Sara Evans Encourages Women At Change The Conversation Event

Pictured (L-R): Leslie Fram, Tracy Gershon, Sara Evans and Beverly Keel

Sara Evans joined members of Change The Conversation Tuesday night (June 27), where she spoke candidly about her personal and professional journey and performed several songs from her new album, Words, from The Steps at WME.

In addition to performing the title track from the album due out July 21, Evans also debuted new songs “All the Love You Left Me” and “Marquee Sign,” as well as an acoustic version of her platinum chart-topper “A Little Bit Stronger.” The project is Evans’ first on her new label, Born To Fly Records, and features 14 female songwriters, including powerhouses Ashley Monroe, Caitlyn Smith, Hillary Lindsey, Hillary Scott, Liz Hengber, and Sonya Isaacs.

“I want to talk about why we need to change the conversation,” said Evans during the event. “When I first got my record deal, women were dominating country radio. We had Faith Hill, Martina McBride, Reba McEntire, Trisha Yearwood, Lee Ann Womack, LeAnn Rimes, Shania Twain, Patty Loveless and on and on. I was fortunate enough to join that group of amazing women. So we need to change the conversation and figure out why it is not that way anymore. Why are there not enough women on country radio? Women artists are amazing and they have so much great music that we want to hear and we need to hear, so let’s change the conversation.”

The event, sponsored by WME and One Hope Wine, began with a conversation between Evans and Tracy Gershon, a co-founder of Change the Conversation who also helped with A&R duties for this album. “Sara Evans has been one of the most influential and admired country artists of the last two decades, so when she spoke about the importance of changing the conversation, the female artists in the room were inspired and invigorated,” Gershon says.

Bobby Karl Works The Room: 2017 MusicRow Awards

Pictured (L-R): MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson, Charles Judge, Jimmie Lee Sloas, Russell Terrell, Ilya Toshinskiy (and his children), and MusicRow‘s Eric Parker. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

 

Editor’s Note:  The event was hosted by SESAC this year and held in the CMA event space. This was the first year the annual awards event was hosted by SESAC. SESAC’s Kelli Turner, Dennis Lord, with the Creative Services team, are featured on this year’s MusicRow Awards print issue which was distributed to the attending guests at the event.

Anderson Benson partnered with MusicRow again this year to sponsor the event. Insurance is a key part of having a successful business in this industry, and Nashville-based insurance broker Anderson Benson is dedicated to serving and supporting the entertainment industry.
 

BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM

Chapter 570

It was “Ladies’ Night Out” at this year’s MusicRow awards.

Women were the biggest winners at the honors, staged on Wednesday (June 28) in the new SESAC/CMA event space. Lauren Alaina, Maren Morris, Jesse Lee and Hillary Lindsey all won. All of them are also songwriters.

The event began with greetings from our host, SESAC’s Shannan Hatch. She introduced MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson.

“Many times, these are the first awards these people receive,” said Sherod. “And they are also early predictors of future awards.”

Eric T. Parker began the ceremony by presenting the annual All-Star Musician Awards. Justin Niebank (engineer), Ilya Toshinskiy (guitar), Jimmie Lee Sloas (bass), Charles Judge (keyboards), Aubrie Haynie (fiddle), Russell Terrell (vocals), Greg Morrow and Fred Eltringham (a tie for drums) and Dan Dugmore, Paul Franklin and Russ Pahl (a three-way tie for steel supremacy).

Pictured (L-R): Song Of The Year winners Clint Lagerberg, Steven Lee Olsen and Hillary Lindsey. Moments By Moser Photography

This year’s first-time musician winners are Terrell and Eltringham. Accepting in person and offering well-spoken thanks were Ilya Toshinskiy, Russell Terrell, Jimmie Lee Sloas and Charles Judge.

“I’ve been doing this for 22 years, so this is pretty sweet,” said session singer Russell Terrell. Toshinskiy accepted warmly with one young child in his arms and another by his side. Judge recognized the musician honors with thanks. Sloas was wry, witty, grateful and endearing.

Pictured (L-R): MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson and Neon Cross’ Melissa Spillman accepting for producer Jay Joyce. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Robertson announced Jay Joyce as Producer of the Year. Melissa Spillman, of Joyce’s Neon Cross publishing company, accepted.

“He’s honored to be among these wonderful creators,” said Melissa. “And he thanks the creative community. Without them, he would be a weirdo in a black hoodie in East Nashville.”

