Tortuga Music Festival Unveils Next From Nashville Stage Lineup

Rock The Ocean’s Tortuga Music Festival has revealed the lineup for its brand new “Next From Nashville” stage. Set for April 12-14 in Fort Lauderdale Beach Park, Abby Anderson, Gabby Barrett, Travis Denning, Everette, Filmore, Lauren Jenkins, Caroline Jones, Levon, Walker McGuire, Logan Mize, Seaforth, Natalie Stovall, Tenille Townes, Rachel Wammack and Waterloo Revival will all perform on the festival’s inaugural “Next from Nashville” stage, bringing more acts to the waterfront festival than ever before.

The up-and-comers will join headliners Jason Aldean, Kenny Chesney and Thomas Rhett and performers Flo Rida, Joan Jett and The Blackhearts, Elle King, Dustin Lynch, Maren Morris and more at the oceanside festival, which was established in 2013 to raise funds and awareness of the issues that the world’s oceans currently face, as well as supporting marine conservation and research.

On The Row: Leah Nobel Shares Vulnerable Tracks Inspired By 100 Interviews

Pictured (L-R): Leah Nobel, MusicRow owner/publisher Sherod Robertson. Photo: Haley Crow

Big Yellow Dog’s Leah Nobel dropped by the MusicRow office to give a sampling of her Running In Borrowed Shoes project. Inspired and adapted from 100 interviews she conducted during the course of about a year, Running In Borrowed Shoes is a broad look at humanity. With emotional, honest conversations with a diverse collection of people as her goal, Nobel has created a 10-track body of work with subject matter in vulnerability, love, loss, resilience and more.

Nobel interviewed 52 women and 48 men from all walks of life, ranging in age from 6 to 93. Nobel says 80 percent of them were strangers.

“Sometimes I would go somewhere with this sign that said: ‘Come Talk To Me,'” Nobel explained. “It was really easy to find people to interview with. The truth is people like talking about themselves, it’s just part of being human.”

The questions Nobel asked were specifically designed to avoid small talk. She often started off with the question, “What do you not want people to know about you?”

“I did interview some people that I knew for the project and if I could go back and do it all over again, I would just interview strangers because strangers felt safer,” Nobel said. “They were like, ‘she doesn’t have any reason to judge me. She doesn’t know me.'”

With a programmer on hand, Nobel performed three songs of the electronic project. Running In Borrowed Shoes was produced by Grammy-award winning producer Pete Stewart (Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, DC Talk, Toby Mac).

 

Photo: Haley Crow

The ethereal “Good Enough” discusses contagious self-doubt and how we all feel like we’re not ‘good enough,’ sometimes.

“[“Good Enough”] was inspired by the most commonly spoken phrase in my interviews, which is people confiding that they don’t feel good enough. Whether it’s body image issues or they don’t feel like a good enough parent or good enough at their job, that was a very consistent part of my interview process and I knew I had to write a song about it.”

The dreamy “Coffee, Sunday, NYT” is about breaking the cycle of business and finding pleasure in the smaller things of life.

“This was based off of two interviews that I did with older women who were both ill at the time. One woman is still with us and the other one passed away a few months after I interviewed her, which is a really strange feeling to talk to a stranger in the last months of her life,” Nobel shared. “I asked [the first woman] what her favorite simple pleasure is and she said, ‘A cup of coffee, The New York Times, and a Sunday morning.'”

“Steps,” the only song on the record translated directly from one person’s interview, tells the story of a refugee from the Rwandan genocide. The lyrics talk about betrayal and anger, and are specific enough to tell the refugee’s story, while still being vague enough for anyone to relate to.

Running In Borrowed Shoes will be released in February. “Good Enough,” “Coffee, Sunday, NYT,” “Steps,” and “Slow Burn” are available now.

Singer Shirley Foley Boone Passes

Shirley and Pat Boone. Photo: Pat Boone

Former Nashville vocalist Shirley Foley Boone died on Jan. 11 at age 84.

