Ray Stevens Opens 750-Seat Dinner Theater CabaRay In Nashville West

Ray Stevens

Nashville has a new, first-rate 750-seat dinner theater showroom: CabaRay.

Located opposite the popular Nashville West shopping center exit, Ray Stevens will welcome concert goers three nights a week at start.

The 78 year old Stevens, who built the 35,000 square foot facility—complete with management offices, gift shop, soundstage and recording studio—has only performed a handful of dates in the past few years aside from his wildly successful PBS show.

In front of VIP guests Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2018, which was declared Ray Stevens Day by Nashville Mayor Megan Barry, the two-time Grammy winner revisited 60 years of music in the 90-minute show.

Longtime Nashville musician and comedian Kevin King served as emcee for the pre-show, which included read remarks by congresswoman Marsha Blackburn.

“I’m very proud to accept these and live it up to midnight, because at midnight I turn into a side-man,” Stevens from the stage of the accolades and his venture. “I’ve worked in so many venues, I wanted to build a place that I thought was the culmination of all that I would like in a place. Right or wrong, this is it!”

Pictured (L-R): Ricky Skaggs, Ray Stevens, Kelly Lang

Also from the stage, Stevens acknowledged manager Don Williams in addition to his own inspiration behind creating the venue, which includes custom wallpaper with photos of old recording sessions with Chet Atkins, Shelby Singleton, Jerry Kennedy, Owen Bradley, Fred Foster and Billy Sherrill.

“I wanted to remind people that Nashville is Music City USA,” said Stevens of the photos on the walls in a rare serious moment during the show. “The Grand Ole Opry has been the backbone of country music. But when the recording studios decided to locate here, that to me was the crowning touch. Owen Bradley’s the Quonset Hut or Chet Atkins’ RCA A. Without the studios we wouldn’t be music city. The musicians came here to work sessions—I did. Especially with Mercury, RCA, Columbia and Decca. It was kinda dicey in the beginning in. I’ve heard stories that Texas was vying for the business from all the major record companies but Nashville won out. I just think a big thank you is due to all those producers and musicians who started it all.”

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Among the titles Stevens performed with a black-tie orchestra spanned gospel’s “Turn Your Radio On” to the politically incorrect “Ahab the Arab” and sexually deviant “It’s Me Again Margaret” and “The Streak.”

Poignant masterpieces highlighted Stevens’ genius in the introductory “Nashville,” alongside “Misty” and “Everything Is Beautiful,” which received a standing ovation from the crowd, including Ralph Emery, Ricky Skaggs, Sharon White, John Berry, the Gatlin Brothers, Steve Wariner, TG Sheppard, Bill Anderson, Kelly Lang, T. Graham Brown, Don Schlitz, Johnny Lee, Lee Roy Parnell, Jeannie Seely, Mandy Barnett, Fred Foster, Harold Bradley, Bobby Goldsboro, Teea Goans, Charlie Monk, Bill Cody, and more.

Signature slapstick vocal wailings were featured on “Along Came Jones,” “Guitarzan,” Sergeant Preston of the Yukon” and “Jeremiah Peabody’s Polyunsaturated Quick-Dissolving…Green & Purple Pills.”

After four faux, comedic encores, and the obligatory “Mississippi Squirrel Revival,” Stevens indulged himself in one last cover title, “Goodnight Irene,” wrapping an entertaining and worthwhile endeavor among the Nashville music scene.

Ed Sheeran Throws Tim McGraw And Faith Hill’s “The Rest Of Our Life” In Infringement Lawsuit

The second single and title track from Tim McGraw and Faith Hill‘s duet album, The Rest Of Our Life, is at the center of a copyright infringement lawsuit.

Penned by pop singer Ed Sheeran, Amy Wadge, Johnny McDaid and Steve Mac, “The Rest Of Our Life” is alleged to be a “willful copyright infringement” on the Sean Carey, Beau Golden and Jasmine Rae [Eldridge] song “When I Found You,” released in Australia by Rae in 2014 on ABC Records.

