Lindsay Ell, Abby Anderson Play To Packed BMI Rooftop On The Row Crowd

Lindsay Ell and Kristian Bush. Photo by Nathan Zucker

Lindsay Ell and Abby Anderson rocked the rooftop at BMI Tuesday night (Aug. 21) during the fifth installment of BMI’s Rooftop On The Row summer concert series. Anderson kicked off the show with her single “Make Him Wait,” and special guest Kristian Bush joined Ell for her set just as the sun began to set over the skyline. The summer’s final rooftop show takes place Sept. 11

Abby Anderson.  Photo by Nathan Zucker

BMI’s Leslie Roberts, Kristian Bush, Lindsay Ell and BMI’s Michael Steinberg. Photo by Nathan Zucker

Ben Folds, Brenda Lee, Jeannie Seely, Ray Stevens Celebrate Stars On Music City Walk Of Fame

Trisha Yearwood with Jeannie Seely. Photos by Donn Jones.

On Tuesday (Aug. 21) in downtown Nashville, four artists were honored with stars on the Music City Walk of Fame. Ray Stevens, Brenda Lee, Jeannie Seely and Ben Folds received the 81st, 82nd, 83rd and 84th stars on the Walk of Fame. The four were recognized for significant contributions to preserving the musical heritage of Nashville and for contributing to the world through song (other industry collaboration).

Ricky Skaggs presented Stevens with the honor, while Trisha Yearwood and Carly Pearce were on hand to honor Seely.

“When I look at all the names on the Walk of Fame, it’s truly humbling to see mine included there,” Stevens said. “Thank you Nashville.”

“I’m honored to be a part of celebrating Jeannie Seely at the induction ceremony putting her star on the Music City Walk of Fame,” Yearwood said. “Jeannie continues to do so much for our industry, and I’m proud to call her my friend.”

“I am humbled by this recognition, and to know I have a place in history among my peers is truly astounding!  Hopefully those who are following our shared dreams will be inspired and encouraged by this walkway,” Seely said. ”Last year I saw the incredible respect given to those represented here. I can only hope that I have earned, and will continue to deserve that respect.”

Pictured (L-R) Ray Stevens, Ricky Skaggs. Photo: Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp

Brenda Lee. Photo: Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp

Ben Folds. Photo: Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp

Photo courtesy of Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp

Three Writers Celebrate First No. 1 With Luke Combs’ “One Number Away”

Pictured (L-R): BMI songwriter Robert Williford, Luke Combs, SESAC songwriter Sammy Mitchell, and ASCAP songwriter Steven Battey

Luke Combs just might be the country artist with the most chart impact right now that is also the most devoted to giving new songwriters a shot at a coveted No. 1 single.

As music industry members gathered on Tuesday (Aug. 21) at Nashville venue The Sutler to celebrate the Columbia Nashville/River House artist’s third No. 1 single, much praise went to Combs’ three co-writers, who were each celebrating their first No. 1 country single with “One Number Away.” “One Number Away” is Combs’ third consecutive No. 1 single from his debut album This One’s For You. Combs’ previous chart-topping singles, “Hurricane” and “When It Rains It Pours,” also marked the first No. 1 songs for Combs’ co-writers on those tracks.

BMI’s Leslie Roberts, ASCAP’s Beth Brinker, and SESAC’S ET Brown hosted the event to honor Combs and his co-writers Steven Battey, Sammy Mitchell, and Rob Williford.

Brinker celebrated Battey, a Georgia native who moved to Los Angeles and began street performing at age 19. Seven years later, Atlantic Records discovered his songwriting talent. Since then, Battey has written or produced for Justin Bieber, Madonna, Flo Rida, Bruno Mars and many others. He moved to Nashville three years ago, before earning his first country No. 1 song with “One Number Away.”

Battey also started the organization Singing for Superheroes, which brings awareness to kids with terminal illnesses. The first video as part of that program has earned more than 47 million views. ASCAP celebrated by giving Battey a Yeti cooler. First Tennessee Bank is ASCAP’s partner at No. 1 parties.

Brown celebrated Mitchell, offering him a Bose headset and speaker. Mitchell hails from Oklahoma City, where he led his rock band This City Lives, before moving to Nashville to attend Belmont University.

