busbee Celebrates Altadena Launch With Nashville Bash

(L-R): Alison Junker; Bethany Mako; Daniel Lee; busbee; BJ Hill; Katie Jelen; Noreen Prunier

Producer and songwriter busbee celebrated the launch of his new company, Altadena, Sunday night (Feb. 24) at The Cordelle in Nashville with a crowd of music industry friends, including top brass from partner companies Warner Music Nashville, Warner/Chappell Publishing, and Red Light Management.

A growing force in the launching and development of careers of artists, producers, and songwriters in a variety of genres, Altadena has offices in Los Angeles and Nashville. The company’s staff includes GM and VP of Creative Daniel Lee, Nashville Creative Director Noreen Prunier, and LA Creative Director Kelly Benini.

The opening included catered barbeque from Nashville’s Peg Leg Porker and a performance from attendees of Nashville’s W.O. Smith Music School, one of three local non-profits highlighted by busbee during the evening’s festivities. In addition to the W.O. Smith school, special attention was given to Porter’s Call, a Nashville organization that provides gratis counseling services to members of the arts industry, as well as Corner to Corner, a local organization that invests directly in underestimated entrepreneurs in an effort to foster the creation and growth of small businesses in Nashville’s most economically-challenged communities.

Pictured (L-R): busbee, Warner Music Nashville CEO John Esposito

Hall Of Fame Great Mac Wiseman Passes

Mac Wiseman. Photo: Stacie Hukeba

HALL OF FAME GREAT MAC WISEMAN PASSES

By Robert K. Oermann

Mac Wiseman, a member of both the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Bluegrass Hall of Fame, has passed away at age 93. He died Sunday, Feb. 24.

Known as “The Voice With a Heart,” Wiseman was a hit recording artist, a record-label executive, a radio host and a music-festival  impresario. He was one of the founders of the Country Music Association.

His hits included “The Ballad of Davy Crockett,” “Jimmy Brown the Newsboy” and “Your Best Friend and Me.” He is also associated with such enduring favorites as “Tis Sweet to Be Remembered,” “Love Letters in the Sand,” “I Wonder How the Old Folks Are at Home,” “I’ll Still Write Your Name in the Sand” and “Shackles and Chains.”

During his long career he recorded with such diverse talents as Flatt & Scruggs, John Hartford, Merle Haggard, Bill Monroe, Woody Herman, Charlie Daniels, The Osborne Brothers, Johnny Cash and John Prine. He recorded for Dot, Capitol, MGM, RCA, CMH, Music Mill, Hilltop, Churchill, Starday and many other labels.

Born Malcolm B. Wiseman in 1925, he was raised in rural Virginia. He survived polio as an infant, and this affected his mobility later in life. Wiseman began playing guitar at age 12. His fluid work on the instrument and his clear, expressive tenor singing were the hallmarks of his performing style.

He started his career as a Virginia radio disc jockey in 1944. He joined Molly O’Day’s band two years later and played bass on her big hit “Tramp on the Street.”

In 1947, he was the host of WCYB radio’s Farm and Fun Time in Bristol, Virginia. He shared airtime there with country-music patriarch A.P. Carter of The Carter Family.

Wiseman then became a member of Flatt & Scruggs’ Foggy Mountain Boys. Bill Monroe hired him in 1949, and Wiseman sang lead on the star’s bluegrass standards “Travelin’ Down This Lonesome Road” and “Can’t You Hear Me Calling.”

Mac Wiseman next joined the Louisiana Hayride on KWKH in Shreveport. While there, he toured with the legendary Hank Williams. He then moved on to the Old Dominion Barn Dance in Richmond, Virginia in 1953.