Filed on Wednesday (Jan. 10) in New York federal court, Carey and Golden will be represented by Nashville-based lawyer Richard Busch, noted for the “Blurred Lines” win, representing the family of Marvin Gaye.

Also named as defendants alongside the writers in the case are McGraw and Hill, record labels Sony Music and McGraw Music, in addition to publishers Sony/ATV, Kobalt, Universal Polygram, WB Music, and individual publishing interests of the writers.

The filing alleges the defendants have profited well in excess of $5 million from the Infringing Song and Sound Recording.

The filing goes in great detail and bases much of the impetus to pursue action on Rae’s boyfriend, Tim Holland, who is a marketing employee by Sony Music on the other end of the world in Sydney, Australia. Nevertheless, filing alleges access came from Holland, in addition to Sheeran’s touring schedule, which routed through Australia “when ‘When I Found You’ was enjoying its biggest success on the Australian airwaves.”

The filing says Rae—allegedly not in her own words to protect her boyfriend—chose to abstain from participating in any legal action against “the song’s recording artists … the owner of the recorded track master … or their record company, Sony Music Entertainment,” although she would be willing to make a claim and pursuing actions against the publishers and writers for a portion of the writer’s royalties.” 

 

Alabama, Chris Young, Lee Brice, Sara Evans And Travis Tritt Join Volunteer Jam XX Lineup

ALABAMA, Chris Young, Lee Brice, Sara Evans and Travis Tritt have been added to the lineup for this year’s Volunteer Jam XX, set for March 7 at Bridgestone Arena. The concert event and tribute to its founder, Charlie Daniels, will also include Alison Krauss, Billy F Gibbons of ZZ Top, Blackberry Smoke, Bobby Bare, Chris Janson, Chuck Leavell, Eddie Montgomery of Montgomery Gentry, Jamey Johnson, Justin Moore, The Oak Ridge Boys, Ricky Skaggs, and a performance from Daniels himself. More special guests will be announced in the coming weeks.

“This year we get back to basics, back to the free form rocking traditions the Volunteer Jam was known for,” says Daniels of the upcoming show. “I’m planning a jam at the last part of the show that will blow the roof off Bridgestone. And we’ve got the pickers coming this year that can make that happen big time.”

Don Was will serve as music director for the show, presiding over a house band that includes Chuck Leavell and Kenny Aronoff. Tickets are on sale now at Ticketmaster.com, by phone at 800-745-3000, at all Ticketmaster locations, and the Bridgestone Arena box office. A portion of the proceeds from 2018’s Volunteer Jam will be donated to The Journey Home Project, a non-profit co-founded by Daniels and manager David Corlew to help Veterans.

Three Hounds Music Signs Sarah Beth Terry

Pictured (L-R): Tyler Bell – GM Three Hounds Music, Sarah Beth Terry, Tom Harrison – CEO/Founder Three Hounds Music.

Three Hounds Music has entered into an exclusive publishing agreement with singer/songwriter Sarah Beth Terry.

Born and raised in Eastern Kentucky, Terry began writing poems and lyrics at a very early age. She credits songwriter, musician, & producer Bobby Terry (no relation) and artist/songwriter Anthony Smith with teaching her to formulate songs. She is reverential about Smith’s album, If That Ain’t Country (produced and engineered by Bobby Terry) and claims that it was an important turning point for her as a songwriter. Ironically, in addition to signing an exclusive agreement with Bobby’s publishing company, Three Hounds Music, Sarah Beth’s first cut is a Craig Morgan song she wrote with Anthony: “I Hate the Taste of Whiskey.” She also has a cut on the new Gaither Vocal Band album.

I’m thrilled to be part of the Three Hounds Music family,” says Sarah Beth. “It’s a good fit and I’m finally on the playing field!”

Three Hounds Music’s roster also includes songwriters Bobby Terry (Faith Hill, Trace Adkins, Gretchen Wilson), David Tolliver (Tim McGraw, Jerrod Neiman, Brantley Gilbert), Kevin Brandt (Montgomery Gentry, Travis Tritt, Randy Travis), and Americana duo FLEENER.

