Industry Pics: ASCAP, ACM, CMA Theater

ASCAP Steps Up For Musicians Corner

Pictured (L-R): ASCAP’s Alison Webber, Jonathan Singleton, Josh Mirenda, Hannah Dasher, ASCAP’s Holly Chester, Deric Ruttan, Centennial Park Conservancy/Musicians Corner’s John Tumminello. Photo: Ed Rode

On Tuesday, Oct. 29, ASCAP hosted a benefit round at the Bluebird Cafe in support of Musicians Corner. The showcase featured hit songwriters Deric Ruttan and Jonathan Singleton, hit songwriter and artist Josh Mirenda, and emerging songwriter-artist Hannah Dasher. Musicians Corner, a program of Centennial Park Conservancy, provides free public access to live music in Nashville’s Centennial Park.

Earlier in October, ASCAP also hosted its regular long-running monthly showcase series at the Bluebird. The round featured ASCAP songwriter-artists Smith Ahnquist, Maria Hassel, Chris Housman and Leah Turner, and was curated by ASCAP Membership Manager Holly Chester.

Pictured (L-R): Smith Ahnquist, Chris Housman, Maria Hassel, ASCAP’s Holly Chester, Leah Turner. Photo: Ed Rode

 

ACM Welcomes Teddy Robb

Pictured (L-R): Teddy Robb; RAC Clark, ACM Awards Executive Producer; Rob Baker, Longshot Management. Photo: Michel Bourquard/Courtesy of the Academy of Country Music

The Academy of Country Music welcomed Monument Records recording artist Teddy Robb to the office while he was in Los Angeles recently. While at the Academy, Robb performed his current single, “Really Shouldn’t Drink Around You” along with other songs from his upcoming project.

 

Tegan and Sara Perform At CMA Theater

Photo by Amiee Stubbs for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Canadian duo Tegan and Sara recently performed at the CMA Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, as part of their “Hey, I’m Just Like You” Tour. Tegan and Sara offered a show reading and relived stories from their new memoir High School. They also performed classics such as “Closer” and “Boyfriend.”

Country Music Hall Of Fame And Museum Promotes Two

Lisa Purcell, Warren Denney

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum has announced two promotions. Lisa Purcell has been named senior vice president, education, development and community outreach, and Warren Denney is the museum’s new vice president of creative services.

Purcell will continue to oversee the museum’s contributed income department, supporting the nonprofit’s mission to preserve the evolving history and traditions of country music. She also directs the education and community outreach department, which develops, implements and evaluates programs that share the beauty and cultural significance of country music with local, national and international audiences. Purcell, who joined the museum in 2014, holds both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in art history from West Virginia University and has completed leadership programs at Belmont University and Harvard University.

“Under Lisa’s leadership, her division has achieved much success. This includes the launch of the museum’s planned giving program and the creation of the Community Counts program, which provides free admission for youth ages 18 and under from Davidson and bordering Middle Tennessee counties,” said Kyle Young, CEO, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. “Through our community outreach efforts advanced by Lisa, the museum now offers more than 1,200 educational programs each year, serving 100,000 people. This museum is a thriving and essential part the Nashville community, and this is due, in large part, to the efforts of Lisa and her team.”

Denney manages the division that meets the overall creative needs of the museum, Hatch Show Print, Historic RCA Studio B and the CMA Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Denney directs the team responsible for the artistic and material support of all exhibitions; catalogs published by CMF Press; records produced by CMF Records; creative support of the museum’s educational mission, development and membership initiatives; and video and radio production. Denney, who joined the museum in 2007 and became creative director in 2009, holds a master’s degree in fine arts in creative writing from Fairleigh Dickinson University, College at Florham and an undergraduate degree in journalism from Middle Tennessee State University.

