Amanda Shires, Margo Price, Brandi Carlile Form Supergroup The Highwomen

 

[Updated, Jan. 11, 2019]: It seems this highly-anticipated trio is quite yet official. Shires tweeted the evening of Jan. 10, “I accidentally jumped the gun when I spoke w/ WFPK about my idea for a The Highwomen. Brandi and I do have something in the works and we will announce the exact details when it comes to fruition. Just wanted to let you know that nothing is official and this isn’t news yet.”

[Original post, published Jan. 10, 2:08 p.m. CT]:

Three of music’s boldest voices have partnered to form a new supergroup. Amanda Shires, Margo Price, and Brandi Carlile will collaborate on a new project under the name The Highwomen. Shires dropped the news during an interview with 91.9 WFPK, and said Jim Lauderdale is also involved as a songwriter with the group. The group is going into the studio in March to record tracks.

The group’s name was inspired by the country supergroup The Highwaymen, which included Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson

“We’ve been writing some songs together for a new project I started with Brandi Carlile. Me, her, and Margo Price,” Shires said. “I don’t even know if I’m supposed to be talking about it, but we’ve got a new group called the Highwomen coming up—as in exalted, not stoned. I mean I’m sure being stoned is fine depending on where you are and all of that. I’m not advocating anything, or un-advocating anything. Anyway, we’re recording it in March, so we were writing some songs.”

Shires first approached Carlile with the idea, and notes that the album will feature special guests including Sheryl Crow.

“We’ve been friends for a long time,” Shires said. “I met [Brandi] on a Cayamo Cruise I can’t even remember when, a long time ago. And we’ve been friends. We were at The Basement [Nashville] for some reason, and I told her about this idea I had called the Highwomen, and she was like, ‘I love that idea.’ And I was like, ‘I want you to be in it. And I want you to help me run this because I’m terrible at business, and my voice isn’t as great as yours.’ And she was like, ‘Yeah I’ll be in your band The Highwomen.’ Then we asked Margo and she said ‘Yeah.’ And we have guests like Sheryl Crow. Any women that want to come, and men, it’s all inclusive. It’s not like man haters.”

“We’ve written a whole lot of songs, me and Brandi, and then on our own we have [written songs] too. And I thought it would be fun to have me and Jim [Launderdale] write and see if anything came out that would work for the Highwomen, and I think we did good. I like co-writing. It’s fun to see how other people’s minds work and process, and I’ve always been such a big fan of his writing. You know, who doesn’t love George Strait? And him as a person, really.”

While Shires, Price and Carlile each have unique sounds that incorporate elements of country and Americana, Shires clarified that the project will be decidedly country.

“For myself and Brandi, the music that we do on our own is our top priority. But this other project that we’re doing is also a priority, but what we want to do is play more country music. So it will be more country.”

Carlile leads the current crop of nominees heading into the upcoming Grammy Awards, earning six nominations for her most recent album By The Way, I Forgive You, including three nods in the all-genre categories. Price is also a current Grammy nominee in the all-genre Best New Artist category. Shires’ latest album To The Sunset released in August 2018.

ACM Lifting Lives Announces 2018 Fall Grant Cycle Recipients

ACM’s Lifting Lives program has announced its 2018 fall grant cycle beneficiaries, with grants totaling more than $270,000 going to a selection of organizations including the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, the Country Music Hall of Fame, Notes For Notes, the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center, the  W.O. Smith/Nashville Community Music School, and many more.

 “ACM Lifting Lives has prospered year over year due to the incredible commitment of the country music community, artists and industry and we are thrilled to announce a significant increase in this year’s deserving grant beneficiaries,” said Tree Paine, Chairman of ACM Lifting Lives. “We look forward to continuing to fund programs in which we are able to improve lives through the power of music.”

 Programs funded through this grant cycle include:

