The Lonely Biscuits Release ‘The San Francisco EP’ Today

Nashville indie-rock trio The Lonely Biscuits have released The San Francisco EP today on Most Lonely Records. The new EP features three originals and their cover of Liz Phair’s iconic single “Never Said.” The three will play a release show at Grimey’s New And Preloved Music Friday night (Sept. 22) in Nashville.

Earlier this month, the band played Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium for the first time, opening for Judah & The Lion. They recently premiered the video for the EP’s lead single “Talk About” on Glide Magazine. To create the video, the band asked their fans to submit their own art, which they turned into a stop-motion video reminiscent of a vintage 90’s Nickelodeon commercial. The song has already garnered over 500,000 streams on Spotify.

The Lonely Biscuits will release their debut album in 2018. On their Pledgemusic page, fans can pledge to have the band mow their lawn, write a song about them, or take home member Wenrich’s childhood amp.

The San Francisco EP Track Listing:
1. Talk About
2. Endlessly
3. San Francisco
4. Never Said (Liz Phair cover)

Carter Winter Talks Deal With Roc Nation, Previews New Music

Carter Winter with MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson

Singer-songwriter Carter Winter recently found himself in a prestigious place for a rising artist, as the only country artist on the performer lineup as part of JAY-Z’s Made In America festival in Philadelphia.

“The lady who was taking care of all the artists said, ‘Go in your dressing room and look by the couch,’” Winter recalls. “There was a bottle of Ace of Spades and [JAY-Z’s] liquor Cognac D’usse. I hadn’t had champagne ever, much less an expensive, like $500 bottle of champagne.”

Winter recently signed on with JAY-Z’s Roc Nation. The deal includes both publishing and an album.

“My manager Zach [Beebe] called me at 4 in the morning and said, ‘Are you on Tidal?’ He started talking to them, showed them my music and six months later or so, we were signed with Roc Nation.”

Winter recently visited MusicRow to offer a live performance of several tracks, including some he is considering for his next project. He offered takes of “Lipstick On My Bottle,” and “Skylines,” as well as “Chaser,” which includes writers Sarah Butler and Chad Carlson.

In 2016, he released his sophomore album The Whiskey In Me, which was produced by Mark Bright and Chad Carlson. The album hit No. 4 on iTunes and No. 34 on Billboard’s country albums chart. He is working on a follow up album now.

Winter is also the face of Durango Boots, with his own line of boots coming soon.

Carter Winter with MusicRow staffers.

Father John Misty To Play Free Acoustic Show At Third Man Records Prior To Ryman Concert

Josh Tillman (a.k.a. Father John Misty) will play to a sold-out crowd at Music City’s Mother Church the Ryman Auditorium next Tuesday, Sept. 26, in support of his acclaimed new record Pure Comedy (Sub Pop). Earlier that day, he will play a free, acoustic solo b-show at Third Man Records’ Blue Room in Nashville.

Known for being the only venue in the world with the capability to record live performances direct-to-acetate, The Blue Room will open its doors at noon for a 12:30 short set, which will be recorded by Third Man engineers on the in-house 1955 Scully Lathe for future release. One lucky, randomly-chosen attendee will walk away that day with a 10″ vinyl record, cut to disc on-the-spot during the performance.

Food trucks will be on site, and beer will be available for purchase. Black and blue records will be ready for pre-order following the set in the Third Man Records storefront for those in attendance.

Nashville’s Lightning 100 will give away 25 pairs of guaranteed-entry tickets, and the remainder of the Blue Room’s capacity will be filled on a first come, first served basis via the Third Man Records box office when doors open for the show.

Leslie Satcher Joined By Vince Gill, Sheryl Crow On New Single, Out Today

Leslie Satcher has recorded a new album with her band, The Electric Honey Badgers, in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. The new project, titled 2 Days In Muscle Shoals, was produced by Brad Crisler.

The lead single from the project, “This Won’t Take Long,” was co-written by Satcher with James LeBlanc and Crisler, and features Vince Gill and Sheryl Crow.