South By Southwest 2018 Adds To Lineup

The 2018 South By Southwest Festival will have over 570 artists performing at this year’s 32nd annual event, and the festival just released some new additions to the lineup.

In addition to the already announced artists, the festival will host the North American debut of composer Max Richter’s 8-hour masterpiece SLEEP, as well as performances by A Place to Bury Strangers (Brooklyn NY), Aleman (Cabo San Lucas MEXICO), Crush (Seoul SOUTH KOREA), Cuco (Hawthorne CA), Cut Chemist (Los Angeles CA), Duckwrth (Los Angeles CA), Ezra Furman (Chicago IL), Flasher (Washington DC), Goat Girl (London UK-ENGLAND), Grupo Fantasma (Austin TX), Hinds (Madrid SPAIN), Jade Bird (Smallfield UK-ENGLAND), Lali Puna (Munich GERMANY), Lo Moon (Los Angeles CA), Lola Marsh (Tel Aviv ISRAEL), Low (Duluth MN), The Marias (Los Angeles CA), Ought (Montreal CANADA), Smokepurpp (Miami, FL), Son Little (Philadelphia PA), Sunflower Bean (New York NY), Superorganism (London UK-ENGLAND), U.S. Girls (Toronto CANADA), Wifisfuneral (Palm Beach FL), XXX (Seoul SOUTH KOREA), and YFN Lucci (Summerhill GA).

Among the Nashville invitees are Becca Mancari, Brother Sundance, Morgxn, The Cunning, Shell of a Shell, Soccer Mommy, Skyway Man, The Grahams, Harpooner, Tristen, Jonathan Tyler, Third Man Records’ Joshua Hedley, Welles and We Were The States.

SXSW 2018 takes place on stages around Austin from March 12 -18, 2018. Artists performing at SXSW 2018 can be heard by tuning into sxsw.com/fm on your mobile or desktop, or on demand any time at mixcloud.com/sxswfm. To register for the event, go to sxsw.com/attend.

In Pictures: Ray Stevens, Jenny Tolman, John Rich, TobyMac

Mayor Megan Barry Proclaims January 10 Ray Stevens Day

Pictured: Ray Stevens receives his proclamation declaring January 10 Ray Stevens Day.

Nashville Mayor Megan Barry officially declared Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2018, as Ray Stevens Day in honor of the country and comedy music legend’s numerous accomplishments and contributions to Music City, USA. Recognized as a Nashville music business icon, Stevens is set to open a new art music venue, CabaRay, on Jan. 18.

 

SESAC’s Jenny Tolman Kicks Off New Year with New Single

Pictured (L-R): SESAC Manager of Creative Services Lydia Schultz, Singer/Songwriter Jenny Tolman and VP of Creative Services Shannan Hatch.

Friends, family and industry colleagues showed up at The Sutler in Nashville on Tuesday night (Jan. 9) for Jenny Tolman’s single release party, to celebrate the release of “Something to Complain About.”

 

John Rich Celebrates Birthday and Launch of Redneck Riviera Whiskey

Pictured: John Rich celebrates his birthday and the launch of Redneck Riviera Whiskey in Nashville on January 6, 2018. Photo: Joe Hardwick

Media, industry and friends gathered at John Rich‘s Nashville home on Saturday (Jan. 6) to celebrate his birthday as well as the launch of his latest business venture, Redneck Riviera Whiskey. Rich launched the Redneck Riviera lifestyle brand in 2014 that has grown into a multi-faceted franchise with apparel, food and honky tonks.

Pictured (L-R): Gretchen Wilson and John Rich at the Redneck Riviera Whiskey Launch Party on January 6, 2018. Photo: Joe Hardwick

Pictured (L-R): Fox and Friends’ Brian Kilmeade, John Rich and Ronnie Barrett. Photo: Joe Hardwick

 

TobyMac Celebrates Release of New Single

Pictured: TobyMac celebrates the release of his latest single with a meet and greet for fans.

CCM artist TobyMac provided fans an early glimpse of his latest song with a single release party at Citizen in Downtown Franklin last week. Fans celebrated the release of TobyMac‘s first new single in two plus years, “I Just Need U.,” and were treated to an exclusive meet & greet along with a limited edition vinyl 45 of the single.