Pictured (L-R): Parallel Music Publishing’s Travis Myatt accepting for songwriter Jesse Lee and MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

The Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year winner was Jesse Lee. The co-writer of “Peter Pan” was cheered at the event by her family. She sent in video greetings from a recording studio in Europe, saying, “I moved to Nashville 15 years ago….I have 15 years of people to thank for this….So it’s nice on days like today.

“Thanks to SESAC [she is an affiliate] for hosting this. I’m having a great time in Copenhagen.”

Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

The Breakthrough Artist-Writer of the Year was Lauren Alaina. This was the first time that MR has had this category.

“It’s been a crazy year,” Lauren said. “When I was 11 years old, I made my parents bring me to Music Row, where I recorded a really bad record of my songs. Now I don’t have a record with really bad songs on there. So thank you for that and thank you for this.”

Next up, Maren Morris made her second visit to the MusicRow winners’ circle. Last year, she was awarded the Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year. This year, she was presented with the Breakthrough Artist of the Year award.

“Thank you, MusicRow, for having me back,” she said. “I always thought of myself as a writer and not an artist. Thank you guys for believing in me when I didn’t even believe in myself.

“I’m working on my sophomore album, which is exciting, but as scary as shit.”

Pictured (L-R): Lauren Alaina, Maren Morris and Ryan Hurd. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

The penultimate award of this 29th annual MR ceremony was the presentation of the Song of the Year honor. Often a predictor of CMA and/or Grammy honors, the ballot this year was packed with deserving compositions – “Vice,” “Wanna Be That Song,” “Leaving Nashville,” “Kill a Word” and the winner, “Blue Ain’t Your Color.”

“Man, what a turnout,” said “Blue” cowriter Clint Lagerberg surveying the capacity crowd. “We [songwriters] don’t get to see this mountain-top a lot. But we get to see the valleys. So this is great.”

Lagerberg and cowriters Hillary Lindsey and Steven Lee Olsen then wowed the crowd with a beautifully rehearsed, outstanding, trio-harmony version of “Blue Ain’t Your Color.”

Appreciating the moment were Michael Knox, Michael Mason, Mike Sistad, Tim Wipperman, Tim Fink, Todd Cassetty, Ben Vaughn, Bev Moser, Susan Collier, Carla Wallace, Dale Dodson, Martha Moore, Edie Emery and Chris Keaton.

Servers circulated with pork, shrimp, ham, bacon and veggie bites on toast points, polenta and/or sweet-potato biscuits. Barry Coburn, Debbie Linn, Cindy Owen, Sherrill Blackmon, Earle Simmons, Erika Wollam Nichols, Dave Pomeroy, Dennis Banka, Don Cusic, Kerry O’Neill, Pat Higdon, John Beiter and Troy Stephenson worked the room.

SESAC’s Shannan Hatch. Photo: Haley Crow/MusicRow

Pictured (L-R): Lauren Alaina and MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson. Moments By Moser Photography

Exclusive: Walker Hayes Chronicles Career Struggles, Creative Triumph Behind New Single

Monument Records recording artist Walker Hayes.

Walker Hayes’ current single “You Broke Up With Me,” might contain lyrics about a soured romantic relationship, but for Hayes, the song chronicles a kind of heartbreak that, for creative musicians and songwriters, can often cut deeper and last longer than any romantic entanglement.

“It’s about the music business,” Hayes says. “My wife Laney and I have been in Nashville for 13 years, trying, and trying to get a foot in the door. It’s been shut on us many times.”

After Hayes and his high school sweetheart Laney moved from Mobile, Alabama, to Nashville in his early 20s, he quickly landed a publishing deal, followed by his first record deal with Mercury Nashville, which he “lost in one of those crazy music biz ways…someone gets fired at the top and they let everyone go.”

In 2010, a second recording contract with Capitol Nashville followed and fizzled.

“When you are on fire, everybody wants on that train and wants to associate with you. They want to applaud you and when I lost my deal at Capitol, we began to feel the other side of that and how when people think your ship has sailed, they have no reason to invest in you.”

Hayes found a new recording home early this year, signing as the flagship artist for ace producer Shane McAnally and manager Jason Owens’ renaissance of Sony Music’s Monument Records, which originally existed from the 1950s through 1990 and was the early recording home for Kris Kristofferson, Dolly Parton, and Willie Nelson. Arista Nashville’s radio team adds additional radio promotion muscle behind Monument’s artists.