She is usually recalled as the wife of pop star Pat Boone, the daughter of Country Music Hall of Fame member Red Foley or as the mother of Grammy-winning hit maker Debby Boone. But she was a recording artist, herself. She was also an author, philanthropist and TV personality.

Her father, Clyde Julian “Red” Foley (1910-1968), rose to fame at The National Barn Dance on WLS in Chicago. He married Eva Overstake (1918-1951) of the show’s Three Little Maids act in 1933. Their daughter Shirley Lee Foley was born in 1934.

The family moved to Nashville in 1946, where Red Foley became a Decca Records superstar and a Grand Ole Opry headliner. Shirley’s mother was billing herself as “Judy Martin” by this time. Judy/Eva’s sister, Shirley’s aunt, became Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Jenny Lou Carson (Lucille Overstake, 1915-1978).

Shirley and her two younger sisters began appearing on their father’s radio and TV shows as children. In 1950, they recorded “Frosty the Snowman” and “Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer” with Red Foley, billed as “The Little Foleys.”

Shirley attended David Lipscomb High School, where the popular cheerleader was voted student-council secretary and Homecoming Queen. Her high-school sweetheart, Pat Boone, was a handsome boy-next-door, a student athlete and the star of the WSIX Nashville radio show “Youth on Parade.” They married in 1953, when both were 19 years old.

He won on TV’s Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts the following year. This show was that era’s American Idol, so Boone launched a highly successful recording career.

Between 1957 and 1962, he had 18 top-10 pop hits, including “April Love,” “Ain’t That a Shame” and “Love Letters in the Sand.” In the early days, his popularity rivaled that of Elvis Presley. Boone starred in 15 feature films.

Shirley and Pat released their first duet LP in 1959. Titled Side By Side, it featured them harmonizing on standards such as “Let Me Call You Sweetheart” and “My Happiness.”

I Love You Truly was issued as the couple’s second duets LP in 1962. Like its predecessor, it was comprised of familiar songs such as “Have I Told You Lately That I Love You,” “Blues Stay Away From Me” and “True Love.”

Shirley taught their daughters to sing four-part harmony. Billed variously as The Boone Sisters, The Boones and/or The Boone Girls, Cherry, Lindy, Debby and Laury Boone became Grammy-nominated gospel vocalists.

Debby became a solo star with hits such as “You Light Up My Life” (1977) and “Are You On the Road to Loving Me Again” (1980). She married minister Gabriel Ferrer, who is the son of Rosemary Clooney and Jose Ferrer and the cousin of George Clooney. Sister Cherry Boone wrote the 1982 book Starving for Affection and became spokesperson for eating disorders.

Mama Shirley Boone became an author, as well. One Woman’s Liberation (1972), The Honeymoon Is Over (1980) and her other works espoused conservative religious values. Both with her husband and solo, she appeared on many Christian-oriented TV talk shows.

She helped to establish Mercy Corps, which has become an international charitable organization dedicated to addressing economic, environmental, social and political problems. She was also a major benefactor of Pepperdine University.

Shirley resumed recording with Pat Boone Family in 1971. The record was nominated for a gospel Grammy Award. This was followed by All in the Boone Family (1972), Pat Boone Family in the Holy Land (1972), the Nashville recorded The Family Who Prays (1973), The Boone Family Christmas (1975) and other titles.

She also costarred in many of her husband’s television programs, beginning with his series The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom in 1959. She performed on such specials as Pat Boone & Family (1968), Pat Boone & Family Thanksgiving Day Show (1962), The Pat Boone & Family Christmas Special (1969), The Pat Boone & Family Easter Special (1970), The Pat Boone & Family Thanksgiving Special (1978), a second Pat Boone & Family Christmas Special (1979) and Together with Shirley & Pat Boone (1983).

After living in Tennessee, Texas, New York and New Jersey, Shirley, Pat and their four daughters moved to Beverly Hills, CA in 1960. She passed away there last Friday with her daughters singing hymns at her bedside.

She and Pat were married for 65 years. She is also survived by 16 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.