Miranda Lambert, Little Big Town Teaming Up For Bandwagon Tour This Summer

Credit: Becky Fluke

Miranda Lambert and Little Big Town are jumping on the bandwagon together this Summer for a joint cross-country trek that will kick off July 12 in Charlotte, N.C. Thirteen dates have already been announced for the co-headlining Bandwagon tour, with more dates and support acts to be announced soon.

Tickets for select dates will become available as part of Live Nation’s Country Megaticket going on sale Jan. 26 at megaticket.com. More information is also available at MirandaLambert.com and LittleBigTown.com.

The tour won’t lack for star power, with the two acts together touting a combined thirty-six ACM Award wins, twenty-one CMAs, and four Grammys.

The Bandwagon Tour dates:

7/12/18: Charlotte, N.C.; PNC Music Pavilion
7/13/18: Cincinnati, Ohio; Riverbend Music Center
7/14/18: Indianapolis, Ind.; Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center
7/20/18: Hartford, Conn.; XFINITY Theatre
7/21/18: Mansfield, Mass.; XFINITY Center
8/2/18: Orange Beach, Ala.; The Wharf at Orange Beach
8/3/18: Tampa, Fla.; MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
8/4/18: West Palm Beach, Fla.;Coral Sky Amphitheatre
8/16/18: Darien Center N.Y.; Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
8/17/18: Pittsburgh; Pa.  KeyBank Pavilion
8/18/18: Philadelphia, Pa.; BB&T Pavilion
8/23/18: Toronto, Ontario; Budweiser Stage
8/24/18: Clarkston, Mich.; DTE Energy Music Theatre

 

Chris Tomlin Inks PR Deal With Schmidt Relations

Chris Tomlin

CCM artist and worship leader Chris Tomlin is joining the roster of publicity clients at Schmidt Relations, which also represents Luke Bryan, Easton Corbin, Eric Paslay, Cole Swindell and the Grand Ole Opry.

As one of only four artists in any genre ever to receive the Sound Exchange Digital Radio Award for over 1 Billion digital radio streams (joining only Justin Timberlake, Pitbull, and Garth Brooks), Tomlin has also sold more than eight million albums, 11.3 million digital tracks with 16 No. 1 singles.

The Grammy winner’s list of music awards include an American Music Award, three Billboard Music Awards, 21 Dove Awards, a BMI Songwriter of the Year Award and more. Tomlin’s latest No. 1 charting album Never Lose Sight contains three No. 1 radio singles— “Jesus,” “Good Good Father” and “Home.” Tomlin’s concert tours have sold-out venues in major cities including New York City’s Madison Square Garden, The Forum in Los Angeles, Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena and Red Rocks in Denver, among others. His 2017 “Worship Night in America Tour” became the first Christian tour sponsored by Amazon Music.

On April 5, Tomlin will kick off his 2018 Worship Night in America tour with special guests Kim Walker Smith of Jesus Culture, Matt Maher, Christine D’Clario, Tauren Wells, and Pat Barrett. The tour will hit 24 markets across the U.S. including Chicago, Indianapolis, Atlanta, Philadelphia and more.

Schmidt Relations is a boutique public relations company based in Nashville, Tenn. Established in 1997, owner Jessie Schmidt has worked the careers of some of country music’s finest including Trace Adkins, Rhett Akins, Joe Diffie, DreamWorks Records, Rascal Flatts, Montgomery Gentry, Reba McEntire, Tim McGraw, Brad Paisley, Blake Shelton, Aaron Tippin, Carrie Underwood, Lee Ann Womack and more.

Tomlin’s signing follows the recent announcement that former Schmidt Relations client Carrie Underwood has moved to PMK BNC for publicity.

