Brooks & Dunn, Ray Stevens, Jerry Bradley To Be Inducted Into The Country Music Hall Of Fame

Record executive Jerry Bradley, artist and comedian Ray Stevens, and duo Brooks & Dunn are the latest inductees into the Country Music Hall of Fame, it was announced Monday morning (March 18).

CMA CEO Sarah Trahern welcomed the crowd gathered at Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in downtown Nashville. The Country Music Hall of Fame was created in 1961 to honor those artists and musicians who made an indelible mark on country music, and 136 legends are in their ranks.

Host Reba McEntire fell ill and could not be in attendance to host the event. In her stead, Bill Cody hosted the morning’s announcement.

Brooks & Dunn were named for the Modern Era category, while Stevens was selected in the Veteran Era artist and Jerry Bradley accepted the honor in the non-performer category (which rotates every three years).

“One of my favorite days of the year is when I get to tell the new class they are being inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame,” said Trahern. “This is the highest achievement in country music, and I couldn’t be more thrilled to welcome Jerry, Brooks & Dunn and Ray into the distinguished group and honor this incredible career milestone.”

“It’s really hard to put into words how it feels to hear you’re going into the Country Music Hall of Fame,” said Kix Brooks. “When you’re a huge fan of country music, there’s nothing more humbling. My idols are on that wall in there – Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings – so to think that Ronnie and I are going to be placed beside those guys is probably one of the coolest things I could ever imagine happening. I’m not sure I’ll ever consider myself a peer because it’s not something that you think about…I just never even dreamed quite that big.”

“This means so much to us and I will be honored to accept it, but I still don’t think I’m ever gonna be able to believe it!” added Ronnie Dunn.

“I am surprised and emotional knowing that I’ll be joining my dad and uncle in the Hall,” expressed Bradley. “I was glad that Sarah Trahern and Tom Collins came to my house to bring me the good news.”

“I am seldom at a loss for words but when they told me I was going to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, I was thoroughly caught by surprise,” said Stevens. “What a great honor to be included in the company of the people who are already members. When I heard the news, I was speechless and all I can say is, ‘It don’t get no better than this!’”

A formal induction ceremony for Bradley, Brooks & Dunn and Stevens will take place at the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum in the CMA Theater later this year. Since 2007, the Museum’s Medallion Ceremony, an annual reunion of the Hall of Fame membership, has served as the official rite of induction for new members.

“This year’s class of inductees includes a visionary executive, a remarkable songwriter, producer, performer, and publisher, and the most-successful country music duo in history,” said Kyle Young, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Chief Executive Officer. “Jerry Bradley, Ray Stevens, and Brooks & Dunn have earned Country Music’s highest honor. It has been my privilege to watch and listen as they forged indelible marks.”

Bios for each inductee is below:

Jerry Bradley

Non-Performer – Jerry Bradley
Jerry Bradley has left an indelible mark on the country music business. He was the head of RCA Records from 1973 to 1982. During his tenure, Ronnie Milsap, Dolly Parton and Jerry Reed achieved pop-crossover stardom, and Elvis Presley returned to the country hit parade. Bradley signed Milsap to RCA. In addition, he signed Alabama, and was at the helm of the label as the group achieved stardom with its first chart-topping successes. He oversaw the creation of country music’s first Platinum-certified album, Wanted! The Outlaws, ushering in an entire era of country music with its stars Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser leading an “outlaw” movement.

As a record producer, Bradley has worked with such Country Music Hall of Fame members as Eddy Arnold, Floyd Cramer, Charley Pride and Dottie West. He was a longtime board member of the Country Music Association and CMA Board President in 1975. He was a key figure in orchestrating CMA’s annual Fan Fair. After the Gaylord company bought Acuff-Rose Publishing in 1985, Bradley was named the head of its newly formed Opryland Music Group. For OMG’s 16th Avenue label, Bradley continued to produce hits for Pride. Among the publishing company’s success stories were Kenny Chesney, Skip Ewing and Aaron Tippin, all of whom became top recording artists.

Bradley belongs to one of the greatest dynasties of the Nashville music industry. His father was Country Music Hall of Fame member Owen Bradley. Bradley’s uncle was Country Music Hall of Fame member Harold Bradley, a member of the fabled “A-Team” of session musicians and believed to be the most recorded guitarist in history. Bradley’s uncle Charlie and cousin Bobby Bradley are noted recording-studio engineers. His aunt was the pioneering female Music Row office manager Ruby Bradley Strange. Bradley’s sister is retired BMI executive Patsy Bradley. His wife Connie Bradley was the chief of ASCAP’s Music City office from 1980 to 2010. His son is artist manager Clay Bradley.

Born in 1940, Bradley was educated in Nashville and served in the Army from 1960 to 1962. Following his discharge, Jerry told his father he’d like to join him in the music business. Owen taught him audio engineering skills at Bradley’s Barn studio beginning in 1965. With his uncle Harold, Jerry launched the family’s Forrest Hills Music publishing company. But Bradley was keen to establish his own Music Row identity. In 1970, he became the assistant to legendary RCA chief, producer and guitarist Chet Atkins, another member of the Country Music Hall of Fame. Bradley assumed the label’s administrative and business tasks so that Atkins could concentrate on music. He arrived at the company just as Atkins protégée Reed achieved the pop-crossover hits “Amos Moses” (1970) and “When You’re Hot, You’re Hot” (1971).