  • Arts Wisconsin – Arts Wisconsin is a statewide organization providing a leadership forum for advancing the local and statewide creative economy, integrating the arts and creativity in education, educating entrepreneurs and activists, and engaging policy-makers and the public as a catalyst for dialogue, information, and action. Funds will go towards music therapy program providing sessions in the local public-school district (Racine Unified) for Music Therapy Methodology, which includes Neurologic Music Therapy, improvisation and sensory integration and Cognitive Therapy techniques.
  • Barefoot Republic, Inc. – Barefoot Republic serves more than 2,100 youth through Day Camp, Overnight Camp, and year-round service, learning and performance opportunities in Kentucky, Tennessee, and California. Approximately one-third of campers participate in music programming. In 2019, ACM will provide full tuition assistance for 30 disadvantaged youth, costs covering activities, meals, supplies and staffing.
  • Camp Sunshine Inc – Camp Sunshine enriches the lives of Georgia’s children with cancer and their families through year-round recreational, educational and support programs. This grant will support the Music Program, with the funds being used directly to pay for the musician hired for 2 weeks of summer camp, for the purchase of new musical instruments and equipment, and to hire musicians for 2 weeks of Sunshine 2U – a hospital program for children too ill to leave the hospital setting.
  • Carnegie Mellon University – Carnegie Mellon University will pay a principal investigator to develop the pedagogy, train the research assistants and music teachers, assist in issuing pre and post-tests, implement the intervention in a six-week study and organize and analyze the all data. The project will then be completed by writing the corresponding research paper on 24-32 participants.
  • Children’s Hospital Los Angeles – CHLA relies on the generosity of philanthropists in the community to support compassionate patient care, leading-edge education of the caregivers of tomorrow and innovative research efforts that impact children at their hospital and around the world. Funds will support a portion of the salary of a professional music therapist in their existing Music Therapy Program.
  • COPD Foundation – The COPD Foundation and PEP (Pulmonary Empowerment Program) have established Harmonicas for Health, the first nationwide harmonica program created especially for individuals with COPD and other chronic lung diseases. This year, help will go towards developing an online version of the program, education for leaders and support improvements throughout the program.
  • Country Music Hall of Fame – The Country Music Hall of Fame created the Instrument Trunks School Outreach Program. This initiative provides free resources to classrooms in Middle TN through the loan of instruments which allows students to feel, hold, play and hear the timeless tools of musicians. The goal of the Instrument Trunks School Outreach program is to support Middle TN schools and Metro Nashville Public Schools as they aim to improve academic achievement for students most at-risk of not succeeding.
  • Follow Your Heart Arts Program, Inc. – The Follow Your Heart Arts Program provides music education opportunities in the hometown of country music artist Charlie Worsham in rural Mississippi. Funds will be used to purchase instruments, seats for the room for instructions and expanding the Songwriters workshop.
  • Foundations of Music Foundations of Music brings music education to underserved classrooms and communities across Chicago. Funds will be used to support its Songwriting/Production Program for students in grades PreK-8, which teaches students to write and produce songs.
  • Glenvar High School – Funds will be used to complete music production rooms for students at Glenvar High School in Salem, Virginia.
  • High Hopes Development Center – The High Hopes Development Center is a pre-school with on-site pediatric clinic, serving children with special needs and long-term disabilities alongside their typically-developing peers. The Center offers a Music Enrichment Program for 148 preschoolers, 60% of whom are typically-developing and 40% having special needs. Funds will be used to assist the Music Enrichment Program with music teacher salary, instruments, and curriculum.
  • Los Angeles Music and Art School (LAMusArt) – Funds will go to support the programs expenses of its tuition-free music ensemble, which includes weekly mentorship and coaching to the students in K-12 in the community of the East Los Angeles. LAMusArt strives to create paths to creative futures by means of arts education.
  • Maryville University’s Kids Rock Cancer – Kids Rock Cancer is an innovative program that helps children successfully cope with the unique emotional challenges that accompany a cancer diagnosis. Through the proven healing power of music therapy, Kids Rock Cancer helps children combat feelings of anxiety, depression, uncertainty and helplessness. Funds will support a third therapist to further develop special programs and camps, provide an additional 25 therapy sessions per year, serve five camps during summer 2019, which include approximately 75-100 campers total and assist in managing patient data.
  • Mr. Holland’s Opus Foundation ­– Mr. Holland’s Opus keeps music alive in their schools by donating musical instruments and vital support services to under-funded music programs, giving economically disadvantaged youth access to this type of education. The many benefits of music education, includes helping students to be successful and inspiring creativity and expression through playing music. Funds will focus on Aiken County Public Schools in South Carolina to help with the purchase of instruments.
  • Music for Seniors – Music for Seniors connects area musicians with older adults through live and interactive programs designed to engage, entertain and educate seniors, by delivering programs to groups in recreational and care settings, offering public daytime concerts at accessible venues, and teaching group classes in instrument and vocal performance. Funds will be used to train and schedule more musicians to facilitate additional Music-Making outreach sessions.
  • Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame – Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame mission is to honor Nashville’s legacy of songwriting excellence through preservation, celebration and education. The funds will be used for the Express Yourself Program, a free after school program for middle school students, 5th– 8th grade in Nashville. While in their 3rd year at JT Moore Middle school, the program includes 20 students and this year is expanding to two additional schools. The program is open to all students and available at no charge. Per school, the funds will provide a weekly stipend for the program’s Song Coach.
