Ashley McBryde Brings Hustle And Heart To New Music

Photo: Haley Crow/MusicRow

For powerhouse vocalist and songwriter Ashley McBryde, the journey from playing houseparties in her hometown of Mammoth Spring, Arkansas (population: less than 1,000) to sharing stages with Eric Church and Chris Stapleton—and most recently, signing with major country label Warner Music Nashville/WAR—has been filled with heart and hustle.

McBryde made her Grand Ole Opry debut in June, where she performed the confident, defiant “Girl Goin’ Nowhere” (co-written with Jeremy Bussey), an anthem for ambitious dreamers everywhere. In the song, she dedicates a few lines to All those folks who swore I’d never be anything/ It took a whole lot of yes I wills and I don’t care.

“I had a teacher in high school who went around the room, asking students what they wanted to do with their lives,” McBryde recalls. “I said, ‘I’m going to make songs up in Nashville,’ and she was like, ‘No, that’s not what’s going to happen. You are from Arkansas.’ Well, nothing lights a fire under an a** like someone telling you that you can’t or shouldn’t do something.”

Though small, McBryde’s hometown had one thing that would set the singer-songwriter on a course to Music City: a radio station.

“We had no internet, no cable, so I lovingly refer to where I grew up as ‘radioland,’ because there was nothing but radio, which was my entire world. It was my Hollywood, my Mt. Rushmore,” she said during a visit to the MusicRow offices, as she introduced the new track, “Radioland.”

McBryde’s musical talents were apparent by the age of three, when she began playing mandolin. “I wanted to play guitar, but I was too small, and we already had a mando, so we couldn’t afford another guitar,” says McBryde.

By nine, she had progressed to guitar, and was sitting in with local bluegrass musicians. “They would show me chords,” she recalls. “I taught myself, but most of it was from those guys.”

MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson with Ashley McBryde. Photo: Haley Crow/MusicRow

Her affinity for harmonies came by way of bluegrass music from Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver, Jim & Jesse, and Shawn Camp. Later she discovered vocalists and writers such as Carly Simon and Janis Joplin, and the guitar stylings of Jimi Hendrix. All of those influences would find common ground in McBryde’s voice, which sounds like a more earthy version of Wynonna or Joplin, with the keen songwriter’s eye for detail of writers like Dolly Parton, Miranda Lambert or Brandy Clark.

“I’m left-handed, so when I saw a VHS tape of Jimi Hendrix playing for the first time, I was like, ‘Are you kidding me? I could have just played it that way? No one told me.’ Same with vocals. I discovered there are other tools in your voice you can employ at any time.”

McBryde studied music (specifically french horn) and conducted the pep band while attending Arkansas State in Jonesboro. Though by that time she had built a solid catalog of her own material, she was too shy to perform her own music.

That changed after a national anthem singer failed to show up before a game; McBryde stepped in to sing. When fellow students discovered McBryde’s musical talents, she began playing house parties and coffeehouses in town, offering a mix of “Nickel Creek covers and stuff I made up,” says McBryde.

Eventually, McBryde made her way to Memphis, where she ran a Guitar Center store, while building her catalog, and experimenting with new sounds in clubs from Lexington to Tulsa. She moved to Nashville 11 years ago, where she began writing songs at Jennifer Johnson’s Song Factory, and collaborated with Bart Butler on her 2016 EP, Jalopies and Expensive Guitars. After a series of showcases, the vivid imagery in her songs and her soulful, resonant voice caught the ear of music manager John Peets.

“John just walked up to me and said, ‘I love what you do and I know what to do with it. Look forward to talking to you.’ And he just left. I took some meetings with him, and I knew that’s where I was supposed to be. I felt the same way when meeting people at Warner [Music Nashville]. I was like, ‘I know that’s it.’”

McBryde says her debut single, “A Little Dive Bar in Dahlonega,” penned with Jesse Rice (of FGL’s “Cruise” fame) and Nicolette Hayford, almost didn’t happen.