In 1973, Bradley became the head of RCA’s Nashville operation. Under his leadership, the label became one of the first in Nashville to achieve autonomy from New York. This meant that he and his successors were free to sign artists, design album graphics and create marketing materials without oversight. He gradually replaced RCA’s “old guard” record producers with new talents such as Tom Collins, Harold Shedd and Norro Wilson. He helped tutor his RCA successor, Joe Galante, teaching the younger executive to appreciate country music. He signed Milsap in 1973 and remained at the helm of RCA, just as he crossed over to the pop charts with “It Was Almost Like a Song” (1977) and “(There’s) No Gettin’ Over Me” (1981). Parton had ambitions beyond country music. Bradley helped her achieve these with “Here You Come Again” (1977) and “9 to 5” (1980).

Thanks to Bradley’s RCA team, Presley returned to the country spotlight in the mid-1970s with “I’ve Got a Thing About You Baby,” “Help Me,” “T-R-O-U-B-L-E” and more. Bradley had begun producing records in the early 1970s. His initial successes included hits with Nat Stuckey (1971’s “She Wakes Me With a Kiss Every Morning”) and Johnny Russell (1973’s “Rednecks, White Socks and Blue Ribbon Beer”). In 1973, he began producing Pride. They had more than a dozen No. 1 records together, including “Someone Loves You Honey” (1978) and “Mississippi Cotton Picking Delta Town” (1974). He signed Alabama to RCA in 1980 and launched the act’s historic string of hits. The label’s promotion of such No. 1 smashes as 1980-81’s “Tennessee River,” “Feels So Right” and “Why Lady Why” led to Alabama’s superstardom, Country Music Hall of Fame induction, and more than 75 million in sales.

While at RCA, Bradley also presided over star-making hits by such artists as Dave & Sugar, John Denver, and Sylvia. During his 1986-2002 spell at the Opryland Music Group, Bradley produced Pride’s “Shouldn’t It Be Easier Than This” (1987), “I’m Gonna Love Her on the Radio” (1988) and more. He also signed such artists as John Conlee and Neal McCoy. Jerry and Connie Bradley are now retired and remain beloved figures in the Nashville music community.

Brooks & Dunn

Modern Era Artist – Brooks & Dunn
For Brooks & Dunn, the road to the Country Music Hall of Fame has been paved with unparalleled accomplishments. The duo dominated the country popularity charts for two decades with 60 charted singles, more than 40 Top 10 hits, 20 No. 1 triumphs, and 12 Platinum-plus albums. Named CMA Entertainer of the Year in 1996, Brooks & Dunn are the most awarded CMA duo of all time. They have created such timeless musical moments as “Neon Moon,” “Believe,” “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” “Play Something Country” and “Rock My World (Little Country Girl).” Their concert prowess set a new bar of entertainment in country music. In fact, their achievements transcend the country genre. By any measure, Brooks & Dunn are one of the most successful musical duos in American music history.

The act was forged by Arista Records executive Tim DuBois. Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn were both eager to join the label’s roster in 1990. DuBois suggested that the solo artists join forces. At the time, Brooks had the longer Music Row pedigree. During the 1980s, he was well known as a hit songwriter in the country community. Born Leon Eric Brooks III in 1955, he is a native of Shreveport, Louisiana. He acquired his nickname while still in the womb. Kix Brooks was playing guitar by age six, performing onstage by age 12 and writing songs by age 14. His college roommate was future BMI executive Jody Williams, who urged him to move to Nashville in 1979. Brooks’ subsequent songwriting successes include his co-written “I’m Only In It For the Love” for John Conlee (1983), “Modern Day Romance” for the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band (1985) and “Who’s Lonely Now” for Highway 101 (1989). As a solo recording artist, he grazed the country charts with “Baby When Your Heart Breaks Down” (1983) and “Sacred Ground” (1989). In 1986, he co-wrote Nashville’s official city song “I Still Hear the Music of Nashville.”

Meanwhile, Ronnie Dunn was becoming a regional honky-tonk star in Texas and Oklahoma. Born in Texas in 1953, he originally performed in his father’s country band. He was a gospel artist while attending college in Abilene. His performances in Tulsa nightclubs led music mogul Jim Halsey to sign him to his Churchill label in 1981. Dunn first appeared on the charts in 1983 with “It’s Written All Over Your Face” and, the next year, “She Put the Sad in All His Songs.” Although he wrote neither song, he was blossoming as a songwriter at the time with “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” among other compositions. He won the Marlboro Country Talent Search in 1988. This eventually led him to the doorstep of Arista Records.