Roberts recalled how Williford first moved to Nashville in 2006, and eventually returned home. Then in 2013, he tried Nashville again, with a renewed focus on songwriting. Williford’s connection to Combs came via Combs’ college roommate’s mother, who was Williford’s high school science teacher. Rob also has “Don’t Tempt Me With A Good Time” on Combs’ debut album, plus two tracks on the deluxe album. “Beautiful Crazy,” another Williford co-write, hasn’t been released as a single, but it has already been certified Gold. Williford received a Taylor Guitar from BMI to celebrate his first No. 1 song.

“When you find your core group of co-writers, your people you come up with in the business, there is nothing more authentic or rewarding than celebrating No. 1s with them. It’s [Luke’s] co-writers’ first No. 1 singles, too,” Roberts said.

Other celebrating include Big Machine Music’s Mike Molinar, River House Artists’ Lynn Oliver-Cline, Concord Music’s Brad Kennard, Sony Music Nashville’s Shane Allen, and more.

Pictured (L-R): Sony Music Nashville’s Steve Hodges, Sony Music Nashville’s Shane Allen, MakeWake’s Zebb Luster, Big Machine’s Mike Molinar, River House’s Lynn Oliver-Cline, BMI songwriter Robert Williford, 50 Egg’s Jonathan Singleton, Luke Combs, ASCAP’s Beth Brinker, ASCAP songwriter/producer Steven Battey, SESAC songwriter Sammy Mitchell, SESAC’s ET Brown, Concord Music Publishing’s Brad Kennard, and BMI’s Leslie Roberts

Molinar pointed out Combs’ skyrocketing career success, which so far includes a Platinum debut album, several Gold- and Platinum-certified singles, and more than 1 billion streams.

“To watch Luke’s trajectory, it is mind-blowing,” said Molinar. “The best part is that it just flows through him and he keeps giving back. It’s not a surprise. This is what Luke is. We look forward to seeing so much more of it.”

“I sat down with Steven and Sammy and they had dreams of being able to come into this town and make a difference,” said Kennard. “This song was written in 2015. Again, to see this album come together and the momentum and see that this song made the album, it has been great to see both of them have their moment in the sun.”

“This is so surreal. We wrote this in a bedroom in a house when we had nothing going on in our careers,” Mitchell said.

“I can’t thank Luke enough for believing in this song,” Battey said. “He championed this song the whole way through. I called it. I said, ‘Bro, you’re dope.’ I’m very honored and humbled to be here.”

“The first time we played this song, we were performing in Asheville, and we had written it the week before,” Williford recalled. “I said, ‘Luke, why don’t we play it tonight?’ He was like, ‘We just wrote it, I don’t know the lyrics.’ So there is a video out there somewhere of Luke singing it, reading the lyrics from his cell phone. Going from that night—watching a crowd that had never heard it before—to watching 65,000 people singing it at Nissan Stadium in June, I’m absolutely honored and humbled to have been a front-row spectator.”

“I’m going to spit some dip in this cup here for a minute,” Combs said in his straightforward manner. “They told me to be authentic so I’m just trying to do that for you guys. In all seriousness, it is hard to believe when you are doing something like this. I want to deflect all the praise to my co-writers here. Thank you guys for believing in me. I had absolutely nothing going on when we were writing this song. It was at the point where I was like, ‘Thank you guys for even letting me cut a song we wrote together’ because it was at that point where it was like, ‘Well, someone else could probably [sing] it.

“Sony, you guys have been rock stars for me. Columbia Nashville, you are superstars. Thank you for helping spread our songs to 48 or 50 million people on country radio every week.” Combs also offered appreciation to those at CAA, River House, Big Machine Music and Jonathan Singleton’s 50 Egg Music, BMI and more.

In Pictures: David Lee Murphy, Kenny Chesney, Ricky Skaggs, Tenille Arts, Kip Moore

Reviver Records Presents David Lee Murphy And Kenny Chesney With Gold Certification

Pictured (L-R): David Lee Murphy, Reviver Records Founder/President/CEO David Ross and Kenny Chesney. Photo: Robin Majors

Reviver Records Founder, President and CEO David Ross presented David Lee Murphy and Kenny Chesney a Gold certification plaque for their No. 1 “Everything’s Gonna Be Alright” at MetLife Stadium Saturday night (Aug. 18). Murphy has been appearing at Chesney’s major stadium shows – singing the No. 1 hit, as well as his own “Party Crowd” and “Dust on the Bottle” –as well as performing his own dates to support his album No Zip Code.

