Music Row’s United Artists Tower To Become 184-Room Boutique Hilton Hotel

50 Music Square West, Nashville, Tennessee.

Nashville’s United Artists Tower, owned by Sai Ram 009 LLC and located at 50 Music Square West, is set to become a 184-room boutique upscale hotel under Tapestry Collection by Hilton Brand. Work on the 56,700-square-foot building is slated to begin at the end of this year, with an opening set for 2020.

The hotel will feature a 360-degree rooftop bar, and the owners are enthusiastic about revitalizing the property and reinforced the importance of partnering with individuals, like Hotel Equities and Tapestry Collection by Hilton, who share in their desire to provide a unique experience for visiting guests, and to pay homage to the building’s history.

The octagon-shaped United Artists Tower was originally constructed in 1974 by two members of Elvis Presley’s backup band, The Jordanaires, and served as office and recording studio space for decades. At nine stories tall, it remains the tallest building on Music Row, affording 360 degree views of Music City.

“We are proud to partner with this ownership group and Hilton,” said Joe Reardon, Sr. VP of Business Development for HE. “During initial conversations about the project, we were impressed with the passion and enthusiasm the owners displayed in regard to preserving the unique and important history of the building. We felt aligned with them right away and share in their excitement to bring the new hotel to Music Row.”

“We are excited to partner with Hotel Equities to revitalize a building with such a storied past into a vibrant hotel that will be an ideal addition to the growing Tapestry Collection portfolio,” said Jenna Hackett, global head, Tapestry Collection by Hilton. “The original style and offerings of this forthcoming hotel will truly encapsulate the spirit of the city and will be one of the first Tapestry Collection properties in the great city of Nashville.”

Ed Sheeran Joins Devin Dawson’s Bluebird Cafe Show

Devin Dawson had planned for three songwriters to join him for his Bluebird Cafe show in Nashville last night (Oct. 9), including his “I Can’t Trust Myself Alone With You” duet partner Jillian Jacqueline, as well as British singer-songwriter Amy Wadge and former Evanescence vocalist and “Placebo” co-writer David Hodges.

However, Dawson and company got a surprise when pop superstar Ed Sheeran was spotted in the tiny crowd packed into the Bluebird Cafe. Wadge co-wrote Sheeran’s 2014 Grammy-winning hit “Thinking Out Loud,” and he joined in for a performance of the song. Sheeran performed at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium on Oct. 6.

“Last night I played The Bluebird Cafe for the first time,” said Dawson. “For a guy who has revered Nashville, country music and songwriting for so long, this was such a HUGE moment for me. I was surrounded by the people I love and admire and we poured our hearts and souls out like only the Bluebird’s atmosphere would allow. We told stories, played songs people recognized and also surprised everyone with songs (and guests) they might not have expected. The imperfections were perfect and the vibe was truly abundant. Thank you so much to The Bluebird Cafe and my Nashville family for yet another reminder that I am indeed in the right place at the right time. What a surreal night I will never forget!”

 

Country Music Is China’s Fourth Most Popular Genre, According To 2018 IFPI Report

The 2018 Music Consumer Insight Report has been issued by IFPI (The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry), finding country music is China’s fourth most popular genre. Country did not make the world’s top genres, however singer/songwriter came in at No. 6.

“This report looks at how music soundtracks the many parts of our day and how this love of music is also driving fans’ growing adoption of technologies. From smartphones to smart speakers, music is a force ushering in these connected devices that are being taken up globally,” says Frances Moore, Chief Executive, IFPI.

The report also notes the average consumer spends 2.5 hours listening to music each week, globally, among many other statistics. The report was put together by an online population of 16-64 year olds in 20 territories between April-May 2018, which accounted for 91.3 percent of global recorded music market revenues in 2017.

Industry Ink: Warner/Chappell Production Music, CMHoF, Anita Cochran

Warner/Chappell Production Music’s Kautz Joins Production Music Association Board

Warner/Chappell Production Music’s Director of Operations, Marcia Kautz, is now a board member of the Production Music Association.