The label was already a pop powerhouse. In 1990, it was opening a country music division with DuBois at the helm. He knew both Dunn and Brooks and suggested that they write songs together. Meanwhile, Asleep at the Wheel recorded Dunn’s “Boot Scootin’ Boogie” for their 1990 Arista album Keepin’ Me Up Nights. When Dunn and Brooks came up with “Brand New Man” (with collaborator Don Cook), DuBois urged them to join forces as an Arista act. Although each had solo aspirations and didn’t know one another well, they agreed to become a team. Brooks & Dunn became overnight stars with the 1991 release of “Brand New Man” and “My Next Broken Heart.” Dunn’s searing performance of his self-written “Neon Moon” cemented the new act’s stardom in 1992. The duo’s recording of “Boot Scootin’ Boogie” became a country dance club sensation. The team earned the first of 14 CMA Vocal Duo of the Year awards that fall. Also, in 1992, McBride & the Ride revived Brooks’ “Sacred Ground” and took it to the top of the country charts. The following year, Brooks & Dunn won their first Grammy with “Hard Workin’ Man.” “She Used to Be Mine” hit No. 1 in 1993. “Rock My World (Little Country Girl),” “That Ain’t No Way to Go” and “She’s Not the Cheatin’ Kind” continued the duo’s hit streak in 1994.

By the mid-1990s, Brooks & Dunn were renowned for high-energy, high-tech concert performances. Dunn’s electrifying singing and Brooks’ exuberant showmanship packed arenas. “Little Miss Honky Tonk” and “You’re Gonna Miss Me When I’m Gone” both hit No. 1 in 1995. The 1996 smash “My Maria” became the biggest country hit of the year and earned the team a second Grammy. Brooks & Dunn capped 1996 with the CMA Entertainer of the Year honor. Hits such as “A Man This Lonely” (1997), the Reba McEntire collaboration “If You See Him” (1998), “How Long Gone” (1998) and “Husbands and Wives” (1998) buoyed the duo to the end of the decade. In 2001, “Ain’t Nothing ‘Bout You” became the year’s biggest country single. “Only in America,” co-written by Brooks, has been used extensively in presidential campaigns for both parties.

Brooks & Dunn leaped back to the top of the charts with “Red Dirt Road” and “You Can’t Take the Honky Tonk Out of the Girl” in 2003. Dunn’s co-written “Play Something Country” and “Believe” became iconic singles of 2005, with the latter winning CMA Single and Music Video of the Year awards. The duo reunited with McEntire on 2008’s “Cowgirls Don’t Cry.” Brooks & Dunn have also collaborated on recordings with such artists as Asleep at the Wheel, Johnny Cash, Billy Gibbons and Mac Powell. In 2006, Brooks became the host of the nationally syndicated radio show American Country Countdown, having taken home CMA and ACM awards for his hosting duties. As a CMA board member and Chairman of the Board in 2005, he was pivotal in the creation of its “Keep the Music Playing” program benefiting music education, which has become the CMA Foundation. He was also the first recipient of the CMA Humanitarian Award in 2015. Brooks & Dunn earned a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2008.

The duo announced their retirement in 2010, with a final performance benefiting the Country Music Hall of Fame, before reuniting in 2015. Dunn was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2018. He also launched his own photography venture known as the “Lensman Project,” offering fans a look into his passion for capturing special moments, with his work being featured in Cowboys & Indians Magazine as well as being exhibited at Cheyenne Frontier Days.

In 2014, the duo announced their reunion along with long-time friend, McEntire, for a residency called “Together in Vegas” at The Colosseum at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas, which received rave reviews and continues to be extended with more shows throughout this year. Brooks & Dunn recently announced their upcoming collaboration album Reboot. Available on April 5, the 12-track release will see the duo team up with Kane Brown, Thomas Rhett, Brett Young, LANCO, Ashley McBryde, Brothers Osborne, Luke Combs, Midland, Cody Johnson, Jon Pardi, Tyler Booth and Kacey Musgraves on re-ignited versions of Brooks & Dunn’s biggest hits.

Veteran Era Artist – Ray Stevens
Having one of the most multifaceted careers in entertainment has led Ray Stevens to the Country Music Hall of Fame. During his six decades in the music business, he has been a session musician, a TV celebrity, a song publisher, a singer, a record producer, a real-estate magnate, a label owner, a nightclub entrepreneur, a music arranger, a video director, a studio builder, a pop-music hit maker, a comic, a gospel artist and a country star. Stevens is renowned for recording novelties like “The Streak” as well as serious fare such as “Everything Is Beautiful.” He was elected to the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1980.

Born Harold Ray Ragsdale in Georgia in 1939, Stevens was a piano player from the age of seven. He grew up in Albany, Georgia, where he formed his first band and became a teenage disc jockey. When he was 17, the family moved to Atlanta. He met his music mentor there, publisher/entrepreneur Bill Lowery. The mogul took him to Nashville to record and arranged a contract with Capitol Records. The company issued his self-composed teen tune “Silver Bracelet” with his “Ray Stevens” stage name in 1957. Stevens majored in music in college. But he truly received his education from Lowery, as did his peers Bill Anderson, Mac Davis, Jerry Reed and Joe South. He worked as an instrumentalist, backup vocalist and producer on recording sessions for Lowery, in addition to making his own records. He first appeared in the pop hit parade in 1960 with his novelty ditty “Sergeant Preston of the Yukon,” issued on Lowery’s NRC label.

