AmericanaFest Achieves 35,000 Aggregate Attendance, Rising Number Of Registrants

Americana Honors & Awards 2016. Photo: Getty Images

Americana Honors & Awards 2016. Photo: Getty Images

The Americana Music Festival and Conference has announced an aggregate attendance of 35,000 for its schedule of official events in Nashville last week. In addition, registrants for the conference rose to 2,270, up from 2015’s tally of 1,829. An estimated 25 percent of attendants traveled from outside the U.S.

The event officially began on Tuesday, Sept. 20 and concluded on Sunday, Sept. 25.

The Honors & Awards ceremony, held on Sept. 21, also became NPR’s top streaming event of 2016. Sirius XM’s Outlaw Country, WMOT, WRLT and WSM-AM 650 all streamed the show. The program will be digitally remastered for broadcast in an edited form as part of PBS’ ACL Presents series on Nov. 19, and in Australia on CMC later this year.

The dates for the 2017 Americana Music Festival & Conference will be Tuesday, Sept. 12 through Sunday, Sept. 17.

Thomas Rhett To Launch First Headlining Tour In 2017

thomas-rhett-home-team-tour

The Valory Music Co. artist Thomas Rhett will hit another milestone in 2017 as he launches his first headlining tour, the 2017 Home Team Tour, in February.

Joining him on the trek will be Kelsea Ballerini (who will embark on her own headlining tour this fall, prior to teaming with Thomas Rhett), as well as Russell Dickerson and Ryan Hurd.

“This is really the first time we’ve been able to totally build our own stage and really plan for our show with all our fans,” said Thomas Rhett. “There has been this undeniable energy out on the road this year, and I know having Kelsea out there is going to amp things up even more. Having my own tour also gives me the opportunity to introduce some people I think are going to explode in the next couple of years and help give them a platform to reach the fans, like how Blake, Toby and Jason did for me. I’m a huge fan of both Ryan and Russell and I can’t wait for my fans to get to know them too.”

The tour will launch Feb. 23 in Saginaw, Michigan’s Dow Event Center. The tour will end with a show in Nashville at the Ascend Amphitheater on April 21.

Thomas Rhett recently announced Tangled Up Deluxe, which will include five new tracks, including his new single, “Star Of The Show.” Tangled Up Deluxe releases Oct. 28.

Thomas Rhett’s 2017 Home Team Tour
Feb. 23: Saginaw, Mich.; Dow Event Center*
Feb. 24: Erie, Pa.; Erie Insurance Arena*
Feb. 25: Peoria, Ill.; Peoria Civic Center*
March 2: Ft. Wayne, Ind.; Allen County War Memorial Coliseum
March 3: DeKalb, Ill.; NIU Convocation Center*
March 4: Duluth, Minn.; AMSOIL Arena
March 9: Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza*
March 10: Baltimore, Md.; Royal Farms Arena
March 11: Dayton, Ohio; Wright State University Nutter Center*
March 17: Huntington, W. Va.; Big Sandy Superstore Arena*
March 18: Winston-Salem, N.C.; Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum*
March 23: Knoxville, Tenn.; Knoxville Civic Coliseum
March 24: Southaven, Miss.; Landers Center
March 25: Norman, Okla.; Lloyd Noble Center
April 21: Ascend Amphitheater*

*Dates that go on sale to the public on Oct. 7

 

NATD To Honor Rod Essig, Doc McGhee, Mike Smardak, Randy Travis

Pictured (clockwise, L-R): Scott Hamilton, Rod Essig, Leon Russell, Mike Smardak, Doc McGhee,  P.K. Subban, and Randy Travis.

Pictured (clockwise, from top left): Scott Hamilton, Rod Essig, Leon Russell, Mike Smardak, Doc McGhee, P.K. Subban, and Randy Travis.

The Nashville Association of Talent Directors will recognize seven Nashville leaders during its sixth annual NATD Honors Gala, slated for Nov. 9 at the Hermitage Hotel.