  • Notes for Notes – Notes for Notes provides youth with free access to musical instruments, instructions and a recording studio. Funds will go towards their Song2Studio2Radio program.  The project will culminate a collective group of songs and podcasts written and performed by youth participants combined with Nashville’s greatest songwriters.  The writers will work with the kids via songwriting, instructions, recording sessions and podcasting.
  • Oliver Middle School Drama – The OMS Drama Boosters believe that a successful drama program creates opportunities for students to grow in confidence while they discover their talents. Students learn life skills  and values. Funds will go towards the expansion of the program serving underprivileged students, and encourages the youth to stay in school.
  • Porter’s Call – Porter’s Call serves recording artists and their families by providing them with counsel, support, and encouragement to deal with issues off-stage. The staff currently sees 30 plus artists and/or spouses per week, often referred by record companies. Funds will be used toward counseling hours, so they can continue to offer counseling free of charge to artists and expand available hours.
  • Project C.A.M.P. Inc. – Project C.A.M.P. Inc. offers a Music Therapy program all year round addressing developmental goals in speech and communication, social skills development, behavioral, social, emotional and other skill sets. This allows children to the opportunity to experience normalcy through interactions with peers who share the same health conditions. Funds will include purchase of instruments, educational materials, staffing, facilities, adaptive equipment needs for children with limited mobility.
  • Shell Lake Arts Center –  The Shell Lake Arts Center mission is to provide innovative music and arts education experiences for youth ages 12 to 18, as well as seminars and workshops for adults.  The funds will be used to fund scholarships to musical camps throughout the summer.  In nine weeks, 24 different camps are held for musicians and young artists.
  • Songs for Sound – Songs for Sound aims to provide everyone with an opportunity to live a mainstream life full of sound and language, and music. Funds will provide hearing protection and hearing education materials on noise-induced hearing loss to be distributed by the Hear the Music mobile clinic in Nashville. It will also support their music camp for children with cochlear implants/hearing aids loss.
  • Anna’s Place NOLA/St. Anna’s Episcopal Church – Anna’s Place NOLA’s mission is to promote healing and wholeness of body, mind and spirit in the Treme/7th Ward and Greater New Orleans community by offering academic, cultural and arts enrichment, holistic healthcare and healthy lifestyle education.  Funds will go to oversee the coordination of activities between the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra and the Loyola Music Therapy Department, as well as teach clarinet, vocal music and Project Learning.  It will also purchase instruments and repair costs for existing instruments.
  • The Howard Phillips Center for Children & Families – Howard Phillips Center provides children and families a support system and resources so they don’t have to face overwhelming challenges alone. Funds for The Howard Phillips Center for Children & Families will go towards four weeks of music therapy classes to 180 children with special needs and their family members over the course of 1 year. It will also cover outside artistic fees, developmental staff time and musical items for families.
  • The Onsite Foundation: Possibilities – The Onsite Foundation provides funding to veterans, first responders, low income individuals and front-line helping professionals. This aids in the healing and rebuilding of those who struggle from the effects of trauma, abuse, stress, mental-health and relationship issues. Onsite Foundation provides workshops and life-changing programs by providing scholarships to participants who would not otherwise receive the experience of emotional freedom Tuition for Veteran’s Living Centered Program. Funds will go towards experiential therapy modalities, song workshop & concerts.
  • The Tapping Individual Potential Program of The Community Foundation of Tennessee – The program is an effort to recognize special skills and talents in young people of middle school age and invest in developing their unique capability.  The TIP program works with Metro Nashville Public School middle school students who have extraordinary musical talent but whose financial or other circumstances make it impossible for their families to provide access to individual enrichment.
  • United Sound, Inc – United Sound Inc. supports music educators in creating their own United Sound ensembles through training, support, and organizational resources so that all children have access to meaningful and authentic music education and musical experiences. Funds requested will open this program in 5 Tennessee schools and will cover the curriculum materials and teacher/student volunteer training for the students with special needs in these schools.
  • Vanderbilt Kennedy Center – The grant will support the organization’s existing mission to facilitate discoveries and best practices that make positive differences in the lives of persons with developmental disabilities and their families through innovative research, services, and training for over 50 years.
  • Vega Productions Inc. – Vega Productions Inc. makes music education accessible to all students, especially those in schools with underfunded programs and whose families’ cannot afford the cost of renting or purchasing a musical instrument of their own. Funds will go towards covering musical instrument repair costs.
  • VH1 Save The Music Houston – Help kids, schools and communities realize their full potential through the power of making music.  Funds would support the Houston Independent School District to provide music education, restore a band program and deliver a general music program.
  • W.O. Smith/Nashville Community Music School – W.O. Smith makes affordable, quality music instruction available to children from low-income families.  Funds will go towards supporting its annual resident camp, a week-long summer music program for low-income children in Nashville, which would cover up to 50 students.
  • Wartburg – Wartburg offers integrated, comprehensive senior care services for your changing life. Unlike conventional retirement communities, Wartburg provides a wide range of services. Funds will go towards music therapists and peer leaders therapy programs for veterans with PTSD, brain and spinal cord injuries and amputees.
  • Westside Children’s Center – Westside Children’s Center funds would support their Kindermusik program, curriculum programmed and tailored to meet the different developmental needs of infants to five-year-olds through music.  The funds will ensure eight classrooms with nine units of Kindermusik by the end of the year.