Country-Pop Star Bonnie Guitar Dies At 95


West Coast country personality Bonnie Guitar passed away on Sunday, Jan. 13, at age 95.

Regarded as a groundbreaking woman in the music business, she sang hits such as “Dark Moon,” was a session guitarist, co-founded Dolton Records, wrote successful songs and produced various pop and country artists.

Born Bonnie Buckingham in 1923, she acquired the pseudonym “Guitar” thanks to her instrumental proficiency in the recording studios of L.A. Her older brothers played guitar, which she also took up as a teenager in the Seattle, Washington area. After high school, she went on the road with a country band and hosted her own radio show.

Her homemade recordings came to the attention of Fabor Robinson in 1955. He was the owner of the 4-Star and Abbott record labels in Los Angeles. Robinson brought her to his home in Malibu and hired her as a session guitarist for his label’s Dorsey Burnette, Jim Reeves, Tom Tall, Ferlin Husky, Ned Miller and other artists. Robinson also changed her name and began recording her as a singer-guitarist. He brought her Miller’s song “Dark Moon.” She recorded it for his Fabor label in 1957. Picked up by Nashville’s Dot Records, the song became a major pop and country hit. This led to appearances on TV’s Ed Sullivan Show and American Bandstand, as well as concerts alongside Sam Cooke, The Everly Brothers, Gene Vincent, The Del-Vikings and Jerry Lee Lewis.

She and Miller co-wrote her follow-up, “Mister Fire Eyes,” which became a much bigger country hit. She made just the pop charts with her self-composed “Candy Apple Red” in 1959.

Guitar and some business associates discovered the Washington State pop trio The Fleetwoods and formed Dolton Records to distribute the group’s records. She co-produced the act, which had its first hit with 1959’s “Come Softly to Me.”

Later that year, she brought The Fleetwoods “Mr. Blue.” It launched the career of future Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Dewayne Blackwell. She wrote the group’s 1960 single “Magic Star.” With Guitar producing and backing the trio on guitar, its other hits on Dolton included “Tragedy” (1961), “The Great Imposter” (1961), “Outside My Window” (1960) and “Lovers By Night Strangers By Day” (1962). Next on the Dolton roster was the instrumental rock group The Ventures. This act scored with “Walk Don’t Run” (1960), “Perfidia” (1960) and “Slaughter on Tenth Avenue” (1964).

Guitar, herself, joined the Dolton roster. She and songwriter Don Robertson recorded as The Echoes and issued “Born to Be With You” on the label in 1960. She and her partners sold Dolton to Liberty Records in 1963.

Following a brief stint at RCA in 1961-62, she re-signed with Dot in 1965. This resulted in her longest string of country hits, beginning with “I’m Living in Two Worlds” in 1966. Other successful country tunes for her included “Get Your Lie the Way You Want It” (1966), “The Tallest Tree” (1967) and “You Can Steal Me” (1967). She was named the ACM Female Vocalist of the Year in 1966.

Bonnie Guitar had her biggest country hit with 1967’s “A Woman in Love” and followed it with “Stop the Rain” (1968), “Leaves Are the Tears of Autumn” (1968), “That See Me Later Look” (1969) and “Allegheny” (1970). She and publisher/songwriter Buddy Killen were duet partners on Dot with 1969’s “A Truer Love You’ll Never Find.”

Guitar was also Dot’s country talent coordinator. She commuted between Seattle and Nashville for several years. Among the country acts she produced for the label was Mac Wiseman.

Her own Dot LPs included Two Worlds (1966), Miss Bonnie Guitar (1966), Award Winner (1967), A Woman in Love (1968) and Affair (1969). She co-produced all of these in Nashville.

She subsequently recorded country discs for Columbia, MCA, 4-Star, MAC, Tumbleweed and Playback. Her songwriting came back into the spotlight when Susan Raye scored a 1973 hit “The Cheating Game.” It was co-written by Guitar and Dennis Knudson.

Bonnie Guitar retired to a ranch where she and her husband raised cattle and quarter horses. After his death in 1983, she resumed her entertainment career. She became the “house band” at the Notaras Lodge in Soap Lake, Washington. With just her own guitar accompaniment and a drummer, she headlined there for more than a decade.

