Gavin DeGraw To Launch Summer Tour In August

Gavin DeGraw. Photo: Alberto Vasari

Gavin DeGraw will launch his 2019 summer tour on Aug. 1 in York, Pennsylvania. The trek will run through Sept. 2 in Syracuse, New York. Prior to the start of the tour, DeGraw will be returning to the CMA Fest Riverfront stage on June 7th for the second year in Nashville. DeGraw recently toured across the US on the RAW TOUR, where he presented his songs in their truest live form, performing his entire catalogue as a trio for the first time.

The full list of dates:
Aug. 1: York, PA – Appell Center for the Performing Arts
Aug. 2: Solomons, MD – Calvert Marine Museum’s PNC Waterside Pavilion
Aug. 3: Selbyville, DE – The Freeman Stage
Aug. 4: Morristown, NJ – Mayo Performing Arts Center
Aug. 6: Huntington, NY – The Paramount
Aug. 8: Port Chester, NY – Capitol Theatre
Aug. 9: Lowell, MA – Lowell Summer Music Series – Boarding House Park
Aug. 10: Webster, MA – Indian Ranch
Aug. 14: Durham, NC – Carolina Theatre
Aug. 15: Charleston, SC – Charleston Music Hall
Aug. 16: Biloxi, MS – IP Casino Resort and Hotel
Aug. 17: Orlando, FL – Hard Rock Live
Aug. 20: Atlanta, GA – Buckhead Theatre
Aug. 22: Birmingham, AL – Avondale Brewing Company
Aug. 24: Pittsburgh, PA – Rock, Reggae and Relief
Aug. 31: Freeport, ME – Discovery Park – L.L. Bean Summer in the Park
Sept. 2: Syracuse, NY – New York State Fair

Tunecore Artists Hit Record Revenue Mark

TuneCore artists earned $83 million in the first quarter of 2019, the company just announced. The total marks a 21% increase over the first quarter of 2018, and brings total distribution revenue to $1.5 billion, all of which was paid to TuneCore artists. Distribution income for artists reached $308 million in 2018, marking a 28% year-over-year increase.

Publishing administration royalties collected for TuneCore artists also grew 42% in 2018 as well as YouTube Monetization, which delivered significant new income for TuneCore artists, growing 48% over 2017.

The platform enables artists to distribute their music to over 150 digital stores and streaming services worldwide including iTunes, Apple Music, Spotify, Amazon, Deezer, and Google Play and that reach helped make TuneCore independent artists a major factor influencing the growth of genres, markets and geographies.

Total streams and downloads of music by TuneCore’s 250,000 worldwide artists hit 199.3 billion in the past year, an 83% increase over 2017.

In 2018, the fastest-growing genres worldwide were:

  • Heavy metal – 154% increase
  • J-Pop – 133% increase
  • R&B/Soul – 68% increase
  • K-Pop – 58% increase
  • World music – 57% increase
  • Instrumental – 42% increase

In 2018, streaming growth varied worldwide:

  • Africa – 146% growth
  • Asia – 52% growth
  • Oceania – 38% growth
  • Europe – 35% growth
  • South America – 32% growth
  • North America – 31% growth

Industry Ink: Chris Young, Willie Jones, Ty Herndon Rising Stars Grant, Jon Reddick

Chris Young Adds USAA As Tour Sponsor

Country music star Chris Young, left, and NFL legend Joe Thomas, right, pose at USAA’s NFL Draft Salute to Service event on April 25, 2019 with Michael Dones and Joe Zettlemoyer at The Steps at WME in Nashville, Tennessee. USAA is an Official Sponsor of Chris Young’s Raised On Country Tour 2019 and Official NFL Salute to Service Partner. (Wade Payne/Invision for USAA/AP Images)

Chris Young has announced USAA as an Official Sponsor of the “Raised On Country Tour 2019.” USAA, a leading provider of insurance, banking and other financial services to members of the U.S. military and their families, will team with Young to create memorable experiences for military, veterans and their families throughout the coast-to-coast headlining tour.

With the 2019 NFL Draft in Nashville, USAA, Official NFL Salute to Service Partner, kicked-off celebrations by hosting a special NFL Draft USAA Salute to Service event for invited military members stationed at Fort Campbell. The event, which took place earlier today at The Steps at WME, featured an acoustic performance by Young and a Q&A session featuring NFL Legend Joe Thomas. Following the on-stage portions of the event, both Young and Thomas met with military members, signing autographs and posing for pictures.