Gator Michaels Named President Of Reviver Records

Gator Michaels

The Reviver Entertainment Group has promoted Gator Michaels to the role of President of Reviver Records. Gator, who joined the Reviver team in 2015, will continue serving as Executive Vice President / General Manager of The Reviver Entertainment Group in addition to his new role.

Reviver CEO David Ross states: “Gator is the consummate professional, and a superb executive. His deep relationships and years of experience have enabled me to grow the Reviver brand while Gator has focused on bringing in artist and publishing deals, all the while, keeping his eye on the day to day operations of Reviver.”

“My time at Reviver has been the most rewarding of my career,” says Gator. “I’m honored that David has put his trust in me to ensure the company continues to thrive.”

After a decade-long radio career, Gator Michaels served as the GM for Young-Olsen & Associates and the Vice President of Promotion at Dreamcatcher Entertainment prior to joining Warner Bros. Nashville, where he earned the title of Senior Vice President. In 2010, Michaels went on to lead Davis Music Group as Executive Vice President/General Manager before founding his own promotions company, Instigator Entertainment, in 2011. He then became Vice President of Blaster Records in 2012.

DISClaimer: Stellar Gospel Efforts From Josh Turner, Gold City, Gordon Mote

Music Row gets religion this week.

In today’s stack of country platters, we find fabulous gospel efforts by Josh Turner, Gordon Mote and our Disc of the Day winners, Gold City. Shout hallelujah.

If you want secular recommendations, I’m urging spins for Chris Young, Big & Rich and our DisCovery Award winners, The Jake Bartley Band. Brotherhood is this band’s debut album, and I have a feeling it won’t be its last.

THE JAKE BARTLEY BAND/Cannonball
Writer: Jake Bartley; Producers: Andrew Crawford, Jake Bartley, Matt Miller; Publisher: none listed; Bonfire (track)
– It’s a well-written Civil War story song about a slave who fights in the Confederate Army. After the war, he vows to return to South Carolina and anonymity. The tempo is brisk, the production is crisp and the harmony vocal is by Vince Gill.

GORDON MOTE/Love, Love, Love
Writers: Mark Nesler/Marty Dodson/Liz Hengber; Producer: Phil Johnson, Wayne Haun, Gordon Mote; Publishers: Nashvistaville/Songs of Universal/Black to Black/I Hope Mama’s Listening/Red Sox Fan, BMI/ASCAP; New Haven
– A-list session pianist Mote is back with a new country-gospel collection. Its title tune is a stately, folksy sermon with a steady rhythm and a splendidly crafted lyric. His singing voice is as fluid and confident as are his fingers on the ivories. Highly recommended.

 

BIG & RICH/Brand New Buzz
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; B&B/New Revolution
– The champagne, the whiskey and the bong aren’t the high that her lovin’ is. The track churns and builds with shuddering electric guitar work, relentless rhythm and increasing power and volume while the boys sing their butts off. Totally righteous and rockin.’

CHRIS YOUNG/Raised On Country
Writers: Chris Young, Corey Crowder, Cary Barlowe; Producers: Young/Crowder; Publishers: none listed; RCA (download)
– Chris name-checks influences Strait, Diffie, A.J., Merle, Willie and Bocephus in this funky, rollicking, lively, joyous bopper. A smile from ear to ear.

 

MARK WAYNE GLASSMIRE/I’ve Got A Feeling
Writers: Debi Champion/Mark Wayne Glassmire; Producers: JOhn Albani/John Wayne Glassmire; Publishers: none listed, BMI/ASCAP; Traceway
-It has a vaguely early-Eagles feeling in that it has an airy, California-country vibe. Sweet and creamy sounding.

WILLIAM SHATNER, JEFF COOK, NEAL MCCOY & HOME FREE/Why Not Me
Writers: Corey Lee Barker/Shawn Sackman; Producers: Jeff Cook, Brian Curl, William Shatner; Publishers: none listed; Heartland
– Captain Kirk has always loved country music, and now he’s getting his own country CD, thanks to Alabama’s Jeff Cook. He also knows he can’t sing, so he gives this lyric his serious, spoken-word oomph while Neal McCoy warbles and Home Free harmonizes mightily alongside him. Shatner will make his debut on the Opry with this on Feb. 15. Be there or be square.
&nsbp;

 

JOSH TURNER/I Saw The Light
Writer: Hank Williams; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; MCA Nashville
– It’s pretty hard to screw up this Hank Williams gospel classic. Josh gives it a rather mellow spin, instead of its usual hand-clapping style. The rumbling, rolling and flawlessly picked track that backs him is the star here.

AARON WATSON/Kiss That Girl Goodbye
Writer: Aaron Watson; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Big Label
-A breakup has never sounded this excited and rocking.

 

OLD DOMINION/Make It Sweet
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; RCA
– As usual, the song craftsmanship is first rate. The happy, hooky toe tapper is about seizing the moment and having a fine time in romance, because “life is short, make it sweet.”

GOLD CITY/Alabama Mud
Writers: Jason Wayne Cox/Timothy Harold Lovelace/Belinda Lee Smith; Producers: Michael Sykes, Daniel Riley & Ken Harding; Publishers: Christian Taylor/Daywind/House of Lovelace, BMI; New Haven
– These stellar singing souls recently and deservedly entered the Gospel Music Hall of Fame. If you’ve ever wondered if there really is “power in the blood,” give this deep dive into backwoods country a listen. A spectacular performance. Want a trip to vintage Southern-gospel heaven? Check out the group’s revival of the old Florida Boys favorite “Bible Lovin’ Man,” which is also on its new Hope for the Journey collection.

Dierks Bentley Teases Winter Leg Of Burning Man Tour ‘On Ice’

Dierks Bentley will launch the winter leg of his 2019 Burning Man Tour next week in Canada.

Ahead of the run, he and tourmates Jon Pardi and Tenille Townes had some fun and converged at the ice skating rink to prepare some “choreography” for the tour in a wonderful parody of sorts.