Those being recognized during this year’s Gala are: Rod Essig, Agent and Co-Head of the Nashville office of Creative Artists Agency (CAA); Scott Hamilton, Olympic Gold-medal figure skater, actor, and speaker; Doc McGhee, head of McGhee Entertainment; Leon Russell, veteran musician and member of both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Songwriters Hall of Fame; Mike Smardak, promoter and President of Outback Concerts; P.K. Subban, Olympic Gold-medalist and one of the top defensemen in the NHL newly acquired by the Nashville Predators; and Randy Travis, the latest inductee into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

The Gala will begin with a reception at 6 p.m., followed by dinner and awards ceremony.For tickets and sponsorship information visit, www.n-a-t-d.com.

“NATD has been a Nashville music industry staple for nearly 60 years. Thanks to the support of our board and members, we have been able to continue the association’s traditions while beginning new initiatives to continue to bring together leaders in our collective industries,” said Steve Tolman, NATD President. “All seven of our honorees this year represent all that is good here in Nashville. They all are leaders in their fields whether it be music, sports or another entertainment form.”

Essig, a music agent at Creative Artists Agency (CAA), co-heads the Nashville office and represents artists including Heart, Joan Jett and The Blackhearts, Martina McBride, Ashley Monroe, Styx, KC and the Sunshine Band and Tim McGraw. Prior to joining CAA in 1993, Essig served as Vice President and co-owner of Minneapolis-based booking agency Variety Artists International. Essig currently serves on the board of the Country Music Hall of Fame, ACM Lifting Lives, Metropolitan Nashville Airport Authority, Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital, MusiCares, Tennessee Film Commission, and Tennessee Performing Arts Center Board. He is a 1997 graduate of Leadership Music.

Hamilton is an Olympic figure skater, author, television personality, and humanitarian. Hamilton became an Olympic gold medalist in 1984 and a pro figure skater. Following his mother’s passing and his own survival of cancer, Scott launched the Scott Hamilton CARES Foundation which supports cancer research. In 2014, he founded the Scott Hamilton Skating Academy in Antioch, Tennessee, in partnership with the NHL’s Nashville Predators. Hamilton currently serves on the Board of Directors for Special Olympics International, Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt, and Provision Center for Proton Therapy.

McGhee is CEO of McGhee Entertainment, artist manager, and a pioneer of the entertainment industry. McGhee has managed the careers of artists including James Brown, Bon Jovi, Motley Crüe, Scorpions, Diana Ross, and Hootie & the Blowfish, and now manages KISS, Vintage Trouble, A Thousand Horses and others. McGhee is co-owner of the LA KISS Football team and has produced events such as the Moscow Music Peace Festival, the FOX TV’s live New Year’s Eve program America’s Party, and Rockin’ The Corps, a free concert for soldiers and their families held on the beach of Marine Corps base Camp Pendleton.

Russell is a Grammy-nominated recording artist, music business entrepreneur, and songwriter. As a central figure of the rock scene in the seventies, Russell composed “A Song For You”, covered by Ray Charles, Willie Nelson, Whitney Houston, and others. He was inducted into the Songwriter’s Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2011.

Smardak is president and founder of Outback Concerts of Tennessee, Inc., an independent, full-service concert and comedy promoter located in Nashville. Outback Concerts also produces the Wild West Comedy Festival in Nashville, Tennessee, and the Blue Ridge Music Festival in Salem, Virginia. Smardak played an integral role in the inaugural Southern Ground Music and Food Festivals in both Charleston, South Carolina and Nashville, Tennessee, and is involved with the upcoming Charlie Daniels’ 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam. Smardak’s honors include ACM Promoter of the Year, IEBA’s Concert Promoter of the Year, Talent Buyer of the Year, Entertainment Buyer of the Year, and Festival Buyer of the Year. He is a 2011 inductee to the IEBA Hall of Fame.