“Warren has provided the museum with a clear creative vision for the past decade,” Young said. “Under his guidance, we have found new ways to tell not only the museum’s narrative, but the genre’s as well. One way he has done this is through content creation and development and video production and editing. This strengthens our ability to share our story with diverse audiences around the world.”

Miranda Lambert Talks Pushing Boundaries, Giving Her Country Roots A Punk Edge On ‘Wildcard’ [Interview]

Almost exactly one year ago, Miranda Lambert, along with her Pistol Annies cohorts Ashley Monroe and Angaleena Presley, released Interstate Gospel, an album filled with swampy, unfiltered reflections of mostly down-on-their luck women determined to overcome with will and humor. Today, Lambert re-emerges with her seventh solo project Wildcard.

If Lambert’s celebrated 2016 solo album The Weight of these Wings was a 24-song, Platinum-selling creative tour de force that elegantly plumbed the emotional heaviness and the beginnings of the meandering journey to wholeness in the wake of heartbreak, her latest solo project, Wildcard, feels like a healing coda. On it, Lambert emerges from the darkness with a refreshing uninhibitedness that embraces celebration, freedom, and perhaps becoming reacquainted with one’s truest self.

Throughout a career that has included six chart-topping projects (making her the first artist to have six albums debut at No. 1 on the country albums charts), Lambert has chosen to invite listeners deep inside her struggles and triumphs, through the unvarnished lyrics in her songs.

Lambert’s classic vivid imagery and quirky lyrics shine on tracks like “It All Comes Out In The Wash” and the swampy “White Trash.” She offers knowing soulfulness on “Holy Water” featuring the McCrary Sisters, and is sarcastic and unrepentant on “Way Too Pretty For Prison,” featuring tourmate and fellow country star Maren Morris. But this time around, there’s extra bite in the vocals, an extra boldness in the songwriting.

 

Perhaps the album’s biggest shift comes with the production. Instead of reuniting with her longtime record producer Frank Liddell for the project, she reached out to Jay Joyce—the reclusive Nashville producer known for his work on all of Eric Church’s albums, as well as projects from Brothers Osborne, Little Big Town, Cage The Elephant, Halestorm, Ashley McBryde, The Wild Feathers, and more.

But for Lambert, it was a natural re-centering on the classic Miranda Lambert sound from her earlier albums, then reveling in both the hard rock and classic Texas country edges. It doesn’t hurt that Joyce was (literally) instrumental in several of her earlier works, having played on an array of tracks for 2005’s Kerosene, 2007’s Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, 2011’s Four The Record and 2014’s Platinum.

“He’s just a mad scientist,” says Lambert, seated at a boardroom table at her label home Sony Music Nashville, looking out over the city. “He’s really brilliant at capturing a sound and not beating it up, you know. He’s part of the sound that was Kerosene, the kind of fiery sound in Crazy Ex-Girlfriend and Revolution,” Lambert says. “He sort of added that rock ‘n’ roll vibe to it. I wanted to go back to my roots in that way and have him put his flavor on it.”

She’s at her most self-assured on the new album as she leans further into punk-rock territory, such as the moody bass lines and crisp percussion that pulsate beneath “Mess With My Head.” It was another Joyce-produced project, Patty Griffin’s 1998 album Flaming Red, that served as inspiration on one of Wildcard’s most spirited, uninhibited tracks, “Locomotive.”

 

“I love the way that album makes you feel when you hear it. Jay texted me one night and was like, ‘I think I have an idea for Locomotive,’ because it wasn’t finding its spot; It wasn’t settling anywhere. But I loved what it said and I thought it was a fun song. And he said, ‘If we approach it with like a punk vibe…’ And I wasn’t sure I could pull it off. I mean, I’m pretty country no matter which way you slice it. But with his kind of punk tones and the band playing like they did, it worked.”

I’ve been down my luck, but I ain’t giving up/I got a heart like a truck, she grinds out the lyrics with a ferocity and defiance that’s been hard-earned of the past few years. Her voice sounds raw, unbridled as she attacks the first lines of “Locomotive,” following a percussion that chugs at breakneck speed, accentuated by Travis Meadows’ blistering harmonica lines.

