Brothers Osborne Unlock Some ‘Skeletons’ On Upcoming Album


Brothers Osborne has announced their third studio album, Skeletons, will be available Oct. 9. The duo teamed up with longtime producer Jay Joyce for Skeletons and co-wrote every track on the project along with frequent collaborators Lee Miller, Craig Wiseman, Natalie Hemby, Casey Beathard and more.

“If Pawn Shop was our introduction, and Port Saint Joe was like the first conversation we had with someone over a beer, then Skeletons is the moment where you start getting down to the real stuff and showing who you really are,” says John Osborne. “If you really want to get to know us, this is the record to do it.”

The brothers just released their new single “All Night” off the new album, and recently performed the song on The Ellen DeGeneres Show and also on the CMA Summer Stay-Cay special. The past few weeks have been busy for the singer/songwriter siblings as they recently performed a “Tunes & Teas” livestream for Pandora in partnership with Twisted Tea, and hosted a July 4th special for ABC Radio. They also released an “Off The Road” digital franchise for CMT.

Skeletons Track Listing:
“Lighten Up” (John Osborne, TJ Osborne, Daniel Tashian and Ian Fitchuk)
“All Night”  (John Osborne, TJ Osborne and Andrew DeRoberts)
“All The Good Ones Are” (TJ Osborne, Lee Miller and Craig Wiseman)
“I’m Not For Everyone” (John Osborne, TJ Osborne, Luke Dick and Natalie Hemby)
“Skeletons”  (John Osborne, TJ Osborne and Andrew DeRoberts)
“Back On The Bottle”  (John Osborne, TJ Osborne and Hayes Carll)
“High Note”  (John Osborne, TJ Osborne, Casey Beathard and Dustin Christensen)
“Muskrat Greene” (John Osborne)
“Dead Man’s Curve” (John Osborne, TJ Osborne, Lee Miller)
“Make It A Good One” (John Osborne, TJ Osborne and Stephen Wilson Jr.)
“Hatin’ Somebody” (John Osborne, TJ Osborne and Casey Beathard)
“Old Man’s Boots” (John Osborne)

Tori Kelly Finds Inspiration And ‘Solitude’ During Quarantine

Tori Kelly. Photo: Elizabeth Miranda

Tori Kelly has been busy working on new music during the COVID-19 pandemic, and will release Solitude, a five-song EP recorded at home during quarantine, on Aug. 14. Kelly revealed the track listing today and shared one of its five songs – her poignant version of Drake’s “Time Flies.”

Kelly penned three of the EP’s five tracks at home. After recording acoustic demos, she worked remotely with producers Monro, Spencer Stewart and Stint to complete “Value” and “Don’t Take Me Home.” On the funky, exuberant “Unbothered” she offers a much-needed dose of hope, looking to the good times ahead. The EP wraps with “Glad,” a personal, soulful ballad that Kelly penned for her husband, and produced and recorded herself.

“I’ve never been more thankful for my home studio than I have during this season of being quarantined,” says Tori Kelly. “In some ways, it felt like I was going back to my roots, when I would be in my room, making songs and posting covers on YouTube. A lot of change has happened since my last album, so it felt great to just freely write what was on my heart and be inspired by different stories. I had so much fun creating this EP and I’m excited to share this new chapter of my music.”

With her 2020 European tour cut short due to COVID-19, Kelly began collaborating with other artists online via her “QuaranTEA with Tori” series and working on new music.

Solitude Track Listing:
1. Value
2. Don’t Take Me Home
3. Time Flies (Drake Cover)
4. Unbothered
5. Glad

Nicolle Galyon On Raising Songs & Daughters: “We Made The Home, Now We’re Building The Family"

Madison Kozak and Nicolle Galyon. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images for Songs & Daughters

One year ago today (July 22), hit song crafter Nicolle Galyon, known for her work on six No. 1 hits such as Dan+Shay’s “Tequila” and “All To Myself,” and Kenny Chesney’s “All The Pretty Girls,” announced her female-driven label, Songs & Daughters.