Subban won the 2013 Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top defenseman, and has been named an NHL First-Team All-Star on two occasions. He acquired by the Nashville Predators on June 29, 2016. Internationally, he has represented Canada four times, winning a pair of gold medals at the World Junior Championships, and most notably, Olympic Gold at the 2014 Sochi Games. In August 2014, he established his own marketing company, P.K.S.S. Management, to facilitate business relationships which include Bridgestone, Gatorade, Samsung and his own clothing line with Canadian company RW&CO.

Travis, a recent inductee into the Country Music Hall of Fame class of 2016, counts lifetime recording sales of over 20 million. He has two double platinum albums, eight platinum albums, and 10 gold records. Three of his songs have earned CMA Song of the Year honors, including 1986’s “On The Other Hand,” 1987’s “Forever and Ever Amen,” and 2003’s “Three Wooden Crosses.” Today, with the help of his wife Mary, Randy continues to make improvements in his speaking, singing and walking by going to rehab daily since his stroke in 2013.

Artist Updates: Kellie Pickler, Russell Dickerson, Darryl Worley

Kellie Pickler Appears On The Ellen DeGeneres Show

Photo: Michael Rozman/Warner Bros

Photo: Michael Rozman/Warner Bros

In an upcoming episode of CMT’s I Love Kellie Pickler, singer/actress/dancer Kellie Pickler fulfills her childhood dream of being an exchange student as she and husband Kyle Jacobs travel to Tokyo to live with the Asada family.

Pickler shared candid behind-the-scenes during an episode of The Ellen DeGeneres Show, which aired Tuesday (Sept. 27).

“This show is about laughter and love,” said Pickler. “It’s all positive and all about our family and friends and our crazy adventures. We just want to be a bright light and make people laugh and feel good.”

The new episode of I Love Kellie Pickler airs this Thursday at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

See Ellen DeGeneres prank Kellie Pickler during her visit:

 

Russell Dickerson Visits Academy of Country Music

Pictured (L-R): Grace Schoper, Dennis entertainment; Russell Dickerson; Erick Long, ACM Photo: Michel Bourquard/Courtesy of the Academy of Country Music

Pictured (L-R): Grace Schoper, Dennis Entertainment; Russell Dickerson; Erick Long, ACM Photo: Michel Bourquard/Courtesy of the Academy of Country Music

The Academy of Country Music welcomed Russell Dickerson to the office while he was in Los Angeles last week. While at the Academy, Dickerson performed his current single “Yours” which has reached over 20 million streams on Spotify, along with songs off his independent EP Yours.

 

Darry Worley’s Tennessee River Run Lineup Revealed

Darryl Worley

Darryl Worley

Kellie PicklerRandy Houser and Chuck Wicks will join Darryl Worley in headlining the 15th Annual Tennessee River Run concert in Savannah, Tennessee, on Oct. 7 and 8. Additional performers include James Robert WebbAlyson Greene, the Marshall Lowry Band, the Bryan Moffitt Band and Dead Horse.

On Friday, Oct. 7 at 6 p.m., Worley will host the Darryl Worley and Friends Songwriters in the Round Gala, a special dinner event at the home of Mayor and Mrs. Bob Shutt in Savannah. Each year, guests listen to the stories behind the hit songs while they enjoy an intimate performance under the stars. To sponsor or secure tickets, individuals may call 731-9262667.

A 5K race will be held on Saturday, Oct. 8 at Pickwick Landing State Park beginning at 8 a.m. Later that morning, Motorcycle Poker Run at Parris Elementary School hits the road. Prizes will be awarded at the final stop.

The concert is one of many events that will raise money to help fund projects of the Darryl Worley Foundation. Organizations that have benefited from the foundation include The Leader In Me program, the Darryl Worley Cancer Treatment Center, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, among others.

Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris Perform On Latest ‘Skyville Live’

Pictured (L-R): John Osborne (Brothers Osborne), Buddy Miller, Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Margo Price, Colter Wall, and TJ Osborne (Brothers Osborne). Photo Credit: John Shearer / Getty Images

Pictured (L-R): John Osborne (Brothers Osborne), Buddy Miller, Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Margo Price, Colter Wall, and TJ Osborne (Brothers Osborne). Photo Credit: John Shearer / Getty Images

Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris and Buddy Miller joined rising artists Brothers Osborne, Margo Price and Colter Wall for the latest installment of Skyville Live on Monday (Sept. 26) in Nashville.