The “Locomotive” recording session also proved that even a two-time Grammy winner, 34-time ACM winner and artist with more than 10 million albums sold can get still get starstruck.

“Travis, who I’m a huge fan of, came and played on the song, and I got kind of star struck because I’d never met him and I’m such a fan of his writing,” he says. “It was kind of a one-take performance because we were all in the same room. There was so much energy, and you can kind of hear that on the tape, too.”

As with The Weight of These Wings, Lambert decamped to east Nashville—this time, recording in Joyce’s Neon Cross, an old Baptist church-turned-recording studio, with a spacious recording area that allowed Lambert to record the album live with her band.

“Everybody was in a circle, and he’s a big believer in having everybody in the same room so you can feed off of one another,” she recalls.

Meanwhile, that confidence and swagger Lambert is known for is back in full gear, nowhere more blatantly than the playful, quirky album cover for Wildcard, which features Lambert in a yellow negligée over fishnet tights and topped with a pale blue jacket.

“I thought that the imaging needed to match the music, which I felt was pretty bright and airy and with an edge, still. I had a sepia tone in my last project, and that doesn’t mean just the way the photos were taken—it’s just in general. It felt like that was a phase in my life. So I needed some bright colors.”

She sought out legendary German photographer Ellen von Unwerth, whose electric, feminine work has been featured in Vogue, Vanity Fair, and album covers for Janet Jackson, Britney Spears and Rihanna. The album photos were shot at an old house in New Jersey “that has not changed since 1971,” Lambert recalls.

“We weren’t even sure she’d say yes. I knew she was kind of a risqué photographer and she really pushed the boundaries way outside of the comfort zone in her other projects. We sent her the record and I talked to her on the phone and explained who I was and what I was looking for. She would push you to try a little harder and do something a little different.”

 

Nestled throughout the eclectic album are moments of relatively quieter reflection on her life situation, both past and present.

The breezy, slightly ‘80s vibe of “Track Record” shines with authenticity and a calm sense of self-acceptance. I got a track record/a past that’s checkered/Can’t help it I’m in love with love, she sings.

“I just think it’s honest. I always believed in being really honest. And that song just tells like everybody’s got a past, basically. It’s just accepting it and not getting bogged down in regret or what ifs, you know.”

Wildcard takes its title from a line in the hopeful “Bluebird,” while “Settling Down” ponders the yin and yang pull of touring and playing music, juxtaposed with the pull of a settled home life.

“How Dare You Love” offers a rarity in Lambert’s catalog—a straightforward love song. You show up and put a spell on me/the nerve she sings, an ode to her relationship with husband Brendan McLoughlin, whom she wed in January. If the marriage came as a shock to music fans when she officially announced the marriage via social media in February, Lambert says the relationship initially took her by surprise as well.

“I’m a sucker for sad songs and also kind of built a career on spiteful songs, but I don’t do a lot of love songs. But this time, I did. I wrote this right around the time we got married. But yeah, sometimes love comes out of nowhere,” she says of the track, which she co-wrote with Ashley Monroe and Jamie Kinney.

“We were talking about how it comes out of nowhere, and I just randomly said like, ‘How dare you love?’ Because that’s the emotion you get. Like all of a sudden out of nowhere, when you’re not looking, is when it finds you.”

 

Over the past several months, Lambert and McLoughlin split their time between Nashville and McLoughlin’s home base in New York City. Parts of the album were written at an apartment in the artsy SoHo district in Manhattan. The change of scenery seems to have offered a creative counterpoint. She brought along several of her co-writers, such as “The Love Junkies” Hillary Lindsey, Lori McKenna and Liz Rose, which resulted in songs like “Fire Escape” and the moody album closer “Dark Bars,” which Lambert co-wrote with Rose.