Satcher penned every song on the album in addition to painting an original art piece for the cover. A release date for the new CD has not been announced yet, but Satcher will play as a special guest for Aaron Watson’s “Night Of Texas” show at the Ryman Auditorium on Wednesday Oct. 4.

The new single, which comes out today, can be heard at song.space/2gjqcw/song/705477.

Ashley McBryde Signs With Warner Music Nashville

Pictured (L-R): John Esposito (Chairman & CEO, WMN), Ashley McBryde

Warner Music Nashville has officially announced the label has signed Ashley McBryde to its artist roster. McBryde recently visited the MusicRow office to preview songs from her upcoming debut for Warner Music Nashville.

McBryde’s current single “A Little Dive Bar in Dahlonega” recently hit No. 1 on SiriusXM’s The Highway Top 30 and will impact radio Oct. 16.

The singer/songwriter has already established herself in the industry, having toured with some of the biggest names in country, including Chris Stapleton and Eric Church. She is managed by Q Prime and represented by WME, and will be hitting the road in October for the SiriusXM Presents: The Highway Finds Tour.

Weekly Chart Report 9/22/17

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DISClaimer: Newcomers Dylan Scott, Patrick Thomas Seize The Day

We say hello to a lot of old friends this week, yet it’s the newcomers who seize the day.

Teea Goans, Mac McAnally, Kelly Lang, Terry McBride and Dan Tyminiski are all here with splendid new discs. But listen to the youngsters, too.

Chief among these is Patrick Thomas. This Nashvillian’s breathtaking performance easily earns him a DisCovery Award.

The Disc of the Day belongs to Dylan Scott. His fifth single, “My Girl,” finally got him on everbody’s radar. His sixth, “Hooked,” sounds like an even bigger winner.

PATRICK THOMAS/Katy
Writers: none listed, Producer: Mark Bright/Will Bowen; Publishers: none listed; PT (track)
– This former competitor on The Voice recently made news as the composer and lyricist of the Civil War musical The Battle of Franklin. His debut EP kicks off with this monumental power ballad that begins with his voice and piano, then builds to a crashing, thunderous shout of regret and heartbreak. A mighty, mighty sound. This man gleams with star potential.

TYMINSKI/Bloodline
Writers: Dan Tyminski/Cary Barlowe/Jesse Frasure; Producer: Jesse Frasure; Publisher: none listed, Mercury (track)
– This gifted singer/songwriter has been hiding his light under a bushel for far too long — as a sideman for Alison Krauss, as the heard-but-not-seen lead voice of the Grammy winning “Soggy Bottom Boys” and as a singer on Avicii’s international pop hit “Hey Brother.” His Southern Gothic solo debut CD drops next month. In advance comes this saga of a lifetime of music making backed by an imaginative electronic soundscape of washes, echoes and layered vocal phrasing. Ear opening.

LAURA LEIGH JONES/Love Bird Can’t Find Love No More
Writers: Jones/Ronnie Bowman; Producers: Brent Rader/Laura Leigh Jones; Publishers: Laura Leigh Jones/Ronnie Bowman/RaeLynn/Never Wanted Nothing More, BMI; LLJ (track)
– Snappy and scrappy. The fiddle-dominated acoustic bed is quickly joined by a rumbling, rapid rhythm track. She sings with fiery, feisty personality, and co-writer Bowman shadows her with flawless harmony singing on the choruses. Highly recommended.

KELLY LANG/My New Obsession
Writer: Kelly Lang; Producer: Kelly Lang; Publishers: none listed; Leopard
– Perennial “DISClaimer” fave Kelly Lang returns with a new collection titled Obsession. Its lead track has a retro-vibe, doo-wop flavored feeling with instantly-catchy hooks. Her throaty alto, as usual, is captivating.

MAC McANALLY/Southbound
Writers: Mac McAnally; Producer: Mac McAnally; Publishers: Beginner, ASCAP; Mailboat (track)
– Mac’s revival of the lovely 1995 hit he wrote for Sammy Kershaw has a lush, full-bodied, beautiful, symphonic backing track. That’s because his new CD by the same name is subtitled “The Orchestra Project.” This is an album to savor at leisure with your favorite smoke and libation.