Earle set the tone for the night performing his classic, “Copperhead Road.” Later, Price took the stage with Harris, who is one of her musical heroes, and sang “Two More Bottles of Wine.”

Earle and Miller joined Harris to raise awareness about this fall’s Lampedusa: Concerts for Refugees series, benefiting Jesuit Refugee Service. The artists all came together to close the show with a rendition of Earle’s song, “Pilgrim.”

The episode streamed live exclusively on AOL.com, RatedRed.com and go90, a free mobile video platform available across all wireless carriers. To access go90, simply download the app via the Apple Store or Google Play.

Skyville Live is produced by songwriter/producer Wally Wilson, with Tisha Fein and Bryan Lee serving as executive producers.

 

BMI Puts Songwriters In The Spotlight At 2016 Radio Show

Pictured (L-R): RAB President & CEO Erica Farber, BMI songwriter & guitarist Shane Fontayne, BMI SVP of Licensing Mike Steinberg, BMI songwriter Graham Nash, BMI President & CEO Mike O’Neill and NAB EVP of Radio John David.

Pictured (L-R): Erica Farber, RAB President & CEO; BMI songwriter & guitarist Shane Fontayne; Mike Steinberg, BMI SVP of Licensing; BMI songwriter Graham Nash; Mike O’Neill, BMI President & CEO; John David, NAB EVP of Radio.

During last week’s 2016 Radio Show, which hosted more than 2,000 radio executives in Nashville, BMI highlighted performances of nine of its songwriters before the industry crowd.

LOCASH performs at the 2016 Radio Show in Nashville.

LOCASH performs at the 2016 Radio Show in Nashville.

BMI-affiliated artists LOCASH performed hits including “I Love This Life” and “I Know Somebody” during an opening night party. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Graham Nash performed on day two of the Radio Show, offering a set of songs from his new album This Path Tonight, as well as some of his classic Crosby, Stills & Nash hits.

Graham Nash and Shane Fontayne perform.

Graham Nash and Shane Fontayne perform.

Other BMI performers in the Spotlight Series included Better Than Ezra frontman Kevin Griffin, The Roosevelts, Modern Inventors, The Sisterhood, Kyshona Armstrong, Shannon LaBrie and Jonny P.

Sisterhood performs at the 2016 Radio Show in Nashville.

The Sisterhood performs at the 2016 Radio Show in Nashville.

The Radio Show is a joint venture between the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) and the Radio Advertising Bureau (RAB).

LifeNotes: Opry Matriarch Jean Shepard Passes At 82

jeanshepard

Jean Shepard

 

Honky-tonk siren, independent-female country pioneer, Grand Ole Opry matriarch and Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Jean Shepard has passed away at age 82.

Among her 45 charted country titles over three decades are such enduring favorites as “A Dear John Letter,” “A Satisfied Mind,” “Second Fiddle” and “Slippin’ Away.” Her fiery, outspoken manner made her one of the most memorable country personalities of her era. Born Ollie Imogene Shepard on Nov. 21, 1933, she was the fifth of 10 children born to an Oklahoma sharecropper. The family moved to California during the Dust Bowl Migration. Desperately poor during the Great Depression, her parents hocked their furniture to buy her an upright bass so that she could pursue a career in music.

Shepard joined The Melody Ranch Girls all-female band while still in school. At age 15, she was singing every weekend in the towns around Bakersfield, CA. Honky-tonk superstar Hank Thompson discovered her and brought her to Capitol Records. When her first efforts didn’t hit paydirt, the label paired her with Ferlin Husky. On 1953’s “A Dear John Letter,” he spoke a Korean War soldier’s recitation while she sang the song’s refrain. Because she was only 18 when they toured together, her parents made Husky her legal guardian.