 

Becky Perry Brown Celebrates Special Opry Anniversary For Late Husband Jim Ed Brown

Pictured (L-R): Becky Perry Brown, Ricky Skaggs.

Last Friday (Aug. 17), Jim Ed Brown‘s widow Becky Perry Brown was presented with a plaque for the 90th Anniversary of the Opry for her late husband, a member for over 50 years. The Whites joined Ricky Skaggs to perform the song Jim Ed requested three years ago in his hospital room, “The Old Rugged Cross.” Perry Brown also signed her book Going Our Way at the Opry shop.

 

“I Hate This” Newcomer Tenille Arts Opens For Kip Moore

Pictured (L-R): Tenille Arts, Kip Moore. Photo: Suzanne Durham

Reviver Records artist Tenille Arts chatted with headliner Kip Moore following her opening set at the WMUS Moose Fest in Muskegon recently. Arts’ popular single, “I Hate This,” impacts country radio on Monday, Aug 27. The debut single was written by Arts and Adam Wheeler, who also co-produced with Matt Rovey.

 

Beautifully Broken Preps Nationwide Release At The Factory At Franklin

Pictured (L-R): John Berry, Jenny Slate Lee, Plumb and CeCe Winans. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images for Beautifully Broken

Big Film Factory held a red carpet premiere of a new feature film, Beautifully Broken, at The Factory at Franklin theater on Aug. 20. Beautifully Broken will be released nationwide in over 600 theaters on August 24 with appearances in the film by Christian music legends including Toby McKeehan and Michael W. Smith. The red carpet reception also included film director Eric Welch, who has directed videos for artists like Kid Rock and Carrie Underwood, in addition to CeCe Winans, Plumb and John Berry, who perform the film’s title song, written by Plumb and Jenny Slate Lee.

Additional guests included Brandi Cyrus, NFL player Michael Oher, award-winning music and film producer Chuck Howard, rock artist Colton Dixon, music duo Louis York, gospel artist Larry Gatlin and singer Nicole C. Mullen. Beautifully Broken explores a refugee’s escape, a prisoner’s promise, and a daughter’s secret as three fathers fight to save their families.

 

‘LinkedIn For Musicians’ Jammcard Launches In Nashville

Jammcard Founder Elmo Lovano

Jammcard, the Los Angeles-based social network startup for musicians has successfully launched in Nashville. The Music Professionals Network has support from such musicians from outfits for Rascal Flatts, Kelsea Ballerini, Lady Antebellum, Kelly Clarkson, Florida Georgia Line, Big & Rich, Jack White and LeAnn Rimes. An invite-only celebration meant for the session players, songwriters and music professionals of music city was held last week with a signature JammJam events at the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum with attendees including:

Andy Wood (guitar) – Rascal Flatts
Jim Riley (drums) – Rascal Flatts
Travis Tory (pedal steel) – Rascal Flatts
Mike Hicks (keys) – Rascal Flatts
Yankton Mingua (utility) – Rascal Flatts
David Hodges (songwriter) – Keith Urban, Christina Perri, Kelly Clarkson, Blink 182)
Daru Jones (drums) – Jack White
Ray Luzier (drums) – Korn
Matt Payne (Music Director) – Kelsea Ballerini
Aben Eubanks (guitar) – Kelly Clarkson
Anna Renne (vox) – Kris Allen
Anthony Rankin (guitar/keys/banjo) – Thompson Square
Audra Mae (vox/songwriter) – Aviici, Kelly Clarkson
Anton Nesbit (bass) – LeAnn Rimes, India.Arie
Ayron Lewis (MD/ keys) – Kirk Franklin
Craig Young (bass) – Jewel, Lady Antebellum
Darius Mines (keys) – Jake Owen, Little Big Town
Derreck Phillips (drums) – Hank Williams Jr./ Michael McDonald
Eddie Robinson (guitar) – Florida Georgia Line
Rory Hoffman (guitar, keys, etc.) – Legend
J Bake (drums) – Mariah Carey
Jason Foster (MD) – Ludacris, T Pain
Keio Stroud (drums) – Big and Rich
Kris Meyers (drums) – Umphrey’s McGee
Loren Clarke (MD) – LeAnn Rimes
Luis Espaillat (bass) – Trace Adkins
Maureen Murphy (vox) – Zac Brown Band
Nick Arbuckle (bass) – Kelsea Ballerini
Phil Moore (bass) – (bass) – LeAnn Rimes, Mat Kearny
Robert Venable (producer) – Kelly Clarkson
Matt Menefee – (banjo) – Big and Rich

