Eric Church Recorded 28 Songs In 28 Days For His Upcoming Project

Pictured (L-R): Lon Helton, Eric Church. Photo: Courtesy AristoMedia

Eric Church revealed that he has been working on new music during an interview with Country Aircheck Publisher/CEO & Host of Westwood One’s Country Countdown USA, Lon Helton at CRS yesterday (Feb. 20).

Church said that following his 2018 Desperate Man album and his 2019 Double Down Tour, he felt the need to push himself further, creatively. He challenged himself to write and record 28 songs in 28 days. Instead of recording his new project at Jay Joyce’s Neon Cross studio in Nashville, Church decamped to Banner Elk, North Carolina, converted a restaurant into a studio, brought out his band and some songwriters and got to writing.

“I felt like it was time to do something nuts,” Church said with a grin. “I would write a song in the morning, we would cut it that night. We removed all the barriers about what people think of the song, and just let it be the most creative thing that day, chase that as hard as you can, and move on. For me, it’s as far out there as I have gotten, creatively. I couldn’t shut it off.”

Pictured (L-R): Lon Helton, Eric Church. Photo: Courtesy AristoMedia

Church talked about a generator—or “genny,” as his crew referred to it—going out and how that inspired the song that he previewed about a girl named, “Jenny.”

“I think by getting that far out there, it really opened up some really great stuff creatively,” Church said. “My antenna was up. Looking back at what came out of it, it was exactly what had to happen.”

John Pierce Signs With Universal Music Publishing Nashville

(L-R): David Crow, Missy Roberts, Cyndi Forman, Terry Wakefield, John Pierce, Troy Tomlinson, Ron Stuve and Travis Gordon

John Pierce has signed an exclusive, worldwide publishing agreement with Universal Music Publishing Nashville.

Pierce has had songs recorded by Chris Young, Jon Pardi, Lainey Wilson, Reba McEntire and Trace Adkins, and was a co-writer on the No. 1 hit “Sweet Annie” for Zac Brown.

“John is on such an upward trajectory with his writing and we are thrilled to be representing him at UMPG. His lyric and melody instincts are on point for today’s country market,” said Terry Wakefield, SVP of A&R, UMPG.

“Beyond excited to begin this next chapter with Terry Wakefield, Troy Tomlinson and the entire staff at Universal,” says Pierce. “They are the kind of music publisher every songwriter hopes to have in their career. I can’t wait to see what we accomplish together.”

Weekly Radio Report (2/21/20)

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Miranda Lambert Discusses Hit Songs And Career Longevity At CRS

Pictured (L-R): Miranda Lambert, Cindy Watts. Photo: Courtesy AristoMedia

Miranda Lambert, the Academy of Country Music’s most-awarded artist, sat down with The Tennessean reporter-turned-The AMG’s Manager of Corporate Communications Cindy Watts to discuss her journey to her latest album, Wildcard, and the last two decades that shaped it yesterday (Feb. 19) at CRS.

Watts guided Lambert through a series of questions leading up to the making of her seventh album Wildcard, which released in November. Lambert performed an acoustic version of “Dark Bars” and “How Dare You Love” to end the interview.

Lambert reflected on her high school days, when she was very shy but went before her school board to start the school choir at Lindale High School. That very same choir performed with her recently at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

“I was in drama club so I sang in the musicals and stuff. I tried out for cheerleading my sophomore year and didn’t make it… I didn’t nail my back handsprings, it was very devastating,” Lamber joked. “My mom said, ‘You know, you can sing, so maybe it’s not good to be yelling in 30-degree weather every Friday,’ which was kind of smart on her part. So I thought, ‘What am I going to do?’ I wasn’t very good at anything else. So my mom and I started a petition to get a choir. Again, I was so shy, I didn’t want to talk to people or anything, but I went in front of the school board and explained why I thought it was important to include singers in all of these high school activities that were so praised. They agreed and the first day we had a choir, 65 kids signed up. So that was pretty telling.”

Lambert also talked about finding her personality and leaving the shyness behind on stage at a bar, during a talent contest.

“I was like, ‘Oh, this is what it is.’ There’s like smoke and neon. That was the point where I got addicted right away,” she said. “I ended up getting the house gig at that bar when I turned 17. I had the gig for four months, three nights a week, for four hours sets and made $200. It’s where I started to get my chops. It’s where I started to realize what all this was about.”