In 1985, she returned to Nashville to record two albums, Yesterday and Today. The latter contained five new Guitar compositions alongside a number of pop tunes. Her LP You’re Still the Same was issued in 1989. She made a number of media appearances in Nashville the following year, including some on CMT. In 1991, Germany’s Bear Family label reissued her early Dot sides.

She retired from the Notaras Lodge in 1997. Guitar occasionally performed at a resort in Idaho and at cowboy-poetry gatherings thereafter. She was profiled extensively in No Depression magazine in 2007. At age 93, she began performing every weekend at a Soap Lake nightclub.

Warner Music Nashville Announces Lineup For CRS Opening Day Luncheon

An advance lineup has been released for Country Radio Seminar’s 50th Anniversary opening day luncheon, hosted by Warner Music Nashville, and includes Devin Dawson, Morgan Evans, Chris Janson, Cody Johnson, Ashley McBryde, Cole Swindell along with the previously announced headliner, Blake Shelton. To be held Feb. 13, the Warner Music Nashville luncheon will take place in the Broadway Ballroom (CRS Performance Hall) at Omni Nashville beginning at noon.

“I can’t think of a better way to celebrate the 50th anniversary of CRS than by kicking it off with the inaugural Warner Wednesday lunch,” said Warner Music Nashville Chairman & CEO John Esposito. “We will be showcasing an impressive and diverse lineup of artists from our roster, headlined by superstar Blake Shelton. We’re ready to make some history!”

More Warner Music Nashville performances to be announced soon.

The $699 final registration rate for Country Radio Seminar’s 50th Anniversary Event (CRS 2019) is available at CountryRadioSeminar.com. Single-day passes are also being made available for $200 per pass and are limited to two day passes per person.

Jason Aldean Sets Off For 2019 Ride All Night Tour In May

Jason Aldean announced today that he will hit the road for his nationwide Ride All Night tour in May, bringing Kane Brown, Carly Pearce and Dee Jay Silver along with him. The 30-city trek will launch May 3 at Tortuga Music Festival in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Fans can first purchase tickets beginning Friday, Jan. 25 for select cities as part of Live Nation’s Country Megaticket here and additional dates will continue to rollout over the coming weeks.

2019 Ride All Night Tour Dates:
4/12 Fort Lauderdale, FL – Tortuga Music Festival*
4/28 Indio, CA – Stagecoach*
5/03 Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena
5/04 Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena
5/09 Evansville, IN – The Ford Center
5/10 Grand Rapids, MI – Van Andel Arena
5/11 Toledo, OH – Huntington Center
5/16 Syracuse, NY – St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview
5/17 Columbia, MD – Merriweather Post Pavilion
5/18 Holmdel, NJ – PNC Bank Arts Center
6/28 Milwaukee, WI – Summerfest*
7/19 Gilford, NH – Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion
7/20 Gilford, NH – Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion
7/25 Albuquerque, NM – Isleta Amphitheater
7/26 Denver, CO – Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre
7/27 Salt Lake City, UT – USANA Amphitheatre
8/09 Cleveland, OH – Blossom Music Center
8/10 Canandaigua, NY – CMAC Performing Arts Center
8/22 Cincinnati, OH – Riverbend Music Center
8/23 Indianapolis, IN – Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center
8/24 St. Louis, MO – Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
9/05 Saratoga Springs, NY – Saratoga Performing Arts Center
9/06 Wantagh, NY – Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater
9/07 Bristow, VA – Jiffy Lube Live
9/12 Charlotte, NC – PNC Music Pavilion
9/13 Raleigh, NC – Coastal Credit Union Music Park
9/14 Burgettstown, PA – KeyBank Pavilion
9/19 Scranton, PA – The Pavilion at Montage Mountain
9/20 Boston, MA – Xfinity Center
9/27 Chicago, IL – Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
9/28 Detroit, MI – DTE Energy Music Theatre
*Lineup May Vary

Dr. Hook’s Ray Sawyer Passes

Ray Sawyer

Former Nashville pop star Ray Sawyer died in Florida on New Year’s Eve.