Mitchell Tenpenny Signs With Riser House/Columbia Nashville

Pictured here, as Mitchell Tenpenny signs his artist recording agreement with Riser House/Columbia Nashville, are (left to right): FRONT – Sony Music Nashville’s SVP Legal & Business Affairs Angie Magill and Chairman & CEO Randy Goodman; Mitchell Tenpenny; Riser House Records’ President Jennifer Johnson and GM Stephanie Hudacek; and, BACK – Kristen Ashley, Tenpenny’s day-to-day manager; Sony Music Nashville’s SVP A&R Jim Catino, COO/EVP Ken Robold, EVP Promotion/Artist Development Steve Hodges, EVP Marketing/New Business John Zarling, Tenpenny’s marketing lead Jennifer Way; and Shane Allen, SVP, Promotion, Columbia Nashville. Photo: Alan Poizner. [Click photo to enlarge]

As the result of a new joint-venture, Sony Music Nashville and Riser House announce the signing of artist and songwriter Mitchell Tenpenny to Riser House/Columbia Nashville.

Tenpenny will release his Riser House/Columbia Nashville debut single this spring. Tenpenny was the flagship artist for full-service label, management, and publishing company Riser House, which was founded by Matt Swanson, Jennifer Johnson, and Tenpenny.

Nashville native Tenpenny’s grandmother was former Sony/ATV Music Publishing CEO Donna Hilley. Tenpenny co-wrote Granger Smith’s Top 5 hit, “If The Boot Fits.”

Sony Music Nashville includes its three country label operations – Arista Nashville, Columbia Nashville, and RCA Nashville – and Provident Music Group, one of the world’s leading Christian music companies. Sony Music Nashville is a division of Sony Music Entertainment.

Girlilla Marketing: 10 Years Of Soul, Sweat, and Music

Girlilla Marketing founder Jennie Smythe

Girlilla Marketing founder Jennie Smythe found the drive and courage to launch her own company after one soul-searching question from her father.

“He asked me one day, ‘What would you do if you knew your life was going to end soon?’” Smythe recalls. “I told him, ‘I would launch my own company and I would travel more.’ We didn’t really talk about it a lot after that.”

Tragically, her father passed away in 2007. With that brief conversation still in her memory, Smythe launched the marketing company Girlilla in January 2008.

This year, the company celebrates its 10-year anniversary, and the company that Smythe launched with one computer at her dining room table has become a digital marketing powerhouse behind campaigns for Darius Rucker, Lee Brice, Sugarland, Rascal Flatts and Lee Ann Womack, as well as the Academy of Country Music and Red Light Management.

Girlilla Marketing’s company name encompasses the passion Smythe has to see women succeed in business, and that has attracted a talented team of marketers, including Ashley Alexander, Stevie Zea Escoto, Jessie Whitmire, Sydney Guilliams, Conley Sweeney and Lindsey Feinstein.

Smythe’s entertainment industry career began with work at Elektra Entertainment and Disney’s Hollywood Records, before joining Yahoo! Music as Director of Marketing and Promotion. She would later make the move to Nashville and begin working for Warner Bros. Records’ New Media Department and then as Clear Channel’s Sr. Director of Content and Marketing.

The challenge of trading years of working for large companies to take a risk was not lost on Smythe when she officially launched Girlilla Marketing.

“I remember day one, when I was sitting by myself and I just broke down. Why would I give up a high-paying, high-profile career path after spending 12 years building up to that point? I did because the idea that there might be something more was far more attractive. It was about making a new path. It’s hard, but not as hard as not trying. I put everything I had into it.”

MusicRow spoke with Smythe about today’s marketing trends and challenges, and what is ahead for Girlilla Marketing.

What was your vision for Girlilla?

I wanted to create the company I always wanted to work for. So instead of spending time talking about glass ceilings or even things that are very timely today, I decided I can spend my time creating instead of complaining. There is a real satisfaction in knowing that half of our employees have been here for more than seven years and half of our clients have been here for more than seven years.

Who were your mentors when starting Girlilla?

I didn’t have anybody to help me figure out the core of the business, but there were a few people who had similar agencies in Los Angeles, so I borrowed from them. One was [former Fanscape CEO] Larry Weintraub. I continue to call him when I need advice.

Who were some of your first clients?

Randy Houser and Zac Brown Band and Universal South, when Fletcher was running that company. He gave us like five clients right off the bat, so we really cut our teeth quickly.