Jo Walker-Meador inducts Mac Wiseman into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2014. Photo: Donn Jones

By this time, he was leading his own band. He had signed with Dot Records in 1951 and had a top-10 hit in 1955 with “The Ballad of Davy Crockett,” the theme song of a Disney TV show. He served as Dot’s A&R executive in 1956-63, moving to Los Angeles and overseeing a roster that included such stars as Jimmy C. Newman, Reno & Smiley, Bonnie Guitar, Pat Boone and Leroy Van Dyke. While on the West Coast, Wiseman became a regular on TV’s Town Hall Party  and starred at The Mint in Las Vegas with The Stonemans as his backing band.

In 1958, Wiseman became one of the creators of the Country Music Association and was elected as the CMA’s first secretary. He was the youngest of the association’s organizers, and at the time of his death was the last living CMA founder.

Mac Wiseman’s Dot Records success as an artist continued with 1959’s “Jimmy Brown the Newsboy.” His next country hit came on Capitol Records in 1963. This was with the Hank Cochran song “Your Best Friend and Me.”

During the 1960s, Wiseman became popular on the collegiate folk-music circuit. He performed at The Newport Folk Festival, Carnegie Hall, The Hollywood Bowl and other prestigious venues.

In 1965, Mac Wiseman was hired as the manager of the WWVA Jamboree in Wheeling, West Virginia. He moved to Nashville in 1968 and signed with RCA Records. The following year, he tasted chart success with the novelty tune “Johnny’s Cash and Charley’s Pride,” produced by Jack Clement. This became Wiseman’s last top-40 country hit.

He subsequently re-emphasized his bluegrass roots. Mac Wiseman ran his own bluegrass festival at Renfro Valley, Kentucky in 1970-83 and recorded most of his 50+ albums with bluegrass instrumentation.

Ronnie Milsap and Mac Wiseman celebrate their induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Photo: Alan Poizner / CMA

But in 1979, he returned to the country charts with a version of the pop oldie “My Blue Heaven,” recorded with jazz great Woody Herman. During the 1980s, Wiseman made albums with collaborators including Merle Travis, Doc Watson, Del McCoury and Brother Oswald.

In 1986, Wiseman was one of the founding members of the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA). He was the narrator of the 1992 film documentary High Lonesome: The Story of Bluegrass Music. He was inducted into the Bluegrass Hall of Fame the following year.

He was elected the president of R.O.P.E. (the Reunion of Professional Entertainers) in 1990 and remained so for the next four years. This organization’s goal is to build a retirement home for country entertainers in Music City. Beginning in 1997, Wiseman was also a four-term secretary-treasurer of the American Federation of Musicians Local 257 on Music Row.

He was saluted with a career-overview, six-CD, boxed set in 2003. A second, four-CD set appeared in 2006. Both were issued by Germany’s Bear Family label.

Mac Wiseman and folk star John Prine joined forces for the acclaimed 2007 album Standard Songs for Average People. In 2008, Wiseman was given a National Heritage Fellowship award from the National Endowment for the Arts. His election to the Country Music Hall of Fame came in 2014.

This was the same year that he re-ignited his solo recording career with the homespun CD Songs From My Mother’s Hand. At age 90, he collaborated with writer Walt Trott on his 2015 autobiography All My Memories Fit to Print. His collaborations with Americana artists Peter Cooper and Thomm Jutz resulted in the 2017 album of newly composed material, I Sang the Songs

Wiseman has five children, including Randy, Sheila, Christine, Maxine, and Scott.

The public memorial service was held Wednesday (Feb. 27) at the Spring Hill Funeral Home in Madison, Tennessee.

Todd Milsap, Son Of Ronnie Milsap, Dies

Joyce Milsap, Ronnie Milsap, and Todd Milsap. Photo: Ronnie Milsap

Todd Milsap, son of country entertainer Ronnie Milsap, has died. He passed Saturday (Feb. 23) on his houseboat at Four Corners Marina in Antioch, Tennessee. Todd Milsap was 49. According to Metro Nashville PD, the death appears to be medically related.