Stevens next signed with Mercury Records. He moved to Nashville in early 1962 and hit the ground running as a session musician on Leroy Van Dyke’s “Walk on By” and Joe Dowell’s “Wooden Heart.” Those hits were recorded on the same day. So was his own comedic smash “Ahab the Arab,” which exploded on the pop charts later that year. He continued to record humorous, self-composed songs for Mercury for the next five years. He also continued to work as a Music Row session musician. Stevens backed Brook Benton, Ronnie Dove, Brenda Lee, Patti Page, Elvis Presley, Charlie Rich, B.J. Thomas and hundreds of others. He began his stint on Monument Records in 1968 with serious material such as “Unwind” and the socially conscious “Mr. Businessman.” Stevens also produced some of Dolly Parton’s early recordings for the label. He roared back into the pop Top 10 with 1969’s wacky “Gitarzan,” but later that year introduced Kris Kristofferson’s somber “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down.” The latter song marked Stevens’ debut on the country charts. When pop superstar Andy Williams went on hiatus from his network television show in the summer of 1970, Stevens was tapped to host a temporary replacement variety series. For its theme song, Stevens wrote “Everything is Beautiful.” Released on Williams’ Barnaby label, “Everything is Beautiful” became a No. 1 pop smash. It also earned Stevens his first Grammy. The song has since been recorded by more than 100 other artists.

In 1971, Stevens scored his first Top 20 country hit with the gospel standard “Turn Your Radio On.” “Bridget the Midget” became a massive British hit in that year as well. His recording of “Love Lifted Me” earned him a gospel Grammy nomination. In the early 1970s, Stevens invested in Nashville real estate, built his Music Row studio/office complex and formed his own publishing company. Staff songwriters included Layng Martine, Jr. (Presley’s “Way Down,” Billy Crash Craddock’s “Rub It In”), Mark Petersen (Sammy Kershaw’s “Cadillac Style” and “I Can’t Reach Her Anymore”) and Buddy Kalb (Chet Atkins’ “Frog Kissin’” and many Stevens singles). Released in 1974, “The Streak” topped both pop and country hit parades and became a five-million-selling phenomenon. The following year, Stevens created an ear-tickling, bluegrass-jazz arrangement of the Johnny Mathis pop standard “Misty.” It became his biggest country hit and earned him his second Grammy. His innovative skills as an arranger were also in evidence on a doo-wop version of the operetta oldie “Indian Love Call” (1975) and a treatment of the Glenn Miller swing classic “In the Mood” (1977) done in clucking chicken voices (billed as Henhouse Five Plus Too).

He continued to mix comic and serious songs during stints with Warner Bros. and RCA. But when he signed with MCA Records’ country division in 1984, it was as a comedy act. Stevens emphasized his funny forte in the 1980s with such country hits as his self-composed “Shriner’s Convention” (1980) and the Kalb-penned “Mississippi Squirrel Revival” (1985). “I Need Your Help Barry Manilow” and “Would Jesus Wear a Rolex” earned him comedy Grammy nominations in 1980 and 1988, respectively. The fan-voted Music City News Awards named Stevens its Country Comedian of the Year for nine consecutive years, from 1986 to 1994. His humorous efforts for MCA earned him a string of Gold and Platinum albums. He repeated these feats during a stint at Curb Records.

In 1991, Stevens opened his own theater in Branson, Missouri. During the next three seasons, he performed for more than a million fans there. At the venue, he noted audience enthusiasm for his humor videos. His 1992 compilation Comedy Video Classics became a 10-times Platinum home video. This led to a series of similar DVD projects, several of which became million sellers. He marketed both video and music efforts on his own Clyde label in the new millennium. In 2012, he issued the giant, 108-track box set Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. He published his autobiography, Ray Stevens Nashville, in 2014. The following year, he launched his own television series on RFD-TV and then Public Television. In 2018, Stevens opened CabaRay Showroom. This 700-seat dinner theater is Nashville’s most sophisticated and technologically advanced showroom. Today, Stevens is regarded as the most successful comedy recording artist of all time.

Jimmie Allen Talks “Best” Success, Expanding His Brand, And Staying Committed To His Hometown (Exclusive)

BBR Music Group artist Jimmie Allen made history with his debut single, and he has big plans to expand on that success.

His debut single, “Best Shot,” punched up the country radio chart to No. 1, making Allen the first black artist to launch his career with a No. 1 debut single on country radio. “Best Shot” held the No. 1 spot for three weeks (including two consecutive weeks). Allen co-wrote the track with Josh London and J.P. Williams.

The song’s success has been a high point for the singer, who moved to Nashville in 2007, and has been open about his early struggles to balance supporting his family and chasing a dream—an ambition that found Allen at one point living in his car, so he could send the money from his various odd jobs back to his family in Delaware.

Now, heading into the ACM Awards, Allen is one of the five finalists for the New Male Artist of the Year honor, alongside Luke Combs, Michael Ray, Jordan Davis, and Mitchell Tenpenny.

“It’s a great feeling because you realize people in your same genre support what you are doing,” Allen says, calling from the set of his upcoming music video. “And to me, that means the most. Of course, I would love to win! Do I think Luke Combs is gonna kick our butts? Of course, I think Luke Combs is gonna kick our butts! But he’s a great guy. He deserves it. And if he takes it, I’m so happy for him.”

A win in the ACM category would make Allen the first black singer to win the honor.

