Gorley’s Tape Room Music Taps Blain Rhodes

Blain Rhodes

Blain Rhodes has joined Tape Room Music as Vice President and General Manager, reporting to company Founder and CEO Ashley Gorley.

Rhodes most recently served as Director of A&R at UMG Nashville. While at UMG, Rhodes played an integral part in the signing of artists Tyminski and Travis Denning. He also worked on projects by Luke Bryan, Easton Corbin and others.

Prior to UMG, Rhodes spent four years as Manager of A&R at Warner/Chappell Nashville. During his time with Warner/Chappell, Rhodes placed songs with George Strait, Tim McGraw, Luke Bryan, Jon Pardi, Blake Shelton, Billy Currington, and many more. Rhodes and Gorley already have a successful track record together as publisher and songwriter, with hits including Bryan’s “Crash My Party,” Pardi’s “Dirt On My Boots,” and William Michael Morgan’s new single “Vinyl.”

“I’m thrilled to have Blain join the Tape Room team and serve as VP/GM,” Gorley says. “His passion for great songs, creative instincts, and relationships with artists and songwriters have proven Blain to be one of the best in the business. I’m excited to have him on board for the next chapter of Tape Room Music.”

Tape Room Music was started in 2011 as a venture between Gorley, Warner/Chappell and Combustion Music. Tape Room’s roster includes Zach Crowell, Matt Jenkins, Jerry Flowers, Will Weatherly, Hunter Phelps, and Brad Clawson. Together, Tape Room writers have celebrated 12 No. 1 songs.

Additionally, Gorley was recently named 2017 Songwriter of the Year by both NSAI and NMPA.

Rhodes can we be reached at [email protected].

Kenny Chesney’s Live Album Enters ‘Billboard’ Top 200 Chart At No. 1

Kenny Chesney’s album Live In No Shoes Nation debuted at the top of the Billboard 200 chart, marking his eighth time in the No. 1 slot on the overall chart. His sales total reaches 219K, with the two-disc set included with every ticket order to next summer’s Trip Around the Sun 2018 stadium shows.

This is Chesney’s 15th time entering at No. 1 on the Top Country Albums chart.

The new collection includes special guests, hits and obscure tracks, recorded in venues ranging from stadiums to local bars.

His tour opens April 21 at Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium.

Live In No Shoes Nation Tracklist
Flora – Bama
Summertime
Big Star (with Taylor Swift)
Boston
When I See This Bar (with Eric Church)
No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems
Anything But Mine
Down The Road (with Mac McAnally)
Guitars And Tiki Bars
Hemingway’s Whiskey
Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven (with Zac Brown Band)
I’m Alive
Save It for a Rainy Day (with Old Dominion)
Pirate Flag
Somewhere With You
I Go Back
One Step Up
American Kids
You And Tequila (with Grace Potter)
Young
There Goes My Life
Out Last Night
Dust On The Bottle (with David Lee Murphy)
Coastal
Boys Of Fall
Noise
Old Blue Chair
The Joker / Three Little Birds (with Dave Matthews)
Happy On The Hey Now

Bakersfield Country Pioneer Billy Mize Dies

Billy Mize

Billy Mize, a key figure on the California country scene of the 1950s and 1960s, has died at age 88. He died at a nursing home in Pleasanton, Calif. on Nov. 1.

Mize made his mark as a television personality, a steel guitarist, a songwriter, a radio broadcaster and a vocalist. His best-known song is the honky-tonk classic “Who Will Buy the Wine.” Billy Mize won three ACM Awards and was the subject of a documentary film. He was born William Robert Mize on April 29, 1929 in Kansas City, but he was raised in California’s San Joaquin Valley. Inspired by Bob Wills & The Texas Playboys, the young guitarist switched to steel guitar when he was 18.

Mize moved to Bakersfield, formed his own band and worked as a DJ on KPMC radio. He began his television career in 1953 on Cousin Herb Henson’s Trading Post show on KERO-TV. He remained with that program for 13 years. Mize is considered to be one of the pioneers of the Bakersfield music scene.