No funeral arrangements have been released at this time. Todd Milsap is the son of Ronnie and Joyce Milsap.

“Our son Todd was a force of joy, life, creativity and giving from the moment he was born,” says the six-time Grammy winner Ronnie Milsap. “He made such a mark on our world in his years on this planet, everyone who met him was richer for it. It is too soon to even understand this loss, and I hope it’s something no one else has to bare. Please keep his three children, their mothers and Joyce and I in your prayers at such a fragile time.”

A gathering of friends and family was held on Tuesday (Feb. 26) at Woodlawn-Roesch-Patton Funeral Home. A celebration of life was held at Woodlawn’s Dignity Hall on Wednesday (Feb. 27).

Dierks Bentley Climbs The Mountain To Bridgestone Arena

Dierks Bentley, Miranda Lambert, and Keith Urban perform Friday (Feb. 22) in Nashville. Photo: Dierks Bentley/Instagram

Dierks Bentley packed out Bridgestone Arena in Nashville on a dreary, rainy Friday night (Feb. 22) and reminded everyone why we all love Dierks Bentley. The sold out show was full of surprise guests, full-circle moments and authenticity.

Bentley opened the show with his latest hit, “Burning Man,” while a large LED screen displayed atmospheric videos of the desert. It was clear from the start that visuals play a big part in The Burning Man Tour.

The light rigs then lowered and Bentley’s band broke out the fiddle and the banjo for the bluegrass-flavored title track to his 2010 album Up On the Ridge

Just when the crowd thought from the mountainous imagery that Bentley was going into another song from his latest project, The Mountain, he threw his arm up as a huge wave took over the screen and looked as if it would crash onto the stage.

“Y’all look like you’re going to the beach!” he said as he went into “Somewhere on a Beach.”

Dierks Bentley at Bridgestone Arena. Photo: Zach Belcher


When Bentley sang “Woman, Amen,” black and white images of Maren Morris, Kacey Musgraves, Brandi Carlile, Miranda Lambert, Reba McEntire, Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton and Loretta Lynn appeared on the screen.

Bentley then brought his stellar opener, Tenille Townesback out to sing Elle King’s part of “Different for Girls.”

“I think things are finally starting to look up for us to hear more females on the radio,” he said. “It is different for girls, but it shouldn’t be.”

Townes was not the only guest Bentley invited out to sing with him. Fans roared when Keith Urban wandered out to shred on guitar and harmonize as Bentley sang “The Mountain.” He compared Music Row to a mountain. A photo of him, Urban and Kenny Chesney displayed on the screen as he talked about the climb to success as an artist.

Bentley then showed a photo of Urban winning the CMA Entertainer of the Year award back in November and Urban shook his head as Bentley said that he had reached the top of the mountain.

The crowd roared even louder when Miranda Lambert made her way to the stage to harmonize with the guys on some Hank and Merle.

Lambert and Urban found their sweet spot, harmonizing seamlessly on “Blue Kentucky Girl” as Bentley sat down on the stage in front of them and enjoyed their stellar harmonies with the rest of us, raising his solo cup in the air.

Before they left, Lambert thrilled the audience with a “Cowboy Take Me Away” cover.

Later, Bentley’s daughter Evelyn Bentley made an appearance to sing Brandi Carlile’s part on their collaboration from The Mountain, “Travelin’ Light.” It seems as if having a country star father has rubbed off, as she held her own for the Grammy-winning Carlile’s part; and she did it all while flossing. Bentley shook his head.

“Quit flossing and go to bed!” he said as she made her way backstage.

At one point, Bentley ‘came a little closer’ to the fans at the back of the arena to sing on a smaller stage. It was clear that Bentley wanted to be close to his fans, as he shook and slapped everyone’s hands on his way to and from the small stage. He even invited a lucky fan to shot-gun a beer with him during the party anthem “Am I the Only One.”