“When Shane signed me, I could tell people were thinking, ‘This is dangerous, this stuff might actually work.’ People would call and say, ‘Hey do you want to write?’ but I was like, ‘Where were you three years ago when I was working at Costco?’ So there is definitely a little smirk in my mind when I’m singing that song, because it’s like, ‘Hey, you broke up with me.’ It’s victorious, for sure, it’s an empowering thing to say.”

Hayes harbors no ill feelings. “I know they are not surprised that something is happening with me. They wish me the best. I’ve received congratulations for everything going on.”

Still, his road to peace was hard-fought, for Hayes, Laney, and their six children.

With the loss of the Capitol deal came loss of income, and a surge of worries over missed mortgage payments and essential car repairs. Hayes balanced 4 a.m., $11/hour shifts at Costco with afternoon songwriting sessions, struggling to provide for his family while chasing an increasingly elusive dream.

The family shared an old beat up Honda without enough room or seat belts for everyone.

“I remember telling the kids to duck if a cop car pulled up beside us at red lights,” Hayes recalled. “Everybody was under a seat belt of some sort, but it probably wasn’t street legal.

“A lot of people probably looked at me as a father, thinking, ‘God, that’s so irresponsible of you. Why don’t you just take care of your family?’ And I was trying.”

Along the way, Hayes found glimpses of hope and support. Hayes picked up a weekly performing gig at Puckett’s Grocery & Restaurant, where his family would eat for free once a week. A friend from church gave the family a van.

“We were at a baseball game. I was happy, I was fine, I wasn’t going to ask anyone for help. He showed up with an old van and said, ‘I’m not leaving until you take this van.’ He had a title and said, ‘All you got to do is sign here.’ I fought because it was embarrassing but that is just an example of someone showing up and saying, it’s ok to need help.”

A self-described “stubborn person,” Hayes resisted the temptation to return to Mobile and join his father selling real estate.

“I didn’t want to take the easy road,” Hayes says. “Like every artist, a nightmare is having to drive back to your hometown and say, ‘You guys are right. I didn’t belong there. I didn’t make it.’”

Though lacking financial freedom, Hayes realized a newfound artistic freedom within the struggle. Songwriting became a growing addiction, an creative filter for processing his thoughts and emotions, as he grew more confident of his own talent and, perhaps more importantly, in his own authentic story.

“I’ve learned what it’s like to only perform and sing what is authentic,” Hayes says. “Before, I thought, ‘I’m in Nashville so I need to write country songs, and maybe I need to sound country. Maybe I need to say ‘truck’ here, even though I drive a Honda. That was immaturity on my part. But I thought I needed to fit in with these alpha male guys who are so western. There is a freedom now that I wish every artist could taste for just a minute.”

While he was still working at Costco, Hayes met McAnally, whom he calls the “great rescuer,” a creative soul that understood Hayes’ affinity for urban beats and up-tempo melodies underpinning lyrics that expose both life’s trials and joys. He began sending songs to McAnally, and eventually signed with McAnally’s SMACKSongs publishing company.

“He said, ‘Everything you send me is so intriguing, but I can’t get people to cut these songs because they are so stylistically you. I feel like the reason people won’t cut them is because you are supposed to.’” Hayes recalls. “If anyone else had said the same thing Shane did, I probably would have said ‘No thanks. I’ve been down this road before and people have told me I needed to be an artist.’ But when he said it, I wanted to do it.”

Working with SMACKSongs and RareSpark Media Group, Hayes sifted through the turmoil to craft the 16 tracks that appear on 8 Tracks Vol. 1 and Vol. 2, which released last year.

“Lela’s Stars” delves into his internal tug-of-war during those years. At one point, Hayes had borrowed thumbtacks from his daughter to keep the fabric on the roof of his rundown Honda from falling in.

Pink and purple, green and blue, poor man’s decorations/All I saw was a bunch of thumbtacks/she saw constellations, he scribbled the lyrics to “Lela’s Stars” on a Styrofoam cup.

Hayes’ kids and wife inspired many of the songs on 8 Tracks. The idea for “Halloween,” a track featuring writing and vocals from Nicolle Galyon, sparked after Hayes found one of his kids’ leftover Halloween jack-o’-lanterns.