Olympic medalist and Good Morning America correspondent Adam Rippon offered his thoughts via Twitter, commenting, “I am obsessed with skating’s newest star: @DierksBentley. You are such a beauty my friend.”

 

 

2019 Burning Man Tour Dates:
1/17/19 Hamilton, ON – FirstOntario Centre
1/18//19 Ottawa, ON – Richcraft Live at the Canadian Tire Centre
1/19/19 Oshawa, ON – Tribute Communities Centre
1/22/19 Winnipeg, MB – Bell MTS Place
1/23/19 Saskatoon, SK – SaskTel Centre
1/24/19 Edmonton, AB – Rogers Place
1/26/19 Calgary, AB – Scotiabank Saddledome
1/28/19 Kelowna, BC – Prospera Place
1/29/19 Vancouver, BC – Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena
1/31/19 Spokane, WA – Spokane Arena
2/1/19 Tacoma, WA – Tacoma Dome
2/2/19 Eugene, OR – Matthew Knight Arena
2/14/19 Ontario, CA – Citizens Business Bank Arena
2/15/19 Fresno, CA – Save Mart Center
2/16/19 Reno, NV – Reno Events Center
2/21/19 Lexington, KY – Rupp Arena
2/22/19 Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
2/23/19 Columbia, MO – Mizzou Arena
2/28/19 Sioux Falls, SD – Denny Sanford PREMIER Center
3/01/19 Wichita, KS – INTRUST Bank Arena
3/02/19 Omaha, NE – CHI Health Center Omaha
3/07/19 Moline, IL – TaxSlayer Center
3/08/19 Duluth, MN – AMSOIL Arena
3/09/19 Grand Forks, ND – Alerus Center
3/28/19 Toledo, OH – Huntington Center
3/29/19 Columbus, OH – Nationwide Arena
3/30/19 Grand Rapids, MI – Van Andel Arena

BMI Foundation Adds To Board Of Trustees, Artistic Advisory Panel

Pictured: Top Row (L-R): Pamela Williams, Vice President of Legal & Business Affairs and Corporate Secretary for Broadcast Music, Inc; Dr. Jennifer Undercofler, Director of the Conservatory of Music at Purchase University. Bottom Row: Nina Young, composer and Assistant Professor of Music Composition at University of Texas at Austin; Nari Matsuura, Partner at Massarsky Consulting.

The BMI Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to the creation, performance and study of music, elected Pamela Williams, Vice President of Legal & Business Affairs and Corporate Secretary for Broadcast Music, Inc., to its Board of Trustees during a recent meeting at the Foundation’s New York office. In addition, Dr. Jennifer Undercofler, Associate Professor of Practice in Music and Director of the Conservatory at Purchase College (SUNY), along with Nina Young, composer and Assistant Professor of Music Composition at the University of Texas at Austin, and Nari Matsuura, Partner at Massarsky Consulting, were announced as the newest advisors on the BMI Foundation Artistic Advisory Panel.

“We are pleased to welcome these talented women to our Board and to the artistic leadership of our organization,” said BMI Foundation President Deirdre Chadwick. “They bring a collective wealth of knowledge, experience and passion that will be instrumental in furthering the exciting and transformative work we are privileged to do in support of music education and emerging artists and songwriters nationwide.”

Williams is Vice President, Legal & Business Affairs and Corporate Secretary for Broadcast Music, Inc. In her capacity as Vice President, Legal & Business Affairs, Williams oversees a wide variety of legal work for BMI. She manages infringement and arbitration processes; supports licensing efforts by negotiating and drafting individual and industry-wide licenses with media licensees, including cable networks and systems, satellite, pay-per-view and VOD, as well as BMI’s “general” licenses for individual license markets and venues, including restaurants, hotels, fitness centers, background music services, symphony orchestras, major league sports teams, and concert promoters; and manages the Company’s state legislative matters. In addition, she also serves as Corporate Secretary for the BMI Board of Directors.

Williams joined BMI in October 2000 as Director in the Business Affairs division of the Licensing department. She was promoted to Senior Director in 2004, to Executive Director in 2008, and to Assistant Vice President in 2009. Williams was appointed Corporate Secretary in 2011, and was promoted to Vice President in 2014. In 2017, Williams transferred from BMI’s Licensing department to the Legal department to further support the legal functions of the Company. Prior to joining BMI, Williams worked as an attorney in the Litigation practice of the Legal Department at Time Warner Inc. where she handled a variety of litigation matters for Time Warner, the Warner Music Group, and the Six Flags theme parks. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from Mount Holyoke College, and her Juris Doctor from Albany Law School of Union University.

Undercofler is Director of the Conservatory of Music at Purchase College. She joined the Purchase faculty as Associate Professor of the Practice of Music in 2016. From 2004 until 2016, Dr. Undercofler served as the Music Director of the Special Music School (PS 859), spearheading the development and opening of its high school division. During the same period. she also founded and conducted Face the Music, a teen new music ensemble. Under her artistic and administrative leadership, Face the Music collaborated with professional groups including the JACK Quartet, Gutbucket, and the Kronos Quartet, performed at venues including Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center Out of Doors, and the Bang On A Can Marathon, and received feature coverage in The New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and other publications. Dr. Undercofler has served on the faculties of Juilliard Pre-College, Queens College, the Mannes Preparatory Division, and Third Street Music School Settlement. She holds two degrees in piano performance from the Juilliard School and a Doctor of Musical Arts from the Eastman School of Music.