“It’s been a lot of years,” he said with his hand on his heart. “We’ve made a lot of fans. Thank you for holding onto us.” Bentley went into “I Hold On” reaching out to his fans and the sky when the song mentioned his father and God.

The sentiment of the night at the “largest honky tonk on lower broadway” wasn’t lost on Bentley. He was grateful, present, intentional and entertaining, leaving some wondering when he will top that mountain and be recognized as an entertainer of the year. Odds are, after Friday night, the crowd already has.

Jon Pardi got the crowd warmed up for Bentley with a plethora of hits from his Platinum California Sunrise.

Kicking the night off with his 2014 “What I Can’t Put Down” and then not wasting any time, Pardi went into his most recent MusicRow No. 1, “Night Shift.”

“We’re gonna be working that night shift tonight!” he said.

The crowd roared as the fiddle whined for the smart, “She Ain’t In It.”

“Shout out to all my hard-working men and women out there enjoying their time off in music city tonight,” he said as the audience raised their drinks and fists in the air for “Paycheck.”

Pardi also promised a new record would come out this year, and teased two tunes from the upcoming project, one called “Heartache Medication” and the other with the lyric it isn’t always the cowboy that rides away.

Audience members swayed and square danced when Pardi went into “Head Over Boots” and sang the words loudly when he performed “Heartache on the Dance Floor.”

“I know y’all got some dirt on your boots!” Pardi yelled as he closed his set with “Dirt on My Boots.”

Tenille Townes was visibly honored to open up the night at the Nashville arena. The folk-rock goddess, draped in burnt orange, performed her debut “Where You Are” and “Somebody’s Daughter,” as well as U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For.”

“I consider it a great honor to open up this night of music for you,” Townes said. “I’m not going to forget this night, Nashville. I’ll hold it close.”

Hot Country Knights. Photo: Zach Belcher


The Hot Country Knights got everything started with their covers of 90s classics like Travis Tritt’s “T-R-O-U-B-L-E.”

A cousin of one of the band members made an appearance to cover Rhett Akin’s “That Ain’t My Truck.” Coincidentally, his voice was uncannily similar to Akin’s son Thomas Rhett. The opening band also had a Dierks Bentley sound-alike, but there’s no way he could have pulled Bentley’s style off.  

The Knights also invited Sawyer Brown’s Mark Miller out to sing “Some Girls Do.”

Friday night was a night of great music, real fan connection and a lot of fun. Dierks Bentley’s Burning Man Tour is one not to forget.

NSAI Reveals Winners Of The 19th Annual Song Contest

 

Pictured (L-R): Jacob Noe, Michael Roth

NSAI, along with presenting partners CMT and C.F. Martin & Co., is proud to announce Jacob Noe as the Grand Prize Song+Lyric winner of NSAI’s annual Song Contest with his entry “Weight of Words” (co-written with Canaan Stanley), and Michael Roth as the Lyric Only Winner with his entry “The Price Of A Song.”

With the addition of presenting partner C.F. Martin & Co. this year, the Grand Prize winning package was bigger than ever and included $5,000 cash, a one-year single-song contract with ole, mentoring sessions with legendary hit songwriter Craig Wiseman and musician, writer, performer and Martin ambassador Hunter Hayes, and a Martin guitar. Additional prizes included a round-trip flight to Nashville, TN, tickets to the 2019 CMT Music Awards, a mentoring session with a CMT executive, a performance slot during the 2019 Tin Pan South Songwriters Festival and more. The total prize package was valued at over $15,000. All eight runner-up entrants in the Song+Lyric category also each were awarded their very own Martin Dreadnought Junior acoustic electric guitar, as well as an industry meeting and a year membership to NSAI.

Roth, the winner of the Lyric-Only category won a prize package that included a mentoring session with hit songwriter Lori McKenna, a Martin guitar, industry access, a round-trip flight to Nashville, TN, a pass to the annual Music Biz conference and more.