“I thought about how I met Laney in 11th grade,” Hayes says. “When I was around her I was free, fearless, not trying to sell myself. She thought I was funny just being myself. Now, after all we’ve been through, she’s still that person. Nicolle and I put it around that idea of Halloween. There’s a line about I still put on my Superman cape and hide in it, but when I’m with you it comes untied for a minute. We thought it was a beautiful sentiment.”

Hayes calls his compositions journal entries, not songs. After working painstakingly to chronicle his journey so far, Hayes kept that penchant for authenticity going into the recording process.

On “You Broke Up With Me,” recorded while still in the writing room, one can hear the voices of Hayes’ co-writers Thomas Archer and Kylie Sackley in the background, along with Hayes’ original vocal take. “I put the guitar down while we were writing and they kept talking and I thought it sounded cool, and I started whistling, and added the background vocals. We never redid it.”

“Lela’s Stars” was recorded in one vocal take.

“They are not perfect, but they are right,” Hayes says. “I feel the closer you get the audience to the conception of a song, the more feeling is going to be in it.”

As Hayes looks back over his journey thus far, and continues working on new music, he sees perhaps the necessary role his trials played in fine-tuning his creative process.

“Maybe we have to all get that close to giving up for the stuff that really matters to us comes out,” he muses. “Creative people are the type of people, who when we say ‘it’s over,’ it’s over. You don’t just get said goodbye to in Nashville. You get injured. If I wasn’t still in Nashville, if I’d gone back to Mobile, it would be like going to Costco. I don’t like to go there, cause it hurts. They were great to me and gave me work, but just the smell and darkness that I feel when I walk in there, I’m reminded of the despair. I wouldn’t do that time in my life over again for any amount of money, but it is what is necessary to get you where you are.”

He credits his wife and family for being the solace and inspiration for the past several years.

“When I succeed or when something happens, it happens to all of us. It happens to Laney. It’s her being rewarded for sticking it out. It wasn’t just my dream.

“I’m not blowing my nose on $100 bills yet, but I feel like I might be able to support my kids while doing what I love. To me, that’s all I want.”

Exclusive: Bonus Q&A Beyond Iron Mountain’s Vault

Founded 1951, Iron Mountain began its Entertainment Services division in the 1990s, led globally by Jeff Anthony, Sr. VP. Iron Mountain’s Nashville post has been headed by Barry Cardinael, Project Manager, since its inception in the early 2000s.

“People know Iron Mountain for the preservation of 30 million assets. We also operate digital studios, which have digitized a staggering 1.5 million hours of content. The third part of our business is the DCR (Digital Content Repository), which is where all this digital data ends up,” says Anthony. “It allows customers to come in and mine their old content.”

In this bonus web piece, MusicRow highlights some of Iron Mountain’s work—storing valuable treasures and assets for many of the world’s leading companies—including all three major record label and recording studios. Pick up a copy of the MusicRow Awards print issue to read the full feature and learn how the DCR helps entertainment companies monetize their archived media. Or subscribe to MusicRow today to receive your complementary print issue.

– – –

MusicRow: How did your work with Neil Diamond bring you to Iron Mountain, Barry?

Barry Cardinael: From the late ’70s I was working full time in L.A. with Neil Diamond both on the road and in the studio. Neil stored tapes in the Hollywood facility. Iron Mountain acquired that facility in the ‘90s, and I had some meetings with one of the VP’s from the client perspective where I had a few ideas of preserving and protecting the assets of the entertainment world. We jotted down a rough prospectus, and he said if we get it going, there will be a job if you want one. I of course took the job and in the first few years worked as a project manager and Jeff Anthony had just come on board. I did a lot of his market research, special projects, etc. in the Hollywood facility.

Today, I’m a project manager for our Entertainment Services Division. Not only do I oversee archiving in Nashville—but because I’m the oldest kid on the block—when we take on projects I decide what we’re going to do, who’s going to do it, what’s the scope, workflow, timeline and budget. We have projects pop up regularly, whether it’s cleaning or baking tapes or transferring them across the country to different facilities. We try to provide a full slate of services for our clients based on what their professional needs are.

What types of conditions do you have to maintain for your archives?

Jeff Anthony: We have the Corbis photo collection in a 20,000 square feet vault, kept very cold and dry—in the neighborhood of 45 degrees and 40 percent relative humidity. That collection has some of the most iconic photos: Albert Einstein with his tongue out or the beam in New York City.

