that will protect songwriters, composers and the music we all love.”

Mike O’Neill, President and CEO of BMI, said, “The DOJ’s interpretation of our consent decree serves no one, not the marketplace, the music publishers, the music users, and most importantly, not our songwriters and composers who now have the government weighing in on their creative and financial decisions. Unlike the DOJ, we believe that our consent decree permits fractional licensing, a practice that encourages competition in our industry and fosters creativity and collaboration among music creators, a factor the DOJ completely dismissed. As a result, we have no recourse other than to fight the DOJ’s interpretation in court. It won’t be easy, and we know it will take time, but we believe that it is the right thing to do and in the best interest of the industry at large.”

Sony/ATV, NMPA Criticize DOJ Ruling On Consent Decree, 100 Percent Licensing

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Martin Bandier, Chairman and CEO of Sony/ATV Music Publishing, and David Israelite, President of National Music Publishers’ Association (NMPA) have each issued statements with concerns about the Department of Justice’s decision regarding 100 percent licensing.

The topic has been a major concern since June 29, when the Department of Justice surprised the industry with the decision. The ruling means that a song co-written by an ASCAP songwriter and a BMI songwriter would be available to license with approval from just one PRO. It also means that if a songwriter owns only a portion of the song, he or she can license the full song, as long as that songwriter ensures the other credited writers are getting paid. Under the current system, known as fractionalized licensing, each copyright owner in the song takes care of licensing their portion.

Meanwhile the ruling declined requests from major publishing companies to have a right to negotiate licensing rates with digital music providers like Pandora and Spotify. The original consent decree was enacted in 1941, and pertained specifically to ASCAP and BMI, but the music industry has lobbied for the last two or three years to modernize the law. Their requests were all denied in the ruling.

The statements are below:

Martin Bandier, Chairman and CEO of Sony/ATV Music Publishing

“We are extremely disappointed by the DOJ’s decision to issue a misguided and unprecedented interpretation of the consent decrees that is contrary to how they have worked and how the business has operated over many decades. Not only does it contradict the views of the U.S. Copyright Office and the entire music industry, but it will bring significant uncertainty and disorder to a marketplace that has worked well for years, while leaving everybody in the licensing process, including songwriters, to try to figure out how 100% licensing might work. Instead of modernizing the consent decrees, this decision has created a host of problems that will now have to be addressed by the courts and must be addressed by Congress as well.”

David Israelite, President & CEO, NMPA

“The Department of Justice (DoJ) has dealt a massive blow to America’s songwriters. After a two year review of the consent decrees that govern ASCAP and BMI, career lawyers who were never elected nor confirmed to their positions, led by a lawyer who previously represented Google, determined that songwriters should have even fewer rights, less control over their intellectual property and be treated more unfairly than they already are. The Department ignored the voices of copyright experts, members of Congress and thousands of songwriters and delivered a huge gift to tech companies who already benefit from egregiously low rates.

“The interpretation that the consent decrees demand that all works must be licensed on a 100 percent basis is both unprecedented and disastrous to the songwriting community. The decision represents a misunderstanding of copyright law and directly violates the legal guidance given by the Register of Copyright. The defiance displayed by these career antitrust lawyers in ignoring the legal opinion of the Register of Copyright is shocking.

“Washington bureaucrats should not be in the business of regulating music as they are neither capable of understanding or fixing the problems they’ve created. We are hopeful that through the legal process, conversations with those in Congress who understand copyright law, and ultimately the voices of those most affected, the creators themselves, we can find a path forward.”

CMA Music Festival Special Pulls In 5.54 Million Viewers

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The Wednesday night (Aug. 3) airing of CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night To Rock on ABC garnered a 1.1/4 Live+Same Day rating, pulling in a viewership of 5.54 million, up from 2015’s average of 5.19 million viewers, according to zap2it.com.

In 2015, CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night To Rock averaged a 1.2/4 rating among adult viewers age 18-49.

The three-hour show featured hosts Thomas Rhett and Brett Eldredge, and included performances from Jason Aldean, Kelsea Ballerini, Dierks Bentley, Luke Bryan, Eric Church, Brett Eldredge, Florida Georgia Line, Miranda Lambert, Little Big Town, Rascal Flatts, Thomas Rhett, Blake Shelton, Chris Stapleton, Cole Swindell, Steven Tyler, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban and Chris Young with Cassadee Pope.

CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night to Rock was executive-produced by Robert Deaton.