‘American Music Awards’ Partners With YouTube Music

dick clark productions has announced a multi-year partnership between the American Music Awards and YouTube Music, marking the first-ever presenting partnership of the show. Through this partnership, music enthusiasts can watch their favorite artists and pop culture icons come together to honor idols, newcomers and record-breakers in the contemporary music scene.

“YouTube Music’s partnership with The American Music Awards is a natural extension of the intimate artist-fan connection that is made possible on YouTube’s global platform,” said Angela Courtin, Director, Global Head of YouTube Music, TV and Originals Marketing. “The American Music Awards are the world’s largest fan-voted awards show and YouTube is the world’s largest platform for discovering music with more than 1 billion fans each month coming to be a part of music culture and engage with over 2 million artists who share their voices and art with the world.”

“YouTube brings global reach, awareness and engagement to the ‘American Music Awards’ unlike ever before,” said Mike Mahan, CEO, dick clark productions. “We look forward to enhancing the AMAs in a unique, innovative and immersive way.”

The 2018 American Music Awards will broadcast live from the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2018 at 8:00 p.m. ET on ABC.

Belmont University To Add 1,700-Seat Performing Arts Center

Nashville’s Belmont University is adding a world-class performing arts center to its ever-growing campus. The new project was announced Wednesday (Aug. 22) and will house a 1,700-seat multi-purpose theatre, a grand lobby and two contiguous event spaces that can hold more than 900 guests when combined with the lobby. The venue, which will be located between Bernard and Compton Avenue on Belmont Boulevard, is slated to open Fall 2021.

Classical concerts, operas, musical theatre performances, dance recitals, commercial showcases and more will be held in the Center’s Performance Hall to accommodate the diverse musical interests and talents of Belmont students. The facility will include a full fly space, wing space, orchestra pit, two forestage lifts, a trap room under the stage, and TV broadcast capabilities. 

In addition to its on-stage features, the facility will have a warm-up room for dance or choral use, various sized dressing rooms, a green room, a scene dock, a loading dock and a green roof to assist with water quality filtration, among other sustainable components, as the project will pursue LEED certification.

“Our goal is to build the finest music performance hall on any college campus in the world, and I couldn’t be more pleased,” said Belmont President Dr. Bob Fisher. “I have dreamed of the creation of this facility since I first came to Belmont in 2000. Along with the Massey Performing Arts Center, Troutt Theater & McAfee Concert Hall, the addition of this venue completes our campus’s performance facilities, creating the most extensive suite of venues of any other institution of higher education.”

Loretta Lynn To Release New Album Sept. 28

Loretta Lynn

Loretta Lynn is releasing a new studio album, Wouldn’t It Be Great, on Sept. 28. Produced by her daughter Patsy Lynn Russell and John Carter Cash and recorded at the Cash Cabin Studio in Hendersonville, Tennessee, the new album is comprised entirely of songs written or co-written by Lynn. The album positions new compositions alongside soulful reinterpretations of enduring classics from her catalog. The Legacy Recordings project includes three tracks co-penned by Lynn and Shawn Camp. The collection was set to release in 2017, but was postponed after health issues.

“This new record means so much to me, but this last year I had to focus on my health and I decided to hold up the release,” said Loretta. “I’m feelin’ good and look forward to it comin’ out. It was really important to me to be a part of it being released and I’m excited to celebrate with everybody!”

“Wouldn’t It Be Great?” is the last song Loretta wrote for her late husband Oliver “Doolittle” Lynn. “That song just always meant so much to me,” said Russell, “because of the lyrics, you know, ‘when my fancy lace couldn’t turn your face,’ it was just so powerful and was a song that needed to be recorded for this album with Loretta. It shows just how masterful my mom is with writing down her feelings.”