Sawyer was the co-founder of Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show. The group scored 10 top-40 pop hits and six Gold-selling singles in 1972-82. With his black eye patch and rumpled cowboy hat, Sawyer gave the act its name and its iconic visual image.

Born in rural Alabama, he played in bands in New Orleans and Mobile in the 1950s and 1960s. Sawyer was in a car accident in 1967, which cost him his right eye. He formed Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show in 1968 with guitarist George Cummings and keyboard player Billy Francis. Cummings recruited fellow New Jersey native Dennis Locorriere to be the band’s lead vocalist.

Nashville’s Ron Haffkine became the act’s producer and manager. Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show first achieved notoriety by appearing on screen and on the soundtrack of the 1971 Dustin Hoffman movie Who Is Harry Kellerman and Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things About Me?

Songwriter Shel Silverstein took a shine to the band and wrote its breakthrough hit, 1972’s “Sylvia’s Mother.” Dennis Locorriere sang lead on it and almost all of its subsequent hits. Sawyer usually sang harmony, handled percussion instruments and provided showmanship.

Silverstein also wrote the group’s second single, “Carry Me, Carrie.” The third single and second big hit was Silverstein’s “The Cover of ‘Rolling Stone.’” Ray Sawyer sang lead on this humorous ditty. After it became a pop smash in 1973, the group did, indeed, appear on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. Later that year, Sawyer and Silverstein co-wrote the band’s single “Life Ain’t Easy.”

In 1975, the group declared bankruptcy, relocated to Nashville, switched from Columbia to Capitol Records and shortened its name to Dr. Hook. With Locorriere again singing lead, the band had a third Gold-selling single with a remake of Sam Cooke’s “Only Sixteen” in 1976.

Ray Sawyer issued his debut solo LP that year. He briefly made the pop charts with its single, “(One More Year of) Daddy’s Little Girl.” It was penned by Haffkine’s office manager, the late Hazel Smith (1937-2018). Meanwhile, Locorriere’s soulful vocal rasp propelled Dr. Hook’s “Sharing the Night Together” (1978), “When You’re in Love With a Beautiful Woman” (1979) and “Sexy Eyes” (1980) to Gold Record status. Even so, the public continued to identify Ray Sawyer as “Dr. Hook.” He and Silverstein co-wrote the “Sexy Eyes” flip side, “Help Me Mama.”

The group switched labels again, this time from Capitol to Casablanca. This resulted in its last flurry of pop-chart activity with “Girls Can Get It” (1980), “That Didn’t Hurt Too Bad” (1981), “Baby Makes Her Blue Jeans Talk” (1982) and Eddie Rabbitt’s co-written “Loveline” (1982). Other notable singles included “A Little Bit More” (1976), “If Not You” (1976, the band’s only top-40 country success), “A Couple More Years” (1976), “Walk Right In” (1977), “Better Love Next Time” (1979) and “Years From Now” (1980).

The original group broke up in 1983 when Ray Sawyer quit to pursue a solo career. Locorriere and most of the other band members remained in Music City. Drummer John Wolter died of cancer at age 52 in 1997.

Sawyer performed in Europe and on the nostalgia circuit in the U.S. He settled in Daytona Beach, Florida in 2000. He was inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 2005 and retired due to ill health in 2015.

According to Goldmine magazine, Ray Sawyer died in Daytona Beach on Dec. 31, 2018 at age 81. He is survived by his wife Linda and son Cayse.

Rory Feek’s ‘Finding Josephine’ Set for Release in Walmart Stores Nationwide

Finding Josephine, a stirring Civil War drama co-written and directed by singer/songwriter Rory Feek, is set for release at Walmart and stores across the nation on February 5th. Starring Alice Coulthard, Boris McGiver (House of Cards), Jessejames Locorriere, Linds Edwards, and Matthew Brady, the film is about a young soldier’s wife who disguises herself as a man and enlists in the Confederate Army in a quest to find her missing husband. Finding Josephine was produced and co-written by Aaron Carnahan.