Beating out nearly 2,600 entries, each placing song advanced through several levels of judging with the final judging event taking place on February 5, 2019, where the Grand Prize-winning song was determined by a panel of elite judges.

Pictured (L-R): Chris Martin, Craig Thatcher, NSAI’s Bart Herbison and Lindsay Gum, John Ozier, Jordan Walker, and Brett James

Judges included Chris Martin (Chairman & CEO, C.F. Martin & Co.), Craig Thatcher (Recording artist and International Clinician/Ambassador for C.F. Martin & Co.), Brett James (Grammy-Winning Songwriter/Producer), Jordan Walker (Manager, Music & Talent, CMT) and John Ozier (Vice President, Creative, ole). For the final judging, each song was played and received a score of 1-10 from each panelist. The song with the highest score in total was declared the winner.

Steven Curtis Chapman Announces Bluegrass Album, ‘Deeper Roots: Where The Bluegrass Grows’

Steven Curtis Chapman is honoring his rural Kentucky heritage as he announces Deeper Roots: Where The Bluegrass Grows available on all music platforms March 22. Today, Chapman released a bluegrass version of “Dive” featuring recent Bluegrass Hall of Fame and Country Music Hall of Fame inductee, Ricky Skaggs, as the lead single.

Deeper Roots serves as the sequel to Chapman’s 2013 No. 1 Bluegrass Album Deep Roots, which was exclusively released with Cracker Barrel. Along with Skaggs, Chapman was also joined by Gary LeVox of Rascal Flatts for a collaboration on “‘Til The Blue.”

Deeper Roots was produced by Chapman and Brent Milligan, engineered by Milligan and Brent King, mixed by Milligan, King and Sean Moffitt and mastered by Brad Blackwood at Euphonic Masters. The 13-track collection features a mixture of familiar hymns like “Life Is Like A Mountain Railroad” and “I’ll Fly Away,” fan-favorite hits including “Cinderella” and brand-new songs such as “Where The Bluegrass Grows” and “‘Til The Blue.”

Deeper Roots: Where The Bluegrass Grows Track Listing:
1. “Where the Bluegrass Grows”
2. “Dive” featuring Ricky Skaggs
3. “‘Til The Blue” featuring Gary LeVox
4. “Cinderella”
5. “Victory in Jesus” featuring Herb Chapman Sr. and Herb Chapman Jr.
6. “Great is Thy Faithfulness” featuring Herb Chapman Sr. and Herb Chapman Jr.
7. “My Redeemer is Faithful and True”
8. “How Great Thou Art” featuring Jillian Edwards Chapman
9. “Life is Like a Mountain Railroad” featuring Herb Chapman Sr. and Herb Chapman Jr.
10. “I’ll Fly Away”
11. “Without Him” featuring Herb Chapman Sr. and Herb Chapman Jr.
12. “Be Still and Know” featuring Caleb Chapman
13. “I’d Rather Have Jesus” featuring Herb Chapman Sr.

Warner Music Nashville Celebrates Dan + Shay Grammy Win And ACM Nominations

 

Dan + Shay pictured with Warner Music Nashville and Sandbox Entertainment

Warner Music Nashville’s Dan + Shay raised glasses with their label family yesterday (Feb. 21) to celebrate their first-ever Grammy award win. The timing was fitting as they also received six ACM Awards nominations this week and tied as the most-nominated artist overall, with Dan Smyers earning an additional four nominations for his work as a songwriter and producer.

Chairman & CEO, John Esposito surprised the duo with a 2x Platinum plaque for “Tequila” and a Platinum plaque for “Speechless.” “Speechless” spent four weeks atop the country radio charts and has sold over 1.7 million track equivalents, including more than 230 million streams. The romantic tune follows the Grammy-winning smash “Tequila,” which has accumulated over 550 million streams internationally.