“I like to say it is more of a home than it is a company,” Galyon says. “We are a place to nurture not just the art but the artist. I want female creators to feel safe to grow, develop and try things.”

Over the past year, the company as evolved and deepened its purpose, strategically and selectively adding artists and songwriters to the roster.

Last month, Songs & Daughters launched a music publishing arm in conjunction with Big Loud Publishing and Warner Chappell Music, and announced the signing of the venture’s first songwriter, Tiera. The company also inked a partnership with Hailey Whitters and Whitters’ Pigasus Records label.

“We made the home, now we’re building the family,” says Galyon, who serves as President & CEO at Songs & Daughters, and was named BMI’s Songwriter of the Year in 2019.

Tiera and Whitters join Songs & Daughters’ flagship artist, Madison Kozak.

Before meeting Galyon, Kozak had already signed a publishing deal with Big Loud while still a junior at Belmont University. When Big Loud’s Seth England invited Galyon to see Kozak showcase some new music, Kozak’s performance of her heartfelt ballad “First Last Name” —along with a well-timed joke—would spark a full-fledged vision for Songs & Daughters.

“At the showcase, I told Madison, as kind of a joke, ‘Hey, I started a record label in my car on the way over here, if you want to talk,’ but I meant it as a way of complimenting her.’ But separately, Seth England had come to me, and we’ve always ran ideas by each other. He was like, ‘Have you ever thought of running a label?’ And I was like, ‘I just made this joke to Madison but I think it’s going to end up being a real thing.’ We had dinner in Fall of 2018, and by the time we left, in my mind, it was a done deal.”

For Kozak, that night meant meeting and performing for her songwriting heroine.

“I got ready for the showcase—picked the outfit, picked the band, picked the songs—got ready for this whole night, and I was expecting to see some people I already write with and friends, never imagining that one of my biggest heroes would be in the audience. I’ll never forget walking out there and making eye contact with Nicolle and thinking, ‘Oh, shoot, THAT’s who Seth brought out. Wow.’ And just talking to her afterward, I thought maybe we could write a song together. I never imagined it would turn into this. I got so lucky to have a mentor who is not only such an accomplished songwriter, but she’s a woman in the music industry who knows how to navigate that. Now being the label CEO that she is, the mom and daughter that she is, and the good-hearted friend she is, I feel very blessed to be working with her.”

Since signing with Songs & Daughters, Kozak has joined CMT’s Next Women of Country Class of 2020, and pre-pandemic, she joined Tanya Tucker on the CMT Next Women of Country Tour. Now, with touring paused during the current pandemic, Kozak has been spending more time writing songs and fleshing out her debut album.

Nicolle Galyon and Tiera. Photo: Julia Cox

Even in the midst of a pandemic, the company has continued moving forward. Tiera e-signed her publishing contract in early March, just as stay-at-home orders were going into effect.

“I’ve had the opportunity to start a publishing company through my deal for years with Warner Chappell. Being a good publisher is more like a day-to-day manager and I never felt like I had the time and bandwidth to give a writer what they deserved until Tiera came along. She had these two powerhouse creative teams—Warner Chappell and Big Loud—that both wanted to work with her and I was kind of caught in the middle in a great way.”

Tiera began teaching herself guitar at age 13. She first gained a national audience after winning her episode of USA Network’s Real Country. As a writer, Tiera has already garnered cuts by other artists, and has released her own music, including “Rewind,” “Wake Up Call,” and more.

“Nicolle is an incredible songwriter, and she can give me advice on things because she’s been through things in the industry that I haven’t been through. That was never something I imagined I would have with whoever I would sign with,” Tiera says. “I’d heard all these stories from songwriters about how they would turn songs in and they wouldn’t hear back from their publishers. But they always respond to the songs I send and they will touch base just to see how I am, so it definitely feels like a family.”

After moving to Nashville 18 years ago, Galyon’s career has given her a deep perspective into the needs and struggles artists and songwriters face.