TY THURMAN/East Tennessee Girl
WRiters: Gregory Tyson Thurman/Cory Young; Producer: Dave Demay; Publishers: Leap The Creek/Life Looks Best, ASCAP; Leap the Creek
– It’s a plinky-plunky ditty with a simple melody and even simpler lyrics. Pass.

TEEA GOANS/Go Down Swingin’
Writers: Sandy Ramos/Jerry Vandiver; Producer: Terry Choate; Publishers: Sony-ATV Cross Keys/BMG Gold/Miller’s Daughter/R2M, ASCAP; Crosswind (track)
– Our western-swing heroine returns with a CD titled Swing, Shuffle & Sway. This swingin’ little tune kicks if off with steel bopping smartly, fiddle sawing sprightly and toes tapping all around. Other tracks sample the catalogs of Mel Tillis, Don Gibson, Rory Bourke & Mike Reid, Richard Leigh & Gary Nicholson, Cindy Walker, Hank Cochran and the like, which should give you some idea of how classy this set is. And let me assure you, she absolutely knows how to sing them. I love her all to pieces. Always will.

DYLAN SCOTT/Hooked
Writers: Lindsay Rimes/Seth Ennis/Morgan Evans; Producers: Matt Alderman, Curt Gibbs, Jim Ed Norman; Publishers: none listed, ASCAP/BMI; Curb (CDX)
– He’s a somewhat everyday contemporary country male vocalist. But with a song this tough and a production this exciting, he sounds like so much more. A star-confirming disc. Play it again.

TONY JACKSON/Old Porch
Writers: Tony Jackson/Cole Capshaw; Producer: Donna Dean Stevens/Jim Della Croce; Publishers: none listed, BMI; DDS (CDX)
– His revival of “The Grand Tour” captured 20 million Facebook views. His self-penned follow-up is a gentle, breezy, summery slice of nostalgia. It name checks a teenage repertoire that included Hank, Garth, Stevie Ray and Lynyrd Skynyrd.

TERRY McBRIDE/Hotels & Highways
Writers: Terry McBride/Matt Rogers/Tommy Cecil; Producer: Terry McBride; Publishers: none listed, BMI/ASCAP; MV2 Entertainment
– It has been awhile since we heard from Mr. McBride. This big, heart-in-throat performance makes me realize how much I’ve missed him. A welcome return.

Matthew West Goes ‘All In’ To Share His Own Story For New Album

With his previous two albums, Matthew West reached new career heights, including a Gold single and record-setting 17 weeks atop CCM radio with “Hello, My Name Is,” by collecting stories that were sent to him from across the globe—now over 40,000 stories–from everyday people with real world struggles, and translating those personal experiences into affecting, memorable songs of comfort and strength.

“I’ve seen billboards around Nashville that say ‘It All Starts With A Song.’ I’ve always felt like that’s true, but really, it all starts with a story,” West tells MusicRow. “People sending me their stories was a game changer for me. It showed me the power music has to build a trust through the radio that is unbelievable.”

With his latest Sparrow Records album, All In, out Friday (Sept. 22), West turns his songwriting talents on his own story, and in the process, has crafted his most personal album to date.

“I usually look for that one central theme that becomes the foundation for the whole record. The words all in kept resurfacing, and thought that felt like an album title,” he says. “I started thinking how for every one of us at any given moment, chances are we have at least one area where we could be living more fully, whether its our faith, our relationships with friends or with a spouse or kids. I just started to write from my own places of where I needed to go all in and I felt like I kept being redirected within the walls of my home.”

Scattered throughout the album are glimpses into West’s own journey, sewn into songs like “Becoming Me” (which features vocals from daughter Luella), and “Something Greater,” which traces his evolution from a young, ambitious dreamer to a family man trying to balance home life and career with lyrics like, Thought I was moving to Nashville/just to sign a record deal.

