ASCAP To Honor Desmond Child

Desmond Child

ASCAP will present Songwriters Hall of Fame Inductee Desmond Child with its prestigious Founders Award at the 35th annual ASCAP Pop Music Awards in Los Angeles on April 23, 2018. From Aerosmith to Zedd, Child’s collaborations include some of pop’s biggest hits over the last five decades including classics like “Livin’ On A Prayer,” “You Give Love A Bad Name,” “I Was Made For Lovin’ You,” “Dude (Looks Like A Lady),” “Livin’ La Vida Loca,” “I Hate Myself For Loving You,” “Poison,” “Waking Up In Vegas” and “Beautiful Now.”

Celebrating his 40th anniversary as a member of ASCAP, Child has penned over eighty Top 40 hits (rock, pop, latin and country) and serves as the Chairman / CEO of the Latin Songwriters Hall of Fame.

“Desmond is one of the most respected and successful songwriters in the world,” said ASCAP President Paul Williams. “His unique ability to capture the essence of our lives through song — whether we’re livin’ la vida loca or livin’ on a prayer — is simply unequaled. We are honored to present Desmond with the ASCAP Founders Award in recognition of his towering achievements. With #1 hits spanning five decades now, Desmond surely has many more milestones still to come.”

The ASCAP Founders Award goes to pioneering ASCAP songwriters who made exceptional contributions to music by inspiring and influencing their creative community. Each songwriter is a musical innovator with a unique style of creative genius. Past recipients including Sir Paul McCartney, Burt Bacharach, Hal David, Stevie Wonder, Tom Petty, Patti Smith, James Taylor, Smokey Robinson, Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler & Joe Perry, Billy Joel, Neil Young, Steely Dan’s Donald Fagan and Walter Becker, Carly Simon and Heart’s Ann and Nancy Wilson to name a few.

‘Bluegrass Underground’ Celebrates Inaugural Taping At The Caverns

PBS series Bluegrass Underground celebrated the inaugural taping in its new home at The Caverns over the weekend, with two sold-out shows.

Billy Strings and The Sweet Lizzy Project (Saturday) and Aaron Lee Tasjan and the Sam Bush Band (Sunday) kicked off a weekend of performances in front of a capacity crowd, as Bluegrass Underground entered its 8th season of taping.

Beginning with this season, the series will be recorded in its new home, equipped with state of the art sound and lights. Cinematographer Allen Branton designed the lighting and Sound Image did the sound, each team adding subtle enhancements to the natural beauty and acoustics of the cave.

“We couldn’t have asked for a better opening weekend,” said Todd Mayo, owner of The Caverns and creator of the Bluegrass Underground series. “Our goal has always been to offer a unique experience to our patrons, as well as quality amenities and ease of access. Based on the reaction this weekend, we’ve met that goal, and maybe even surpassed it.”

Prior to the music kicking off Saturday’s grand opening event, Mayo hosted an official “ribbon” cutting ceremony that saw a giant banjo stand in for the usual ribbon. Several area dignitaries were on hand to participate in the ceremony and welcome the new attraction’s team to the county. The grounds were packed with people from the area as well as guests who had traveled in from other states to experience the first night of The Caverns.

The Caverns is just 10 minutes from Exit 127 in Pelham, TN on I-24. The address is 555 Charlie Roberts Road, Pelham, TN 37366.

Erin Kinsey Inks With CAA

Rod Essig and Erin Kinsey

Erin Kinsey has signed with CAA for representation.

The seventeen-year-old from Rockwall, Texas, is a highly accomplished musician and songwriter who has been performing for audiences in Texas, Nashville, and abroad for the past six years. In 2016, she was chosen out of over 400 applications from all over the world and made her European debut performing at the annual Country to Country (C2C) Festival in London, England at The O2 Arena.

“I am blown away by Erin’s voice,” said CAA co-head Rod Essig. “She has such a fresh, unique sound and along with her ability to master several instruments and write original music makes her a ‘triple threat’ talent that we are excited to nurture, and watch grow.”

“I am so excited to be a part of such an amazing talent agency like CAA and to further develop my music career,” says Kinsey. “Singing, songwriting and playing music are my true passions.”

On April 28, Kinsey will open for Hunter Hayes for the St. Jude Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon & ½ Marathon in Nashville at the Toyota Rock ‘n’ Roll Concert Series at Ascend Amphitheater.