With the two chart-topping hits, Dan + Shay boast two of the five most-streamed country songs of 2018, and are the only duo ever to hold the top two spots on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart simultaneously for eight consecutive weeks.

CCM News: Michael W. Smith, Ryan Stevenson, Integrity Music

Michael W. Smith Releases Live Album

Michael W. Smith

When Michael W. Smith hosted a gathering of 14,000 people at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville last August, the energy of the event was captured on AWAKEN: The Surrounded Experience, out now via Rocketown Records and The Fuel Music. The album features Smith along with special guest CeCe Winans.

On April 30, Smith will return to Bridgestone Arena to be honored by his peers during the “35 Years of Friends: Celebrating The Music of Michael W. Smith” event. The all-star line-up includes performances by Amy Grant, Brian Littrell (Backstreet Boys), CeCe Winans, The Gatlin Brothers, Jars of Clay, Jason Crabb, Jim Brickman, Lee Greenwood, MercyMe, Natalie Grant, Newsboys, The Oak Ridge Boys, Randy Travis, Rascal Flatts, Ricky Skaggs, Russ Taff, Sandi Patty, Vince Gill, Wynonna and more.

 

Ryan Stevenson Celebrates No. 1

Gotee Records and First Company Management recently celebrated Ryan Stevenson‘s No. 1 song “No Matter What.” The single topped Billboard’s Christian AC Indicator chart for three consecutive weeks. The song was written by Stevenson, producer Bryan Fowler and Jonathan Smith. It is also the title track to Stevenson’s 2018 album.

This is his third consecutive Top 5 Billboard Christian Airplay and Christian AC radio single in the last three years.

 

Integrity Music Signs William McDowell

Integrity Music has signed worship leader, pastor, author and recording artist William McDowell and will release his upcoming live album.

McDowell, who serves as pastor of Orlando, Florida’s Deeper Fellowship Church, previously released five critically-acclaimed albums which earned Dove and Stellar Awards, and a Grammy nomination.

Florida Georgia Line’s ‘Can’t Say I Ain’t Country’ Debuts At No. 1

FGL visits “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” in Los Angeles. Photo by Michael Rozman/Warner Bros.

Florida Georgia Line’s fourth studio album Can’t Say I Ain’t Country (BMLG Records) debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart, with consumption of 300,000 album equivalents.

To promote their latest album, Tyler Hubbard and Brian Kelley went on a week-long, coast-to-coast jaunt, appearing on both daytime and late-night television. The duo stopped by The Ellen DeGeneres Show Thursday (Feb. 21) to perform their single “Talk You Out of It,” and then chatted with host DeGeneres –who later surprised Hubbard and his wife Hayley with the gender reveal of their second child due in August. (See video below).

Heading into the 54th Academy of Country Music Awards on April 7,  FGL is nominated for Duo of the Year, Single of the Year, Song of the Year, and Music Event of the Year—all for their 4-times Platinum, “Meant to Be” collaboration with Bebe Rexha.

FGL’s upcoming tour features Dan + Shay and Morgan Wallen, plus special guests HARDY and Canaan Smith on select stops.

Reba Promotes New Music in NYC

Reba On CBS This Morning. Photo: Michelle Crowe

This week Reba McEntire gave live audiences in New York City more details about her forthcoming album Stronger Than The Truth, out April 5 on Big Machine Records. Today McEntire released another song, “No U In Oklahoma,” which she co-wrote with Ronnie Dunn and Donna McSpadden.

 

 

Reba’s appearances in New York City began on CBS This Morning as she spoke with co-hosts Gayle King and Norah O’Donnell about returning to host the ACM Awards for her sixteenth time and announced the nominees. She then chatted with host Kevan Kenney for a BUILD Series before wrapping the night at The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. She also joined host Andy Cohen and actor Morris Chestnut on Watch What Happens LIVE.

Reba on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. Photo Credit: Scott Kowalchky

Stronger Than The Truth is available for pre-order here.