Songwriter Bob McDill Donates Life’s Work To Country Music Hall Of Fame

Pictured (L-R, Front row): Bobby Bare, Bob McDill, Don Schlitz; Back row: Jon Byrd, William Michael Morgan, Allen Reynolds, Thomm Jutz, Jamey Johnson, Kyle Young in Nashville, Tennessee. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum

During his nearly 30-year career, songwriter Bob McDill penned 31 No. 1 songs.

Among his numerous contributions to the country music world are classics including Keith Whitley’s “Don’t Close Your Eyes,” “Amanda” (recorded by both Don Williams and Waylon Jennings), Dan Seals’ “Everything That Glitters Is Not Gold,” Alan Jackson’s “Gone Country,” Mel McDaniels’ “Baby’s Got Her Blue Jeans On” and “Louisiana Saturday Night,” Alabama’s “Song of the South,” “It Must Be Love,” recorded by Don Williams and later by Alan Jackson, and Sammy Kershaw’s “She Don’t Know She’s Beautiful.”

McDill was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1985. He retired from songwriting in 2000.

For years, the handwritten lyrics to those notable hits and numerous others, some 200 recorded songs, and written on 217 legal pads during this three decades as an active songwriter, sat in McDill’s basement.

Pictured (L-R): Governor Haslam, Bob McDill, and Kyle Young. Rick Diamond/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum

On Monday (July 31), McDill donated his personal collection to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, including all 217 legal pads of handwritten lyrics, along with 110 awards and plaques, and his Martin 1967 D-28-S that he played exclusively for songwriting for decades.

McDill made a rare public appearance for the donation ceremony, where Bobby Bare performed “Amanda,” Jamey Johnson offered a rendition of “The Door Is Always Open,” Don Schlitz performed “Good Ole Boys Like Me,” Jon Byrd offered “Everything That Glitters (Is Not Gold),” and William Michael Morgan sang “Don’t Close Your Eyes.”

“McDill’s donation to this museum is one of astounding consequence,” said Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Kyle Young. “We are humbled and honored by his generosity, and we will use this collection to educate generations of songwriters and scholars on the extraordinary career and craft of Bob McDill.”

Pictured: Bob McDill, Bobby Bare, Jamey Johnson. Rick Diamond/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum

McDill, a Beaumont, Texas native, was influenced by the writing of Thomas Wolfe, as well as played by radio DJs including WLAC (Nashville)’s John Richbourg and WXLR (Texas)’s Wolfman Jack. McDill began writing songs at age 15 and later played in the folk group the Newcomers. While a student at Lamar University, he wrote “The Happy Man,” which Perry Como recorded in 1967. The next year, McDill had his second hit, “Black Sheep,” recorded by Sam the Sham & the Pharoahs. Allen Reynolds helped McDill place the song, and in 1970, McDill and Reynolds began working for Jack Clement’s publishing company, Jack Music.

McDill’s first country success came with Johnny Russell’s 1972 recording of “Catfish John,” co-written with Reynolds. McDill began a rigorous schedule of completing one song per week for the next three decades and would go on to score dozens of Billboard #1 hits, for artists as diverse as Ray Charles, Jerry Lee Lewis, Anne Murray, Lefty Frizzell and Joe Cocker.

 

Dates Set For Jon Pardi’s CMT On Tour Shows

Singer, songwriter and hitmaker Jon Pardi will launch the 15-date CMT On Tour Presents Jon Pardi’s Lucky Tonight Tour on Oct. 12 in Birmingham, Alabama.

Pardi will bring his growing stable of hits, including “Head Over Boots” and “Dirt On My Boots” to cities including Chicago, Fort Worth, Grand Rapids, and more along the way. As previously announced, Pardi will be accompanied by two newcomer country trios, Midland and Runaway June.

Pre-sale tickets will be available starting tomorrow, Aug. 1 at 10 a.m. local time on jonpardi.com/tour, with tickets officially on-sale this Friday. Additional tour dates to be announced in the coming weeks.