Lynn will also be featured with track on King of the Road,’ a two-disc tribute LP for Roger Miller, set for release Aug. 31. Lynn will sing “Half A Mind.”

 

Loretta Lynn Wouldn’t It Be Great Track Listing:
1. Wouldn’t It Be Great? (written by Loretta Lynn)
2. Ruby’s Stool (written by Loretta Lynn, Shawn Camp)
3. I’m Dying for Someone to Live For (written by Loretta Lynn, Shawn Camp)
4. Another Bridge to Burn (written by Loretta Lynn, Lola Jean Dillon)
5. Ain’t No Time to Go (written by Loretta Lynn, Patsy Lynn Russell)
6. God Makes No Mistakes (written by Loretta Lynn)
7. These Ole Blues (written by Loretta Lynn, Patsy Lynn Russell)
8. My Angel Mother (written by Loretta Lynn)
9. Don’t Come Home a Drinkin’ (written by Loretta Lynn, Peggy Sue Wells)
10. The Big Man (written by Loretta Lynn, Shawn Camp)
11. Lulie Vars (Traditional, arrangement by Loretta Lynn)
12. Darkest Day (written by Loretta Lynn)
13. Coal Miner’s Daughter (written by Loretta Lynn)

Exclusive: Brad Belanger Talks Building Careers For Sam Hunt, Dustin Lynch

Brad Belanger

Artist manager Brad Belanger parlayed experience in concert booking and doing photography/video work into managing star acts such as Sam Hunt and Dustin Lynch.

Growing up in Virginia in the early ‘90s, Belanger was immersed in the DIY music culture embraced by teen punk rock bands in the area. In addition to handling lead vocals and guitar for a local band, Belanger started his own indie label at age 15.

“I liked booking the shows, making the fliers, designing the T-shirts and how the invites looked,” Belanger tells MusicRow. “I was way more into that than writing great songs or practicing. It was very much a mentality of having your own label, booking your own shows, and tapes and mailing lists,” he recalls. “I was very lucky to grow up with that mentality in Virginia because it’s kind of the template that I’m doing now, almost 30 years later, just with the internet now.”

After attending Middle Tennessee State University, he began working with APA’s Steve Lassiter, before transitioning into doing photography and video work. That strategic move would bring a host of career opportunities, including his management role with Sam Hunt, the artist behind the 5x Platinum-selling single “Body Like A Back Road” and 3x Platinum-selling album Montevallo.

For more on artist management and the teams behind some of Nashville’s biggest artists, pick up a copy of MusicRow’s current Artist Roster print issue.

MusicRow: How did you transition from concert booking into doing photography and video work?

Belanger: I wanted to be a little more hands on with music. Right around that time the internet was popping up with YouTube and MySpace and everything. Marketing music digitally was just starting to form and I thought, “That encompasses everything I love.” I quit the booking agent job and picked up a video camera and some video editing and graphic design software. I taught myself in my late 20s how to do that. I knew that would be a major part of marketing music.

MR: What was your first job doing video?

Belanger: The very first person who ever hired me was a 17-year-old Taylor Swift. They hired me to make a behind-the-scenes video clip for “Teardrops On My Guitar,” and soon after that Keith Urban and his team hired me. They were one of the first to hire a full-time photographer and videographer on staff, and I did that for Keith for about five years.

MR: Is that how you were introduced to Sam Hunt?

Belanger: Yeah, that introduced me to Sam, through [the Hunt-penned hit for Urban] “Cop Car.” I loved his music and this was back before he had a record deal, and he’d never played a live show. He had no photos taken, and he was just coming up on the idea of being an artist when he and I met. He said, “I need some headshots and I want to do some video stuff.” He sent me some demos of “House Party” and “Take Your Time” and everything, and I loved it so much I said I would do it. We hung out and talked about things we loved and after about a month, he was like, “Man, you’d be a great manager. I’m looking for a manager.” So I quit working with Keith and began working with Sam.

Sam Hunt and Brad Belanger. Photo: Courtesy Brad Belanger

MR: You first began managing Sam when he had no label, no previous manager. How does what he needed from you then as a manager differ from what he needs from you now as a manager?