“We just wandered around the city,” Lambert recalls. “There was a fire escape at the apartment we had and we would leave the windows open so the city noise would come in. Just having lunch, having wine. That city, if you’re open to it, as much as you’re allowing to let in, it will come in. And that’s a good thing. From the graffiti to the street art. It’s just like there’s creativity and you feel it. It’s like an energy buzz.”

Though Lambert has spent years selling out arenas, on “Dark Bars,” she recalls and revels in her time spent playing tiny clubs all across Texas and beyond. Last month, Lambert held a private concert to preview songs from the new album; instead of choosing any number of Nashville’s newly-minted, sleek performance venues, Lambert opted for one of Nashville’s own dark bars, Exit/In, a well-worn rock club that seemed to parallel Wildcard’s harder edges.

“Exit/In just felt like another honky tonk almost, you know what I mean? And it is a great venue but it’s also where I feel the most at home because that’s where I started this whole journey. And I miss shows like that. I’m so thankful that I’m on an arena tour right now, don’t get me wrong. But also, I miss just like a random pop up at a dive bar. Because it just kind of takes you back to that first feeling you had when you started to love this. But also once you get to this level where you have all these people to pay and buses and everything else, it’s hard to go, ‘I’m going to go play dive bars.’ And plus, there’s also radius clauses. It’s funny to me because that’s all the stuff that I’m like, ‘I don’t care. I just want to go play music.'”

For much of 2019, Lambert used her headliner status and those arena shows to promote emerging female country artists such as Kassi Ashton and Tenille Townes. Next year, she will bring a string of mostly fellow Texas artists on the road with her, including Cody Johnson, Parker McCollum, and The Randy Rogers Band, as well as labelmates LANCO.

“I am a Texas artist, that’s where I started so I’m drawn to them anyway because it’s a certain kind of sound, a certain kind of scene that only is there. And I thought, ‘Well, I’ve done an all-girl thing, let’s do a Texas boy thing.’ And I always like to keep a younger band or artist out on the road, because it reminds you of that fire and helps keep that ignited.”

On Wildcard, Lambert finds magic in the transitions—from heartbreak to hope, from familiar surroundings to unexplored landscapes—both physically and sonically.

“There’s something to be said for pushing yourself out of your comfort zone. So I’m thinking about for the next record, whatever the next project is, maybe choosing to go write in a few different places. I have a house in Austin, for instance. Spending some time somewhere else gives a new energy.”

Keith Case To Be Honored At The Ninth Annual NATD Honors Gala

The Nashville Association of Talent Directors Board has chosen to honor Keith Case posthumously at their upcoming 9th Annual NATD Honors Gala on Nov. 19 at Nashville’s Hermitage Hotel.

Case was renowned for his work with Bluegrass and Americana artists, represented countless acts, and started his own booking agency, Keith Case and Associates, which was influential in both bluegrass and Americana music. He passed away on Sept. 3, 2019.

Stephanie Langston from Nashville’s WKRN and Shawn Parr from Cumulus’ “Nash Nights Live” will emcee this year’s event. Honorees being awarded for their accomplishments and service to the Nashville entertainment industry this year include (In-Memoriam) Former CEO of Capitol Christian Music Group Bill Hearn, publishing and radio legend fondly nick-named “the Mayor of Music Row” Charlie Monk, recently retired GM of the Nashville Municipal Auditorium Bob Skoney, head of the Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp Butch Spyridon, receiving the “Colonel Tom Parker Award” legendary music agent Bonnie Sugarman, Premier Global Productions and Country Thunder’s Troy Vollhoffer, and the best-selling/most-awarded female Gospel artist of all time CeCe Winans.

The Gala will begin with a reception at 6 p.m. CT followed by dinner and an awards ceremony. Tickets for the Gala can be purchased here.