CMT On Tour was created in 2002 and has played a role in launching up-and-comers towards superstar status. In the past, the tour has featured artists including Brett Eldredge, Thomas Rhett, Cole Swindell, Trace Adkins, Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, Randy Houser, Sam Hunt, Jamey Johnson, Miranda Lambert, Brad Paisley, Rascal Flatts, Sugarland, Keith Urban, Jake Owen and Kip Moore.

CMT On Tour Presents Jon Pardi’s Lucky Tonight Tour Dates:

Oct. 12: Birmingham, Ala.; Avondale Brewing Co.
Oct. 13: Savannah, Ga.; Grayson Stadium
Oct. 14: Charlotte, N.C.; Coyote Joe’s
Oct. 19: Houston; House of Blues
Oct. 20: Austin; Stubb’s Outdoors
Oct. 21: Fort Worth, Texas; Billy Bob’s Texas
Nov. 2: Worcester, Mass.; The Palladium
Nov. 3: Silver Spring, Md.; The Fillmore Silver Spring
Nov. 4: North Myrtle Beach, S.C.; House of Blues
Nov. 10: St. Paul, Minn.; Myth
Nov. 11: Madison, Wisc.; Orpheum Theatre
Nov. 16: Chicago; Joe’s on Weed Street
Nov. 17: Rosemont, Ill.; Joe’s Live
Nov. 18: Milwaukee, Wisc.; The Rave
Dec. 8: Grand Rapids, Mich.; The Intersection (Jon Pardi and Runaway June only)

Weekly Register: Sam Hunt’s “Body Like A Back Road” Makes History

Sam Hunt

Sam Hunt remains the king of the hill as his monster smash “Body Like A Back Road” continues to dominate the Nielsen Soundscan country digital sales chart with 42K moved this week and 1.430 million sold to date.

The song reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart more than six months ago, and it has been entrenched in the top position for 25 weeks, breaking the record for most weeks atop the nearly 59-year-old chart.

Rounding out the top five in the country digital sales rankings are Dustin Lynch‘s “Small Town Boy” at No. 2, with 16K, Kane Brown‘s “What Ifs” at No. 3, also with 16K, Lady Antebellum‘s “You Look Good,” at No. 4 with 14K, and Brett Young‘s runaway hit “In Case You Didn’t Know” at No. 5 with 14K.

Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton continues his steady sales pace this week, moving another 10K units on his latest CD, From A Room: Vol. 1, which has logged 465K in sales to date and has already reached gold status. Trailing behind Stapleton is Sara Evans, whose first indie project Words bows with 9.9K for the week to land at No. 2. Lucas Hoge lands in third for the week with 7.1K for his Dirty South project, followed by Stapleton’s Traveller at No. 4 with 6.9K and Various Artists on Now Country 10 at No. 5 with 6.1K.

Information provided by Nielsen Soundscan.

Becky Gardenhire Named Partner At WME

Becky Gardenhire

WME has promoted Becky Gardenhire to Partner. Gardenhire joined WME’s predecessor the William Morris Agency in 2002 in its Los Angeles office, and relocated to the Nashville office in 2003.

Her client roster includes Adam Craig, Charlie Worsham, Chase Bryant, Clare Dunn, Clayton Anderson, Courtney Cole, Ingrid Andress, Jake Owen, Jordan Davis, Justin Adams, LANCo, RaeLynn, Rascal Flatts, Sara Evans and many others. Additionally, she works across the WME Nashville roster booking concerts in arenas, amphitheaters, theaters, PACS and casinos in the South.

Gardenhire also started “Talk the Talk,” a monthly lecture series that connects the women in WME’s Nashville office with other successful women in the Nashville community. She has signed several artists, and is an integral part in the new artist development program.