Meanwhile, he also began appearing on The Hank Penny Show on Los Angeles television in 1955. The handsome, dapper entertainer graduated from there to the famed Town Hall Party program. By the late 1950s, he was appearing on seven weekly L.A. country TV shows, while still commuting to his Bakersfield commitments.

In 1966, he became the host of Gene Autry’s Melody Ranch series on KTLA-TV. He also began filming his own syndicated TV show in Bakersfield. The Academy of Country Music named him its television Personality of the Year in 1965, 1966 and 1967.

As a songwriter, Billy Mize provided Charlie Walker with “Who Will Buy the Wine” in 1960. This was Mize’s biggest hit as a writer. He also wrote the Johnny Sea 1964 hit “My Baby Walks All Over Me.” Others who recorded Billy Mize songs included Dean Martin, Merle Haggard, Jerry Lee Lewis, Red Simpson, Johnny Cash, Ernest Tubb, Bob Luman, Vikki Carr, Waylon Jennings, Porter Wagoner, Jim Ed Brown, Ray Price and Buck Owens.

His younger brother Buddy Mize is also a songwriter, noted for the 1966 Marty Robbins hit “The Shoe Goes on the Other Foot Tonight,” Bonnie Guitar’s 1966 hit “Get Your Lie the Way You Want It” and other tunes. His “Hangin’ On” was a Gosdin Brothers country hit in 1967, a Joe Simon R&B hit in 1968 and a Vern Gosdin/Emmylou Harris collaboration in 1976. Buddy was also a radio personality and record producer.

As a recording artist, big brother Billy Mize first made the country charts with his self-penned “You Can’t Stop Me” in 1966. Recording for Columbia, United Artists, Challenge, Decca, Liberty, Imperial and Zodiac, he made the charts 11 times between then and 1977. He wrote his 1969 top-40 hit “Make It Rain.”

His albums included This Time and Place on Imperial Records in 1969, You’re All Right With Me on United Artists Records in 1971 and Love N Stuff on Zodiac Records in 1976. In later years, he released Billy Mize’s Tribute to Swing (G&M, 1986), A Salute to Swing (Hag, 2006) and Make It Rain (Sharecropper, 2006).

As a steel guitarist, Billy Mize worked on recording sessions for Merle Haggard, Buck Owens, Johnny Bond, Merle Travis, Tommy Duncan and others. He also performed as a member of Haggard’s band The Strangers.

He continued his TV work on the series RFD Hollywood. He eventually formed his own television production company and created TV specials starring Haggard. He and his brother Buddy worked on several TV projects together in the 1980s.

Billy Mize suffered a stroke in 1988 at age 59 and was unable to speak clearly for many years. In 2001, he was honored by the Pioneers of Western Swing organization. He regained his ability to sing and performed at his 80th birthday party in 2009. He was the subject of the critically praised 2014 documentary film Billy Mize and the Bakersfield Sound.

Mize was also the great uncle of rising country artist Logan Mize.

WMBA Accepting Applications

The Women’s Music Business Association (WMBA) is accepting applications for 2018 membership through Dec. 1. Applications can be found at wmbanashville.org/membership.

The WMBA is a 501(c)6 nonprofit membership organization dedicated to fostering opportunities for women within the music industry through education, networking, industry involvement, and community service.

Exclusive: Beth Laird Discusses The Journey To Creative Nation

Beth Laird

It was a family friend who would provide Creative Nation’s Beth Laird with her entry into the competitive Nashville music industry.

Laird’s childhood babysitter Regina Stuve, who led corporate communications for Universal Music Group Nashville at the time, suggested Laird intern for her during the summer.

“I walked in and we became really great friends. I fell in love with the business,” Beth, a Winchester, Tennessee native, tells MusicRow. “I realized a lot of creative business people help music creators protect their business and take away a lot of the details so they can be more creative.”