“It means we’re going in the right direction as far as inclusion for everyone,” he explains what a win would mean for him and for country as a whole. “No matter your race, your gender, sexual orientation. We’re all different, and to me, music is supposed to be the thing that brings us together.”

While the earnest R&B-flavored “Best Shot” has become Allen’s signature, he’s eager to share a wider representation of his live show with his follow-up, “Make Me Want To.”

“In my show, I might have one ballad, and that’s ‘Best Shot.’ Most of the time, I’m jumping, running around, doing flips off the speakers, running through the crowd. I felt like going into the summer with a sing-a-long, up-tempo song.”

The song’s lyrics, which center on a guy who sees a girl in a bar, and, enthralled, begins contemplating a future together, are as dreamy as the production is sleek and animated.

“I’m pretty sensitive and a lot of times in relationships I catch feelings fast. That’s what this song is about. It’s about a guy that catches feelings, but he’s confident in his vulnerability. I feel like it’s very important, as men, we show that side. I think if you can show your vulnerable side that makes you cool, you know?”

Allen wrote “Make Me Want To” alongside Paul Sikes and Jennifer Denmark, approximately eight months after that same group penned Allen’s breakthrough viral track from 2017, “Blue Jean Baby,” a track inspired by an ex-girlfriend.

Only recently has he divulged “Blue Jean Baby” was about her.

“She knows now,” Allen says. “I told her like, I think six months ago.”

“Make Me Want To” draws from his early days in Nashville after relocating in 2007. Allen played his first Nashville shows at the now-defunct Fiddle & Steel Guitar Bar, and hung out at karaoke bar Lonnie’s Western Room (his favorite karaoke song: Ricochet’s “Daddy’s Money”).

“The second verse—you’re the center of the world on a bar stool—I pictured someone sitting on a bar at Lonnie’s, kinda laughing at her friends singing karaoke. I was trying to paint visuals ’cause I see a picture first in my head.”

Allen is constantly searching for and receptive to new song ideas—a magpie drawn to the brightest of intriguing phrases or melodies. He recalls watching multiple TV shows the evening leading up to a writing session, or listening to a mix of country, Christian, pop, and hip-hop on the way to the studio. Books also inform his ideas (his latest read? The Alchemist), and he takes inspiration from artists who have earned success by following their own unique paths.

“I admire how much love Kacey Musgraves has gotten. Her first album came out in 2013, she worked at it and never quit. I always call her the Katy Perry of country music. I’m a huge fan of her and her team, how they attack different avenues to get her music out. She’s everywhere and she’s done it by being herself.”

 

 

Hometown Hero

References to his life growing up in Milton, Delaware are littered throughout Allen’s debut album, Mercury Lane. He takes the album’s title from the street he grew up on. An album track, “21,” references his alma mater Cape Henlopen High School. The video for “Best Shot” features numerous family videos and photos, while the song was inspired by his late grandmother, Bettie-Ann Snead, who died in 2014, just months before Allen’s own son, Aiden, was born.

“She never got a chance to meet him, and that’s what crushed me the most,” he says.

Allen keeps in his back pocket the purple scarf Snead regularly wore, and his guitar strap bears her name.

“She was everything,” Allen recalls. “When my mom moved, I stayed with her as a kid, because I wanted to stay in the same school. I remember right after she died, I was in Los Angeles. My music wasn’t going anywhere, I had three jobs at the time, and my son was about to be born. I was frustrated and I was like, ‘Alright god, if you want me to keep chasing this music dream, give me some tangible sign.’ I walk in to the L.A. Kings game and they are celebrating winning the Stanley Cup, so as soon as I walk in, they gave me this replica Stanley Cup ring. I wear it to remind me that somewhere, there’s someone that needs to hear what I have to say.”

Despite an ever-increasing tour schedule, Allen remains deeply committed to his hometown.

Allen’s cousins are involved with youth basketball team the Delaware Phenoms. Allen also supports the team, helping to pay for the players’ shoes and uniforms. He’s currently in the process of buying the team a sprinter van.

Each December, he returns to Milton music venue Bottle and Cork to perform two benefit shows—an all-ages show in the afternoon, followed by a 21+ show in the evening—which benefits a different elementary school each year.

“I sell out bigger places in Delaware, but I want to keep it small and personal, so every year, each school is making the same amount. I don’t want anybody to feel like, well, our concert was at a smaller venue than this one was at a bigger one. The concert is my way of giving back, ‘cause I have so many friends that are still in the community.”

 

 

Giving It His Own Best Shot: Books, Movies And A Clothing Line

Allen is taking advantage of his burgeoning career and radio success to diversify his brand, with plans for books, a clothing line, and a movie already in place. He says the movie will begin filming this summer, with Allen portraying a military character. For this multi-hyphen creator, these plans are simply long-held dreams coming closer to fruition.

“Everything I wanted to do, I planned it like five years ago,” he says. “The clothing line comes out next year. I’m writing two books right now—one about my life and the other one is this cartoon character I developed.”

Ever the entrepreneur, Allen views each new output as a way to not only create revenues for his own family, but aims to create ways to enrich others.