The same applies for motion picture film because of the color dyes. You can typically get well in excess of 250 years life. There’s a lot of studies from the Rochester Institute of Technology that suggest the colder the temperature, the longer the life. I’ve seen some design curves suggesting a 500-year life if you kept it closer to freezing. Same thing with audiotape or videotape, you can get a couple hundred years if it’s kept in the 60-degree range.

There’s always been this thought with magnetic tape that if you’re comfortable, the tape is probably comfortable. People talk about 65-degrees or 45-percent relative humidity. We go a little bit cooler and a little bit dryer. This is sort of the standard set by the Library of Congress. We like to see five to 10 air exchanges per hour, using HEPA filters in all of our vaults.

Where are your more exotic underground and aboveground storage facilities?

Anthony: Iron Mountain has a number of underground storage facilities. The original in upstate New York called Iron Mountain Mine in Rosendale, New York. The largest one we have is in Pennsylvania where we typically keep our crown jewels. We also have a facility in Rhode Island, London—which is an old abandoned tube station—Paris and Rio de Janeiro.

How have you reduced risk when delivering archived media back to your clients?

Anthony: We have strategic studios in a lot of our facilities. So if a label or studio wants original content, the last thing you want to do is pull it out of a vault and into an airplane or truck, which really puts that asset at risk. What we’ll do is take the asset out of the vault and in to our studio, where we have amazing engineers, some of which have been nominated for Grammys or won Oscars for technical achievement. So the idea is an asset never leaves an Iron Mountain facility. It comes out of the vault, in to the studio and is digitized and can then take the digital vault and send it to the client with the original asset going back in to the vault, never seeing the light of day.

Explain how digital has impacted your work.

Anthony: Digital has been wonderful as a transport mechanism. If you want to get data from point A to point B efficiently, the only way to do that is to digitize it. If you put something up in the cloud, we all know what could happen—similar to the Sony breech. If you have things on tape and completely offline, there’s no way you would be subject to piracy. So all of our studio systems are not connected to the internet.

In terms of archiving, digital has been almost a disaster. Previously, you had to be very efficient with the finite amount of motion picture film in a magazine. With digital cameras, it’s not uncommon to find 30 cameras on set and they never turn them off. They’re shooting almost 10x more content than they used to when there was film. The labels are grappling with the same problems. People don’t record to tape anymore. Where typically on a tape you’d get 1-3 songs, on a hard drive you could get 50 takes of the same song and you don’t have a lot of metadata on that hard drive.

So you have this avalanche of content, metadata issues, format obsolescence, data degradation—It’s a real problem studios are grappling with.

How did Nancy Shapiro’s Grammy P&E Wing Deliverables Committee help solve those issues?

Cardinael: The deliverables committee was put together to try to establish what would be the most acceptable single standard for long-term preservation, cataloging, identifying around high-quality audio files. After much debate, putting recordings on LTO became the world standard. It is a technical committee of about a half dozen members that looked at the technology out there, and what would be best to use long term and not leave you scratching your head 5-10 years ago because you can’t retrieve what you recorded. The committee was meant to help engineers determine what to deliver to labels when turning in that $200,000-500,000 album project.

I’ve been on the Deliverables Committee since I moved to Nashville for Iron Mountain in 2001.

What do you find rewarding about your job in Nashville today?

Cardinael: One of the things I like best about the entertainment services division is working for such a large company. We have the wherewithal to have great buildings and systems and build studios to help people with professional needs. The best part is everyone I work with loves what we do.

But I’m a very lucky guy to have—back in the ’70s when we were all young and still alive—to have worked with Cat Stevens, Earth, Wind & Fire, Beach Boys, and Neil Diamond for over 20 years and went around the world multiple times. I consider myself just as lucky today to do the work I’m doing, with the people I’m doing it with, for the people I’m doing it for, as I did in my prior professional career.

Pick up a copy of the MusicRow Awards print issue to read the full feature or subscribe to MusicRow today to receive your complementary copy.

Third Day Hosting Old-Time ‘Revival’ With Latest Album

Third Day and band take a break with Fame Studios owner Rick Hall (center)

Third Day is going a little old school and reaching back deep into their musical roots on their latest CD, Revival, due out Aug. 4. They recorded the new project at the legendary Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, which has been the birthplace of recordings by Etta James, Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding and more, and checked a box off the bucket list in making the new album there. 

“It’s one of those ‘if these walls could talk’ kind of things,” drummer David Carr shares. “With all of the incredible hits, the sounds the melodies that have been created in [that] space, some of that you hope that it rubs off a little bit.”