Laird returned to Nashville each summer to intern with Stuve. After graduating from University of Alabama in 2004, she got a job at Nashville Bun Company, helping to schedule shipments for English muffins. But she continued studying the industry, and patiently waiting for her first break. When Stuve’s husband Ron took over the old BMG Music Publishing, Laird took on a receptionist role. While there, she also met a then-emergent songwriter and producer Luke Laird.

“That was my first job and that’s how I met Luke,” Beth says. “I met him the first month I was there. We instantly connected.” Surrounded by graduates with degrees and education in music business, Laird became a quick study of the industry. “I really didn’t know what a publishing company was, or what a staff writer was. I had a lot of making up to do.” She focused her ambition on learning more about the industry, networking, and attending as many industry events as possible.

After BMG Music Publishing folded into Universal Music Group in 2007, Beth transitioned to a role as song plugger at Windswept Music. There, she was introduced to Jody Williams, who had just taken over the writer/publisher department at BMI during that time. Beth was offered the role as a writer-publisher representative at BMI, under the direction of Jody Williams, a job Laird says she was not prepared.

“I was the youngest rep, there weren’t female reps at that time, and I was under qualified,” Laird says frankly. “I had to learn quickly. For whatever reason, I’ve always been thrown into the next opportunity because someone really felt I was capable, and made me feel I was capable. Jody empowered me, and let me go out and make my own mistakes. When I needed support and encouragement he would teach me to keep going.”

Beth excelled, rising to the role of Director, Writer/Publisher Relations, and gaining invaluable contacts from various segments of the industry. After five years at BMI Beth stepped out on her own, and in 2011, with husband Luke Laird, launched Creative Nation.

“For us, just using your own money to completely start something at the time was the biggest risk,” says songwriter-producer Luke Laird. “Most business people are invested outside the music business would not say ‘Invest your money in the music business.’ They say real estate or a more sure thing, but for Beth and I, this is what we know.”

Their first signing was songwriter Barry Dean.

“I wanted to work with someone whose success was tied to my success,” Dean says. “That had skin in the game. It’s a time of incredible disruption in the industry. She brought the songwriter, the performer, and the recording artist together. She saw them as interconnected. In so many ways I feel like I owe my career to Beth and her approach.”

“Luke and I took all the good and bad experiences we’ve had in our journeys and thought about how we want Creative Nation to be set up and perceived,” Beth says. “We always wanted Creative to come first and then second we wanted a place to feel homey. I wanted writers and artists to feel comfortable, energized and creative. And I wanted to hire staff that supported that. Since I’m married to Luke, he’s naturally going to help me keep that in balance. We truly are a family-owned business so it already starts out with that vibe.”

In 2014 Natalie Hemby joined the roster. She recently released the critically acclaimed album Puxico.

“I spent so much time over at Creative Nation before I even signed there, so to me, it made sense to go there because it already felt like home,” Hemby says. “All my close friends were already there. I wrote with Luke and Barry every other day, and I was always in Beth’s office playing her songs and talking about music. For me, it was a no brainer….”

In 2015, the company announced the signing of Lori McKenna for both publishing and management representation. That same year, McKenna celebrated the chart-topping success of Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush,” which McKenna wrote during her time at Universal. The song would go on to be certified 3x Platinum by the RIAA and earned Grammy and CMA honors. McKenna also earned ACM Songwriter of the Year honors in 2017.

Tim McGraw also recorded the touching track “Humble and Kind,” a solo write for McKenna published by Universal. The song earned McKenna an array of accolades, including a Grammy for Best Country Song and a CMA Award for Song of the Year. McKenna also became the first female to be named the ACM’s Songwriter of the Year. In 2016, McKenna released her 10th solo project, The Bird & The Rifle, to critical acclaim.

“My career has changed so much for the better since signing with Creative Nation,” McKenna says. “Beth has helped me prioritize my goals and the whole team at CN has helped make things happen that seemed unreachable before. Beth carefully put all these pieces together so that the writers can simply write – everything else is taken care of. What they really have built here is more than a business, it’s a family.”