After getting third place on Nashville Star, Lambert was guided by Tracy Gershon to her first label deal. It was then that she handpicked Frank Liddell to produce her records. Together the two made six essential Lambert albums. For Wildcard, Lambert needed something new creatively.

“I had meetings with Frank Liddell and we decided that we weren’t in the same spot, creatively, and he gave me permission to go find what I needed. I knew that was Jay Joyce. And so I think there’s magic in new energy when you need to find a creative way to re-make yourself. And when you have somebody new, you have a different kind of energy and nervousness and I think that worked in our advantage,” she said.

Pictured (L-R): Miranda Lambert, Cindy Watts. Photo: Courtesy AristoMedia

With a house of radio executives in the house, Lambert talked about what radio means in her career.

“I mean it feels good to have your song go to the top of the chart. That’s not the case in my career very often,” she said. “It’s interesting because I’ve had a career based on songs, not hits. As much as we pay attention because we’re in our bubble, the crowd doesn’t know that that ‘Gunpowder’ went to No. 9 or that ‘Little Red Wagon’ went to No. 11, nor do they care. Nor do I care as long as they hear it. I can’t play shows if I’m not heard. Still to this day, I need for people hear my new music. They’ve seen me several times in every city and when they’re weighing out, ‘Do I want to go see Luke Combs or Miranda? I’ve seen her several times, and he’s new and great,’  and they have money to get one ticket, it’s nice to have a new song or seven that you can promote.”

Pictured: Miranda Lambert. Photo: Courtesy AristoMedia

Reba McEntire Returns To Universal Music Group Nashville

Pictured (L-R, front row): UMG Nashville Chairman/CEO Mike Dungan, Reba McEntire, UMG Nashville President Cindy Mabe; (L-R, back row): UMG Nashville EVP/COO Mike Harris, Maverick’s Clarence Spalding, UMG Nashville EVP Promotion Royce Risser, UMG Nashville EVP A&R Brian Wright. Photo: Chris Hollo

Country superstar Reba McEntire announced today (Feb. 20) that she will return to her original label home, Universal Music Group Nashville, where she spent the first 32 years of her famed career. During her time on both Mercury and MCA Records, two of the four labels that form Universal Music Group Nashville, Reba saw 33 of her 35 career singles hit No. 1 and sold over 56 million albums worldwide. Reba performed at the CRS Team UMG At The Ryman Luncheon this afternoon.

“It’s a wonderful feeling to be back with the family where I started,” shares Reba. “I am thrilled because my catalog is here at Universal and I’m really excited to revisit all the songs that I recorded many years ago. We’re going to have a lot of fun.”

“At a time when our music, our community and our artists need a bright guiding light, Reba returning to the place where it all started is a great testament to her continuing impact and her powerful musical legacy and we are so proud she’s coming home,” says UMG Nashville President Cindy Mabe. “Reba is a music icon who changed culture and paved her own path by making strong empowering musical statements throughout her career through her songs, her videos, her fashion, her shows and her persona. She’s inspired so many generations of fans and there is so much more impact to be made. It is our honor and privilege to get to collaborate and grow the future of Reba’s musical career.”

It was also announced that on March 20th, Reba will hit the road on her first headlining arena tour since 2011. Rising singer/songwriter Caylee Hammack is set to join her for the dozen stops. Reba will also continue her residency with Brooks & Dunn at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas with 24 new dates through December.

For a full list of tour dates, news and more, visit www.reba.com.

DISClaimer: Travis Denning, Avenue Beat, Brandy Clark, Sophie Sanders Top New Tracks

Travis Denning

All of the ingredients for a perfect DisClaimer are here.

We have a superstar (Luke Bryan), some brand-new folks (Jake Rose, Avenue Beat, Sophie Sanders, Lindsay Bowman), a healthy proportion of female voices (Brandy Clark, Lauren Lucas and the afore-mentioned Bowman, Sanders and Avenue Beat) and some of my favorite up-and-comers (Filmore, Travis Denning, King Calaway).

All told, it is an embarrassment of riches.

In a tough, tough field, the clever track by Travis Denning eaks out a Disc of the Day prize, but not without stiff competition from Clark, Filmore and King Calaway.

The DisCovery Award choice was just as tough. It goes to Avenue Beat, with Sophie Sanders as a super strong challenger.