Third Day’s touring band joined them in the studio for the making of the new CD, which includes 13 songs produced by their long-time producer, mentor and friend Monroe JonesThe album’s first single, “Revival,” is at radio and available now at all digital service providers for download and streaming here.

Fans will have the opportunity to buy the album’s deluxe version, which will include five additional tracks and a special fan bundle with exclusive items, before it’s available through retail outlets on release day.
Revival (standard version) song listing:
1. Revival 
2. Gonna Be There With Me
3. Leave This World Behind
4. Let There Be Light
5. Faithful and True 
6. Gather Round Now
7. In Your Hands
8. Loves Me Like A Rock
9. New Creation
10. Nobody Loves Me Like Jesus
11. Anything Is Possible
12. Great God Almighty
13. Devotion

2017 ‘MusicRow’ Awards Winners Revealed

MusicRow honored the songwriters, publishers and artists behind some of the year’s top hits and breakthrough songs during the 29th annual subscriber-voted MusicRow Awards on Wednesday, June 28, during a private ceremony hosted for the first time by SESAC, and sponsored by Anderson Benson insurance in the CMA’s event space.

Winners included producer Jay Joyce, who earned his second MusicRow Award win in this category for his work with Eric Church, Brandy Clark, Little Big Town, Carrie Underwood, Brothers Osborne, Devin Dawson, LANCO, The Wild Feathers, and more.

Eleven all-star musicians were honored for their work on the most Billboard Top 10 album credits in eight categories over the past 12 months. Winners included: Jimmie Lee Sloas (bass), Justin Niebank (engineer), Aubrey Haynie (fiddle), Ilya Toshinskiy (guitar), Charles Judge (Keyboards), Russell Terrell (vocals) and a tie for Fred Eltringham and Greg Morrow (guitar), and Dan Dugmore, Paul Franklin and Russ Pahl (steel).

Maren Morris, who has previously earned MusicRow‘s Breakthrough Songwriter honor, was honored this year as Breakthrough Artist, while Lauren Alaina was honored with MusicRow’s inaugural Artist-Writer category, for co-writing her first Top 10 hit, the No. 1 single, “Road Less Traveled.”

Parallel Music Publishing’s Jesse Lee was honored as this year’s Breakthrough Songwriter.

This year’s MusicRow Awards recognized Song of the Year “Blue Ain’t Your Color,” recorded by Keith Urban and written by Hillary Lindsey, Clint Lagerberg and Steven Lee Olsen.

The 2017 MusicRow Awards June/July print issue was also revealed at the ceremony. The new issue features SESAC’s Kelli Turner and Dennis Lord, with the Creative Services team on the cover.

Mark Nesler Inks With SNG Music

SNG’s Gary Reamey, Steve Leslie, Marty Dodson, Mark Nesler (seated)

SNG Music has signed Mark Nesler to its roster of writers. Nesler has penned No. 1 hits for Tim McGraw (“Just To See You Smile”), George Strait (“Go On,” “Living and Living Well”), Keith Urban (“You Look Good In My Shirt”) and Darryl Worley (“I Miss My Friend”), among others.

“We are so thrilled to have Mark Nesler joining our publishing family,” says SNG Music Partner, Marty Dodson. “Over the course of my career, I have never worked with a more talented, hard-working writer, and for 17 years he has inspired me to elevate my game as a lyricist, to write words worthy of the beautiful melodies he creates.”

SNG’s roster also includes SNG Music partners Steve Leslie, Gary Reamey and Dodson, along with Zarni DeVette and SNG Songwriter Emeritus, Bobby Fischer.

Bill Miller Becomes Majority Owner Of Skull’s Rainbow Room

Pictured (L-R): Chef Gannon Leary, Keith Moore, David Wileman & Bill Miller

Bill Miller, President and Founder of Icon Entertainment, has purchased a majority interest in Skull’s Rainbow Room in Nashville’s historic Printers Alley. The property adds to Miller’s lineup of Nashville attractions and merchandise companies including The Johnny Cash Museum, the Patsy Cline Museum, Nudie’s Honky Tonk and Music City Threads.

Skull’s first welcomed patrons in 1948 and recently re-opened its doors in 2015, after a 17-year hiatus.