New York-based composer Young has had several works presented by institutions such as Carnegie Hall, the National Gallery, the Whitney, LA Phil’s Next on Grand and Noon to Midnight, and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra’s Liquid Music Series. A graduate of McGill and MIT, Young completed her DMA at Columbia University where she was an active participant at the Columbia Computer Music Center. She is an Assistant Professor of Composition and Director of Electronic Music at the Butler School of Music (UT Austin), and a Visiting Composer at the Peabody Institute. Young also serves as Co-Artistic Director of NY-based new music sinfonietta Ensemble Échappé and a visiting artist at Arts Letters & Numbers. Peermusic Classical publishes her compositions.

Matsuura is Partner at Massarsky Consulting where she leads the valuation practice of the firm, and has conducted music asset valuations of music publishers, record companies, artist and songwriter catalogs, including Andreas Carlsson, Benny Blanco, Big Loud Shirt, Boosey & Hawkes, Bush, Carlin Music, CeeLo Green, Downtown Records, Downtown Music Publishing, Eddie Holland, Glenn Gould, Linda Perry, Marvin Hamlisch, peermusic, Primary Wave, Reservoir Media Management, Rogers and Hammerstein, Round Hill Music, Rush, Ryan Tedder, Smokey Robinson, SONGS, Spirit Music Group, The Offspring, and many more. In addition, since joining the firm in 2001 she has been a consultant to a number of music companies including Universal Music Publishing, Warner Chappell Music, the RIAA, among many others.

 

Singing-Cowboy Promoter Packy Smith Passes

Packy Smith

Nashville’s Packy Smith, renowned as an expert on western music and movies, has died at age 77.

Smith co-produced the Happy Trails Theatre TNN TV series about Roy Rogers and Dale Evans. He authored books about Gene Autry and Hopalong Cassidy. He was the co-founder of the Western Film Festival.

He was an expert on Autry, Rogers, Tex Ritter, The Sons of the Pioneers, Rex Allen, Foy Willing and other singing-cowboy stars. He founded Riverwood Press to publish the works of other western-film enthusiasts.

Born Morton Packard Smith in 1941, he was raised in Nashville’s Inglewood neighborhood. He developed a love for cowboy movies at an early age. This evolved into a lifelong career collecting, selling and analyzing western movies and music. In addition to his books, he authored numerous articles about the topic.

For the past three decades, he has been screening rare cowboy films at the Western Film Festival in Arizona and the Lone Pine Film Festival in California. He also booked vintage Hollywood cowboy stars for these gatherings.

He served on the board of the Museum of Western Film History in Lone Pine, north of Bakersfield, CA. He had a nationally recognized, encyclopedic knowledge of this genre.

Packy Smith is survived by wife Cathleen, sons Tony and Jeff, daughters Cathy and Izora, stepchildren Kim and John, siblings Blanton and Judy and 10 grandchildren.

A Celebration of Life was held Jan. 12  in The Pavilion at Harpeth Hills Memory Gardens (9090 Highway 100). In lieu of flowers, the family requested donations to Alive Hospice, the Museum of Western Film History, the Democratic Party or a favorite charity.

MusicRow’s Top 100 Songwriters Of 2018

Josh Osborne. Photo: Moments By Moser

2018 was a milestone year for songwriters. After years of campaigning for updated legislature regarding streaming royalties, the Music Modernization Act was passed in October. This important piece of legislature is crucial to the survival of the modern songwriter, and will create a landscape for songwriters to thrive in years to come.

This past year also proved to be a prosperous year for these 100 songwriters who saw the most chart success on the weekly MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart. Using algorithms based upon song activity according to airplay, digital downloaded track sales and streams, these 100 songwriters were on top in 2018.

SMACKSongs and Sony/ATV’s Josh Osborne takes the No. 1 slot aggregating chart data from each weekly MusicRow Top Songwriters Chart in 2018. The songs that solidified his top spot in 2018 included LANCO’s “Born To Love You,” Sam Hunt’s “Body Like A Backroad,” Midland’s “Burn Out,” Old Dominion’s “Hotel Key,” Blake Shelton’s “Turnin’ Me On,” and more.

It looks as if 2019 will be a strong year for Osborne, as well. He announced this week his worldwide publishing deal with Sony/ATV.

Ross Copperman

Rezonant Music Publishing’s Ross Copperman takes the No. 2 slot on the 2018 Top Songwriter Chart. The BMI writer was propelled by songs like LANCO’s “Born To Love You,” Dierks Bentley’s “Woman, Amen,” Blake Shelton’s “I Lived It” and Kenny Chesney’s “Get Along.”

 

Shane McAnally

SMACKSongs’ Shane McAnally follows Copperman at No. 3 with Jake Owen’s “Down To The Honky Tonk,” Midland’s “Burn Out,” Old Dominion’s “Written In The Sand,” and many more.