Filmed during CMA Music Festival June 9-12, the special featured performances from four-day celebration, which this year was highlighted by meet-and-greets in Fan Fair X, live music on 11 stages, more than 600 artists and celebrities, and a guest list of 88,500 fans.

Exclusive: Cody Johnson Brings Rodeo Lessons To Music Career

Cody Johnson

Cody Johnson. Photo: Cameron Powell

After leaving behind a career in pro rodeo (with the shiny buckles to prove it), Cody Johnson has settled into a 25-acre ranch in Huntsville, Texas, with a family and a promising country music career.

He’s been traveling to Nashville over the last few years to write and record, and says he considers the city a second home, yet he remains fiercely independent. His 2014 release, Cowboy Like Me, debuted at No. 7 on Billboard’s country album chart. His new project, Gotta Be Me, releases Friday (Aug. 5). With memorable tunes like “Half a Song” (which conjures classic George Strait) and the single “With You I Am,” Johnson is keeping his eyes on the prize.

“I take my old rodeo background directly to heart with this music,” Johnson tells MusicRow. “It’s not the bucking off and getting thrown on the ground, it’s the getting back on. Man, it’s a scary industry no matter what part of the industry you’re in. There’s no certainty in it anyway, so let’s just throw the dice on the table and see if we can make it happen. So far the good Lord’s been good to us.”

Cody Johnson

Cody Johnson. Photo: Cameron Powell

MusicRow: Why was it important for you to record the album in Nashville?

Cody Johnson: Backing up a few projects, A Different Day was the first project I had come up here and done. I was writing with Trent Willmon and he wasn’t really producing at the time, but I know he was thinking about it. He kind of used me as his guinea pig. He wanted to do demo sessions of songs we’d written, and when I heard them, I said, “You call this a demo? This is a record!” So that is what started our first project [in 2011], A Different Day.

Moving to the follow-up project, Cowboy Like Me, it was obvious I wanted to come back here. My touring band that I have back home, I uphold them to the highest of standards. They are great! They’re good enough to be on an album but they didn’t want to be on the album.

Their thoughts were the same as mine: If we get those guys in Nashville that are the best of the best, to hone in on who you are, and your sound, and what we do as a live band, they’re going to play licks that are more out of the box. More creative stuff that we wouldn’t think to do. And if we get that, then we get to learn that record and take it to the stage and make ourselves better.

SiriusXM and the Highway channel have been playing “With You I Am.” What has that support meant for you?

That’s been a recent big deal. We were sitting at a bar not too long ago, after soundcheck, just eating and grabbing a beer. They had the Highway on and we heard “With You I Am” come on the radio and I asked the bartender to turn it up.

Everybody was so shocked at how shocked I was. I said, “Guys, that’s the first time I’ve ever heard myself on a radio station, period.” That’s a different world and a totally different broad spectrum to know that we’re getting that kind of light shown on us. I feel the ballgame changing a little bit. That’s really, really cool to see.

Cody Johnson

Cody Johnson. Photo: Cameron Powell

You have a solid base on socials and in streaming. Have you seen an uptick since SiriusXM picked you up?

Absolutely. We’ve done like 80 or 90 million streams in the last 18 months. It’s been unreal. And I’m one of those guys who keeps my head out of social, and I keep my head out of the clouds. I treat this just like any other job. You wake up, put on your work boots and go give it your all. I don’t think I’ll ever let myself get too caught up in all that stuff.

Are you going to try to shop your music to a major label?

We actually have had some majors approach us, but the thing is, I’ve built my career off the fan base we’ve developed. Not just in Texas. We’re honestly playing more outside the state of Texas than we are in, because we haven’t oversaturated our markets.

It’s great to go play in front of 10,000 people somewhere, but what about those 78 people in South Carolina, and the fans there that know every word of your stuff? You can’t not go there because there’s not enough of them. You have to go develop that and bust your knuckles, so to speak.

You’re clearly very driven. Where does that come from?

My dad worked every day growing up. My mom, my brother and I cleaned houses so my mom could homeschool us, because we didn’t have a lot of good school districts around us. I’ve never met a more hard-working man than my father. I’ve always wanted to make them proud. Now that I have a wife and a daughter, and I have 12 guys on a bus, and a staff of over 15, I feel like I owe them that, to put on my work boots every day.

I think that a lot of it comes from rodeo. You’re going to knock me down, but you’re not going to knock me down forever. I’m always going to get back up and say, “Hit me again.” I’m one of those people that when the fight is heaviest, I perform my best.