LINDSAY BOWMAN/You Don’t Get To Know
Writer: Lindsay Bowman; Producer: Kent Wells; Publisher: none listed; BMI; LB
– She has a bluesy, throaty vocal quality that she puts to good use on this defiant break-up anthem. The minor-key melody gives her room to toss in plenty of soul-sister effects. Promising.

LUKE BRYAN/Born Here Live Here Die Here
Writers: Jake Mitchell/Jameson Rodgers/Josh Thompson; Producer: Jeff Stevens/Jody Stevens; Publisher: none listed; Capitol
– It begins as a ballad, then picks up some steam after the first stanza. Tempo-wise, it never seems to resolve that tension and make up its mind. Lyric-wise, it’s a splendid evocation and salute to little-village life. Which is to say, it fits him like a glove.

TRAVIS DENNING/Abby
Writers: Ashley Gorley/Matt Jenkins/Chase McGill; Producer: Jeremy Stover; Publisher: none listed; Mercury
– Very cute. He’s breaking up with her. Is there someone else? You bet, and her name is A-B-B-Y, which stands for “Any Body But You.” Put your ears on this right now. This guy is definitely on a roll.

BRANDY CLARK/Love Is a Fire
Writers: Brandy Clark/Shane McAnally/Jessie Jo Dillon; Producer: Jay Joyce; Publisher: none listed; Warner Music
– For my money, this is the radio world’s most criminally overlooked artist on today’s country scene. The woman is a genius writer and a delicious vocalist. This swooning ballad is yet another example of how involving, enchanting and downright commercial her work is. For God’s sake, play her. The new album is titled Your Life Is a Record and it drops on March 6. I’ll be the first in line to buy a copy.

AVENUE BEAT/Be a Bro
Writers: Sam Backoff/Sami Bearden/Savana Santos/Summer Overstreet; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Valory Music Co.
– Delightful. The creamy, female-trio harmonies, clever lyrics and frothy production are all ear-tickling. A sheer pleasure from opening beat to closing note.

KING CALAWAY/No Matter What
Writers: Andy Albert/Devin Dawson/Jordan Schmidt/Mitchell Tenpenny/Paul DiGiovanni; Producer: Robert Deaton/Ross Copperman; Publisher: none listed; BBR
– This is ridiculously catchy. These six fellows are so hooky and polished and flawless it is almost scary. You’d have to be deaf to resist their audio charms.

SOPHIE SANDERS/All My Friends Are Married
Writer: Sophie Sanders; Producer: Paul Sikes; Publishers: Songs of the Sanderosa; SS
– Sophie is the daughter of Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Mark D. Sanders. Well, the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, as they say. She displays totally wry, worthy songwriting chops here, not to mention a dreamy, atmospheric production and a languid, lovely singing voice. A single to get lost inside. Oh, and don’t miss her kitty cat’s guest vocal toward the end.

FILMORE/My Place
Writers: John-Luke Carter/Justin Ebach/Tyler Filmore; Producer: John-Luke Carter/Zach Abend; Publisher: none listed; Curb
– He sounds so welcoming and friendly here. The gist of it is, come and hang out with him at his house anytime you feel like it, because the party never stops. There’s just something about this creative and unique fellow that I dig.

JAKE ROSE/Tractor Town
Writers: J. Rose/B. Tyler/B. Beavers; Producers: Kevin Kadish/Nathan Chapman/Jake Rose; Publisher: none listed; Starts With Music
– The boyish, tenor vocal is perfect for the innocence in this vividly penned, small-town lyric. The crunchy production boosts things, too. A promising disc debut.

LAUREN LUCAS/Addicted to the Rain
Writers: Lauren Lucas/Jim Reilley; Producer: Reilley; Publisher: none listed: LL
– Echoey and ghostly, with wistful yearning and ache.

Frank Ray Signs With Spirit Music Nashville/Fluid Music Revolution

(Front Row L-R): Katie Flynn, Creative Director-Spirit Music Nashville; Kara Jackson, Creative Director-Spirit Music Nashville; Michelle Davey, Director of Administration-Spirit Music Nashville; Frank Ray; Oscar Chavira, Manager; AJ Burton, VP-Fluid Music Revolution; Kate Richardson, Partner-Richlynn Group; Nathan Drake, Attorney-Loeb & Loeb LLP (Back Row L-R): Chip Petree, Attorney-Ritholz Levy Fields LLP; Matt Cottingham, Attorney-Ritholz Levy Fields LLP; Derek Wells, Sr. Director A&R/Production-Spirit Music Nashville; Frank Rogers, CEO-Spirit Music Nashville/Owner-Fluid Music Revolution; Brian Bradford, VP of Administration and Operations-Spirit Music Nashville

Frank Ray has signed a worldwide publishing deal with Spirit Music Nashville/Fluid Music Revolution.