Belanger: When we first started, I took every photo and directed probably the first five music videos—shot and directed and edited. Designed the cover for Montevallo. The first few years I as very hands-on with building the brand. As his career grew, people I was inspired by visually, we were able to call on those people and bring in big directors from England. They came to Nashville for the first time and began shooting the videos. We transitioned from doing the creative to now overseeing and becoming more of a traditional manager.

In the beginning there was just five of us and a van. We did everything on the cheap because we didn’t have any money. Now there are 50 employees and it’s a huge company and I’ve transferred into managing that whole company. It’s a lot more 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and a lot less 7 p.m. – 2 a.m.

MR: Sam Hunt is a songwriter at heart. As a manager, how do you balance his need for time and space to be creative, with a music cycle that now constantly demands new music?

Belanger: I don’t balance that. I look at it the same way [Red Light Management’s] Coran Capshaw looks at it. We go play the poker game and Sam gives us the cards to play. The cards are the songs. For me, I absolutely respect his process and how he wants to do it and how long he wants to take.

From day one when we were living on credit cards and driving in a van and dead broke, we always said, “We will leave money on the table. We will not think about money first or chase it, and we will not feel bad for taking time off for being with our families.” This year he’s playing 25 shows. Last year he played 45 shows. With [Belanger’s management client] Dustin Lynch, he plays 100 shows. But the number of shows doesn’t matter to us.

MR: How does it differ working with Dustin, who had an image and career already built before you started working with him, versus working with Sam, whose career you helped build from the ground up?

Belanger: I’m just such a fan of Dustin as a person. He’s one of those people you love to be around. He has a great work ethic. Everybody wants to see him succeed. He just needs a few more pieces put together to really step to that next level. That’s what really attracted me to work with him. I am just interested to come in at this point in his career—six or seven years in—and see how I can help and refine a few things.

MR: Can you elaborate on what things you want to refine?

Belanger: My team is able to help define his brand a little more. He had started doing that already right before I came along, with his daily video blogs. Everybody knows he has five No. 1s and he has hits, but when you ask someone, “Who is he?” they have a little more of an ambiguous answer. My goal is to really define who Dustin Lynch is as an individual. Then as a fan, you are not only a fan of the songs, but you are a fan of him as a person. Luke Bryan fans are fans of Luke Bryan. Same thing with Sam Hunt or Carrie Underwood. They love Carrie, not just a group of songs. They love her. So I’m just trying to shine more light on who he is.

MR: Is the album format dead?

Belanger: No, I think it is still alive and well. When it is needed, it’s needed. It’s not needed all the time. Some people I look at and go, “Dude, no one was waiting on another album. Don’t put one out. Just put four good songs out.” There is a time and a place. Obviously, Sam Hunt last year, where he was at in his life and career, just putting one enormous song out did just fine. We sold every concert ticket and every piece of merch. But it was coming off Montevallo.

MR: Will The Nashional Music Festival still happen?

Belanger: Absolutely. We just ran into some hiccups as far as licensing. We’ve still got it on the dashboard and ready to pull at any time, but we all decided the next most important thing is a record. Let’s focus on finishing the record and then jumping off of that might be the best time to do this festival.

The best thing we can do right now is follow up Montevallo with a great 10-song record with a bunch of hits on it.

MR: When will the album come out?

Belanger: Probably not this year. Next year would be the goal.

MR: Who have been your biggest mentors, and what has been the best advice they haven given you?

Belanger: Coran Capshaw and [CAA’s] Darin Murphy as well. He was the first person I called when I thought about quitting work with Keith to go work for Sam. They give big-picture, long-term advice. In the first few years coming up, everything was a desperate struggle to keep our vision true and to make people in love with it. This is a long-term business and you don’t have to fight every day. Not every battle needs to be a blood-and-guts battle.

Special Opry Evening Filled With Milestones For Dustin Lynch, Trace Adkins, Dillon Carmichael

Trace Adkins with Dustin Lynch. Photo by Chris Hollo for Grand Ole Opry

Dustin Lynch became the latest artist invited to join the Grand Ole Opry family Tuesday night (Aug. 21) during a momentous set of Opry shows that also saw Trace Adkins celebrating his 15-year Opry anniversary and Dillon Carmichael making his debut on the revered stage.