“The Production Music Association has long been the advocate of the production music industry as a whole,” says Marcia. “I am excited to have been elected to the board and to get started with the excellent team of professionals that drive this industry.”

Kautz is Director of Operations for Warner/Chappell Production Music, a leader in worldwide music licensing. Her responsibilities span the departments of finance, human resources, operations, licensing administration, and business development. She has over 20 years of music industry experience, ranging from record label admin to publishing and finance. Her varied experience from within multiple aspects of the industry informs her leadership, whether working closely with staff or overseeing large-scale licensing and revenue opportunity negotiations with partners and clients.

 

Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Adds Director Of Public Relations

The Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum has added Kelly McGlumphy to the museum’s staff, as director of public relations. In her role, McGlumphy leads the communications efforts for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Hatch Show Print, RCA Studio B, the Haley Gallery, and the CMA Theater. Her responsibilities include the overarching strategy and management of media relations and corporate communications for the organization.

She has nearly two decades of experience in the non-profit, agency and corporate sectors, McGlumphy most recently served as public relations senior manager for GOJO Industries, where she was responsible for public relations and social media strategy for the GOJO and PURELL brands. The Cleveland native began her career in media relations for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. McGlumphy, who is accredited by the Public Relations Society of America, holds a bachelor’s degree in communications from John Carroll University and a master’s degree in integrated marketing communication from West Virginia University.

 

Anita Cochran Performs “Fight Like A Girl” on Good Morning America

Good Morning America’s Robin Roberts with Anita Cochran Photo: ABC/Paula Lobo

Two weeks after completing her final chemotherapy treatment and mere hours before Anita Cochran performed her new power anthem “Fight Like A Girl”on Good Morning America she found herself in the hospital after sustaining a fall on the rainy streets of New York City and breaking two ribs.

Cochran, true to the words of her own song, ‘fought like a girl’ through the pain and no sleep for what would become one of her most emotional and powerful performances of her career as she rallied breast cancer patients and patients right in the middle of Times Square. Good Morning America and ABC News saying, “The singing sensation and breast cancer survivor rocks Times Square with her inspiring anthem.”

 

Atlantic’s First Female A&R Exec Dorothy Carvello Releases #MeToo Story In Book, ‘Anything For A Hit’

Dorothy Carvello has come a long way from her first post as secretary for Ahmet Ertegun, Atlantic Record’s co-founder and president, who signed such notable acts as Aretha Franklin and Led Zeppelin, negotiated distribution deals with Mick Jagger, and added Neil Young to Crosby, Stills & Nash. Carvello’s career led her to becoming the first female A&R executive at Atlantic Records, and one of the few women ‘in the room’ at RCA and Columbia.

In her book Anything For A Hit: An A&R Woman’s Story of Surviving the Music Industry, released in September, Carvello speaks her truth regarding the daily abuse and harassment she faced working under Ahmet Ertegun, as well as other kingmakers of the music industry.

The book claims to feature never-before-heard stories about artists such as Michael Jackson, Madonna, Steven Tyler, Bon Jovi, INXS, Marc Anthony, Phil Collins, and others. It touts its release as a must-read for anyone who has ever wondered what it’s really like to be a woman in a male-dominated industry.

Carvello penned the book before the #metoo movement launched, and recounts personal stories about her experience as a woman in a male-saturated music industry. She specifically focuses on the sexual harassment and abuse she received daily while working as Ertegun’s secretary.

Carvello’s book is available now for purchase on Amazon.

Mitchell Tenpenny To Divulge ‘Secrets’ In December

Mitchell Tenpenny will release his debut album, Telling All My Secrets, on Friday, Dec. 14. The album will include his breakthrough debut single, “Drunk Me,” which has earned more than 77 million on-demand streams and has surpassed 500,000 downloads in the U.S. The title track “Telling All My Secrets” is available now with pre-order of the project.