Beginning at age 21, she scored a string of hits on her own, including “A Satisfied Mind” (1955), “Beautiful Lies” (1955) and “I Want to Go Where No One Knows Me” (1958). Her 1954 LP Songs of a Love Affair was country music’s first female “concept” album. Shepard’s 1955 hit “I Thought of You” was later the song that launched the career of her fellow Hall of Fame member Connie Smith. Jean Shepard joined The Ozark Jubilee in Missouri, then became a breakthrough female solo singer on the Grand Ole Opry. She became a member on her birthday, Nov. 21, 1955. She was named Cash Box magazine’s Top Female Country Singer of 1959. During her early career, she was chaperoned by Husky and then by Hawkshaw Hawkins, whom she married in 1960. After Hawkins died in the 1963 plane crash that also killed her friend Patsy Cline, Shepard was left to fend for herself in a male-dominated industry.

She was the single mother of two sons, battling for her rights. She said she developed her feisty, sassy personality as a result.

Jean Shepard. Photo: Chris Hollo/Grand Ole Opry

Jean Shepard. Photo: Chris Hollo/Grand Ole Opry

Her hits of the 1960s included the yodeling standout “Second Fiddle” (1964), the peppy “Many Happy Hangovers to You” (1966), her Ray Pillow divorce duet “I’ll Take the Dog” (1966) and the classic “If Teardrops Were Silver” (1966). Other memorable singles during this era included “Heart We Did All That We Could” (1967), “Your Forevers Don’t Last Very Long” (1967) and the standard “Seven Lonely Days” (1969). In the 1970s, she continued to score with such hits as her Grammy Award nominated “Then He Touched Me” (1970), plus “A Woman’s Hand” (1970) and “Another Lonely Night” (1971).

Shepard moved from Capitol to United Artists Records and reignited her chart fortunes with the Bill Anderson songs “Slippin’ Away” (1973), “At the Time” (1974), “Poor Sweet Baby” (1974) and the evergreen “The Tip of My Fingers” (1975). When Skeeter Davis was suspended from the Opry for being outspoken about her born-again Christianity, Jean Shepard went to bat for her with the show’s management. Davis was reinstated as a result.

Also during the 1970s, Music Row and country radio promoted the “countrypolitan” sound. Honky-tonk music was pushed aside in favor of Vegas-influenced pop stylings. In protest, Shepard became the mouthpiece of The Association of Country Entertainers (ACE), a group dedicated to preserving country’s heritage. Shying away from controversy, radio programmers gradually dropped her records from their playlists. She lost her major-label contract in 1977. Her final charted song was 1978’s statement of traditional-country loyalty “The Real Thing.”

She continued to record for independent labels in the 1980s and 1990s and retained her popularity as one of the Grand Ole Opry’s most dependable stars. During the 1980s, she toured Europe, where she maintained a solid fan base. She also began doing shows to raise funds for Vietnam veterans’ causes.

Jean Shepard had married Roy Orbison band member and road manager Benny Birchfield in 1968. After flying model airplanes with Birchfield in Hendersonville, Orbison died of a heart attack in 1988. The couple organized Orbison’s Nashville memorial service.

In 2011, Jean Shepard was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. She published her memoir, Down Through the Years, in 2014.

By 2015, she was the longest-lasting member of the Opry cast. She retired from the show, again on her birthday, Nov. 21, 2015. It was her 60th anniversary as a cast member.

She entered hospice care last week. Shepard reportedly died of complications from Parkinson’s Disease on Sunday, Sept. 25.

Her sons are Don Robin Hawkins, Harold Franklin Hawkins II and Corey Birchfield. She is also survived by husband Benny Birchfield and by several grandchildren and great grandchildren.

Big Loud Records’ Morgan Wallen Trades Baseball Ambitions For Country Music Dreams

Pictured (L-R): Mark Annino, Morgan Wallen, Dominic Frost

Pictured (L-R): Mark Annino, Morgan Wallen, Dominic Frost

For most teen athletes pursuing a career in professional sports, a serious injury can be career ending. For Big Loud Records artist Morgan Wallen, it ushered in a shift into country music.