In 2007, she signed with Warner Chappell as a songwriter. It took seven years of hard work before she celebrated her first No. 1 single, with Miranda Lambert’s “Automatic.” She also competed as an artist on the popular music competition The Voice in 2012. In 2019, she earned BMI’s Country Song of the Year for “Tequila.” She’s also earned two ACM Awards and a CMA Triple Play Award.

Most of all, she hopes to offer mentorship and support for female creators, whether they choose to focus their talents in the artist space, as a songwriter, or both.

“I do have a bit of a platform now and I get to choose how I use that and that is something I wish had been there more for me. I’ve had some really great champions over the years as I’ve come up through the business, but I can’t say that I’ve had a lot of champions that were songwriters like me and were my peers. I have seen especially the female creatives in our business go from being in competition to being in collaboration and I feel like I’ve watched myself as a writer go from being the only girl in the writing room to being one of three girls in the writing room and we’re writing a song for a guy. So to watch that evolution, I’m trying to create that collaborative space at the label.

“I would love for someone signed to a Songs & Daughters publishing deal to get a cut with an S&D artist and maybe they co-write together. That’s the kind of thing that can’t be forced, you just have to create a space that creates the opportunity for it to happen organically.”

Hailey Whitters. Photo: Harper Smith

Galyon also brought singer-songwriter Whitters into the Songs & Daughters fold. In partnership with Whitters’ Pigasus label, Songs & Daughters will handle marketing and promotions, alongside Big Loud, for her album The Dream, further building Whitters’ team, which also includes management with Make Wake Artists (known for its work with superstar Luke Combs) and BRND MGMT, and touring through CAA.

“Although unknown to us at the time, I believe my journey with Songs & Daughters began three years ago with Nicolle [Galyon] in the writer room,” Whitters says. “I find it refreshing and unique, that my label head is a creator—someone who’s not only involved in the promotion of my music, but also the genesis of the song. I also found it particularly motivating that the label is run by a woman in an industry that is quite often dominated by men in leadership positions.”

“The Hailey deal was unique,” Galyon says. “She had a fully-finished project that she self-funded and I’ve been working with her as a songwriter for a few years. So it was just fun to take that partnership and say ‘How can we all work together?’ For me it’s fun to work with a songwriter and artist like Hailey because I don’t have to let it go when it leaves the writing room. I get to continue to ride that ride with her.”

Female artists continue to fight a hard battle for airplay at country radio, but as a songwriter, label head, and champion for those she works with, Galyon has been encouraged that the first half of 2020 has seen No. 1 hits for female artists including Ingrid Andress, Gabby Barrett, Carly Pearce, and Maren Morris.

“I feel like that’s so hopeful and encouraging,” she says. “I feel like the first few dominoes have fallen and I hope the rest will follow suit. One thing about those female artists is they are all passionate about building up other female artists, so the more success they have, the more opportunities they create for younger female acts.”

Academy Of Country Music Launches ACM: The Hub

The Academy of Country Music has announced the launch of ACM: The Hub, now live at TheHub.ACMcountry.com, featuring new series “The ACM Weekly” beginning Wednesday, July 29 and “ACM Wine Down Wednesday” with current episodes now live at The Hub.

The Hub will include intimate artist conversations, at-home acoustic performances, unique artist & fan engagement opportunities, artist Marketplace and weekly ACM curated playlists. The Hub is a destination for artists of all levels in Country Music to reach fans with music, upcoming virtual livestream concerts and performances, and easy access to artist merchandise – a one-stop-shop for quality curated content for music fans, worldwide.

“The Academy’s goal is to help fans and artists connect during these quarantined times with no live shows.” said Damon Whiteside, CEO of the Academy of Country Music. “We want to provide fans with a dedicated place to see the best of Country Music content, including a comprehensive fan calendar featuring upcoming live streams, events, new music, merchandise and playlists. This will allow fans to easily follow all their favorite artists and discover live virtual and other opportunities. I want to thank our Board and industry members who provided valuable input to our Staff throughout the development of this initiative and will continue to be integral to its ongoing success.”