Others added to the Creative Nation family include Steve Moakler, Kassi Ashton, Mags Duval, Muscadine Bloodline, Tyler Johnson, and Alec Bailey.

Meanwhile, Luke has amassed more than 20 No. 1 singles in the course of his career, and 27 Top 5 singles, in addition to production work on albums including Kacey Musgraves’ Same Trailer, Different Park, and Pageant Material, as well as Moakler’s Steel Town, Brett Eldredge’s “Mean To Me” and Thomas Rhett’s “Get Me Some Of That.”

“We try to have writers in their own lanes,” Beth says. “I don’t like to have the same types of writers and artists because I want them to support each other. And we are very thoughtful about every member we put on the team and how they will affect other members. When you are a small team, every person makes a big difference. But when we know, we usually know.”

Laird’s fearlessness in securing the best talent to support Creative Nation’s writers and artist-writers, and her drive to learn aspects of the music business not traditionally associated with music publishing—including planning and coordinating album releases and pursuing sync licenses—allow Creative Nation to expand its offerings to its writers.

“All our artists have a really defined vision and they know what they want. Some just want to put out a record, some want press, some want a record deal. I try to find out what is the artist’s definition of success and how can I help them reach those goals?”

“Her business sense is really good,” Luke says. “Beth didn’t go to school for music business, but she learned it on the fly. When she wants to know how something works, she’s not afraid to ask questions. She’s not afraid to do any job and I saw that from the beginning. The things that she learns and how she retains information is unlike anyone I’ve ever seen. She’s very outgoing and is a relationship person. In this business it’s very important, and she doesn’t use people. She has their best interests at heart, which is kind of hard to find and honestly, it’s kind of hard to operate that way in this business. But in the long run, I think it is better.”

Beth’s ambition and work ethic have paid off. Among her accolades, Beth was named one of MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row in 2013, and named to Billboard’s 30 Under 30 list in 2010. Laird has learned collaboration and communication are key to excelling  while juggling roles as business owner, wife and mother to two young sons.

“One key for me is that we are 50/50 partners in life and in business, so we don’t see it as a male/female thing,” she says. “We trade dropping off kids or picking them up or seeing a show or traveling. Communication is so important too, and knowing when one thing feels out of balance and you need to take care of it. When you are in so many roles, leader of a company, wife, daughter, mother, friend, manager, publishers, a lot of people have different needs. But I’m not going to be good or nearly as helpful if I’m not balanced in my life. I know if I’m healthy and feel balanced I’m going to be better for them. We know our family and our company are priorities.”

For a separate interview on Beth Laird, Creative Nation, and the Nashville music publishing industry, purchase MusicRow’s 2017 Publisher print issue, or subscribe to MusicRow here.

Lori McKenna accepts the Songwriter of the Year honor at the ACM Honors in Nashville.

Music Industry A-Listers Encourage Lee Thomas Miller To Make Congress Run

Lee Thomas Miller.

Songwriter and NSAI president Lee Thomas Miller says he will soon make an announcement regarding whether or not he will enter the race for Tennessee’s seventh congressional district of Tennessee seat that will soon be vacated by Marsha Blackburn.

Miller has not officially announced his campaign, though he tells MusicRow a decision should be announced in the coming days.

“It’s an honor to even consider serving in that House of Representatives,” he tells MusicRow. “It’s one of the pillars that the whole nation was built on, the fact that it’s a government represented by the people, by the normal people. I think the one thing I keep hearing is that people feel like they are not being represented. I’m not a politician, and I’m not a lawyer. I don’t speak like one and I don’t pretend to be one. It’s something that people have been asking me about for a good 10 years because I’ve been involved in issues that I felt were worth fighting. I’ve been willing to be loud and at least push back and try to make our voices heard.”

Miller has written several No. 1 country hits, including “The Impossible” (Joe Nichols), “The World” and “I’m Still A Guy” (Brad Paisley), and “You’re Gonna Miss This” (Trace Adkins), and has been nominated for three Grammy awards.

As Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI) president, Miller has made numerous trips to Washington, D.C., alongside fellow songwriters, to fight for songwriters’ rights and to enlighten lawmakers to the plight of songwriters whose incomes are largely governed by consent decrees.

In recent days, Miller received a letter signed by more than 80 country artists, songwriters, and music industry executives, encouraging Miller to announce his run for the seat. Among the letter’s signees were Brad Paisley, Kix Brooks, Dustin Lynch, Chris Janson, Brandon Heath, Rusty Gaston, Tom Douglas and more.

“We are united in our request that you seriously consider this service,” the letter reads in part. “We come from different parties and embrace different philosophies. And we represent different communities within music. Yet we share a great passion for music and this wonderful industry that chronicles American life and brings such joy to so many. We love the creativity in our business. We all also rely on this business to employ others and to support our own lives. So while we all are part of this industry because of our commitment to music, we are mindful that public policy is especially crucial at this juncture in our industry’s transformation to the digital world.”

“Everything has been moving kind of fast. When I first saw the names, I was humbled that those leaders in the community would step up and put their name on it. It’s one of many things that has led me toward what I’m going to do. Once we started digging in deeper and looking into what it meant to run and be a candidate, you learn that of course the federal government makes things complicated and filing candidacy is complicated, so the best I can say is stay tuned.”

Read the full letter below.

[Click photo to enlarge]

Guitar Craft Academy Graduates Inaugural Class

The new Guitar Craft Academy in Nashville, which opened in fall 2016, recently graduated its very first class of students.

The school is accredited through an organization called NASM (National Association of Schools of Music), and that accreditation sets it apart because it makes Guitar Craft Academy the only luthier school eligible to offer scholarships and federal student aid.

The school’s instructors are notable luthiers, including Marty Lanham (founder, Master Luthier and proprietor of Nashville Guitar Company and co-founder of the Station Inn.) 

TobyMac’s ‘Light Of Christmas’ Album Out Today

TobyMac is releasing a 10-track collection of holiday tunes, Light Of Christmas, today on all digital music platforms and services. Light Of Christmas includes the brand new track, “Can’t Wait for Christmas” featuring Relient K, and last year’s crazy fun radio single “Bring On The Holidays,” along with songs from his 2011 Christmas in Diverse City release, which featured Owl City, Leigh Nash and more.

TobyMac will kick off the new year by bringing his “HITS DEEP Tour” to 29 markets alongside a lineup including Danny Gokey, Mandisa, Ryan Stevenson and Finding Favour. The 2018 “HITS DEEP Tour” is a partnership with K-LOVE, Air1, Awakening Events and Food for the Hungry. Kicking off at Oklahoma City’s Chesapeake Energy Arena in late January, the “HITS DEEP Tour” will wrap in mid-March after stops in San Diego, Denver, Seattle, Minneapolis, San Antonio, Birmingham and more.

Light Of Christmas Track List:

  • Bring On The Holidays
  • Light Of Christmas (with Owl City)
  • Can’t Wait For Christmas (feat. Relient K)
  • Mary’s Boy Child (feat. Jamie Grace)
  • Little Drummer Boy (Christmas Remix)
  • Christmas This Year (feat. Leigh Nash)
  • The First Noel (feat. Owl City)
  • This Christmas (Father Of The Fatherless) (feat. Nirva Ready)
  • O Come, All Ye Faithful
  • The First Noel (DJ Heavenbound Remix) (feat. Owl City)

CMA Walks Back Media Restriction For Red Carpet, Backstage

Amidst a slew of social media backlash, the Country Music Association (CMA) has apologized and lifted the restriction it revealed on Thursday, Nov. 2, which directed media not to discuss hot-topic issues on its red carpet and backstage media corral at next week’s 51st CMA Awards show.

The CMA threatened to revoke credentials and provide a security escort for media if such reporting strayed to particular subjects, outright naming the “Las Vegas tragedy [at the Route 91 Harvest festival], gun rights [or] political affiliations.”