“You have other families relying on you—my band, my tour manager, my crew. I feel like a lot of us musicians, we’re head of companies without even realizing. In a way, it really helps you push the envelope more because you realize, ‘What if I take this chance here? It’s not only better for myself but it’s better for everyone else around me.’

“I have a cousin that’s a great cartoonist. This is me creating a job for him. And it’s something that he can build upon for his family. So everything I do, it’s to start something. And hopefully, it trickles down, grows into this big empire. Not only for me and my family, but for every else involved.”

But first, Allen’s deep in the creative process for the next step in building what he hopes will be a second No. 1 single—the music video for “Make Me Want To.” Again, he’s taking the opportunity to do something a little different, showcasing two of his personal favorites.

“I’m a huge Disney fan and a huge Harry Potter fan, so the video is a mix of both,” says Allen, who wrote the video treatment himself and presented it to his label.

One thing the video won’t have—a performance segment.

“I didn’t wanna really do a performance spot,” he says. “Because I feel like that just takes away time we could get more creative with the video, and I’m like, ‘Everybody knows I’m not singing for real, anyways,’” he says, laughing.

Tim McGraw To Headline Free Concert at NFL Draft In Nashville This Spring

Tim McGraw is headlining a free outdoor concert on April 26 as part of the 2019 NFL Draft celebration at the Draft Main Stage in downtown Nashville, the NFL and Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp announced today. Additional performers for the event will be announced in the coming weeks, and Gospel music great CeCe Winans will sing the National Anthem to help kick off the NFL Draft activities on Thursday, April 25.

More than 20 Nashville-based acts will perform during the three days of activities on the Draft Main Stage and at the NFL Draft Experience presented by Oikos Triple Zero, a free admission football festival held outside Nissan Stadium. McGraw serves on the Nashville Local Organizing Committee for the Nashville Draft, and no other NFL Draft has integrated free live music to the extent that will be included in the Nashville Draft.

“Each year, the NFL strives to make the Draft weekend a memorable experience for our fans,” said NFL Executive Vice President, Events & Club Business Development, Peter O’Reilly. “The passionate fan base and iconic location will ensure a unique experience that is unlike anything fans have ever seen. We want to thank the Tennessee Titans and the city of Nashville for being a gracious host for the 2019 NFL Draft. We would also like to thank Tim and CeCe for generously giving their time to our fans to make their experience even more memorable.”

“Tim is a world-class musician who will no doubt elevate the fan experience that the NFL and the city are bringing to downtown for the Draft,” said Nashville Mayor David Briley.“Tim’s performance will be a showcase of the talent and charisma we have in our city. Come April, the country will once again see why Nashville has become the international destination it is today.”

Admission to the 2019 NFL Draft is free and open to the public. The Draft Main Stage location will be at First and Broadway, and it is free and open to the public to view Draft selections and the McGraw show. Draft picks on Main Stage will take place evenings of April 25 (Thursday) and April 26 (Friday) and during the afternoon of April 27 (Saturday). The Schermerhorn Symphony Center will be host to Selection Square, which features the team tables where representatives from each club will make their Draft selections. The NFL Draft Red Carpet will take place on April 25 (Thursday) at The Green at Riverfront Park.

The NFL Draft Experience will include an autograph stage with current NFL players and NFL Legends, interactive games, play football clinics, a PLAY 60 Zone presented by Danimals for the smallest NFL fans, a photo opp with the Vince Lombardi Trophy, the NFL Shop presented by Visa at Draft with exclusive NFL merchandise, Taste of Tailgate with Nashville restaurants and Bud Light Bars, the NFL Draft Experience Draft X stage with 1 Nashville-based artists of all genres, the Look Like a Pro experience where fans can step inside a replica NFL Draft Main Stage bearing a draft day jersey of your favorite NFL team and have your photo taken, and more. 

The 2019 NFL Draft in Nashville is expected to be the largest event in Nashville and the State of Tennessee given the anticipated attendance over three days, national networks and media coverage.

Chris Tomlin Releases Live Album, ‘Holy Roar: Live From Church’

Grammy winning and Platinum selling artist-songwriter Chris Tomlin launched his Holy Roar Tour with sold-out shows last week and Friday (March 15) he released a new live album Holy Roar: Live From Church. The album, recorded at a church in Nashville in front of 200 worship leaders, contains seven songs from his earlier Holy Roar album released last fall, including the new radio single and rising worship song “Is He Worthy?,” plus a song by Pat Barrett, who is signed to Tomlin’s imprint label Bowyer & Bow.

“I’m so excited to be releasing this live music today and to be performing these songs on tour this spring,” says Tomlin. “I want to write songs that give people a voice to sing and fill the churches. It’s not just a studio recording, but you hear all the people and the life that’s in that. I think this is so important to have this because you hear the songs in the truest form in which they were written.”

Tomlin’s 2019 touring year will also include the third-annual Good Friday Nashville concert at Bridgestone Arena on April 19, his first concert at the iconic Hollywood Bowl on his birthday May 4, and his first-ever trip and concerts in Israel. Chris Tomlin Worship Nights in Israel – A Journey Through the Holy Land is a 7-day destination concert event (June 20-27) that will tour Galilee, the Dead Sea, Nazareth, Capernaum, Mount of Beatitudes, the Garden Tomb, and other stops.