“The ACM Weekly” series will begin to stream Wednesday evenings with the first episode launching on Wednesday, July 29. The Weekly will feature several Country Music artist performances in each 20-40-minute episodes, highlighting artists with upcoming projects and new music.

The Academy’s first ever “ACM Wine Down Wednesday” weekly series kicked off earlier in July with Carly Pearce and Tenille Townes, both episodes now available to watch on The Hub. The series will continue through Wednesday, August 5, presented by 1000 Stories® Bourbon Barrel-Aged Wine. The five-week “happy hour” virtual series is the first to be highlighted on The Hub, featuring artist performances, conversations and stories highlighting rising female Country Music artists including Maddie & Tae, MacKenzie Porter and Lainey Wilson. Wilson, the third episode of the series will be available on The Hub following her episode tonight at 6:00PM CT via Wilson’s official Facebook page, as well as the Academy of Country Music® and 1000 Stories® Wine official Facebook pages. Additionally, 1000 Stories® Wine is donating $2,000 per artist participating towards the ACM Lifting Lives COVID-19 Response Fund to be disbursed to individuals in the Country Music community who are currently in need of pandemic relief assistance.

ACM®: The Hub was developed in response to COVID-19 freezing the concert festival & touring world. When the Academy recognized in spring of 2020 that artists were turning to live performances via web streams to stay engaged and connected with their fan base, we developed The Hub to collect, curate and organize artist content all in one place. The platform is designed to spotlight the Country Music genre as a format for consumers to enjoy – whether familiar or new to Country. Access and viewership for all curated content is now available at the official ACM®: The Hub.

RIAA Designates SoundExchange As Authoritative Source Of U.S. ISRC Data

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has designated SoundExchange as the authoritative source of International Standard Recording Code data in the United States.

RIAA is taking this action to ensure a trusted source of ISRC data for the U.S. market, particularly as the implementation of the Music Modernization Act and the transition to streaming make accurate ID of sound recordings even more critical. This designation builds on a prior agreement by SoundExchange with IFPI to provide a publicly accessible ISRC lookup service.

ISRC is the internationally recognized identification tool for sound recordings and music videos implemented by IFPI. It serves as a fundamental component of data associated with recordings. ISRC is used throughout the music industry with applications across supply chains, reporting, music discovery, archiving and rights management and is also a key data element used to link recordings to musical compositions and their identifier, International Standard Musical Work Code.

“Due to SoundExchange’s extensive experience and widely respected reputation for efficiency and transparency, RIAA considers the ISRC codes and associated sound recording data held by SoundExchange as authoritative for commercial use in the U.S. marketplace. Moving forward, everyone should utilize this data. Industry wide use of these codes and associated data will contribute to the successful implementation of the MMA and to increased efficiency across the U.S. music industry more generally,” said David Hughes, head of technology and standards at RIAA.

“I am routinely asked how ISRC users can know whether a given code is correct. Designating SoundExchange as the authoritative source addresses this issue within the U.S. We hope it will lead to more efficient and cost-effective processes for data management and transmission,” said Paul Jessop, Executive Director of the U.S. National ISRC Agency.

“Accurate and accessible data is vital to a healthy music industry, and serving as the authoritative source of ISRC data advances SoundExchange’s mission to ensure that music creators are paid accurately and efficiently,” said Michael Huppe, President & CEO, SoundExchange. “When we eliminate friction through better and more efficient technology solutions such as access to ISRC data, creators in the music community can focus on the music.”

MV2 Celebrates Fifth Anniversary With Two No. 1 Hits, Eight Charted Singles

Photo: Pictured top row (L-R): Lindsey Parrish, Tony Harrell and Ben Strain. Bottom row (L-R): Nicole Sherrill and Mike Whelan

MV2 Entertainment celebrated its five-year anniversary back in May with a pretty major achievement: eight charted singles to its credit only six months into the year, including a pair of No. 1 country singles.