“We all had especially crappy days leading up to the day we were supposed to write. So crappy that I thought we shouldn’t write that day,” McBryde says. “I had broken my windshield, forgot my guitar. Nicolette had just gotten dumped in a Home Depot parking lot; they went from being together for three years and picking out wood flooring, to being single in the parking lot.” Rice was also late to the meeting, and McBryde recalls, “When he showed up, he was just a wreck. The strap on his gig bag was broken, and he was like, ‘Guys, I dropped my phone in the toilet last night at Tin Roof, and I just was not going after it.’ I don’t blame him, I wouldn’t have, either.”

The trio went to a nearby bar to discuss their misfortunes, where Rice recounted a previous day, when his car broke down, forcing him to make a spontaneous detour to Dahlonega, Georgia. Rice wound up visiting a café called The Crimson Moon, listening happening upon Shawn Mullins performing his 1998 hit song “Lullaby,” and meeting a girl.

“She raised her glass to him as they were sitting in that bar, he raised his glass back, and they’ve been together ever since,” says McBryde. “They got married last May. He said, ‘That’s the worst day of my life and it turned into the best day of my life.’”

Not to mention the inspiration for McBryde’s first single, which the trio would write that day.

“It’s a lot cooler to sing it when it’s just truth and you don’t have to bullsh*t any of it,” McBryde says.

MusicRow staffers with Ashley McBryde.

Shore Fire Media Moves To New Location

Shore Fire Media has moved its Nashville office into a new location at 1017 17th Ave S., Suite 4.

The company’s current staff includes Jaclyn D. Carter, Senior Account Executive/Publicist; Andrea Evenson, Account Executive/Publicist; and Brian Mansfield, Content Director.

Founded in 1990 by President/CEO Marilyn Laverty and based in Brooklyn, New York, the company’s clients include Bruce Springsteen, Yusuf, Kesha, Lee Ann Womack, Elvis Costello, Maxwell, Margo Price, ODESZA, Morrissey, St. Vincent, Carole King, Bonnie Raitt, Zac Brown Band, Randy Rogers Band, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Jackie Lee, Alex Williams, 3rd & Lindsley, Alan Jackson’s AJs Good Time Bar, Brooklyn Bowl, Big Yellow Dog Music, Downtown Music Publishing, Hurray for the Riff Raff, Esperanza Spalding, Josh Abbott Band, Maggie Rose, Mitchell Tenpenny, Music & Memory, Valerie June, Tortuga Music Festival, MEMPHO Music Festival, Summerfest, and many others.

Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, Patty Griffin, Lee Ann Womack To Headline 2018 30A Festival

The 9th annual 30A Songwriters Festival, set for Jan. 12-15, 2018, has announced its initial headliners for the event. The festival, held in venues along Highway 30A in Florida’s South Walton County, will feature main stage performances in Grand Boulevard’s Town Center by Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, The Zombies, the North Mississippi Allstars, and Lee Ann Womack.

Also confirmed for nighttime performances are Charles Kelly of Lady Antebellum, Patty Griffin, Emily Saliers of the Indigo Girls with her solo Murmuration Nation band, Shawn Mullins, and Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame members Mike Reid and Craig Wiseman. 

“It is especially gratifying to confirm Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle and Patty Griffin all in one year for 2018. They are among the most elite songwriters and performers in contemporary music and we are very lucky that their schedules aligned with ours,” states co-producer Russell Carter.

Among the 175 stellar songwriters who will perform at the 2018 Festival are Tommy Stinson (the Replacements, Bash & Pop), Jeffrey Steele, Kim Ritchey, Jeff Black, Will Kimbrough, Dan Navarro, The War & Treaty, Wyatt Durette, Farewell Angelina, Griffin House, Levi Lowrey, Peter Case, Charlie Mars, Chris Stills, Emerson Hart (Tonic), David Ryan Harris (John Mayer Band), David Hodges (Evanescence), Heather Horton, Old Salt Union, Robby Hecht, Alex Guthrie, Mary Bragg, Blue Jays, Josh Osborne, Jaren Johnston, Mark Irwin, Jonathan Singleton, Jeremy Stover, Matt Dragstrem, Adam Hambrick, Jacob Davis, David Berkeley, Matt Hires, David Robert King, and Michele Malone.