In Pictures: BMI At SXSW

BMI celebrated this year’s SXSW with a series of events and performances from artists and songwriters in the country, pop, hip-hop, and Latin fields. Things kicked off at the YETI/BMI Day Party featuring BMI singer/songwriters Kalu & The Electric Joint, Dizzy, slenderbodies, Morgan Saint, Wallows and Tyler Childers. The evening heated up at Antone’s with electrifying sets by Joshua Hedley, lovelytheband, Devin Dawson, BONES and MAX.  BMI also presented “Sonidos Alternos” featuring Latin music’s best and brightest talents from around the world including Melymel, COASTCITY, Los Chinchillos Del Caribe, RAWAYANA, The Chamanas and Buffalo Blanco at Speakeasy.

BMI’s Josh Tomlinson and artist Devin Dawson pose for a photo backstage at Antone’s.

Rayland Baxter performs during BMI’s SXSW Howdy Texas Party at the Yeti Flagship Store.

Dizzy performs at the Yeti Flagship Store on March 14, 2018, in Austin, TX. (Erika Goldring Photo)

Jean Rodriguez of Coast City at the BMI’s Sonidos Alternos Latin Showcase at SXSW March 14, 2018

Buffalo Blanco backstage with BMI’s Joey Mercado at the ͞Sonidos Alternos͟ Latin Showcase at SXSW March 14, 2018

Joshua Hedley performs at Antone’s on March 14, 2018, in Austin, TX. (Erika Goldring Photo)

Kalu & The Electronic Joint performs at the Yeti Flagship Store on March 14, 2018, in Austin, TX. (Erika Goldring Photo)

Bethel Music’s Killing Kryptonite Tour Set For June

The “Killing Kryptonite Tour” with John Bevere and Bethel Music will kick off in June and visit New Orleans, Atlanta, Boston, New York and several other markets. The tour carries the namesake of Bevere’s USA Today and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller book about his own story.

The idea behind the tour is to invite concertgoers to experience truth and powerful transformation through music and teaching. Tickets for the “Killing Kryptonite Tour” are available now, and range from $20-$55. To purchase tickets or for more information, click here.

Killing Kryptonite Tour:
*All dates subject to change.
June 4: New Orleans, LA
June 5: Atlanta, GA
June 7: Memphis, TN
June 8: Lexington, KY
June 9: Peoria, IL
June 11: Kalamazoo, MI
June 12: Cincinnati, OH
June 14: Boston, MA
June 15: New York, NY

Rising Women On The Row: WME’s Becky Gardenhire

Becky Gardenhire

WME Partner Becky Gardenhire was recently announced as one of this year’s MusicRow Rising Women On The Row honorees. MusicRow will feature Q&As with each of this year’s six honorees leading up to the event. MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row for 2018 also includes Faithe Dillman, Leslie DiPiero, Lynn Oliver-Cline, Annie Ortmeier, and Janet Weir.

Gardenhire is responsible for guiding the daily touring, film, literary and sponsorship opportunities for several well-known artists including Adam Craig, Charlie Worsham, Chase Bryant, Courtney Cole, Ingrid Andress, Jake Owen, Jordan Davis, Justin Adams, LANCO, RaeLynn, Rascal Flatts, Reba, Sara Evans and many others. She leads a team of agents that work across WME’s entire country roster booking concerts in arenas, amphitheaters, theaters, PACS and casinos in the South and is an integral part of WME’s New Artist Development Program. Gardenhire sits on the Board of Directors for the T.J. Martell Foundation and the W.O. Smith School of Music, and is a member of ACM, CMA, NARAS, IEBA and the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

MusicRow caught up with Gardenhire to discuss her music industry career, and advice she has for industry newcomers. MusicRow Magazine’s sold-out Rising Women On The Row event will be held Tuesday, March 27 at Omni Hotel Nashville.

MusicRow: How did you become involved in the music industry?
Becky Gardenhire: This sounds stereotypical, but I grew up on a farm, and I listened to country music. I knew I wanted to get into the entertainment industry, but I went to school for film and television so I thought I would be going into that side of the entertainment industry. Then I moved to Los Angeles after college and worked for WME’s [formerly William Morris] TV department, but the agent I was assigned to had a project working with our Nashville office, so through that I began to understand what clients we represented in the country space.

It became obvious that I was enjoying the concert side of things while my day job was as an assistant to a TV agent. I visited Nashville for a weekend, fell in love with the city, and decided to move here. I told the agent I was working for, and soon a job opened up that allowed me to move to Nashville and still stay with the company. Then I just started working my way up through the Nashville office.

Who were some of your mentors once you got to Nashville?
Greg Oswald was the first agent I worked for in our Nashville office, and is still a great mentor to me to this day.

Jumping from the TV side to the music side, I had to be tenacious and surround myself with the right people, especially when you are starting off with not as much experience. Sometimes, people are afraid to ask, ‘What am I not doing right?’ but you need to hear that so you can grow in your career. That was helpful when I transitioned from being an assistant to being a music agent, because I was the one booking the dates and the one in charge of that territory.