CMA Awards co-host Brad Paisley took to his Twitter calling the guidelines “ridiculous and unfair” just before the CMA sent a release lifting its guidelines, which it defended by saying “they were created with the best of intentions to honor and celebrate Country Music.”

Artists like Maren Morris chimed in on the social site.

Artist Ryan Adams mocked the restriction with a list of Hee Haw-esque stereotypes that hypothetically would be approved to discuss on the CMA red carpet.

Now, one day after the guidelines were issued, the CMA heeded the social backlash and reversed course, now lifting restrictions.

CMA apologizes for the recently distributed restrictions in the CMA Awards media guidelines, which have since been lifted. The sentiment was not to infringe and was created with the best of intentions to honor and celebrate Country Music.

The CMA’s original restriction notice, sent to media on November 2, read:

In light of recent events, and out of respect for the artists directly or indirectly involved, please refrain from focusing your coverage of the CMA Awards Red Carpet and Backstage Media Center on the Las Vegas tragedy, gun rights, political affiliations or topics of the like. It’s vital, more so this year than in year’s past due to the sensitivities at hand, that the CMA Awards be a celebration of Country Music and the artists that make this genre so great. It’s an evening to honor the outstanding achievements in Country Music of the previous year and we want everyone to feel comfortable talking to press about this exciting time. If you are reported as straying from these guidelines, your credential will be reviewed and potentially revoked via security escort. We appreciate your cooperation in advance. If you have any concerns on your coverage plans, please reach out to the CMA Communications team in advance so we can be a great partner as we celebrate The 51st Annual CMA Awards.

The 51st Annual CMA Awards will air live from Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena next Wednesday, November 8, on ABC.

Kelsea Ballerini’s Unapologetic Second Act

When Kelsea Ballerini released her debut effort, aptly titled The First Time, in 2015 for then emergent indie label Black River Entertainment, the album cemented Ballerini as an artist with songwriting chops, effervescent personality and sublime blend of pop and country hooks. She became one of country music’s brightest rising stars.

The First Time spawned three No. 1 hits, “Peter Pan,” “Dibs” and “Love Me Like You Mean It,” along with the Top 10 “Yeah Boy,” making Ballerini the first female country artist to notch a trio of consecutive chart-toppers from a debut album. She earned a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist in 2017, and an ACM Award for New Female Vocalist of the Year, in addition to iHeartRadio and Radio Disney award wins.

Such early success can breed pressure to retread the same lyrical and sonic territory to sustain the momentum. Instead, with her sophomore endeavor Unapologetically, which releases today (Nov. 3), Ballerini expands the sweep of influences she assimilates into her own music.

“I first thought, ‘How do I get back to where I was when I made the first record so I can do that again?’,” she told MusicRow, “but I was trying to go back to my 19-year-old self and that’s not who I am anymore. I had to let myself be 22 and 23 when I was writing this album, and make that into music.”

While Ballerini winked at the furthest reaches of her pop, rock, and hip-hop influences on her first project, this time around she adopts them more fully, from the a flirtation with R&B on “I Hate Love Songs” to the electro-pop effects employed on “Miss Me More.”

“The way that [her first album] was accepted made me want to push it further. On ‘Miss Me More,’ you can hear that Bieber-esque pop thing and ‘Get Over Yourself’ that chorus is a bit of a rap. That doesn’t take it out of country.”

On her debut album, Ballerini relied on co-writers and producers including Forest Glenn Whitehead and Jason Massey, forming a largely untested but trusted group of fellow creatives and dreamers. The First Time earned gold status, while “Love Me Like You Mean It,” “Dibs,” and “Peter Pan” all went Platinum.

She reunited with Whitehead and Massey as producers on Unapologetically (and with Whitehead as a co-writer), but explored new creative endeavors with Shane McAnally, Hillary Lindsey, Nicolle Galyon, Jimmy Robbins, Lindsay Rimes, Ross Copperman, Zach Crowell, Ashley Gorley, and more. McAnally, Robbins, and Rimes also contributed production to select tracks.