The 30A Songwriters Festival has also once again teamed up with NPR’s Folk Alley, a multi-media music service produced by WKSU. Folk Alley will be on site throughout the weekend producing sessions, interviewing artists and filming and recording performances in a home studio on 30A. The in-studio sessions are aired on the syndicated Folk Alley Radio Show.

A variety of festival weekend passes are available now starting at $255 and can be purchased at 30asongwritersfestival.com.

ASCAP Honors Top Christian Songs, Performers At 39th Annual Christian Awards

Pictured (L-R): ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams, ASCAP Vice President of Nashville Membership Michael Martin, Reba McEntire, ASCAP CEO Elizabeth Matthews, ASCAP Executive Vice President of Membership John Titta. Photo: Ed Rode

Matthew West, Joel Smallbone, and Colby Wedgeworth and Fair Trade Music were among the big winners at the 39th Annual ASCAP Christian Music Awards Tuesday night (Sept. 19) at the Franklin Theater in downtown Franklin, Tennessee.

Hosted by ASCAP CEO Elizabeth Matthews, ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams, Executive Vice President of Membership John Titta and Vice President of Nashville Membership Michael Martin, the evening celebrated the songwriters and publishers of Christian music’s most performed songs of the past year.

Reba McEntire made a special appearance to present the Song of the Year award to writer Wedgeworth and publisher Fair Trade Music for “The River,” and West received his second ASCAP Christian Music Songwriter of the Year award, having previously claimed the title in 2014. He also earned three ASCAP most-performed song awards for his own chart-topping single, “Mended,” as well as “One Step Away,” recorded by Casting Crowns and “Tell Your Heart to Beat Again,” recorded by Danny Gokey.

Smallbone earned his first ASCAP Christian Music Songwriter-Artist of the Year award and two ASCAP most-performed song awards for hits “Priceless” and “It’s Not Over Yet,” recorded by For King & Country. Matthews presented the ASCAP Christian Music Publisher of the Year Award to Capitol CMG Publishing, which claimed the award for the 15th consecutive year with an impressive nine award-winning titles.

Performers on the show included Jordan Feliz with Wedgeworth on “The River,” as well as Hannah Kerr, Ryan Stevenson, Emily Weisband, and Matthew West with Randy Phillips.

Hannah Kerr performs “Warrior” at the 39th Annual ASCAP Christian Music Awards. Photo: Ed Rode

Pictured (L-R): James Rueger, Fair Trade Music Publishing; Colby Wedgeworth, Joel Smallbone, Matthew West, Capitol CMG Executive Vice President Casey McGinty. Photo: Ed Rode

Emily Weisband performs “Thy Will” at the 39th Annual ASCAP Christian Music Awards. Photo: Ed Rode

Pictured (L-R): ASCAP Vice President of Nashville Membership Michael Martin, ASCAP Christian Music Songwriter of the Year Matthew West, ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams. Photo: Ed Rode

Joel Smallbone (For King and Country) accepts his award for ASCAP Christian Music Songwriter-Artist of the Year. Photo: Ed Rode

Alex Williams Helps Launch Bud Light Basement Performance Series

Bud Light has launched an all-genre branded performance series “Bud Light Basement” with Big Machine Records artist Alex Williams.

The series will release several acoustic performance videos over the coming weeks, starting with Williams’ “Pay No Mind,” from the singer’s debut album Better Than Myself, which released Aug. 11. On the album, Williams blends musical influences with his own staunchly independent take on the world as he sifts through his musings and life experiences, infusing his songs with stories, quirky characters, and honesty.
Williams wrote or co-wrote all 12 songs on his debut album, including four tracks with fellow songwriter Marshall Altman, including “More Than Survival.”
“He challenges me as a songwriter, just going into his studio at 9 at night and working on songs, it produced a lot of songs on the album,” Williams told MusicRow prior to the album release. “He’s a quirky guy and I dig that. He’s a fearless songwriter. There are no boundaries and he doesn’t try to make something what it’s not.”