“The secret is out,” Tenpenny shared directly with fans yesterday. “So thankful to finally share what I’ve been working on with y’all.”

Growing up on Music Row under the watchful eye of his grandmother, first female CEO of Sony/ATV Music Publishing, Donna Hilley, Tenpenny is no stranger to the Music Row writing rooms, where he crafted his major label debut. He penned 56 songs in preparation for the album, narrowing it down to 11 tracks that tell his story, including Top 15 single “Drunk Me,” fan favorite “Alcohol You Later” and, exclusively to digital and vinyl, the polarizing track “Bitches.”  The tracks were featured on Tenpenny’s self-titled EP, which has garnered more than 91 million on-demand audio and video streams.

“I’m proud of the success of a track like ‘Bitches.’ It is always a favorite at our shows but for a new listener I understand it could be a bit divisive. The song isn’t about girls or guys, it is about cheaters and liars and haters and bullies. I hate bullies and I hate people that pick on others,” says Tenpenny of the song. “Sometimes there is only one word for a certain emotion. In this case it was bitch. I’m excited to ‘share all my secrets’ on this album so fans get the full picture of what I’m about.”

Telling All My Secrets Track Listing:
1. Truck I Drove in High School | Mitchell Tenpenny/Jordan Schmidt/Andrew Albert/Devin Dawson
2. Alcohol You Later | Mitchell Tenpenny/Sam Sumser/Michael Lotten
3. All On You | Mitchell Tenpenny/Andrew Albert/Nick Fradiani/Jordan Schmidt
4. Goner | Mitchell Tenpenny/Andrew Albert/Jordan Schmidt
5. Chance Worth Taking | Mitchell Tenpenny/Josh Hoge/Matthew McVaney
6. I Get The Picture | Mitchell Tenpenny/Alex Kline/Michael Whitworth
7. Drunk Me | Mitchell Tenpenny/Jordan Schmidt/Justin Wilson
8. Somebody’s Got Me | Mitchell Tenpenny/Hillary Lindsey/Jordan Schmidt
9. Somebody Ain’t You | Mitchell Tenpenny/Thomas Archer/Dallas Wilson
10. Telling All My Secrets | Mitchell Tenpenny/Jordan Minton/Dallas Wilson
11. Walk Like Him | Mitchell Tenpenny/Justin Ebach/Steven Dale Jones

Exclusive: Dan+Shay’s Dan Smyers Talks CMA Nominations, Crafting The Perfect “Tequila”

Dan+Shay. Photo: Patrick Tracy

Dan+Shay’s mammoth hit “Tequila” has been a mainstay on both country radio and Hot AC this year, with its smooth dynamics and aching vocals.

The song has surpassed 100 million streams on Spotify, and has earned more than 260 million on-demand streams. The track spent multiple weeks atop the country radio charts. In August, on the heels of the No. 1 party for “Tequila,” the duo headlined a block party in Nashville for 10,000 fans.

The smash also brought the the duo’s Dan Smyers and Shay Mooney multiple nominations at the upcoming Country Music Association Awards in November, including Music Video of the Year, Single of the Year and Song of the Year. They are also nominated for Duo of the Year.

“It’s funny because we were the ones who announced them with Luke Bryan and Sugarland,” Smyers tells MusicRow. “I probably looked like a fool when our names were called, because you never go into it expecting that. We knew the song had a great impact, but there is a lot of great music and it’s a very hot time for the country format. For our name to be called a few times is a cool thing. We worked super hard on that song and the album, so it was a great validation. To be accepted by our peers and be nominated by our peers is just awesome. It’s a win just to be nominated.

“And getting a free ticket to the show! Those tickets are expensive,” he quips. “We know, we just bought some for our families.”