What lessons have you learned that help in your day-to-day job?
Listening is so important, especially when you are working strategically. Our job is to fulfill the client’s vision, whether it’s their music, tour, or they are putting out a book or some other project. If you don’t really listen to what their vision is, you can’t enhance it or make it better. That happens in negotiations, too. If you can’t hear what the other person is trying to get from you, you can’t figure out how to negotiate that conversation.

How have you seen the touring world change during your career?
Ticketing is still a huge challenge. We are all still trying to figure out how to make it a better experience for the fans, and how to keep the secondary market from being such a problem. No one has the answers yet and that has certainly something that has consistently been a challenge. The other thing is, there are so many ways artists can release music now, which leads to more people touring, but it also requires you to be more strategic about how you are touring, and what other tours you are competing with. The volume has definitely changed. We have more headliner tours every year, so we are trying to make sure strategically that everyone is successful.

You also started the Talk The Talk series at WME, which helps foster connections and empowers women. How did that start?
I am a huge fan of Sheryl Sandberg, who wrote Lean In. That book inspired me. We needed to be doing more at our company and I wanted to be part of something like this. When I was first promoted, I was the third female agent in our country department. So I thought, we need to make sure we are supporting each other. We brought in speakers to talk about how they made it in their career fields. Every woman in our office, from intern to the most senior-level agent, is attending. We’ve had women speak who are leading companies, and entrepreneurial women in the industry. We’ve kept it internal, and it may turn into something outward-facing. Right now, we’ve just kept it for our WME staff.

Also, there is Women In Music at WME, for women working in music at all our WME offices. We started off doing weekly meetings and now it is every other week. We are doing mentorship programs, we are talking to non-profit organizations we want to support as a group. We all work together within the music department as part of the business, but now we have another core opportunity to come together to support each other as women.

What advice would you have given to yourself when you were first starting in the industry?
Keep your mind open to all opportunities that can come along. I was a super planner. I remember graduating college and thinking, ‘Ok, this is what my career is going to be like.’ I thought I knew my exact career path, which is so naïve. You don’t know what opportunity is going to come your way that might change your path, but don’t be afraid of it. I think people fear that if they get off their path and go explore something, that they can never get back, and that’s so not true. You have to follow your intuition. I never would have gotten to Nashville if I didn’t follow my passion for country music.

Rising Women On The Row: River House Artists’ Lynn Oliver-Cline

Lynn Oliver-Cline

River House Artists founder Lynn Oliver-Cline was recently announced as one of this year’s MusicRow Rising Women On The Row honorees. MusicRow will feature Q&As with each of this year’s six honorees leading up to the event. MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row for 2018 also includes Faithe Dillman, Leslie DiPiero, Becky Gardenhire, Annie Ortmeier, and Janet Weir.

In 2016, Oliver-Cline launched River House Artists, a creative firm that includes label, publishing and management, with flagship artist Luke Combs. Combs has since celebrated a Gold-certified album and two Platinum, No. 1 singles. River House Artists manages Faren Rachels, Drew Parker, and in publishing represents Ray Fulcher (who earned his first No. 1 single with Combs’ “When It Rains It Pours”), Driver Williams, Rob Williford and Parker. Early in her career, Oliver-Cline joined Virgin Records as Director, A&R, before teaming with BMI in writer/publisher relations. In 2007, she became day-to-day manager for Zac Brown Band at ROAR. In 2010, she launched the band’s Southern Ground Artists as General Manager, overseeing all label, publishing and management operations. In 2014, she joined Thirty Tigers as VP, Marketing, spearheading album launches for Jason Isbell, Lucinda Williams, and more.

MusicRow caught up with Oliver-Cline to discuss her music industry career, and advice she has for industry newcomers. MusicRow Magazine’s sold-out Rising Women On The Row event will be held Tuesday, March 27 at Omni Hotel Nashville.

MusicRow: Luke Combs has been one of the biggest breakthrough artists in recent years, and his headlining shows at the Ryman Auditorium got an incredible fan reaction. Has this fast success changed his overall marketing strategy in any way?

Lynn Oliver-Cline: I don’t think people expected him to be such an entertainer, but it just comes naturally for him. Then his voice is flawless. It’s effortless for him and it’s fun to watch. He’s on the same trajectory he’s always been on, it’s just happening a lot faster than we thought it would.

What were some of the biggest challenges you faced when opening River House?

I think the biggest thing is just overcoming yourself and your own fear, and believing you can do it. This is all I’ve ever done, besides now being a wife and a mom. You worry about taking risks, and about the financial piece of it. Also, just finding the right fit. When you start your own company, you want to find the people you want to work with, and that’s not always easy to find either. Fortunately, we are good on both of those counts.