Chris Young’s Raised On Country Tour 2019 kicks off May 16 in Alpharetta, Georgia with over 25 shows through September.

 

Willie Jones Releases New Single “Down For It”

Black River Entertainment’s Willie Jones has released his new single “Down For It,” via 4 Sound/Empire.

Jones says, “’Down For It’ was created earlier this year between writing sessions in Nashville and Los Angeles. You can hear the inspirations from both cities. Melodically, the song brought back memories of growing up in the ’90s and I saw images of shows like ‘Reading Rainbow’ in my head. When it was time to make the video, I thought paying homage to that show would be something cool and different. For those who remember, it should bring a smile to their face.”

In support of the new music, Willie will be touring all year with key performances during Nashville’s NFL’s Draft Week and CMT Fest.

 

Ty Herndon’s 2019 Rising Stars Grants Now Accepting Applications

Ty Herndon

GLAAD will award 2019 Rising Stars Grants of $2,500 to young people (ages 18-30) for their commitment to enhancing LGBTQ inclusion and representation in music. The Ty Herndon Rising Stars Grant for music is eligible to LGBTQ young people who are working to accelerate acceptance in the music industry.

In addition to the $2,500 grant, Rising Stars Grant recipient will attend GLAAD’s Concert for Love & Acceptance in Nashville,  including airfare and accommodations for the recipient and a guest. Applications are now open for submission, and will close May 19, 2019 at midnight PST. All applicants and recipients will be notified via email by May 24, 2019.

Gotee Records Signs Jon Reddick

Jon Reddick

Gotee Records has signed Jon Reddick, with the release of his single “You Keep Hope Alive,” penned with Anthony Skinner and Jess Cates, and produced by Nathan Nockels.

Reddick grew up the son of a pastor and the church pianist in Memphis, and brother to six siblings including Janice, who went on to become a Stellar Award and GMA Dove Award nominated recording artist for Motown Gospel. Eventually, Reddick and his family made their way to Nashville, where he has co-written with Matt Redman, Tommy Sims, Josh Kerr and Sheryl Crow. He has also played keys for artists including Nicole C. Mullen and Mandisa.

Singer-Songwriter Erin Enderlin Releases New EP, ‘Chapter One: Tonight I Don’t Give A Damn’

Fresh off the SiriusXM Outlaw Country presents Jamey Johnson Tour, country singer-songwriter Erin Enderlin released today (April 26) her EP Chapter One: Tonight I Don’t Give a Damn. The three-song EP features the tunes “Broken,” “Till It’s Gone” and “Tonight I Don’t Give A Damn.”

“For me, it was interesting to think about how her situation was going to affect the rest of her life,” says Enderlin, who will quickly follow the EP with Chapter Two this June, as well as both Chapter Three and Chapter Four before the end of the year. The project is a collaboration between Enderlin’s Black Crow Productions and label partner Blaster Records, with management by music industry veteran Marty Winsch.

Chapter One: Tonight I Don’t Give a Damn is available to stream and purchase here.

On The Row: Ingrid Andress Discusses Her Road To Nashville, And The Power Of Being “Lady Like”

Ingrid Andress with MusicRow Magazine owner/publisher Sherod Robertson.

With her debut offering “Lady Like,” Atlantic Records/Warner Music Nashville artist Ingrid Andress presented herself as a strong individualist. The Colorado native’s “Lady Like” focuses on flouting gender stereotypes, which she first experienced when she entered public high school, after having spent her middle school years being homeschooled alongside her siblings.

“It was really shocking to me how many unspoken rules there were about ‘If you’re a girl you do this, and if you’re a guy you do this.’ I’m from a large family, and I grew up doing whatever I wanted and expressing what I wanted,” she tells MusicRow. “I played street hockey with my neighbors and I played with Barbies, too. This song was written about that moment when I realized that you don’t have to apologize for what you do and how you do it. You’re allowed to just be who you are. Just because everyone else feels like they need to be a certain way, that doesn’t mean you have to, and I believe that for both genders.”

During a recent visit with MusicRow Magazine, she offered early listens to more music, which reveal Andress as a keen perceiver of both today’s culture and of her own perspectives. She penned both “Lady Like” and her latest, “More Hearts Than Mine,” with Sam Ellis and Derrick Southerland.