Adkins invited Lynch to become an official part of the Opry family, remarking, “Being a member of the Grand Ole Opry is at the top of my list of achievements in my career and always will be. We want people to be members of the Grand Ole Opry that will have a respect for this institution that it deserves, that it has earned for 92 years. We think that Dustin Lynch is going to carry on in that proud tradition.”

“Thank you! I wish you weren’t so big. I wanted to pick you up, but I couldn’t!” responded a thrilled Lynch, who will officially be inducted as an Opry member on Sept. 18.

Earlier in the evening Opry member Eddie Montgomery introduced his nephew Dillon Carmichael for his Opry debut appearance, with Carmichael’s mom Becky Montgomery performing backing vocals during his performance. The night was doubly special for Carmichael, who had once worked in security at the Opry but had not allowed himself to step inside the Opry’s famed circle of wood center stage until his official debut.

Longtime Opry Entertainment Group President Steve Buchanan also celebrated his retirement during the evening with remarks by Opry member Vince Gill along with friends, family and Opry members during a backstage reception.

Pictured: Trace Adkins with UMG Nashville ‘s Mike Dungan. Photos by Chris Hollo and Rachael Black for Grand Ole Opry

Pictured (L-R): Garth Brooks, Jeannie Seely,Steve Buchanan, Sally Williams & Trisha Yearwood. Photos by Chris Hollo and Rachael Black for Grand Ole Opry.

ASCAP Christian Awards To Honor Twila Paris, Gospel Music Association

The heart of Nashville’s Christian music community will come together on Monday, Oct. 15, at The Franklin Theatre in downtown Franklin, Tennessee, when The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) presents its prestigious ASCAP Golden Note Award to acclaimed singer, songwriter and author Twila Paris at the 40th annual ASCAP Christian Music Awards. ASCAP will also honor the Gospel Music Association (GMA) with the ASCAP Partners in Music Award at the invitation-only gala.

“Twila has a gift for creating beautiful music and words that can inspire people to dance and rejoice or bring comfort to them in trying times. She has composed a moving body of work that resonates deeply with her listeners,” said ASCAP President Paul Williams. “We are delighted to present Twila Paris with this richly deserved ASCAP Golden Note Award.”

With 33 No. 1 singles from 22 albums, songwriter-artist Twila Paris has made a lasting mark on Christian music, paving the way for many Christian female vocalists and worship leaders. Paris released her first full-length album in 1981 and since then has written books, recorded children’s music, and created timeless worship songs. In the span of a decade, Paris was the recipient of 10 Dove Awards, including the 1995 GMA Song of the Year for “God Is In Control” and the 1992 GMA Praise and Worship Album of the Year for Sanctuary. Churches across America have recognized several of Paris’s songs in hymnals, and congregations can be heard singing her works such as “He Is Exalted,” “We Bow Down,” “Lamb of God” and “How Beautiful.”

The ASCAP Golden Note Award is presented to songwriters, composers and artists who have achieved extraordinary career milestones. Past recipients include Mark Lowry, Michael W. Smith, Bob McDill, Don Williams, Mary Mary, Reba McEntire and many more.

The Gospel Music Association takes home the ASCAP Partners in Music Award for playing a key role in bringing attention to the music of Christian songwriters. Founded in 1964, the organization aims to preserve the legacies of those that have blazed the trail for gospel music through the GMA Foundation and the GMA Gospel Music Hall of Fame. The GMA’s annual Dove Awards promotes and brings awareness to the best and brightest in the Christian and Gospel music industry. The ASCAP Partners in Music Award recognizes an ASCAP-licensed organization which has shown exceptional dedication in presenting ASCAP members’ music to the public.

“ASCAP has always been able to count on the Gospel Music Association for its commitment to exposing the endless variety of Christian music to audiences everywhere,” said Williams. “Through its awards shows and many other programs, the GMA is a touchstone for the Christian and gospel music industry.”

The 2018 ASCAP Christian Music Awards will recognize the writers and publishers of the most-performed songs in Christian music, and features special performances by today’s most popular artists and songwriters in the genre. Top awards go to ASCAP Christian Music Songwriter of the Year, Song of the Year and Publisher of the Year. Recent ASCAP Christian Music Awards honorees include Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith, Matthew West, Joel Smallbone (For King & Country), David Garcia, Ben Glover, Colby Wedgeworth, Brown Bannister and many others.