A former police officer from Las Cruces who left his full-time job to pursue his passion as a singer, Ray has been sharing his talent with audiences throughout the U.S. and leading aspiring Hispanic artists in what he calls the beginning of a modern Latino Country movement. In 2017, he released the solo debut EP Different Kind of Country, followed by his second EP, Tequila Mockingbird, in 2018. Tequila Mockingbird garnered media attention from the CBS Evening News, the USA Network, and NBC’s Today Show, and his song “The Drive” reached No. 1 on Texas regional radio. He has shared stages with Keith Urban, Luke Combs, Granger Smith, Kip Moore, Toby Keith, Dan + Shay, Maddie & Tae, Big & Rich, Luke Bryan and more, and is currently touring in support of his EP.

“Spirit Music Nashville and Fluid Music Revolution are beyond excited to be working with Frank Ray,” said Frank Rogers, CEO, Spirit Music Nashville. “Over the last several years, we have watched as Frank has developed into a seasoned singer, songwriter and performer. We feel like the sky is the limit for Frank and now it is time for the world to find out about him. Here we go!!!!”

“I’m so excited to be a part of the Spirit Music Nashville/ Fluid Music Revolution team,” said Ray. “They’ve taken me under their wing since I first started coming to Nashville and I’ve always felt like part of the family. The company is forward-thinking, the staff is both attentive and fun to work with and the writers are beyond amazing! As an artist, I’m confident that the collective wealth of knowledge at Spirit Music Nashville/Fluid Music Revolution is sure to break out some hits for me and many others for years to come!”

 

 

Luke Combs To Headline New York’s Madison Square Garden

Luke Combs is continuing his What You See Is What You Get Tour into the Fall and will make his headlining debut at New York’s Madison Square Garden on Tuesday, Dec. 1. Additional stops on the tour include Raleigh’s PNC Arena, Dallas’ American Airlines Center, San Francisco’s Chase Center, Las Vegas’ T-Mobile Arena, Chicago’s United Center, Orlando’s Amway Center and Boston’s TD Garden, among others. Combs will perform in a new in-the-round stage design on the newly-confirmed dates.

Tickets for the shows, which will feature special guests Ashley McBryde, Drew Parker and Ray Fulcher, will be available for pre-sale starting Feb. 25, with general on-sale following on Feb. 28. Combs’ official fan club, The Bootleggers, will once again have early access to tickets through Ticketmaster Verified Fan pre-sale starting next Tuesday, Feb. 25.

Produced by Scott Moffatt, Combs’ new album What You See Is What You Get features 17 songs including the five tracks previously released via The Prequel EP last summer. The EP debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart with all five tracks charting on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs Top 25—a feat not accomplished by any artist in 60 years since Johnny Cash in 1959. Combs’ “Even Though I’m Leaving” spent three weeks at No. 1 on the country charts, making it Combs’ seventh consecutive No. 1 — a first on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart. Following this success, Combs’ new single, “Does To Me” featuring Eric Church, recently shipped to country radio.

Warner Chappell Music Nashville Promotes Overton To Director, A&R

Will Overton

Warner Chappell Music Nashville has promoted Will Overton to Director, A&R. In this role, Overton will continue to sign new acts and develop established acts on the company’s roster.

“Will is trustworthy and consistent, someone you can rely on,” said Ben Vaughn, President & CEO, WCM Nashville. “I commend him for his dedication to writer development, and I know I speak for the entire team in congratulating him on this well-deserved promotion.”

“It’s been a privilege to be part of the Warner Chappell Nashville family for the past four years,” added Overton. “I’m so lucky to work with great people, incredible songwriters, and powerful songs every day. I’m so excited to continue this journey alongside the WCM team!”