The lush pop ballad “More Hearts Than Mine” takes pride in her family, detailing their big hearts and quirky, caring ways as she asks a lover to understand how a romantic breakup would affect more than just the two of them.

“I’m from a family of seven people and we are all very close. It’s a very sacred part of my life. When you start dating someone and it starts to get serious, you have to introduce them to your family and that thought never occurred to me for some reason. I just thought, ‘My family will be over here and whomever I meet will be over here and they are never going to meet.’ Then it was coming up on Thanksgiving or something, I processed that situation by writing this song.”

Ingrid Andress with MusicRow Magazine staffers.

She also played the yet-unreleased track “Both.” “I saw how relationships are starting to become extremely casual and I think a lot of people don’t want to admit they are unhappy with it. I think most people actually do want to be in a good relationship, but these days it’s uncool to be serious with someone. I wrote this song to remind people that you are allowed to stand up for what you want in a relationship and that’s everybody’s right.”

Andress, who grew up playing piano, moved to Nashville about five years ago and has been writing for Universal and Arthouse, Kara DioGuardi’s publishing company. She met DioGuardi through a pop songwriting class DioGuardi led at Berklee College of Music, and through that connection got the opportunity to write with Frank Rogers in Nashville.

“Nashville is the songwriting capital of the world so I moved here. I remember I got here in September. [Rogers] was like, ‘I’d love to write with you, but I’m booked until February.’ I had no idea that was how it worked. So I waited tables until we could write together. That day he said I need a publishing deal. I quit my job waiting tables the next day,” said Andress, who spent time waiting tables, pre-record deal, with Devin Dawson, who is now her label-mate at Warner Music Nashville.

Along the way, Andress earned writing credits on songs including Charli XCX’s “Boys” and has written with artists including Alicia Keys, Sam Hunt, and Fletcher.

“I learned how to write songs the Nashville way, which taught me so much. I’ve always loved the storytelling aspect of country. So I learned how to do that here and I took that with me to pop sessions. I would be like, ‘We need a concept before we start,’ and people are like, ‘Oh, no, just riff on the mic.’ And I’m like, ‘No, concept!’” she said, laughing.

Andress also discussed having her co-writers often produce the songs they worked on. “I wanted to do that instead of just picking one producer to do a whole album. I think there is something sacred about what happens in the room when you write a song. Capturing that is more important to me than having it be this conducive sound by one guy that wasn’t there when you wrote it.

“There’s a lot of untapped talent on Music Row that I feel needs to be showcased, so why not start with me and bring up my friends? I’m not taking away from those big producers because they are there for a reason but my personal style is to keep it within the posse.”

She says she’s most excited about being able to tell her own stories through her music.

“After being a songwriter for other people for so long, sometimes you get to write your own story but not often. So being an artist, I love telling stories that are my own.”

 

Chris Shiflett Releases First Track From New Solo Effort

Foo Fighters member Chris Shiflett is premiering a new song, “Liar’s Word,” today. The track comes from Shiflett’s new solo album, Hard Lessons, which is set for release June 14 on East Beach Records & Tapes/Thirty Tigers.

The album is available now for pre-order, and each digital pre-order comes with an immediate download of the previously released tracks, “Welcome To Your First Heartache” and “This Ol’ World.” Hard Lessons was recorded at Nashville’s RCA Studio A and produced by Dave Cobb. The album features 10 new songs including a duet with Elizabeth Cook on “The One You Go Home To” and special guest guitarist Laur “Little Joe” Joamets on “This Ol’ World.”

“I remember one night between Foo Fighters gigs last year I went out for dinner with Dave Cobb to chit chat about making this record,” recalls Shiflett. “He said he had a vision of me playing through an old Marshall JCM-800. So, when it came time to record, we found one on Craigslist, cranked it up and it was perfect. I think this record hits a little closer to mixing everywhere I’ve been musically into one big blender and comes out something a little different. Since it was my second time working with Cobb and Co. out there at RCA Studio A, I kind of knew what to expect as far as his process, so I intentionally didn’t overthink or over-demo the songs because I didn’t want to get too stuck on any ideas I brought with me. I couldn’t be more excited about the results.”

Hard Lessons is Shiflett’s fourth solo album and the second in collaboration with Cobb who produced 2017’s widely praised West Coast Town.