“My family and I have been huge fans and customers of Skull’s since it reopened,” said Miller. “Skull’s fits perfectly into our strategy of investing in historic, iconic venues rich with history and of the highest caliber. The team at Skull’s has created a fantastic bar and restaurant and we are honored to be involved with David, Gannon and Keith along with the rest of the staff. I can’t think of anything we will change aside from contributing our marketing and promotional expertise. The operations team has already created the perfect storm.”

Under Icon Entertainment, the current team will remain in operation. David Wileman will continue as partner and General Manager of the attraction that has achieved 17 awards since the re-launch in 2015, and Chef Gannon Leary will continue his award-winning cuisine that has been perfected over his 28 years of experience in the food and beverage industry. Crafting the signature drinks will be the current Bar Manager Keith Moore, a native of Dublin, Ireland with more than two decades of experience as a bartender and manager.

“It’s been an absolute pleasure getting to know Bill and his wonderful family over the past two years,” Wileman said. “I have watched their companies grow and have nothing but respect for what they have achieved. I know that I speak for everyone at Skull’s when I say that we are very excited at the prospect of working with such an established and professional group. We are extremely proud to be involved in some amazing collaborations to create new venues that will add to the fantastic experience that is Nashville.”

Josh Phillips Signs With Warner/Chappell And Write Or Die Music

Pictured Back row (L-R): Back: Ben Vaughn (WC), Alicia Pruitt (WC), Will Overton (WC), Chris Kappy (Make Wake Artists). Front row (L-R): Brantley Gilbert (Write or Die), Josh Phillips, Rich Egan (Write or Die)

Warner/Chappell Music and its publishing partner, Brantley Gilbert’s Write Or Die Music, have signed a worldwide co-publishing agreement with songwriter Josh Phillips.

Phillips has already performed nearly 400 shows over the course of his four-year career, opening for acts including Cole Swindell, Chris Janson, Sam Hunt, and Tyler Farr. He’s had songs recorded by Luke Combs and The Voice’s Warren Stone, and has collaborated with Randy Montana, Jonathan Singleton, Love & Theft, Channing Wilson and Kemo Forrest, among others.

Currently touring the country, Phillips is also working on his debut album. He is managed by Make Wake Artists, and booked by WME.

Industry Ink: ASCAP, Jacob Davis, Levon, Sylvia

ASCAP Kicks Off Summer With ‘Cool’ New No. 1 Songwriter Gift

Pictured (L-R): ASCAP’s Michael Martin and Beth Brinker, “Seein’ Red” No. 1 co-writers Jason Sever and Kurt Allison, and ASCAP’s Mike Sistad.

ASCAP officially welcomed summer with the debut of its new first-time No. 1 songwriter gift, a custom ASCAP-branded YETI Roadie cooler. Now, each freshly minted chart-topping writer will receive one of the new ASCAP YETI Roadies on stage at No. 1 celebrations.

 

Jacob Davis Makes Opry Debut

Photo: Chris Hollo

Pictured (L-R): Black River Entertainment’s Gordon Kerr, Black River Records’ Rick Froio, Jacob Davis, and the Grand Ole Opry’s Sally Williams. Photo: Chris Hollo

Black River Entertainment’s Jacob Davis made his Grand Ole Opry debut last Friday night (June 23). Davis performed “What I Wanna Be,” the debut single off his forth-coming album, as well as his soulful tune “James Brown,” which was accompanied by horns.

 

Levon Performs At CRB Breakfast

Pictured (L-R): Nick Martin (Big River Broadcasting/WXFL), Michael Hall (Levon), Tim Roberts (WYCD), Becky Brenner (Albright & O’Malley & Brenner), Ryan Holladay (Levon), Jake Singleton (Levon), Bill Mayne (CRB), Charlie Morgan (Emmis), Joel Raab (Joel Raab Coutry Radio Media), JR Schumann (Sirius XM).

Country group Levon recently performed at a breakfast for the CRB Board of Directors and the CRB Agenda Committee.

 

ylvia Inks Deal With ArtistLive Agency

Pictured (front row L-R): ArtistLive’s Deric Brown, Sylvia; (back row L-R): Webster PR’s Kirt Webster, Sound Artist Support’s Brian Horner. Photo: Courtesy Webster PR

Singer/songwriter Sylvia has signed an exclusive agreement with Nashville based ArtistLive Agency for booking representation. Sylvia and her team will work closely with ArtistLive Agency’s president, Deric Brown, for future shows and appearances.

Sylvia is hitting the road in support of her latest album It’s All In The Family, which was released in late 2016.