Overton has been part of Warner Chappell Music since 2015 and previously worked as A&R Manager. Prior to Warner Chappell, Overton worked at WME and Nashville music publishing company DropTine Music. He earned a Bachelor of Arts from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and a Masters in Management Studies from Duke University.

After “David Ashley Parker,” Travis Denning Showcases His Rock Music Leanings

Travis Denning

When UMG Nashville artist Travis Denning joins labelmate and fellow Georgia native Sam Hunt’s Southside Summer Tour beginning in May, it will not only mark some of the largest stages the “David Ashley Parker From Powder Springs” singer has performed on, but it will also be a full-circle moment.

Denning, 27, first opened shows for Hunt back in 2014 at Bluewater Valdosta, a college bar in Valdosta, Georgia, and then at The Crazy Bull in Macon, Georgia. “There were maybe 700 people at Bluewater, which was a lot for that place,” Denning recalls. “This is really cool to have this kind of moment again.”

“It feels kind of like the pinnacle moment, and not only is it a huge tour and it’s my first amphitheater tour, but I mean, Sam was a guy that I’ve looked up to. And really, I’ve enjoyed his music ever since he first came out on the scene.”

He’s been building his touring cred with his own series of headlining shows, as well as opening concerts for Justin Moore and making the trek overseas to perform as part of C2C. But he’s been building his star power, songwriting chops and guitar prowess since grade school in his hometown of Warner Robins, Georgia.

“I grew up in an Air Force town,” he says of his childhood, where his parents worked as civil servants for the United States Air Force at nearby Robins Air Force Base for most of his formative years. He says his parents both currently live in D.C, working out of the Pentagon.

As a child, he was “obsessed” with buying CDs, and reading liner notes while he listened to the songs that swirled from the three-disc CD changer that came as part of a cheap three-piece boombox.

But it was when Denning received his first guitar at age 11 that he knew music was his calling. Denning tried various sports teams growing up, and says his parents assumed music would be one more thing he briefly tried before moving on to the next hobby.

“I think maybe they thought, ‘Okay, he’s going to try guitar and it’ll kind of blow over,'” he recalls. But Denning soon took up guitar lessons with a local instructor, and learned the chords to John Denver’s “Take Me Home Country Roads,” in part thanks to an uncle who appreciated Denver’s music. “All of those songs, like ‘Rocky Mountain High’ and ‘Leaving on a Jet Plane,’ they’re rooted in those strumming patterns and chords that, especially in country music, we use every day. As soon as I started learning songs, I was like, ‘I’m not giving this up.’ After two years or so, my parents were like, ‘Alright, this is who he is.’”

However, like many youthful musicians just beginning to funnel their youth and passions into music, Denning was really yearning to rock.

“Honestly, country music came later in my life, when I was in high school. As a kid, I loved southern rock—Marshall Tucker Band, Allman Brothers, of course Skynyrd. I can tell you the exact moment it happened, when I was seven years old,” he recalls. “My dad played Back in Black and ‘Hells Bells.’ Then as you grow older, as an 11-year-old guitar player it’s like, ‘I want to hear it faster, I want to hear it louder.’” Soon, bands like Metallica and Slayer made their way into Denning’s musical collective.

“That’s just as big of a musical influence on my live shows and my recording process, just as much as country music songwriting is to who I am as an artist,” he says.

While he fine-tuned his guitar shredding on a foundation of metal and rock, he found his love for touring and performing through church music, spending two summers touring the East coast as part of a church youth choir, performing reinterpreted versions of Methodist hymns.

“It was literally the first time I toured, to be 16 and driving through Pennsylvania and seeing the Amish country. The choir director would let me bring my guitar and incorporate it into what we were doing. That encouraged me to keep chasing my passion and learn how to make it work with anything—by that time I had been playing guitar for a few years and I knew I wanted to make a living being a musician.”

Around that time, Denning also began studying the craft of songwriting, falling headlong back into those country frameworks he grew up listening to, drawn in by country music’s imagery and small-town stories.

“With my generation, we grew up on a lot of different music, but when I started to write songs, that’s when I realized that country music has the best songs in the world. I related because I grew up with a bunch of rednecks, a bunch of country folks, and a bunch of people who worked at the Air Force base, things like that. I heard these songs and I was like, ‘Oh, that’s my people.’”

One of his earliest country influences came from another Georgia artist who grew up about 20 minutes north of Warner Robins—Jason Aldean.