In addition to her work at WME, Becky is also very involved in the community. She currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Nashville Symphony and the W.O. Smith Music School. She is an alumni of Leadership Music and Source, and she devotes her time to the WME Foundation. She was recently named to Nashville Business Journal’s “40 Under 40 List,” and is a member of CMA, ACM, GMA, and IEBA.

With the addition of Gardenhire, WME’s Nashville office, led by Rob Beckham and Greg Oswald, is now home to a total of 10 WME partners, including Beckham, Oswald, Gardenhire, Joey Lee, Shari Lewin, Keith Miller, Kevin Neal, Risha Rodgers, Jay Williams, and Lane Wilson.

Adele Moves To SESAC For Performing Rights Representation

Adele has moved to SESAC Performing Rights for representation in the United States, it has been announced by John Josephson, chairman and CEO, SESAC Holdings, Inc. Adele was previously with BMI.

SESAC’s main headquarters are based in Nashville.

Adele joins artist-songwriters including Bob Dylan, Neil Diamond, RUSH, Zac Brown, and Lady Antebellum on the SESAC roster. Among other benefits, SESAC pays royalties on a monthly rather than quarterly basis, and also offers singular licenses that include both performance and mechanical rights.

Adele’s chart-topping singles include “Rolling in the Deep,” “Someone Like You,” “Set Fire to the Rain,” “Rumour Has It,” “Skyfall” and “Hello.”

“We are humbled and grateful to have been selected to represent Adele’s performing rights in the United States,” said Josephson. “With each new release, she surpasses her own prior record of achievement and confirms her place as a global superstar in a category all her own.”

With the release of her multi-platinum debut album, 19, in 2008, Adele earned two Grammy Awards, including Best New Artist. Her second release, 21, was named the 2012 Grammy Album of the Year and sold 35 million copies. Adele released her third studio album, 25, in late 2015. The album has gone on to sell more than 23 million copies worldwide, and has earned Adele five additional Grammy Awards.

During her career, Adele has garnered more than 130 awards and received more than 250 nominations for some of the industry’s most prestigious honors to include the Brit Awards, an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award, Billboard Awards, American Music Award, and Ivor Novello Awards, among others.

Adele just completed a multi-year international tour, and performed her finale in the U.K. at London’s Wembley Stadium.

Industry Ink: ‘Nashville’ Soundtrack, John McEuen, Towne

‘Nashville’ Releases Third Volume Soundtrack From Season Five

Another volume of Nashville soundtrack music is set for release Aug. 10. 

The Music of NASHVILLE, Season 5 VOLUME marks the first-ever third volume soundtrack in the history of the series and includes 17 tracks. Since Nashville debuted in 2012, Big Machine Records has released 10 soundtracks as viewers created a community around the cast’s musical journey, and more than one million albums and five million single-track downloads have been sold with over 200 million streams to date.

John McEuen’s Acoustic Traveler Coming To Sirius XM

John McEuen‘s Acoustic Traveler Show will broadcast on SiriusXM The Village channel 741 from July 31-Aug. 5. The shows will also be available for two weeks on demand at siriusxm.com/streamingMcEuen and the String Wizards will also be performing live in select cities in August. The shows will share the music and memories of the landmark Nitty Gritty Dirt Band album Will the Circle Be Unbroken in multi-media format, including archival photographs, 8mm film from 1967, Circle session photos, narratives and music.  Classic songs from the album will be woven in with Dirt Band favorites, hot bluegrass and rare early NGDB music. 

Towne Signs With Patriot Artists Agency

Nashville duo Towne has signed with Patriot Artists Agency for talent booking.

Stephen Brush and Terry Rhodes have built a company that offers big agency representation with a boutique approach that is the perfect fit for who we are as a touring act,” said Steevie Steeves and Jon Decious of Towne. “They have deep roots in the touring industry, a proven track record, and a diverse roster that was really appealing to us.”
Rhodes is the former head of East Coast Music for ICM. Brush also worked at ICM prior to launching International Artists Agency (IAA) in 2004.