“Tequila” is one of three songs this year to be nominated in both the Song and Single of the Year categories at the upcoming Country Music Association awards. While the Single of the Year honors commercial success, the Song of the Year accolade tends to honor songs on the basis of songwriting quality.

“It’s fun to have both of those nominations because they do honor very different things. Those are always two of our favorite categories,” Smyers says. “We moved here to be songwriters. That’s our first love. We love being artists and doing shows, but part of that is being able to hear and feel fans singing our songs back to us, or hearing it on country radio. Being an artist is a vehicle for our true passion, which is being songwriters. To be in both of those categories is crazy.”

He gives credit to his “Tequila” co-writers, Nicolle Galyon and Jordan Reynolds. “To be in the song category with two of my favorite writers. Jordan Reynolds, we live like next door to each other so we are always working on songs like three or four days per week, and he’s about to be the next ultimate breakout songwriter star. The first day I ever wrote with him a few years ago, I texted my publisher and said, ‘This guy is about to take over Nashville.’ And then Nicolle, who is just prolific and genius. We’ve worked with her on a few of our albums and she’s incredible.”

Smyers co-wrote the track in early 2017. He says “Tequila” garnered interest from other artists in the Nashville community looking to record the song, but Smyers elected to hold on to it, knowing he had something special.

Smyers knows well the hold frenzy that comes when the songwriting community hears a great song; Dan+Shay had attempted to put another hit, “Break Up In The End,” on hold. The song would later be recorded by Cole Swindell.

“With ‘Break Up In The End,’ someone sent me that demo and said, ‘This song was just written,’ and I thought, ‘This is a Song of the Year, I’m putting it on hold.’ And right when I sent that email back, they said, ‘Hey sorry you’ve got the second hold on it. Cole just put it on hold.’ We were hoping he would cut a different song, but those things happen.”

Though the duo’s tight-knit vocals make “Tequila” sound effortless, Smyers recalls the weeks he spent in the studio, crafting “Tequila” to match his sonic vision.

“I worked so hard on that track. I think there were like 140 tracks in my Pro Tools session,” says Smyers, who worked with co-producer Scott Hendricks and mixer Jeff Juliano.

“In the studio we cut at Ocean Way with a great band. On the demo, we had a piano start it off, but I wanted to have an acoustic guitar because I could see the video in my head of a heartbroken person walking up to the mic and singing it. We tracked it at 80 beats per minute, six bpms slower than we have it on the album. I finished up a rough track and we did a scratch vocal on it, and something didn’t feel right to it,” he recalls.

Smyers collected the bare bones recordings made for the track, working feverishly to revamp it. “I basically took everything that was recorded and I sped up all the band instruments and I asked Jordan to send me the midi from his piano on the original demo, which was in a different key. I transposed it and subbed that piano back into my track with the band and it was magic. That was the missing thing. That original piano in the demo, there was something haunting and ethereal about it. It was still dynamic and a ballad but it had more energy.”

Smyers’ hours of painstaking work to get the exact sound he was looking for has paid off, as “Tequila” has transcended the country charts, crossing over into the Top 15 on radio’s Hot AC chart, a milestone Smyers appreciates for opening up the possibility of more fans to gravitate toward country music.

“The crossover of ‘Tequila’ has been really cool because we haven’t abandoned our sound. That’s a song you could hear at The Listening Room or the Bluebird or any writer’s round. It’s a Nashville song, four chords and the truth on this one. When it gets to the mainstream and it’s on Hot AC or Top 40 it’s an honor for us, because we know someone is listening to that station that may not have heard country music before.”

“Speechless,” the duo’s follow-up to “Tequila,” has also earned nearly 80 million on-demand streams and has sold 600,000 track equivalents. The official music video, featuring footage from each of their real-life weddings, has reached nearly 20 million views.

A songwriter at heart, Smyers says he and Mooney are always in the studio working on new music. “Even though as artists we are on record cycles, we still write songs. Literally, I think the day after our album came out, we were still writing and we had writers on the road with us. It’s nonstop. We are hashing out demos and working out ideas for what could be the next project.