The East Tennessee native had dreams of playing professional baseball. “I played through my senior year. I got a couple of college offers and right before my senior year started, I blew my arm out,” says Wallen. “Those college offers kind of disappeared on me really fast. I went through a time where I didn’t know what I would do with my life, because that’s what I had worked so hard for, for such a long time.”

With his sports career sidelined, Wallen rekindled his passion for music, picking up the guitar and piano, and crafting his own material. A long-time fan of bands such as Bad Company, AC/DC, and Three Doors Down, Wallen credits an Eric Church song for inspiring him to pursue country music.

“I always liked country music, but Eric Church was the first person who made me fall in love with it,” says Wallen. “The first song I heard was ‘Love Your Love The Most,’ and just the imagery, and how he just took me to a place…that song hit me in a way no song ever had before. I started digging into country more, and realized I liked Tim McGraw’s music and Keith Whitley. It’s funny, I told my dad that, and he said, ‘You don’t remember us riding around and listening to Keith Whitley when you were a kid?’ I didn’t remember, but I guess he instilled that in me.”

Wallen was introduced to WME Entertainment’s Kevin Neal, who signed him and convinced him to move to Nashville just over a year ago. “We started sending my music around, and we sent it to Big Loud Records. I came in to play for Clay [Hunnicutt] and the owners, and the week after that they had me play for the staff. The week after that, they offered me a publishing and record deal.”

Though professional label, booking, and publishing deals have come swiftly to the burgeoning new talent, Wallen is intent on making the most of his newfound opportunities.

Pictued (L-R): Morgan Wallen, MusicRow Owner/Publisher Sherod Robertson

Pictued (L-R): Morgan Wallen, MusicRow Owner/Publisher Sherod Robertson

During a visit to the MusicRow office, Wallen previewed several songs from his Joey Moi-produced EP, including “Stand Out” and “Whiskey Glasses.”

“This is kind of like ‘beer goggles,’ just a little stronger prescription,” he quipped.

Since moving to Nashville, Wallen says he has penned about 70 songs in preparation for his The Way I Talk EP and upcoming full-length album. When he’s not in the writing room or in the studio, he’s been on the road, performing his music for radio stations across the country. It was those station visits that solidified his instincts to make “The Way I Talk” his debut single.

“We had our top three songs that we played for them,” Wallen recalls. “We didn’t have a single picked, but this song was the one that every one kept asking for.”

The rocker takes pride in his Southern roots on the debut single, which drips with Southernisms like “y’all,” and “yonder,” and places his vocal twang front and center.

“I feel this is a song that introduces me to the world in a way I would love to be introduced,” Wallen says. “It embodies me and what I’m proud of. But even though it’s me, I like to think everyone can insert his or her own personal whatever it is to make you relate.”

Pictured (L-R): Clay Hunnicutt, Big Loud Records; Craig Shelburne and Jessica Nicholson, MusicRow; Mike Bachta, Working Group Management; Morgan Wallen; Dirk Hemsath, Working Group Management; Sherod Robertson, Eric T. Parker and Troy Stephenson, MusicRow

Pictured (L-R): Clay Hunnicutt, Big Loud Records; Craig Shelburne and Jessica Nicholson, MusicRow; Mike Bachta, Working Group Management; Morgan Wallen; Dirk Hemsath, Working Group Management; Sherod Robertson, Eric T. Parker and Troy Stephenson, MusicRow

Allyson Gelnett Joins Stoney Creek Records Promo Staff

Allyson Gelnett

Allyson Gelnett

BBR Music Group has hired Allyson Gelnett as Director of Northeast Regional Promotion for label imprint Stoney Creek Records.

An MTSU graduate, Gelnett interned with Walt Disney Records and Sony Music Nashville. Prior to landing at Stoney Creek Records, she spent the last several years working in the distribution, sales and marketing fields, most recently as a Business Development Manager at Bluume, LLC, a tech company based in Tempe, Arizona.