Nichole Nordeman Recounts The Miles Of Her Journey On Latest Album

Nichole Nordeman has released her fifth full-length studio record, Every Mile Mattered. The album features tracks like “Sound of Surviving,” You’re Here,” and the vulnerable, introspective “Dear Me,” songs that muse on the journey and ups and downs of life and living with gratitude instead of regret.

The project also includes a newly recorded-version of “Slow Down” featuring Nichole singing with her daughter, Pepper Ingram. The viral hit from her 2015 EP, The Unmaking, garnered over 23 million views.

The popularity of that song inspired another project from Nordeman, a new parenting book, Slow Down, which will be released on Aug. 22 via Thomas Nelson. The book includes intimate essays from Nichole herself, along with testimonies and stories from listeners, practical help and wisdom on slowing down, and tangible tools that will inspire readers to savor daily parenting moments.

Every Mile Mattered Track Listing:
1. Every Mile Mattered
2. You’re Here
3. Dear Me
4. No Longer
5. Lean
6. Hush, Hush
7. Listen To Your Life
8. Beautiful Day
9. Sound of Surviving
10. Anywhere We Are
11. Slow Down (feat. Pepper Ingram)

Discovery Communications Acquires GAC Parent Company Scripps Networks

Discovery Communications, Inc. has inked a deal to acquire Great American Country parent company Scripps Networks Interactive, Inc. in a cash-and-stock transaction valued at $14.6 billion. The transaction is expected to close by early 2018.

Scripps Chairman, President and CEO Kenneth Lowe is expected to join Discovery’s board of directors following the close of the transaction.

Discovery and Scripps combined company will produce an estimated 8,000 hours of original programming each year, and will be home to 300,000 hours of library content. Combined Discovery and Scripps will hold a nearly 20 percent share of ad-supported pay-TV audiences in the U.S.

The combined company’s portfolio of brands will include Discovery Channel, HGTV, Great American Country, TLC, Animal Planet, Food Network, Travel Channel, DIY Network, and more.

The deal’s $90 per-share cost, based on Discovery’s Friday closing price, represents a premium of 34 percent to Scripps’ unaffected share price as of Tuesday, July 18, before deal talks were first reported. Discovery is paying $63 per share in cash and $27 per share in stock. Scripps shareholders will own 20 percent of Discovery, which will also take on Scripps’ net debt of approximately $2.7 billion in the deal.

“This is an exciting new chapter for Discovery. Scripps is one of the best run media companies in the world with terrific assets, strong brands and popular talent and formats. Our business is about great storytelling, authentic characters and passionate super fans. We believe that by coming together with Scripps, we will create a stronger, more flexible and more dynamic media company with a global content engine that can be fully optimized and monetized across our combined networks, products and services in every country around the world,” said David Zaslav, President and CEO, Discovery Communications.

“Through the passion and dedication of our incredible employees, and with the support of the Scripps family, we have built a lifestyle content company that touches the lives of consumers every single day,” said Lowe. “This agreement with Discovery presents an unmatched opportunity for Scripps to grow its leading lifestyle brands across the world and on new and emerging channels including short-form, direct-to-consumer and streaming platforms.”

LifeNotes: Music Industry Veteran Tammy Brown Passes

Tammy Brown at the 2016 SOURCE Awards banquet in Nashville on Aug. 23, 2016. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography

Widely loved music-industry veteran Tammy Brown has passed away following a decade-long battle with cancer.

Brown worked for song publishers, record labels, producers and recording studios. She championed such artists as Little Big Town, Martina McBride, Keith Urban, Billy Ray Cyrus, Lee Ann Womack and Trisha Yearwood. In 2016, she won a SOURCE Award as a game-changing woman in the Nashville music business.