“I figured there might be a lot of people in Nashville that will smile when they hear that line—A&R guys and waitresses and UPS guys,” says West, who also counts Nashville as his home, with wife Emily and their two children, Luella (11) and Delaney (8).

West says the frank lyrics on songs like “The Beautiful Things We Miss” serve as a constant reminder of his priorities as a husband and father.

“That song stings a bit to sing but I’m glad I wrote it. I don’t want just good songs; I want important songs. By important, I don’t mean it will change a generation. I’m not that arrogant to think I can do that, but I mean important to me. If a song changes the way I look at something, chances are it will have that potential in somebody else’s life. That is one of those songs, an aching cry that says I don’t want to miss those moments right in front of me.”

Matthew West in his cabin retreat, where he wrote songs for All In

That struggle to prioritize family time is a familiar struggle for most artists, in an era where streaming and downloading has dwindled the expected income from singles and album sales, forcing artists to make up the deficiency with more tour dates.

“You are asked to be on the road way more than ever. We’ve had to strike that balance. Our ‘all in’ was to decide to homeschool for four years so we could all be together. Now the girls go to an awesome school in Nashville. I’ve learned that I have to turn down some opportunities that might move my career forward, but I don’t want to look back and have regret about being absent as a dad. So that’s always front and center in my mind.”

On “The Sound of a Life Changing,” West chronicles the creative spark that initially led to him to Nashville, and to a career as a singer and songwriter.

“One of the things I’ve noticed about my songwriting is I’ll start with the idea being very personal, a little snapshot of my own specific story. In this case I had the title for a while, but I didn’t know how to write it. I thought, ‘What are some of the sounds of my life changing? What is my life soundtrack?’”

One song on that soundtrack would undoubtedly come while West was still a college student at the University of Illinois, sitting in Assembly Hall Arena, watching Steven Curtis Chapman perform his 1999 hit “Speechless.”

“I remember sitting there, this college kid, just crying. I felt like I was supposed to do what I just saw,” West recalls. Like many aspiring artists, with a heart full of dreams and notebooks stuffed with lyrics, West moved to Nashville shortly after he graduated from the University of Illinois. West was one of the few singer-songwriters fortunate enough to have a publishing deal in hand before he graduated college.

In the writing room, West’s early inspiration came full circle, as “The Sound Of A Life Changing” not only name-checks Steven Curtis Chapman, but counts the CCM superstar as a co-writer on the track.

“I called Steven and said I wanted to write a song with him. He was a bit late to the session; he forgot he had some interviews to do. Meanwhile, I was kind of having a moment like, ‘Here I am all these years later and the guy who inspired me is coming to write a song with me.’ I started writing about that, and I told him I had a song started and it had his name in it. He was like, ‘Let’s do this.’ It was neat to write a song about Steven but also to actually write it with him.”

West, who has long been signed with Combustion Music, is an artist and songwriter in equal measure, having written songs with and for Casting Crowns (“Already There”), Danny Gokey (“Tell Your Heart To Beat Again”), Scotty McCreery, Rascal Flatts, and more. Like he has done with many of his previous albums, West retreated to a cabin just outside of Nashville to pen the songs for All In.

“Before you move to Nashville you are typically writing by yourself and when you come to Nashville and kind of get put into the machine, where all of a sudden the pendulum swings to the other extreme and you wind up only co-writing. You can lose the confidence or the skill set to see a song from beginning to completion. Writing a song by yourself is not always as quick of a process. Nashville can be a town of high output. Nashville’s rare because it’s not just quantity, but it’s quality, too. So being by myself is sort of the antithesis of the fast-moving part of it. But when you fight through the mental battle that it takes to write a song by yourself, you learn to trust your instincts. But with this album, I knew I needed to stretch musically, so I co-wrote a lot of this project.”

Ironically, while most of the stories West translated into song for 2012’s Into The Light and 2015’s Live Forever were solo writes, nearly every song on All In was co-written. He continues to share some of the stories sent to him, most notably on tracks like “Power Love Sound Mind,” and “Never Ever Give Up.”