Williams caught the attention of Big Machine Label Group’s Julian Raymond, who has worked as a songwriter and producer on albums from artists including Glen Campbell, Hank Williams, Jr., and Jennifer Nettles. Williams soon found himself with a label deal with Big Machine Records.

“He got the green light to make the album. I didn’t think that was going to happen for a while,” Williams said. “But they gave me a chance to make an album with substance that I wanted to make. That’s pretty cool coming from a major label. They haven’t given me any boundaries, which is great.”

The Bud Light Basement sessions are filmed by Starstruck Entertainment’s content studio, in partnership with Bud Light.

David Lee Murphy Returns To Recording With Chesney/Cannon-Produced ‘No Zip Code’

Pictured (clockwise, from top left): David Ross, Founder/President/CEO, Reviver Records; Gator Michaels, Executive VP, Reviver Records; Kenny Chesney; David Lee Murphy.

David Lee Murphy is taking another turn behind the mic and releasing his own album project, No Zip Code, on Reviver Records. Produced by Kenny Chesney and Buddy Cannon, the project will be Murphy’s fifth studio album, and his first with Reviver Records. He previously enjoyed chart success with his chart-topping classic “Dust on the Bottle” and the most-played song of 1995 “Party Crowd.”

Murphy hasn’t strayed far from the charts since then though, having penned more than 50 cuts, including No. 1 songs for Jason Aldean (“Big Green Tractor,” “The Only Way I Know”), Blake Shelton (“The More I Drink”), Gary Allan (“A Feelin’ Like That”), Jake Owens (“Anywhere With You”), Eli Young Band (“Always the Love Songs”), Thompson Square (the Grammy-nominated “Are You Gonna Kiss Me (Or Not)”) and Kenny Chesney (“Livin’ In Fast Forward,” “Pirate Flag”). He’s also had album cuts for Thomas Rhett, Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, Brooks & Dunn, Brad Paisley, Montgomery Gentry, Reba McEntire, and Keith Urban.

“We are thrilled to welcome David Lee Murphy to Reviver,” says label CEO David Ross. “His songs, his style and this record are incredible. We can’t wait to get to work.”

“I didn’t think I’d ever get out here and do this again,” Murphy says. “You focus on writing, and that’s its own kind of great. But Kenny and I got to talking, and it seemed like something worth doing. Then when we got in the studio, it felt so good, every day was more exciting than the one before.”

“David Lee is the original – and the last of – the hillbilly rock stars,” said Chesney of Murphy. “His groove, the way he lays into a melody is so smooth, yet he uses the words for shaping the rhythm. He knows the life, and he bottles it up in song. Making this record showed us what country music can be in the 21st century.”

Little Big Town To Launch Breakers Tour In 2018 With Kacey Musgraves, Midland

Fresh off the heels of their sold-out, year-long residency at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium, Little Big Town has announced they are hitting the road with Kacey Musgraves and Midland for their nationwide Breakers tour beginning in early 2018.

The multi-city run kicks off Feb. 8 at Chesapeake Energy Arena in Oklahoma City and will hit 26 markets, including stops in Austin, Atlanta, Minneapolis, Washington, D.C. and New York City’s Radio City Music Hall. Additional stops will be announced at a later date.

A preview of The Breakers Tour featuring a very special performance by Little Big Town, Kacey Musgraves, and Midland, will take place tonight on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon.

Tickets for the new tour go on sale this Friday, Sept. 22, and two enhanced ticket experiences, the ‘Happy People’ and ‘The Breaker’ experiences, will be offered throughout the tour. Additional experiences available include a meet & greet with Little Big Town, a Q&A session, exclusive merchandise, and more. Ticket information can be found at LittleBigTown.com.