Ashley Gorley. Photo: Ed Rode

Round Hill Music’s Ashley Gorley falls at the No. 4 position in the top 100. Gorley won ASCAP’s Country Songwriter of the Year for the sixth consecutive time in 2018. Tunes like Luke Bryan’s “What Makes You Country,” Carly Pearce’s “Hide The Wine,” Blake Shelton’s “I Lived It,” and Thomas Rhett’s “Life Changes” and “Marry Me” solidified his position.

Tyler Hubbard. Photo: Delaney Royer

Big Loud Publishing’s Tyler Hubbard takes the No. 5 slot, with writing credits on songs like Jason Aldean’s “You Make It Easy,” as well as Florida Georgia Line’s “Simple” and the 50-week Billboard No. 1, “Meant To Be.”

MusicRow’s Top 100 Songwriters of 2018:

1. Josh Osborne
2. Ross Copperman
3. Shane McAnally
4. Ashley Gorley
5. Tyler Hubbard
6. Nicolle Galyon
7. Chase McGill
8. Hillary Lindsey
9. Lindsay Rimes
10. David Garcia
11. Luke Combs
12. Jon Nite
13. Rhett Akins
14. Josh Miller
15. Jesse Frasure
16. Jordan M. Schmidt
17. Jessie Jo Dillon
18. Morgan Evans
19. Brett Young
20. Trevor Rosen
21. Michael Hardy
22. Scooter Carusoe
23. Kevin Welch
24. Shay Mooney
25. Josh Kear
26. Dan Smyers
27. Jordan Reynolds
28. Matthew McGinn
29. Shy Carter
30. Thomas Rhett
31. Laura Veltz
32. D. L. Murphy
33. Matthew Ramsey
34. Robert Williford
35. Brian Kelley
36. Justin Ebach
37. Sean McConnell
38. Ben Hayslip
39. Chris Stevens
40. Bobby Pinson
41. Eric Church
42. Chris DeStefano
43. Russell Dickerson
44. Casey Brown
45. Parker Welling
46. Taylor Swift
47. Kane Brown
48. P.T. Monahan
49. Bebe Rexha
50. Josh Hoge
51. Chris Young
52. Luke Dick
53. Jordan Davis
54. Ray Wylie Hubbard
55. Brett Eldredge
56. Zach Crowell
57. Justin Wilson
58. Seth Ennis
59. Luke Laird
60. Chris Janson
61. Tom Douglas
62. Josh Thompson
63. Corey Crowder
64. Maren Morris
65. Will Weatherly
66. Brad Clawson
67. CJ Solar
68. Matt Rogers
69. Scotty McCreery
70. Chris Stapleton
71. Mike Henderson
72. Brandon Lancaster
73. Pavel Dovgalyuk
74. Abe Stoklasa
75. D. Frasier
76. E.M. Hill
77. Jimmie Allen
78. JP Williams
79. Liz Rose
80. Rob Snyder
81. Channing Wilson
82. Mitchell Tenpenny
83. Sammy Mitchel
84. Steven Andre Battey
85. J. Yeary
86. Dierks Bentley
87. R. Hurd
88. Brandon Kinney
89. Jeff Middleton
90. Ben Stennis
91. Carrie Underwood
92. Kelsea Ballerini
93. Derek George
94. Darius Rucker
95. Josh London
96. Dustin Lynch
97. Andy Albert
98. Mark Holman
99. Devin Dawson
100. Jacob Durrett

Jameson Rodgers Signs With River House/Columbia Nashville As They Announce Long-Term Joint Venture

Pictured (L-R): Front – Sony Music Nashville SVP Legal & Business Affairs Angie Magill and Chairman & CEO Randy Goodman; Jameson Rodgers; and River House Artists Founder & Owner Lynn Oliver-Cline; Back –SMN COO & EVP Ken Robold; and Combustion Music President Chris Farren

Jameson Rodgers has signed a recording deal with River House Artists/Columbia Nashville. In conjunction with the signing, Sony Music Nashville and River House Artists have officially announced an exclusive, long-term joint-venture agreement, effective immediately. The first collaboration between the two actually began in 2016, when multi-Platinum artist Luke Combs inked a deal with the River House Artists and Columbia Nashville imprints.

A Mississippi native, Rodgers moved to Nashville in 2010 to pursue his music career and signed with Combustion Music in 2014. He has since had cuts including Florida Georgia Line’s “Wish You Were On It” and their latest single “Talk You Out of It,” as well as Chris Lane’s new single “I Don’t Know About You.” He has independently released two EPs, the latest featuring streaming hits, “Some Girls” and “Missing One,” which have been featured on Spotify’s New Boots and Wild Country Playlists along with SiriusXM’s On The Horizon. A new single is expected later this year from Rodgers, who is slated to open Luke Combs’ Beer Never Broke My Heart Tour beginning Jan. 31 and is also one of three artists chosen for the CMA Kixstart Artist Scholarship inaugural class.

“The entire Sony Music Nashville team is thrilled to be furthering our partnership with River House Artists. Lynn Oliver-Cline’s A&R instincts and passion to nurture and develop artists make her an incredible partner,” said Ken Robold, SMN COO and EVP. “We are very excited to have Jameson Rodgers as our first signing. His combination of incredible songs, work ethic and desire to be on the road growing his audience is inspiring. We can’t wait to embark on what will be an amazing partnership together.”