“It’s interesting because we’ve had some success and got a fanbase and the attention of a lot of people. It puts more pressure on you, because more people are listening now. Your fans will check it out at midnight when [new music] comes out, so you owe it to those fans to deliver the best music you possibly can.”

Badflower’s “Ghost” Claims Top Active Rock Chart Spot

Badflower. Photo: Tyler Shields

Badflower has topped the Active Rock Radio Mediabase Chart with their first No. 1 single “Ghost.” The inaugural act on Big Machine/John Varvatos Records has captured audiences across the airwaves and online with the song’s thought-provoking video and lyrics that touch on the sober topic of suicide.

“I didn’t even think the song would make the album but to see the connection it has made with so many people has been amazing,” said Badflower frontman Josh Katz. “We have the most talented and dedicated team in the industry to thank for this. And all of you who connected with the song, requested it at your radio station, came to a show. So much love for everyone. Dream come true for sure. We’re ready for whatever comes next.”

The tune is available now at all digital and streaming services, and is currently on featured playlists such as Apple Music’s The New Rock and the A-List: Hard Rock, Spotify’s Rock This & The New Alt, as well as Amazon’s Introducing Rock. Pandora also ranked Badflower No. 1 on their Predictions Chart, which is determined by activity across all major social music sites.

The band is currently on the road supporting From Ashes To New’s The Future Is Now Tour 2018. Later this fall, they will support The Wrecks on their U.S. tour and select dates with A Perfect Circle while also headlining several shows and appearing at numerous music festivals. They will also join Nothing More’s The Truth Tour in 2019.

NBC Greenlights Songwriter Competition ‘Songland,’ With Shane McAnally And Ryan Tedder

NBC has green lighted the upcoming songwriter competition Songland, ordering an 11-episode first season of the series. Songland will offer undiscovered songwriters a chance to create a hit song. The first episode will include singer-songwriter-producer Shane McAnally, as well as OneRepublic’s Ryan Tedder, recording artist Charlie Puth, and songwriter Ester Dean.

Each episode will offer five contestants the chance to work with producers and an artist on new music, and one winner per episode will have his or her song released as an artist’s next single, according to NBC. The series is executive produced by Maroon 5’s Adam Levine and Eurythmics co-founder Dave Stewart.

Songland will be produced by Live Animals in association with Universal Television Alternative Studio, Dave Stewart Entertainment and 222 Productions. Levine and 222 Productions are represented by Irving Azoff, Adam Harrison for management and WME for film and television.

“Songwriters shape the anthems and tell the stories of each generation, and now we’re pulling back the curtain on the collaborative process and opening the door for new talent to emerge,” said Meredith Ahr, president of Universal Television Alternative Studio. “While filming our first episode, the excitement was palpable as we witnessed the creative direction of our panelists transform and elevate the music right before our eyes. Without a doubt, Songland will inspire music lovers and give us all a greater appreciation for the songs we love.”

The series is currently seeking submissions at songlandcasting.com.

George Strait Adds Two More T-Mobile Vegas Shows In February

(Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images for George Strait)

George Strait is headed back to Vegas in the New Year, with two more Strait To Vegas shows slated for Feb. 1- 2, 2019, at the T-Mobile Arena. The dates follow the success of 18 previous “Strait to Vegas” shows, with two more still slated for December of this year.

Special guest Ashley McBryde will open the two February shows, and tickets go on sale Friday, Oct. 19 via StraitToVegas.com.

The “Strait to Vegas” series began with six shows in 2016 and extended with 10 more in 2017. In 2018, Strait headlined Bayou Country Superfest to a sold-out Mercedes Benz Superdome crowd in New Orleans, Louisiana, two nights in Tulsa, and one night in Austin. The music legend will play his final shows of 2018 this Dec. 7 and 8 in Las Vegas at T-Mobile Arena.