“When people shared with me their stories [on those previous albums], and on this album there are still some of those stories I told, I felt like they were opening the story of their life to me, and I felt like they trusted me and me alone. With this album I didn’t intend for it to become as much of a personal expression and journey and musical scrapbook. It just happened that way.”

West also gives credit to fellow Combustion Music writer AJ Pruis, who co-wrote all but two tracks on the album, for pushing him to become ever more transparent in crafting the songs for All In.

“I was sort of writing by myself, but with him in the room. He came from this very pop place working on the tracks, and he would hear the lyrics I was writing. Whenever I would touch on something personal that I was maybe afraid to write, he would be like, ‘That’s awesome. Don’t be scared of that.’ I had a lot of moments writing these personal lyrics. I’m not a crier, but man, I sat in this cabin and AJ would turn around and see me crying. I felt like certain doors of remembrance were being unlocked and opened that had been shut for a long time.

“With All In, maybe this time it’s my story that causes a ripple effect. Maybe my story as a dad who knows he’s got to do a better job causes a ripple effect for other dads, or for other husbands. How cool of a legacy would that be for this record?”

Blake Shelton To Release ‘Texoma Shore’ In November

Blake Shelton remains firmly rooted as a proud Oklahoman with the title of his upcoming album, Texoma Shore, slated to release Nov. 3 via Warner Music Nashville.

“Lake Texoma has always been a place of great memories, new and old,” said Shelton. “I literally recorded this album on its shore so it’s full circle for me to take the love of this place and my love of country music.” Fans can pre-order the album here beginning tomorrow.

The album’s lead single “I’ll Name The Dogs” is approaching the Top 20 in just two weeks since its impact at country radio. It was the No. 1 trending video on YouTube from the day of release throughout its first weekend. With over half a million views within 24 hours and 2.1 million first week plays, both the song and the video are earning widespread attention.

Earlier this year, Shelton became the first country artist ever to win the all-genre Favorite Album category at the People’s Choice Awards, along with the title for Favorite Male Country Artist.

“When you listen to the record it will go from something traditional to something that will make your head spin back to something even more traditional. That’s just what you can expect from one of my albums. At this point in my career it’s always good for me to try something different, with different sounds, and I think you’ll hear hints of that on this record. I’ve explored about every part of country music you can explore and it seems like I always keep coming back to my roots, which is traditional country music. I love great songs and there are so many talented writers in Nashville, but I do have a song on the album that I wrote and I’m very proud of it.”

Josh Turner Celebrates 10-Year Anniversary As An Opry Member

Photo Credit: Chris Hollo

Josh Turner has played the Grand Ole Opry a whopping 150 times, and on Tuesday night (Sept. 19), he celebrated his 10th anniversary of being an Opry member. Bill Anderson was on hand to commemorate the special occasion, who also happened to host the night of Turner’s very first appearance at the famed institution over 16 years ago.

“When I was headed back to my dressing room, Bill Anderson asked the crowd if they wanted to hear some more,” said Turner of his first experience on the show. “Bill hollered out at me and said, ‘Josh, let’s make that train a little bit longer.’  I was blown away that he called me back out to do an encore.  I didn’t know how to do an encore and I didn’t have a second song prepared so I sang ‘Long Black Train’ again.”

Prior to the anniversary celebration, Turner was surprised by his management and label with the news that his most-recent No. 1, “Hometown Girl,” is now officially RIAA-certified Gold. Turner’s Opry performance included “Hometown Girl,” his Platinum-selling No. 1 hits “Would You Go with Me” and “Your Man,” his latest single “All About You,” and the timeless “Long Black Train.”

Pictured (L-R): UMG Nashville SVP A&R Brian Wright, UMG Nashville CEO & Chairman Mike Dungan, MCA Nashville VP Promotion Katie Dean, Modern Management’s Ted Greene, Josh Turner, UMG Nashville SVP Promotion Royce Risser, UMG Nashville President Cindy Mabe, UMG Nashville COO Mike Harris
Photo: Haley Hall