“I am ecstatic to be extending my River House partnership with Sony Music Nashville. We work really well together and I have never felt anything less than 100% support and commitment to my vision and the artists we develop together,” added River House Artists Founder/Owner Oliver-Cline. “Jameson is the perfect fit for our next launch together. Everything about him is genuine, and his passion for writing great songs and playing great shows is highly contagious. His record is going to be very special and there is no better team to bring it to the masses. I can’t thank Randy, Ken and the SMN team enough for being the best partners to me and RHA.”

“Today is a dream come true finally getting to sign this record deal. It’s been such a journey getting to this point. Since I moved to Nashville I’ve dreamed of not only signing a record deal but specifically with a Sony label,” said Rodgers. “It’s an honor to get to work with River House and Sony together. I look forward to seeing what the rest of this year and beyond brings!”

Rodgers is managed by Red Light Management’s Shawn McSpadden and JP Durant, and booked by Darin Murphy and Sam Forbert at CAA.

Tracy Byrd To Embark On North American Tour

Tracy Byrd

After years of taking time off from touring, Tracy Byrd is hitting the road for a North American tour. Byrd’s fellow Beaumont, Texas native Mark Chesnutt will also make an appearance on the tour for shows billed as The Beaumont Boys.

With hits like “Holdin’ Heaven,” “Watermelon Crawl,” “I’m From The Country,” “Ten Rounds of Jose Cuervo,” “Drinkin’ Bone,” and “The Keeper of the Stars,” Byrd is celebrating 25 years as a recording artist.

“I am really enjoying getting back out on the road,” says Byrd. “I loved spending time off watching the kids grow, but I have missed seeing the legion of fans that we had gained over the years. I look forward to reconnecting with them on the road!”

Tracy Byrd On Tour:
Feb 02 – Buck Owens’ Crystal Palace / Bakersfield, Calif.
Feb 04 – The Saddle Rack / Fremont, Calif.
Feb 05 – Harris Center For The Arts / Folsom, Calif.
Feb 06 – Gallo Center For The Arts / Modesto, Calif.
Feb 07 – Dell E. Webb Center For The Arts / Wickenburg, Ariz.
Feb 08 – Dell E. Webb Center For The Arts / Wickenburg, Ariz.
Feb 09 – The Liberty / Roswell, N.M.
Feb 15 – Private / Vidor, Texas
Feb 16 – Dosey Doe / The Woodlands, Texas
Feb 17 – Diamond Jacks Casino And Hotel / Bossier City, La.
Feb 21 – Liberty Hal / Tyler, Texas
Feb 22 – Hippodrome / Waco, Texas
Feb 23 – Arlington Music Hall / Arlington, Texas (Daytime Show)
Feb 23 – Matagorda Country Fair / Bay City, Texas (Nighttime Show)
Mar 01 – Marshfest / Winnie, Texas
Mar 02 – Private / Austin, Texas
Mar 22 – Redneck Country Club / Stafford, Texas
Mar 23 – Ford Of Boerne Ribbon Cutting / Boerne, Texas (Daytime Show)
Mar 23 – Twisted J Live / Stephenville, Texas (Nighttime Show)
Mar 28 – Imogene Theater / Milton, Fla.
Mar 29 – The Stockyard / Holiday, Fla.
Mar 30 – The Ranch / Fort Meyers, Fla.
Mar 31 – Orange Blossom Opry / Weisdale, Fla.
Apr 05 – Coyote Joe’s / Charlotte, N.C. – (Beaumont Boys Show)
Apr 06 – Red Barn Convention Center / Winchester, Ohio
Apr 12 – Choctaw Casino / Pocola, Okla.
Apr 13 – Delta Downs / Vinton, La.
Apr 25 – Cahoots / Lebanon, Tenn.
Apr 26 – Saddle Up Saloon / Indianapolis, Ind.
Apr 27 – Arcada Theater / St. Charles, Ill.
May 18 – Lee County Fair / Giddings, Texas
Jun 01 – Billy Bob’s Texas / Fort Worth, Texas
Jun 12 – Merryman Performing Arts Center / Kearney, Neb.
Jun 14 – Kickin’ Country Festival / Karlstad, Minn.
Jun 28 – Big Texas / Spring, Texas
Jun 29 – Johnny’s Steaks & Bbq / Saldo, Texas
Jul 24 – Cowlitz County Fair / Longview, Wash.
Jul 26 – Canyon Country Fair / Caldwell, Idaho
Jul 29 – Montana State Fair / Great Falls, Mont.
Aug 03 – Deerasic Classic / Cambridge, Ohio
Aug 06 – Umatilla County Fair / Hermiston, Ore.
Aug 07 – Tillamook County Fair / Tillamook , Ore.
Aug 08 – Riverfront Amphitheater / Albany, Ore.
Aug 23 – Cotton Eyed Joe / Knoxville, Tenn.
Aug 24 – Garden City Bicentennial / Garden City, Ga.
Oct 25 – Bluegate Theater / Shipshewana, Ind.
Dec 14 – Redneck Country Club / Stafford, Texas
Dec 21 – Jefferson Theater / Beaumont, Texas