Later this summer, Tomlin will return for two shows to Red Rocks Amphitheatre, where in 2017 he became the first Christian artist to play back-to-back concerts at the historic venue.

Holy Roar: Live From Church track listing:
1. Is He Worthy?
2. Holy Roar
3. Goodness, Love And Mercy
4. Build My Life (feat. Pat Barrett)
5. Praise Him Forever
6. Impact
7. Nobody Loves Me Like You (feat. Ed Cash)
8. Praise Is The Highway

2019 Holy Roar Tour:
3/15/19 Sacramento, CA (Golden 1 Center)
3/16/19 San Diego, CA (Viejas Arena)
3/17/19 Glendale, AZ (Gila River Arena)
3/21/19 St. Louis, MO (Saint Louis University-Chaifetz Arena)
3/22/19 Wichita, KS (INTRUST Bank Arena)
3/23/19 Omaha, NE (Baxter Arena)
3/24/19 Milwaukee, WI (UWM Panther Arena)
3/28/19 Amherst, MA (Mullins Center)
3/29/19 Portland, ME (Cross Insurance Arena)
3/30/19 Lowell, MA (Tsongas Center UMass Lowell)
3/31/19 Baltimore, MD (Royal Farms Arena)
4/4/19 Tampa, FL (Yuengling Center)
4/5/19 Tampa, FL (Yuengling Center)
4/6/19 Gainesville, FL (Exactech Arena in the Stephen C. O’Connell Center)
4/7/19 Greensboro, NC (Greensboro Coliseum Complex)
4/11/19 Grand Prairie, TX (Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie)
4/12/19 Grand Prairie, TX (Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie)
4/13/19 The Woodlands, TX (Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion)
4/14/19 San Antonio, TX (Freeman Coliseum)
4/17/19 Rogers, AR (Walmart AMP)
4/18/19 Kansas City, MO (Sprint Center)

Additional 2019 concerts:
4/19/19 Nashville, TN (Good Friday Nashville)
5/4/19 Los Angeles, CA (Hollywood Bowl)
6/20-27/19 Israel (Worship Nights in Israel – A Journey Through The Holy Land)
7/29/19 Denver, CO (Red Rocks Amphitheater)
7/30/19 Denver, CO (Red Rocks Amphitheater)

Tickets available at www.christomlin.com.

Industry Ink: Rodney Atkins At Opry, BMI At SXSW, ASCAP At Bluebird

Rodney Atkins Feels The Love Following Opry Performance

Pictured (L-R): Greg Hill, President, Hill Entertainment Group; John Clore, VP Marketing, Curb Records; Jim Ed Norman, CEO, Curb Records; Sally Williams, GM, Grand Ole Opry / SVP, Programming & Artist Relations, Opry Entertainment; Ry Atkins, Rose Falcon Atkins; Rodney Atkins; Ryan Dokke, SVP/General Manager, Curb Records; and Benson Curb, SVP Revenue & Marketing, Curb Records. Photo: Chris Hollo/Opry.

Following Rodney Atkins’ March 12, 2019 Grand Ole Opry performance, his Curb Records team presented him, wife Rose Falcon, and son Ry with an Opry baby care package in anticipation of Rodney and Rose’s upcoming baby, due August 2019.

 

BMI Celebrates Ray Benson’s Birthday At SXSW

Chris Shiflett of the Foo Fighters (center) performs with Ray Benson and his band Asleep at the Wheel during the BMI Howdy Texas presents Ray Benson’s Birthday at SXSW on March 12, 2019, in Austin, TX. Photo: Erika Goldring for BMI

BMI highlighted the work of several performers during the 2019 SXSW Music Conference and Festival, with the BMI Howdy Texas Presents: Ray Benson’s 68th Birthday Bash on March 12.

Performers included Katie Pruitt, Robert Ellis, Wade Bowen, Dale Watson, Chris Shiflett of the Foo Fighters, Ed Roland of Collective Soul, Randy Houser and Robert Earl Keen.

The event benefited the Health Alliance for Austin Musicians (HAAM) and was sponsored by Delaware North, Topo Chico, the Texas Music Office, Austin Music Movement, Sugar & Dude, Chevron, Judy & Patrick Cantilo, Husch Blackwell LLP, Castletop Capital, St. David’s Foundation, Seton Family Healthcare and Quest Diagnostics.

 

ASCAP Presents at the Bluebird Cafe

Pictured (L-R): ASCAP VP of Membership Michael Martin, Michelle Pereira, Cecilia Castleman, Johnny Dailey, ASCAP Membership Manager Holly Chester, Cross Atlantic

On Wednesday, March 13, ASCAP hosted its long-running monthly showcase series at the Bluebird Cafe. The round featured ASCAP songwriter-artists Cecilia Castleman, Cross Atlantic, Johnny Dailey and Michelle Pereira. Dailey made his Bluebird Cafe debut at the showcase, curated by ASCAP Membership Manager Holly Chester.

Hillsong United’s New Album ‘People’ Coming In April

Hillsong UNITED will release a new 12-song album, People, on April 26. The live album will feature the single “Another in the Fire.” Recorded live in Sydney, Australia, the album includes three previously-released tracks, “As You Find Me,” “Good Grace,” and “Whole Heart (Hold Me Now).”