Who have been some of your mentors in your career?

First and foremost, I’ve learned the most about talent scouting from producer Matt Serletic. I did A&R for him for a few years and he discovered Matchbox 20 and produced Gloriana and Willie Nelson. I feel like I can identify that raw talent and take it to the next level because of him.

Also, he makes epic records. He always taught me to think globally. You always have to be thinking and strategizing for the future.

What career lessons did you learn from your time working with Thirty Tigers and with Zac Brown Band?

No one is better at sales and marketing than David Macias. He is truly the master of marketing and sales. During my short time working with him, I learned I wanted to be like him, I just didn’t want to put out as many records, which is why I started my own company. At the time, his model was very high-volume and I just wanted to do one or two releases per year. I am thankful that I was able to talk to him about that and do that.

What advice would you have for women who are just getting into the music industry?

You have to be passionate and you have to work hard, but don’t lose yourself. Be open-minded and flexible, because this industry is changing so fast.

Arranger, Producer and Conductor Ronn Huff Passes


Musician, composer and arranger Ronn Huff died March 18. To honor his life, a service will be held at 2 p.m. on April 7 in Wightman Chapel at Scarritt Bennett in Nashville, with a time of visitation beginning at 1 p.m.

In 1973, Huff arranged and recorded Alleluia, A Praise Gathering which became the first Christian music recording to receive and RIAA Gold Album certification. He was the producer and principal conductor for the Nashville Symphony from 1994 until 2002. In 2005, he was inducted into the Gospel Music Association Hall of Fame. His arrangements can be heard on recordings by Faith Hill, Amy Grant, Celine Dion, Jewel, Martina McBride, Alison Krauss, Sandi Patty, Keith Urban, George Strait, Clint Black and Boston Pops. In 2011, he received the Golden Baton Award from the Nashville Symphony.

Huff was also a founding member of the Friends of the Arts at Belmont Board, whose members support the College of Visual and Performing Arts. In 2005, the Ronn and Donna Huff Endowed Scholarship was created to support a Belmont Music student majoring in Composition and Arranging.

Huff is the father of musicians/songwriters/producers Dann Huff and David Huff, and their brother Ronn Huff II.

Jeffrey Steele, Kent Blazy, Jesse Lee Set For Jesse Labelle Benefit Concert

Jeffrey Steele

Hit songwriters including Jeffrey Steele, Kent Blazy, Clint Daniels and Jesse Lee have joined the lineup for a concert to benefit Nashville singer-songwriter Jesse Labelle, who survived a Valentine’s Day crash while headed to a performance at University of Penn State Worthington Scranton. Labelle hit a patch of black ice, sending his care into a tailspin across four lanes of traffic, where it then landed on the side of the road and caught fire.

Labelle escaped the vehicle by kicking the door open but lost his touring van, instruments, sound equipment, merchandise and countless personal items in the accident. Now his friends and fellow songwriters are pulling together to help him raise funds to replace all the things necessary to get him back on the road.

The benefit concert will take place at Nashville’s Listening Room Cafe on Thursday, March 29. The show begins at 6 p.m., and admission is $10.

The full lineup includes Steele, Blazy, Daniels, Phil Barton, Lee, Forest Glen, Austin Burke, Sammy Arriaga, Michael Whitworth, Jaden Michaels, John Gurney, Ava Suppelsa and Lala.

Labelle is a singer/songwriter originally from Canada who has received gold records in his native country. Since moving to America, Labelle has won numerous songwriting competitions including the 2018 Music City Songstar contest for his upcoming single “Two Hearts And A Diamond.” He has opened for the likes of Keith Urban and Brad Paisley and will make his debut appearance at this year’s CMA Music Festival.

For tickets, visit listeningroomcafe.com.

Chattanooga’s Moon River Festival Sells Out In Under Eight Hours

Drew Holcomb and AC Entertainment’s 2018 Moon River Festival has sold out in less than eight hours.

The two-day event features 22 acts across two stages, and takes place on the banks of the Tennessee River at Coolidge Park in Chattanooga, TN on Sept. 8-9. The 2018 lineup features The Avett Brothers, The Head and the Heart, Drew Holcomb & The Neighbors, Judah & The Lion, Trampled By Turtles, Margo Price, Mavis Staples, I’m With Her, The Dirty Guv’nahs, Joseph, The Secret Sisters and more.

“I am overwhelmed and honored to announce that Moon River Festival 2018 is Sold Out, in just one day,” said Holcomb. “This is mind-boggling to me. I am humbled beyond words. We believe this festival will be one to remember for all time. The quality of the lineup, Coolidge Park in Chattanooga, and early September… all of these things are shaping up to deliver a memorable event for the ages. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for continuing to believe in this vision. We will see you in September!”