“Allyson possesses Northeast roots and a strong work ethic. Plus she moved to Middle Tennessee from Arizona just like [Stoney Creek Director of National Promotion] Heather Propper and me. We are ALL IN on Allyson!” says Chris Loss, VP/Promotion of Stoney Creek Records.

“I am beyond grateful to Benny Brown and Jon Loba for trusting me with this opportunity to live out a dream and am so excited for the chance to work closely with Chris and Heather. I feel like I’m walking into a family and I can’t wait to bring my own spark to the team,” adds Gelnett.

Gelnett takes over the role held by Hilary Hoover, who departs Stoney Creek Records to pursue other opportunities.

Gelnett will report directly to Loss. Her new role will be effective Monday, October 3 and she can be reached at [email protected].

Rhett Akins Signs Publishing Deal With Warner/Chappell Music

Top Row (L-R): Alison Junker (WC), Will Overton (WC), Matt Michiels (WC), Ben Vaughn (WC), Jon Platt (WC), Rhett Akins, Jess Rosen (Greenberg Traurig LLP), Leslie Roberts (BMI), Steve Butler (WC), Travis Carter (WC), Phil May (WC), Phil Graham (BMI). Bottom Row (Left to Right): Lisa Boullt, Alicia Pruitt (WC), Jessi Vaughn (WC)

Top Row (L-R): Alison Junker (WC), Will Overton (WC), Matt Michiels (WC), Ben Vaughn (WC), Jon Platt (WC), Rhett Akins, Jess Rosen (Greenberg Traurig LLP), Leslie Roberts (BMI), Steve Butler (WC), Travis Carter (WC), Phil May (WC), Phil Graham (BMI).
Bottom Row (L-R): Lisa Boullt, Alicia Pruitt (WC), Jessi Vaughn (WC).

Rhett Akins has entered a worldwide publishing deal with Warner/Chappell Music.

The two-time BMI songwriter of the year will resume working with Warner/Chappell’s Ben Vaughn (EVP, Warner/Chappell Nashville) and Jon Platt (Chairman & CEO, Warner/Chappell Music), who worked with Akins while at EMI Publishing.

Effective immediately, Warner/Chappell will publish Akins’ future work as well as select catalog.

Akins’ recent hits include No. 1 songs “Huntin’, Fishin’, & Lovin’ Everyday” with Luke Bryan, “Mindreader” with Dustin Lynch, and the most added song at country radio last week, “Dirt On My Boots” with Jon Pardi.

“I’m extremely proud and excited to work with the Warner/Chappell family,” said Akins. “I’ve had a long and successful relationship with Ben Vaughn and Jon Platt, and I can’t wait to continue my career with their talented team.”

“Rhett recently celebrated his 24th No. 1 song, which is an astounding achievement,” said Vaughn. “He lives and breathes songwriting—co-writers love working with him and so many artists call him a friend and mentor—and I speak for the entire Warner/Chappell team when I say how thrilled we are to be working with such a special songwriter and his incredible body of work.”

Akins is the recipient of 29 BMI Awards and was named BMI Songwriter of the Year in 2011 and 2014. His songs have been awarded BMI Song of the Year (2011 and 2012) and ASCAP Song of the Year (2012 and 2014), and Akins has received the Triple Play Award five times for having three No.1 singles in a 12-month period.

On Wednesday night (Sept. 21), Warner/Chappell Nashville and BMI co-hosted a dinner to celebrate Akins’ illustrious songwriting career, which includes a whopping 24 No.1 songs. The dinner was attended by Akins, Warner/Chappell and BMI staff, and Rhett’s attorney, Jess Rosen of Greenberg Traurig LLP.

Beyond his success as a recording artist with hits like “That Ain’t My Truck” and “Don’t Get Me Started,” Akins has written for many other artists, often as one-third of The Peach Pickers, a songwriting team that also includes Ben Hayslip and Dallas Davidson.

Akins has written songs for many country artists, including Blake Shelton, William Michael Morgan, Tyler Farr, Brantley Gilbert, and others, including Akins’ own son, singer-songwriter Thomas Rhett.