“So Will I (100 Billion X),” one of UNITED’s biggest songs to date, has been certified Gold by RIAA with over 108 million career streams.

The group will return to the United States for the first time in nearly three years for their The People Tour MMXIX, which launches April 25 in Austin, Texas and wraps July 2 at New York City’s Madison Square Garden.

Official track listing for PEOPLE:

  1. Ready or Not
  2. Here’s to the One
  3. Might Sound Wild
  4. Whole Heart (Hold Me Now)
  5. As You Find Me
  6. Clean
  7. Starts and Ends
  8. Highlands
  9. Holy Ground
  10. Another in the Fire
  11. Good Grace
  12. Echoes (Till We See the Other Side)

SESAC, Tony Arata, Beth Nielsen Chapman, Rivers Rutherford Hold Benefit Concert For Gilda’s Club

Songwriters Tony Arata, Beth Nielsen Chapman and Rivers Rutherford have teamed with SESAC for a benefit concert to aid Gilda’s Club Middle Tennessee. The event will be held Wednesday, April 17, beginning at 6:30 p.m. at SESAC (35 Music Sq. E.)

The event will help fund Gilda’s Club Middle Tennessee’s free cancer support program, which serves anyone impacted by cancer, including those diagnosed and their family and friends. Gilda’s Club’s evidence-based programming includes support groups, healthy lifestyle workshops, mind-body classes, social activities, educational lectures and community resource information. Offering approximately 60 professionally-led support and networking groups, and more than 50 educational workshops and lectures each month, Gilda’s Club Middle Tennessee is able to make a tangible difference in the lives of those impacted by cancer.

Tickets to the event are $100, and available at gildasclubmiddletn.org. Attire is business casual, or casual with a touch of red.

Acmeville Records Teams With Blank Range

Blank Range

Acmeville Records has partnered with Nashville rock band Blank Range for the band’s latest record. The album, titled In Unison, will be released on vinyl in April. Acmeville Records will release a limited edition, 300-copy run of the album, available at theacmevillenashville.com, and at select Nashville-based stores including The Groove in East Nashville.

Acmeville Records was founded as the in-house record label for Acme Feed & Seed in order to empower Acme’s mission of the discovery and preservation of Nashville’s music and history. When the Acme team discovered that Blank Range was going on infinite hiatus to pursue solo projects, they sprang into action to ensure that the band’s final album would be memorialized on vinyl in order to preserve this essential chapter in Music City history.

In Unison which was recorded in a home north of Nashville, showcases three Blank Range members taking turns delivering lead vocals throughout the 10 tracks of the album.

Since Blank Range formed in 2013, the avant-garde indie group has been a force to be reckoned with on the Nashville music scene. The band won The Road to Bonnaroo competition in 2014, they went on to open for the likes of rockers Alice in Chains, Spoon, and Drive-By Truckers. In 2018 they toured with Margo Price and Tyler Childers.

Blank Range has also been an integral part of the Acme Radio Live family, appearing on Acme Radio Live since 2017.

Before the Blank Range members transition into individual projects, they’ll be performing the last three shows on the books this year as a group in conjunction with Acme Radio Live and Acme Feed & Seed. On April 13, Blank Range will perform at Acme Radio Live’s Record Store Day at The Groove, followed by three encore performances throughout the summer which will take place on the Acme Feed & Seed stage (dates to come).

“While we’re coming to the end of one chapter in the Music City, we’re also welcoming the next chapter of the individual artists in Blank Range and continuing to preserve their legacy,” said Carl Gatti, Director of Entertainment and Radio at Acme Feed & Seed.

“Acme has provided a platform for musicians, and especially Blank Range, to get their craft out into the world for years,” said the band’s manager, Hampton Howerton. “The first vinyl pressing on Acmeville Records is a natural extension of their mission and it’s a testament to the songs the band wrote and recorded that the folks at Acme felt the desire to preserve In Unison on wax.”

In Pictures: BMI At SXSW

BMI (Broadcast Music, Inc.) brought several top singer-songwriters for day two of SXSW with the Yeti x BMI Day Party. Soul, country, indie, pop and alt-rock converged when Logan Ledger, Willie Jones, Billy Strings, Illiterate Light, Katie Schecter, Wafia, JP Saxe, Jackie Venson, Republican Hair and Tomar & the FCs took stages both inside and outside of the Yeti Flagship store in Austin, Texas.

Katie Schecter and her band pose for a shot at Yeti’s Flagship Store in Austin before their set at BMI / Yeti Day Party during SXSW on March 13, 2019, in Austin, TX. Photo: Erika Goldring

BMI / Yeti Day Party takes place on two stages at the Yeti Flagship Store during SXSW on March 13, 2019, in Austin, TX. Photo: Erika Goldring

Pictured: BMI’s Josh Tomlinson (second on Left) poses with Austin-based Tomar & The FCs at the BMI / Yeti Day Party during SXSW on March 13, 2019, in Austin, TX. Photo: Erika Goldring

Willie Jones perform at the BMI / Yeti Day Party during SXSW on March 13, 2019, in Austin, TX. Photo: Erika Goldring

Weekly Chart Report (3/15/19)

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