“Honestly, I couldn’t get into a room with a hit writer to save my life on the first record,” she says, laughing. “So the fact I have this opportunity on this album was a gift. I shared stories and opened up to them and to have them add their perspectives, that’s why the record sounds like it does.”

Ballerini cites Lindsey as a co-writer she had on her “wish list” for years.

“As a young female songwriter, she is the reason I write songs. She is exactly what I want to be when I grow up. She’s incredible and I love writing with her,” Ballerini fawns of Lindsey.

Like its predecessor, Unapologetically features 12 songs all co-written by Ballerini. The singer-songwriter penned more than 200 songs for the album. Unapologetically is a transition album, one Ballerini calls “the movie of my life the past three years.”

The album follows a chronological arc, opening in the depths of heartbreak on “Graveyard,” accepting the end of a relationship and the consequent process of self-rediscovery with “Machine Heart” and “Roses,” and crowned by the airy self-confidence needed to find love again with the album’s final five tracks.

“You really get to know an artist by listening to the whole record. I love that you can feel it go from dark to light. You can feel the whole temperament of the album change, just like my life has. It’s really cool.”

Midway through Unapologetically comes “In Between,” a solo write for Ballerini, and the last song she penned for the album. “In Between” is a gorgeous coming-of-age portrait conveying the dreams and ambitions, shifting social roles and newfound wisdom of a woman entering adulthood, on lines like half head up in the clouds/half feet down on the ground, and Sometimes I’m my mother’s daughter/sometimes I’m her friend.

“I realized I had written a lot about people that had been defining people in my life, but I realized I hadn’t written about just my life,” Ballerini says. “That song is the time-stamp of the record, the song I’m going to listen to when I’m 50 and remember what I was feeling when I was 24.”

Her career now bolstered by a string of hits, Ballerini didn’t waste the good fortune, instead poring over every aspect of the album, from song selection to the album cover.

“I wanted the album cover to look happy and sad at the same time. No matter what song you are listening, to I wanted that album cover to make sense. So if you are listening to ‘Graveyard,’ it looks like the saddest cover in the world because I’m curled up on a chair. But if you are listening to ‘Machine Heart’ or ‘Unapologetically’ it looks like you are resting after walking through a battle.”

Scattered throughout the album are snippets of audio intended to infuse life moments into the songs—a voicemail from Ballerini’s mother tags “In Between,” while ripped audio from footage of a high school football game intros “High School.” Her fiancé and Warner Music Nashville artist Morgan Evans offers harmonies on “Unapologetically.”

Vocally, Ballerini comes across as comfortable with warm, conversational singing—accepting her instrument’s limitations. Those lessons can be attributed to countless hours logged on the road, opening for Rascal Flatts, Lady Antebellum and Thomas Rhett.

“When I made my first record I had never done a full-band show before. My voice only knew singing over my guitar. My favorite singers are belters like Carrie Underwood and Kelly Clarkson. I always wanted to be a singer like that, but I’ve learned that’s not my voice. Once I learned what my voice can and can’t do, I think that helped a lot on this record.

“Vocally we didn’t make it perfect. The only time we had for recording was when I came off the road and my voice was tired. On certain songs, especially ‘I Hate Love Songs,’ ‘High School,’ and ‘Machine Heart,’ you can hear it. On all three of those days, my voice was nearly gone and you can hear how tired I was. And I just let that be ok. For every song we did vocals for maybe two hours. We didn’t overthink it. It sounds like me and I’m really proud of that. I’m glad that it is not perfect.”

Self-acceptance, and the confident worldview that often accompanies it, has been a mainstay in Ballerini’s first two albums, and that’s by design.

“I just think there is so much crap everywhere all the time, just negative stuff, especially for young girls. I don’t want to be a part of it. I want anything that people hear from me to make them feel good. Even if it is a vulnerable sad song I want there to be an encouraging lyric. It leaves you feeling better and that’s what I feel like I need to contribute to the world right now.”

Ballerini will perform with Reba on next week’s CMA Awards, and will launch The Unapologetically Tour in February 2018, with special guest Walker Hayes.