HARD LESSONS TRACK LIST:
1. Liar’s Word
2. This Ol’ World
3. Welcome To Your First Heartache
4. The Hardest Lessons
5. The One You Go Home To (feat. Elizabeth Cook)
6. Fool’s Gold
7. I Thought You’d Never Leave
8. Weak Heart
9. Marfa On My Mind
10. Leaving Again

Spun Out: New Study Examines Drastic Decline In Female Artists On Country Radio

A new study was released Friday (April 26) investigating gender representation of the Top 150 songs on the Mediabase year-end radio reports from 2000-2018, as well as from Mediabase’s weekly airplay charts from 2002-2018. The study, titled Gender Representation On Country Format Radio: A Study of Published Reports from 2000-2018 and conducted by Jada E. Watson in consultation with WOMAN Nashville, analyzes spin data by how men, women and male-female artists are represented by total annual spins. A five-page brief of the report can be downloaded here, while the full report can be downloaded here.

The study looks at datasets taken from charts published by Mediabase; the first includes the Top 150 songs on the year-end country format charts for the Published Panel from 2000-2018 and data capturing song spins (both annual and monthly) for 2,850 records over the 19-year period. The second dataset uses weekly charting activity of Published Panel from 2002-2018 and captures the same data as the first, but also includes weekly ranking positions for the 302,387 records over the 17-year period.

Total annual spins of songs recorded by male artists in the Top 150 songs of the year-end reports increased from 5.8 million in 2000 to 10.3 million in 2018, while spins for women decreased from 2.8 million to 1.1 million over the same time period. The decrease among spins by female artists expanded from a 2:1 radio in 2002, to a 9.7:1 ratio in 2018.

According to the study, which looked at the Top 10 male and female artists by sum total of annual spins from 2000-2018, the top male artist, Kenny Chesney, earned more than 6 million spins, while the top female artist, Carrie Underwood, had just over 3 million spins.

“Unlike the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, where there was a general trend toward decline for all artists over the two-decade study period, these year-end radio reports show an increase in the number of songs by men against a decrease in songs by women. Men consistently have more than 100 of the top 150 songs on the year-end charts, with an average of 114 between 2003 to 2013, increasing to an average of 130 songs between 2014 to 2018,” Watson said in the report.

Male artists are programmed more than women in every year of this study period by an average of 58.6% when looking at all 2,850 songs on the year-end reports. According to the study, men’s worst showings on the year-end chart for the time period are significantly higher than women’s best showings, at each angle of analysis.

According to the findings for the year-end published panel analysis, female country artists, as well as male-female ensembles, were shut out of the Top 10 of the year-end reports in 2003, 2008 and for the last five years of the study period.

The second part of the study analyzed the weekly airplay charts over a time period from 2002-2018, which also show an underrepresentation of women in radio programming. According to the report, over the course of 17 years (883 weeks), male artists spent 749 weeks (85%, the equivalent of 14.4 years) in the No. 1 position, while female artists spent 98 weeks (11%, 1.8 years), and male-female ensembles spent 39 weeks (4%, 0.75 years).

The study found that for all songs on the weekly Country Airplay reports from 2002-2018, 75.5% of the songs were from solo male artists, or groups composed entirely of male performers. Songs recorded by solo female performers and groups composed entirely of female artists make up 19.6%, while songs recorded by mixed male-female ensembles made up 4.9% of the songs studied. Looking at the Top 100 songs of the weekly Country Airplay reports from 2012-2018, men (solo/all-male groups) make up 70.5% of the songs in the Top 100, while solo females and all-female groups make up 24.5%, with 5% coming from male-female ensembles. When looking at the Top 10 of the weekly Country Airplay reports from 2002-2018, 81.4% of songs are from men, while females make up 13.8% and male-female groups make up 4.9% of the total.

A weekly distribution of the Top 10 songs maps a 17-year period with a greater than 50% percentage point gap between men and women. With the exception of 2005, (when women maintained 21.7% of the Top 10 songs) female artists had 15% of the Top 10 songs between 2002 to 2004 and 2006 to 2012. According to the study, 2013 marks a down turning point for female artists, where they drop to 8.4% of the Top 10 songs in 2014, and maintain an 8.8% average over the last five years.

Female artists have their lowest point in 2014 with just 6.3%, where male-female groups have more Top 10 songs (7.9%). Male artists maintain a 17-year average of 82%, with highs of 90.2% in 2003 and 2016 and 92.1% in 2018. These results show a significant disparity between male and female artists in the Top 10 of the chart. In this context, women are not allotted enough space on radio playlists to move their songs up the chart and into the Top 10.