What is the process like when you begin working for a client?

Everybody is different, but we get to know each other. I don’t become them online. I don’t do social media for artists, but I figure out what moves them in real life, so we can create campaigns that reflect that online. When you have the gift of a music client, most of them and what is specific about our Nashville clients, is those clients are on the road so they are touching people in real life. It’s not just a video on YouTube, it’s a real person singing real songs in real life, so the strategy, instead of concentrating on, ‘How do we get people to stream this record or buy this ticket?’ It might be, ‘How do we capture the artist-fan relationship that is happening on the road and translate it online?’ It’s become more complementary instead of the driving force.

Somebody’s website needs to be updated or an email database needs to be updated and the data needs to be segmented, tour dates need to be corrected on a thousand sites. So we speak to our PR counterparts, we are on the phone with management, business management, because we talking copyright, trademark and monetization. Those three things are paramount in everything we do.

Now you’ve almost become a project manager or product manager for every single initiative. When you are off-cycle on a label initiative you are usually on-cycle for a tour project and at every point, content is being produced.

How have the leadtimes for projects changed?

Lead-time has become shorter, which is good and bad. It is good because it is not as expensive anymore. It wasn’t too long ago when you would start a campaign with two photos, a bio, a list of tour dates and they would say, ‘This is what we have.’ It would be expensive to make videos and if you had to change photos in the middle of a campaign, that was a big deal. Now, we can have three to four looks, because you still want to follow the rules of branding. You want to have consistent looks and graphics and logos for the artists so things start to click for fans.

Now that more artists are younger, digital natives, how does that help or hinder what you do in digital marketing?

We don’t have to explain as much. We used to say if a potential client wanted to know why they should be active in the digital space, we were out. But if they wanted to know how to be active and better promote themselves digitally, we are in. Now artists are so used to putting everything out there that nothing is special anymore, so sometimes you have to create a balance.

Given how the digital realm has changed so much in the past few years, how have you changed your approach to digital marketing?

It used to be the Wild West. We had free reign to experiment and explore. Over the past five years, that has been dampened a bit by business development, retail, FTC compliant and those kinds of things, but when I hear people jump on the negative train about that, I still think it is the best job ever. There are always new platforms, new features on those platforms, or changes to algorithms.

Two of the biggest platforms we use are still Facebook and Instagram. Especially when they integrated Stories and Live, it took us away from Snapchat a lot. We still use Twitter in terms of being a part of a conversation in a timely fashion or an awards show or TV performance or a great piece of content from an outlet. For an overall mosaic of how to express yourself as an artist, I think Instagram gives us the best tools.

How do you approach marketing brands and companies, versus marketing artists?

On a brand page, you’ll never get the same reaction and engagement, as you will on an artist page, although everyone wants higher engagement and more followers on social media. And that’s ok.

Sometimes fans expect an almost immediate response when controversy happens, and yet sometimes responses have to go through different channels before they are posted. How do you balance crafting the right response, versus a timely one?

We always err on the side of accurate. I would rather be late and accurate than shoot off the hip and retract a statement. We’ve all been in situations where someone has gone against that advice, but it’s still my job to clean it up.

Sometimes artists say things that perhaps they shouldn’t say on social media. How do you handle that when you find out about something after it has been tweeted or posted?

My biggest advice is to always address it and don’t delete it. If it was innocent, by deleting it, it can send the wrong message. Of course there are commonsense rules that apply to everyone, like don’t post things at 2 a.m. after you’ve had a few cocktails.

How do you see digital marketing changing in the next several years?

My hope is that everything becomes more simplified. I think people are over stimulated. There are so many platforms and ticket options and merchandising. We are selling, selling, selling and I believe that every revolution comes with an evolution and I think it is simplicity. I think we have already seen that with the surge in vinyl sales. I think the human connection becomes even more important.

I love that there are no music genres. It pains me that people still try to put music into boxes. Fans today go from rock to country to urban in one sitting and that’s okay. Parents are sharing playlists with their kids and they are bonding over this music.

I’m so excited to see what happens in the next five to ten years.