The film has deep roots in Feek’s own story. In the mid-90s, he purchased a 150-year-old farmhouse and came across letters between a Civil War soldier and his wife. Incredibly moved by their love story and longing for one of his own, Feek’s wish was granted when he met and married his late wife Joey, with whom he formed the country duo Joey+Rory. The pair recorded “Josephine,” a song that was loosely based on the Civil War letters and later blossomed into a full-blown screenplay that told both of Feek’s story and that of Josephine, connecting the two tales with a thread of devoted love.

Finding Josephine was filmed in Halifax County, Virginia, in 2015. The film was screened at the 2016 Bentonville Film Festival, as well as 2016 Nashville Film Festival, where it won the Grand Jury Prize for Tennessee First Feature. The February release marks the first time the film will be made available to a wider audience.

Chase Rice Adds Dates To Eyes On You Tour

Chase Rice‘s Eyes On You Tour will extend into 2019 with 21 additional dates across the U.S. and Canada. The second leg begins Friday, Feb. 22 in St. Louis, Missouri and continues through Saturday, May 11 in Hampton Beach, New Hampshire.

“Having a song like ‘Eyes On You’ connect at this level has taken our live show to another level,” said Rice. “Every night I have to take a minute and film them singing the words back to us on stage.”

Tickets can be purchased on Rice’s official website.

Eyes On You 2019 Tour Dates:
Friday, Feb. 22 – Ballpark Village, St. Louis, Mo.
Saturday, Feb. 23 – Eagles Ballroom, Milwaukee, Wisc.
Saturday, March 2 – Coral Sky Amphitheatre, West Palm Beach, Fla.
Friday, March 8 – C2C Festival, The O2, London, U.K.
Saturday, March 9 – C2C Festival, The SSE Hydro Arena, Glasgow, U.K.
Sunday, March 10 – C2C Festival, 3 Arena, Dublin, Ireland
Friday, March 15 – Showbox SoDo, Seattle, Wash.
Friday, March 22 – Wilma Theater, Missoula, Mont.
Saturday, March 23 – Pub Station, Billing, Mont.
Sunday, March 24 – Knitting Factory, Boise, Idaho
Friday, March 29 – Grizzly Rose, Denver, Colo.
Saturday, March 30 – Grizzly Rose, Denver, Colo.
Thursday, April 11 – Georgia Theatre, Athens, Ga.
Saturday, April 13 – House of Blues, North Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Friday, April 19 – The Tarheel, Jacksonville, N.C.
Thursday, April 25 – Starland Ballroom, Sayreville, N.J.
Friday, April 26 – Express Live!, Colubus, Ohio
Saturday April 27 – Mercury Ballroom, Louisville, Ky.
Thursday, May 2 – Suwannee River Jam, Live Oak, Fla.
Friday, May 10 – Upsate Concert Hall, Clifton Park, N.Y.
Saturday, May 11 – Hampton Beach Ballroom, Hampton Beach, N.H.

Kevin Welch Starts 2019 With Another Week Atop The MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart

Kevin Welch begins the new year as he left it last year on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart; at the No. 1 spot.

The holiday season did not alter the positions of the top four on the Top Songwriter Chart. Following Welch, is Ashley Gorley at No. 2, Shane McAnally at No. 3 and Luke Combs at No. 4.

The No. 5 slot on the MusicRow Chart is occupied by Justin Ebach, who moved up three slots from No. 8. Ebach is advanced by songs like Maddie & Tae’s “Friends Don’t,” Dustin Lynch’s “Good Girl” and Brett Young’s “Here Tonight.”

The last chart of 2018 did not feature a female songwriter under No. 35. The first Songwriter Chart of 2019 does not see a woman until Laura Veltz at No. 42.

The weekly MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart, published every week, uses algorithms based upon song activity according to airplay, digital downloaded track sales and streams. This unique and exclusive addition to the MusicRow portfolio is the only songwriter chart of its kind.

Click here to view the full MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.