Over the course of the 19-year period of the year-end chart analysis, this study reveals that male artists are given more annual spins, with an increase by 42.9% over this period from 5.8 million total spins in 2000 to 10.3 million in 2018 (when looking at the Published Panel). Women have 2.8 million at the start of this period (just under half the total annual spins of male artists), but then decline to an annual average of 1.1 million over the majority of this study period (15 years). While they maintain 1.1 million spins annually, the drastic increase in spins for male artists means that women occupy a smaller percentage of the year-end charts in each of these 15 years.

Spins for male artists increase through and following all industry changes: ratings slumps, increase and decrease of commercial loads, and consolidation of stations. Women are disadvantaged in this culture and suffer through each of these moments of change in the industry, and are gradually eliminated from radio culture to a point of 11.3% of the overall year-end charts and 9.2% of the annual spins in 2018.

“When songs by male artists receive 9.7 times more spins than those by female artists (as in 2018), we have a significant cultural problem,” Watson says, noting this hasn’t always been the case. She cites a 1997 Billboard Magazine article from the late Chet Flippo, which outlines the slow rise of female artists throughout the genre’s history, through the ’90s. Watson points to the mid-’90s as a pivotal moment “in both the tone and number of female artists in country music,” Watson says.

The report says data taken from Hot Country Songs charts compiled in the 1990s (which at the time measured only country radio airplay) shows that between 1996 and 2000, female artists maintained an average of 30% of the overall chart, with a high of 34.1% in 1999. They also earned more No. 1 songs during the period, earning 40% of the chart-topping songs in 1996, and increasing to 52.4% in 1998 (a year female country artists earned more No. 1 songs than male country artists).

“In a world in which these popularity charts and statistics impact how labels sign, produce and promote artists, programming decisions play a vital role in the broader cultural space of the genre,” Watson says. “The results of this study point to significant gender imbalance in the genre, and renders visible the impact of the gender-based programming that has governed the industry for decades. Indeed, these discriminatory practices are not new to country music. They date to the early days of radio programming when female artists had to abide by rules regarding their public conduct, image, and sexuality and were not programmed back-to-back because of a lack of female hits. By the late 1990s, this practice of ‘spreading them out’ developed into a gender-based formula in which women were programmed at 13-15% of radio playlists. These issues do not just persist today–they are significantly worse now than in the late 1990s. They are systemic to the industry and so ingrained in the culture that those in positions of power do not see the sexism and discrimination in their actions.”

Recommendations:

The study laid out steps for several sectors of the country music industry in how to help alleviate the long-standing problem:

• Radio: spin more women, more frequently.
• Labels: sign and promote women with the same commitment, intensity and resources as male artists.
• Industry associations (CMA, ACM, CRS): set a standard for inclusion and representation throughout your mandate: update eligibility requirements for awards and honors to exclude ingrained bias and work with participating sponsors to develop diverse programming.
• Promoters and Presenters: create and book diverse and inclusive tours, festivals, and experiences.
• Management and Agencies: take the lead from Stacy L. Smith and her recommendations for the film industry: work with your artists to develop inclusion riders–demand diversity and inclusivity in the studio, on tour, and festivals.
• Male artists: play an active part in this discussion and with the inclusion rider. Demand that your female colleagues have equal opportunity on radio, tours, festivals, and more.
• Audiences and Advocates: hold the above businesses accountable for their choices and offerings.

“These solutions are not hard, but they do require significant change,” Watson summarizes in the report. “They require public commitments, action plans and benchmarks for accountability. The decisions driving the industry should reflect and represent its diverse and growing audience. The future of country music can be one of inclusion and opportunity for all.”

New Willie Nelson Project ‘Ride Me Back Home’ Coming June 21

Legacy Recordings is set to release Willie Nelson‘s upcoming album Ride Me Back Home on June 21.

The album’s title track, co-written by Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Sonny Throckmorton along with his daughter Debby, as well as Lucinda Hinton and Joe Manual, examines horses and their spirituality.

“Sonny lives right by Willie’s Luck studio,” longtime friend/producer/musical compadre Buddy Cannon pointed out. “He said he wrote that song because he was over there and saw Willie’s horses. I don’t even know if Willie knows that or not.” The horses to which Cannon refers are a group of more than 60 that Willie has adopted over the years, rescuing them from the slaughterhouse and giving them a home on his “Luck” ranch. This project marks the 13th album Cannon has produced for Nelson in little more than a decade. The album also debuts three new tracks co-written by Nelson and Cannon, including “Come On Time,” “One More Song to Write,” and “Seven Year Itch.