“I thought, ‘Well hell, this guy went and did it. Why can’t I?’ Jason cuts outside songs, same with George Strait. So I would study his liner notes and see names like Wendell Mobley and Neil Thrasher. Of course, Rhett Akins. That sparked the flame in me, like ‘Okay, these guys are kajillionaires, but maybe I can make money writing songs, and put food on the table by doing what I love.’”

When the time came to graduate from high school, his heart was set on studying songs, not textbooks.

“I graduated from Warner Robins High in 2011 with a 3.79 [GPA], and I took it all the way down to a 1.8 my first semester of college. You got to really work to kill a GPA like I did. I tried college for a semester, but I’ll be honest, I knew at high school graduation that I was done.”

The protagonist in Denning’s witty, relatable Top 40 breakthrough track “David Ashley Parker from Powder Springs” may have been inspired by the singer-songwriter’s own teenage experience trying to sneak into clubs with a fake ID, but Denning had a more pragmatic plan for making his way into Nashville’s bar scene, where so many aspiring artists and songwriters begin playing writers rounds and networking.

Instead of moving to Nashville right away, Denning continued honing his craft closer to home, working and saving up $10,000 along the way. He turned 21 in December 2013, and one month later he was crashing on an air mattress in a Nashville apartment.

“It’s the networking in places like Losers where things happen,” he says. “I wanted to move here when I was actually legal. I saved money so I could move here, make rent and eat, and not have to be worried about making money right off the bat.”

Upon arriving in Nashville, Denning already had a friend in fellow Georgia native and songwriter, Cole Taylor.

“He had been here for about a year and I just kind of followed him around to things. Hell, he was figuring it out, too.”

Taylor would soon find songwriting success in co-writing songs like Florida Georgia Line’s “Sippin’ On Fire,” and “Home Alone Tonight,” Luke Bryan’s duet with Karen Fairchild of Little Big Town. Taylor and Denning attended every songwriter hangout they could, expanding their circle of songwriting buddies to include writers like Thomas Archer, who co-wrote Luke Combs’ smash hit “Hurricane.”

From there, things moved quickly—Denning inked a publishing deal with Jeremy Stover’s RED Creative in 2014, and Jason Aldean recorded Denning’s “All Out Of Beer” for his 2016 album, They Don’t Know. Justin Moore recorded Denning’s “Life in the Living,” and in 2017, he inked a label deal with UMG Nashville, the label powerhouse behind artists including Hunt, Eric Church, Keith Urban, Carrie Underwood, Little Big Town, and others.

“My short-term goal was get a publishing deal, and just focus on songwriting, build that craft because that’s something you always have. I hoped I would have one or two hits for other artists, sign a label deal and then be able to sing those in my own set. I moved up here to be on a tour of bus and behind the microphone. That’s what I’ve wanted to do my whole life.”

His debut single “David Ashley Parker from Powder Springs” peaked in the Top 40 on country radio, but Denning says he felt a career shift in the wake of the song.

“’David Ashley Parker’ is everything I love about country music. Telling stories, and it kind of gives you a sideways smirk—it’s a story that everybody has lived. When we sing that in our show, even opening, you almost can’t tell it wasn’t a hit because it just connected with people. It just proves that there will be success on radio, there will be success on streaming, and sometimes they’re not at the same time. I think as long as it connects with people, and you’re moving forward and finding your fans, I think they’re all victories and they’re all equal.”

He followed the song with his current Top 20 single “After A Few,” which resurfaces Denning’s early rock and blues leanings; Denning also played the guitar solo and some overdubs on the original demo for the track. Another release, “Red, White and Blue” which he co-wrote with Cole Taylor,  focuses on his respect for military and growing up in that small “Air Force town” in Georgia.

“I told someone the other day, ‘After a Few’ is kind of the anchor of all the music that has come out and will continue to come out. Tyler Rich told me he called it dark disco country, and I wanted that dark, dangerous kind of image when you hear that song but you still drink a beer to it, you know you can still have fun.”

As “After A Few” enters the Top 20 on country radio, and a new track “Abby” has just released, Denning also has a co-writing credit on Michael Ray’s Top 25 single “Her World Or Mine.”

“Now, that dream of having a song on the radio that I’m not singing, but that I wrote, is happening at the exact same time that my song’s taking off. And honestly, it’s cooler. It’s way better than I could’ve ever imagined.”