Dwight Yoakam, Ronnie Milsap, Joe Diffie To Play Big Sky Music Festival

Dwight Yoakam has been announced as the headliner of next year’s Canadian Big Sky Music Festival, to be held July 18, 2020. Ronnie Milsap and Joe Diffie will also perform at the festival, located on picturesque Burl’s Creek Event Grounds in Oro-Medonte, Ontario.

The festival will also include a craft market loaded with artisan talent, a classic car show and new this year a sparkling big rig show & shine, as well as a variety of food and beverage vendors.

Additional artists on the lineup will be announced in the coming weeks. Limited early bird tickets for the festival are on sale at noon ET today at bigskymusicfestival.ca.

Chris Tomlin Preps Christmas EP For Nov. 15

Chris Tomlin is debuting a new single digitally today (Nov. 1) with the release of “Christmas Day” featuring We The Kingdom. The song is part of the Christmas Day: Christmas Song of Worship EP available on Nov. 15 and will feature four songs, including three originals including “Christmas Day,” as well as the classic “Little Drummer Boy.” This is Tomlin’s first new Christmas music since 2015’s Adore and his gold-selling Glory In The Highest: Christmas Songs of Worship from 2009.

“I’ve always loved Christmas and get so excited when we have the opportunity to create new music to worship Jesus, especially this time of the year,” said Tomlin.

The release comes on the heels of Tomlin’s Fall tour, which he wraps this weekend, and the launch of his upcoming 12-city holiday tour, Chris Tomlin Christmas: Christmas Songs of Worship Tour, which kicks off Dec. 2.

Christmas Day: Christmas Songs of Worship EP Track Listing:
1. Christmas Day (feat. We The Kingdom)
2. His Name Is Wonderful
3. Little Drummer Boy
4. Hope Of Israel

 

CMA Touring Awards Nominees Announced

The Country Music Association has announced the nominees for the 2019 CMA Touring Awards, which highlight behind-the-scenes members of the touring industry.

CMA members in the following membership groups are eligible to vote on the 15 categories up for awards: Advertising/Public Relations/Media, Affiliated, Artist, Entertainment Services, Marketing/Digital, Musician, Personal Manager, Record Label, Talent Agent, Talent Buyer/Promoter, Touring, and Venue.

Final voting for the 2019 CMA Touring Awards opens Thursday, Nov. 7 and closes Wednesday, Nov. 20. This year’s Touring Awards will take place Tuesday, Jan. 21 at Nashville’s Marathon Music Works.

Final nominees for the 2019 CMA Touring Awards are as follows:

CATEGORY 1 – BUSINESS MANAGER OF THE YEAR
  • Renee Allen – Arnie Barn, Inc.
  • David Boyer – Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy, Inc.
  • Duane Clark – Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy, Inc.
  • Mary Ann McCready – Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy, Inc.
  • Dwight Wiles – Wiles + Taylor & Co., PC
CATEGORY 2 – COACH/TRUCK DRIVER OF THE YEAR
  • Kelley Beck – Blake Shelton
  • Caleb Garrett – Luke Bryan
  • Ronnie Goodwin – Eric Church
  • Larry Phye, Jr. – Chris Stapleton
  • Rob Shepherd – Darius Rucker
CATEGORY 3 – FRONT OF HOUSE (FOH) ENGINEER OF THE YEAR
  • Jared Blumenberg – Florida Georgia Line
  • Billy Moore – Eric Church
  • Chris Rabold – Kenny Chesney
  • Arpad Sayko – Chris Stapleton
  • Ian Zorbaugh – Old Dominion
CATEGORY 4 – LIGHTING DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR
  • Michael “Sparky” Anderson – Blake Shelton
  • Scott Cunningham – Florida Georgia Line
  • Gavin Lake – Eric Church
  • Chris Reade – Dierks Bentley
  • Alec Takahashi – Thomas Rhett
CATEGORY 5 – MANAGER OF THE YEAR
  • Clint Higham – Morris Higham Management
  • Mary Hilliard Harrington – Red Light Management
  • Jason Owen – Sandbox Entertainment
  • Chris Parr – Maverick
  • John Peets – Q Prime South
CATEGORY 6 – TOUR MANAGER OF THE YEAR
  • Todd Bunch – Eric Church
  • Kevin Canady – Blake Shelton
  • Tommy Garris – Old Dominion
  • Jason Hecht – Chris Stapleton
  • Mike Kelly – Darius Rucker
CATEGORY 7 – MONITOR ENGINEER OF THE YEAR
  • Bryan “Opie” Baxley – Kenny Chesney
  • Wesley Crowe – Thomas Rhett
  • Stuart Delk – Rascal Flatts
  • Marc Earp – Eric Church
  • Scott Tatter – Dierks Bentley
CATEGORY 8 – PRODUCTION MANAGER OF THE YEAR
  • Jay Ballinger – Dierks Bentley
  • Todd Ortmeier – Florida Georgia Line
  • Jason Parkin – Darius Rucker
  • Kevin Twist – Thomas Rhett
  • Ed Wannebo – Kenny Chesney
CATEGORY 9 – PUBLICIST OF THE YEAR
  • Tyne Parrish – The GreenRoom
  • Carla Sacks – Sacks & Co.
  • Jessie Schmidt – Schmidt Relations
  • Jensen Sussman – Sweet Talk Publicity
  • Wes Vause – Warner Music Nashville
CATEGORY 10 – TALENT AGENT OF THE YEAR
  • Marc Dennis – CAA
  • Darin Murphy – CAA
  • Aaron Tannenbaum – CAA
  • Nate Towne – WME
  • Jay Williams – WME

CATEGORY 11 – TALENT BUYER/PROMOTER OF THE YEAR

  • Ben Farrell – Lon Varnell Enterprises
  • Ali Harnell – Live Nation Nashville
  • Patrick McDill – Live Nation Nashville
  • Louis Messina – Messina Touring Group
  • Ed Warm – Joe’s Bar
CATEGORY 12 – TOUR VIDEOGRAPHER/PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR
  • Zach Belcher – Dierks Bentley
  • Jeff Johnson – Carrie Underwood
  • Michael Monaco – Luke Bryan
  • Matt Paskert – Jake Owen
  • Jill Trunnell – Kenny Chesney
CATEGORY 13 – TOUR VIDEO DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR
  • Brian Carico – Blake Shelton
  • Milojko Dobrijevich – Jason Aldean
  • Chris Jones – Eric Church
  • Ryan Rushing – Luke Bryan
  • Mark Willcox – Chris Stapleton
CATEGORY 14 – TOURING MUSICIAN OF THE YEAR
  • Wyatt Beard – Kenny Chesney
  • Tyler Chiarelli – Florida Georgia Line
  • Dan Hochhalter – Dierks Bentley
  • Bennett Lewis – Maren Morris
  • Pete Sternberg – Brothers Osborne
CATEGORY 15 – VENUE OF THE YEAR
  • Ascend Amphitheater – Nashville, TN
  • Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion – Gilford, NH
  • Bridgestone Arena – Nashville, TN
  • Joe’s Bar – Chicago, IL
  • Red Rocks Amphitheatre – Morrison, CO
The CMA Touring Awards, originally called the SRO Awards, were created by the CMA Board of Directors in 1990 to honor outstanding professional achievement within the touring industry. The first awards were presented at a black-tie gala hosted by K.T. Oslin and Roger Miller during CMA’s Entertainment Expo, also known as the Talent Buyers Entertainment Marketplace. Ten awards were presented at the first gala and the number swelled to 19 over the years before settling at the current 15. The SRO Awards were renamed the CMA Touring Awards in 2016.

Weekly Radio Report (11/1/19)

Click here or above to access MusicRow’s weekly CountryBreakout Radio Report.