Elsewhere on the project, Nelson covers Billy Joel’s “Just The Way You Are,” Mac Davis’ “It’s Hard To Be Humble” (with Lukas Nelson and Micah Nelson), and Guy Clarks “Immigrant Eyes” and “My Favorite Picture of You.”

He also revisits “Stay Away From Lonely Places,” a song Nelson first penned and recorded as part of his 1972 album The Words Don’t Fit the Picture.
“I’m the biggest Willie Nelson fan there is, and I thought I knew every song that he ever did. But I had never heard that song. It sounded totally new to me,” said Cannon, who encouraged Nelson to include the song on the new album. “He’s a born troubadour. It’s the greatness: That early genius that was him and his songs is still there.”

Willie Nelson – Ride Me Back Home

01. Ride Me Back Home
02. Come On Time
03. My Favorite Picture of You
04. Seven Year Itch
05. Immigrant Eyes
06. Stay Away From Lonely Places
07. Just The Way You Are
08. One More Song To Write
09. Nobody’s Listening
10. It’s Hard To Be Humble (with Lukas Nelson and Micah Nelson)
11. Maybe I Should’ve Been Listening

Peter Frampton To Receive Music Biz Chairman’s Award

Peter Frampton is being honored by the Music Business Association with its Chairman’s Award for Sustained Creative Achievement at the Music Biz 2019 Awards & Hall of Fame Dinner on May 7. The awards are part of the Music Biz 2019 Conference set for May 5-8 at the JW Marriott in downtown Nashville.

“We could think of no artist more deserving of an award for sustained creative achievement than Peter Frampton, who has fashioned a storied career through his solo efforts, co-founding of a supergroup and his extraordinary collaborations with fellow industry legends,” commented Music Biz Chairman Steve Harkins. “This will be the third time Peter has graced the Music Biz stage; once in 1977 to honor his landmark live record Frampton Comes Alive!, again as part of the 2006 Universal Music Showcase, and this year to rightfully honor him as a music industry icon and a true bastion in the history of Rock music.”

The prestigious Chairman’s Award for Sustained Creative Achievement recognizes artists and innovators who have achieved the highest levels of continued artistic achievement in the music industry. Past recipients include Nile Rodgers, Reba McEntire, The Doobie Brothers, Lionel Richie, Cyndi Lauper, Garth Brooks, Chicago, Kool & The Gang, Liza Minnelli, Fleetwood Mac, Kenny Rogers, Elton John, Frank Sinatra, Barbra Streisand, Nat King Cole, Santana, Lena Horne, and Benny Goodman, among many others.

Frampton just announced the Peter Frampton Band will release its new album entitled All Blues on June 7 via UMe. Recorded with his longtime touring band, made up of Adam Lester (guitar/vocals), Rob Arthur (keyboards/guitar/vocals) and Dan Wojciechowski (drums), the album is a collection of Frampton’s favorite blues classics.

In February, Frampton made public his diagnosis of Inclusion Body Myositis (IBM) which has prompted him to announce his retirement from regular touring at the end of this year. His retirement will come at the conclusion of “The Peter Frampton Finale – The Farewell Tour” which will run across the U.S. and Canada from June through mid-October.

Old Crow Medicine Show’s Chance McCoy Readies Solo Debut

Chance McCoy

Chance McCoy is releasing his debut solo single No One Loves You (The Way That I Do)” today (April 26). Best known as a member of the Grammy-winning Americana group Old Crow Medicine Show, the song is the first peek into his upcoming debut album set to release later this year.

“I came up with the lick down in Muscle Shoals in the middle of the night at a friend’s cabin on the lake. My son had his guitar tuned all crazy, I couldn’t sleep so I snatched it off the couch and came up with the lick. It was meditative, just rocking back and forth on my bed playing that figure on the acoustic. The lyrics are written about my time as a white water guide out west. They’re all true except the romance. I had to make that part up because I was lonely as hell back then. I was sleeping in the back of my truck. All I cared about was being on the river, riding those waves,” said McCoy.

Multi-instrumentalist McCoy’s debut album is set to drop this Fall. “People know me as a folk musician, but I’m expanding my creative horizons and blazing some new trails with this album,” said McCoy of the new project. “Wandering’s what I do.”