2018 Dates For The Breakers Tour Featuring Little Big Town, Kacey Musgraves, and Midland:
2/8 – Oklahoma City OK  Chesapeake Energy Arena
2/9 -Austin TX  Frank Erwin Center
2/10 –  Grand Prairie TX  Verizon Theatre – Grand Prairie
2/15 – Columbus OH  Schottenstein Center
2/16 – Rosemont IL Allstate Arena
2/17 – Toledo OH  Huntington Center
2/22 – Wilkes-Barre PA  Mohegan Sun Arena
2/23 – Uncasville CT  Mohegan Sun
2/24 – New York NY  Radio City Music Hall
3/2 – Reading PA  Santander Arena
3/3 -Washington DC  Anthem
3/15 – Green Bay WI  Resch Center
3/16 – Duluth MN  Amsoil Arena
3/17 – Grand Forks ND  Ralph Engelstad
3/22 – Grand Rapids MI   Van Andel Arena
3/23 – Cedar Rapids IA  U.S. Cellular Center
3/24 – Sioux City IA  Tyson Events Center
4/5 – Minneapolis MN  Target Center
4/6 – Milwaukee WI  BMO Harris Bradley Ctr
4/7 – St. Louis MO  Chaifetz Arena
4/19 – Greensboro NC  Greensboro Coliseum
4/20 – Greenville SC  Bon Secours Wellness Arena
4/21 – Atlanta GA  Infinite Energy Arena

Disney Music Group Promotes Ciara Shortridge

Disney Music Group has promoted Ciara Shortridge to the new role of A&R Manager. Shortridge began her career with Disney in September 2009 and previously held the roles of A&R Coordinator and A&R Representative. Ciara will report to Barbara Vander Linde, VP, Music Publishing/A&R at Disney Music Group.

In her new role, Shortridge will manage the Disney Music Group Nashville office, and will be responsible for signing, developing, and exploiting exceptional talent, as well as helping to bring internal Disney, international, and multi-platform and multi-genre placement opportunities to the Nashville community.

Vander Linde says, “Ciara has been the heart of our Nashville office, and I am thrilled to share the news of her promotion.”

Singer-Songwriter Mark Selby Dies

Mark Selby

Nashville-based recording artist and songwriter Mark Selby died Monday (Sept. 18) after a battle with cancer. He was 56.

Selby was a recording artist, songwriter, session guitar player and producer released albums on Vanguard Records. He wrote a string of hits with Kenny Wayne Shepherd, including “Deja Voodoo,” “Slow Ride,” “Last Goodbye,” and “Blue on Black,” which was No. 1 for 17 weeks and Billboard’s Mainstream Rock Song of the Year. He also wrote the Dixie Chicks’ first No. 1 single “There’s Your Trouble” and had his songs recorded by many other artists including Wynonna, Trisha Yearwood, Johnny Reid, Jo Dee Messina, Lee Roy Parnell and Keb’ Mo. A highly-regarded session player, Selby played on recordings by Kenny Rogers and Wynona Judd.

Born and raised in Oklahoma, Selby spent his youth harvesting wheat and playing in bands throughout the Midwest before moving to Hays, Kansas to attend Fort Hays University where he earned a bachelor’s degree in music. Selby was inducted into the Kansas Music Hall of Fame in 2016.

Selby is survived by his wife and songwriting partner, Tia Sillers.

A memorial service will be announced at a later date. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to MusicCares in memory of Mark Selby.

Memorial Service Set For Don Williams

Don Williams

A memorial service honoring Country Music Hall of Fame member Don Williams will take place on Wednesday, Sept. 27. The ceremony will be held in the CMA Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame (located at 222 5th Ave. S. in Nashville) for the music industry, friends and family. Doors will open at 4 p.m. with the memorial service commencing promptly at 4:30 p.m.

Williams, 1978 CMA Male Vocalist of the year and known as the “Gentle Giant” for his mellow laid-back delivery of more than 40 Top 10 country hits during his five-decade career, died on Sept. 8 following a brief illness. He was 78. In lieu of flowers, please consider donations to MusiCares, Music Health Alliance or a charity of your choice.

To read Don Williams’ full obit written by MusicRow‘s Robert K. Oermann, click here.