As a Music Row personality with over 30 years in the industry, Tammy Brown’s resume included stints at Sound Shop Studio, Tree Publishing, Sony/ATV Music Publishing, Sony Music Nashville and ole Publishing. Throughout her career, she always campaigned for musical and songwriting excellence.

Tammy Brown grew up on a small farm in Oklahoma with no indoor plumbing. Her passion for music led her to move to Los Angeles In 1975. She became a production assistant, spending hours at studios attending to recording session details.

Brown moved to Nashville in 1987. She landed a job at Sound Shop studios, owned by Buddy Killen of Tree Publishing. After a year, she moved over to Tree, booking their in-house demo studios. She assisted more than 100 Tree writers, and organized the publishing firm’s No. 1 parties.

Tree Publishing eventually became Sony Music Publishing. There, Brown became producer Paul Worley’s executive assistant for six years. When he moved to Sony Records, so did she.

She began pitching songs to Worley and to the label. In recognition, she was promoted to Sony A&R supervisor. Her ear for talent led her to match songwriters with artists for writing sessions. She paired Marcus Hummon with Richard Marx, Billy Ray Cyrus with Jude Cole, Mac McAnally with Bob Bennett and Travis Tritt with Casey Beathard, plus Rivers Rutherford.

Getting successful songs to Montgomery Gentry, McBride, The Kinleys, Billy Gilman, Tritt, Marty Stuart, Buddy Jewell and Cyrus led her to becoming Sony’s Associate Director of A&R. During this era, Tammy Brown also became a key figure in Leadership Music’s annual Nashville Music Awards balloting procedure.

After she left Sony in 2004, Brown became the Creative Manager for ole Songs. While there, her efforts for the publisher resulted in six hit singles and dozens of album cuts.

She withdrew from the industry when she was diagnosed with cancer in 2008. Brown conquered leukemia in 2009. At that time, she was honored with a luncheon by the song-plugger collective Chicks With Hits. But by last year, her cancer had returned.

Tammy Brown went into hospice care and then died peacefully on Sunday, July 30.

Funeral arrangements have not been announced.

Max Barry, Son Of Nashville Mayor Megan Barry, Dies

Pictured (L-R): Bruce Barry, Max Barry, Nashville Mayor Megan Barry.

Max Barry, son of Mayor Megan Barry and Bruce Barry, died from an apparent overdose in Denver, Colorado on the evening of Saturday, July 29.

Mayor Megan Barry and Bruce Barry have released a statement on this tragic news:

“Early this morning, we received news that no parents should ever have to hear. Our son Max suffered from an overdose and passed away. We cannot begin to describe the pain and heartbreak that comes with losing our only child. Our son was a kind soul full of life and love for his family and friends.

Our family would greatly appreciate your thoughts and prayers, and would respectfully ask for privacy as we mourn the loss of our child and begin to understand a world without his laughter and love in our lives.”

Max Barry, age 22, graduated in June from the University of Puget Sound. Max attended Eakin Elementary School, West End Middle School, and MLK High School before attending and graduating from University School of Nashville. He is survived by his parents, as well as grandparents Joyce Brody, Jan Mueller, and Ken Mueller.

Information about arrangements will be announced when they are developed. The Barry family would respectfully ask for your understanding and privacy during this very difficult time. They will not be available for interviews until further notice. Messages of condolence can be sent to [email protected] or Office of Mayor Megan Barry, 1 Public Square, Nashville, TN 37201.

Updated: 

A visitation will be held at the Martha Rivers Ingram Center for the Performing Arts at the Blair School of Music, 2400 Blakemore Ave, from 5 to 8PM on Monday, July 31.

A memorial will be held at the Belcourt Theatre, 2102 Belcourt Ave, starting at 10AM on Tuesday, August 1 with doors opening at 8:30AM.

In memory of Max, contributions can be made to the Oasis Center or Nashville Humane Association.

Pictured (L-R): Bruce Barry, Nashville Mayor Megan Barry, Max Barry