MV2’s No. 1 tracks include Jon Pardi’s “Heartache Medication” and Luke Bryan’s “One Margarita,” and additional tracks include “Be A Light” by Thomas Rhett, “Got What I Got “ by Jason Aldean,  “Lovin’ On You “ by Luke Combs, “Ain’t Always The Cowboy” by Jon Pardi, “Only Truck In Town” by Tyler Farr, and “I Dare You” by Kelly Clarkson. Luke Bryan has also recorded the MV2 song “Build Me A Daddy,” which he recently performed on The Tonight Show.

“We’ve been incredibly fortunate to have had such great success since the launch of the company in 2015. I credit that success to having the right team and talent in place,” said MV2’s GM Tony Harrell. “James Archer and I were very deliberate in designing a business that embraced the concept of values-based leadership and incorporating that principle into our everyday approach to building this business.”

“When Tony and I began discussing the idea of working together in the music industry by creating a music publishing company, I fully understood that this was a long-game investment,” MV2 President and CEO James Archer said. “We wanted to create a business that reflected our standards and ethics, so we approached the creation of this company with the same values-based leadership philosophy I use with my other businesses.”

Harrell and Archer give much of the credit for the company’s success to its creative team and its roster of writers. “We have an incredible and diverse front line with Mike Whelan, Ben Strain and Nicole Sherrill representing our writers and catalog and Lindsey Parrish keeping our roster connected and promoted through social media,” Harrell added.

The creative team is led by Sr. Creative Director Mike Whelan who credits his song skill to his time working with great writers like Bob McDill, Dean Dillon, Skip Ewing, Tony Martin and others. Along with Whelan, his publishing partner for nearly a decade Ben Strain and Creative Director Nicole Sherrill round out the team. Together, Whelan and Strain have placed more than 30 hit songs and contributed to the development of recording artists Jordan Davis, Travis Denning, Adam Hambrick and others.

MV2 also recently launched an indie label, New Lost City Records, whose first two signings are MV2 songwriter Nora Collins and Oklahoma-based artist Blake Henderson. MV2’s songwriters roster of songwriters includes Josh Thompson, Thomas Archer, Houston Phillips, Nick Donley, David Frasier, Nora Collins, Joe Whelan and Forrest Finn.

Eddie Stubbs Announces Retirement

Eddie Stubbs. Photo: Grand Ole Opry/WSM

Longtime WSM Radio on-air personality, Grand Ole Opry announcer and music scholar Eddie Stubbs announced his retirement on Tuesday evening (July 21). He will officially sign off on July 29. WSM will soon announce plans for its 7 p.m.-midnight shift; in the interim, Jeff Hoag will serve as host.

WSM Radio posted the following on their Facebook page: “This evening Eddie Stubbs announced his retirement from WSM Radio and the Grand Ole Opry. Eddie has been a part of our airwaves for more than 25 years, and we’re so grateful for his knowledge, wisdom and passion for country music. Stay tuned this week and next as WSM celebrates Eddie Stubbs. We’ll revisit some of his famed interviews from our archives, and so much more! Thank you Eddie, for keeping the light on for Nashville radio!!”

On July 8, 1996, Stubbs began hosting the evening shift on WSM and now holds the distinction of being the longest-serving broadcaster in the 7 p.m. to midnight slot in WSM’s 95 years of operation. With a different theme each night, ‘Hall Of Fame Monday,’ ‘Two For Tuesday,’ Way Back Wednesday,’ ‘Classic Opry Thursday’ and ‘WSM By Request’ on Fridays, Stubbs’ unique insight into the stories and the people behind the music always gave listeners a reason to tune in.

Stubbs said, “I have had an extremely blessed 25 years at WSM, and as the third-longest tenured announcer in the Grand Ole Opry’s history. The experiences and friendships have allowed me to live a lot of dreams. Needless to say, I will be forever grateful.”

WSM Director of Content and Programming J. Patrick Tinnell said, “Eddie’s talent, service and dedication are the stuff of legends and are forever part of WSM and Grand Ole Opry history.”

Stubbs came to Nashville on March 21, 1995 to play fiddle with the Queen of Country Music Kitty Wells and her husband Johnnie Wright. A week later he was hired part-time at WSM. Just seventeen days after his arrival in Music City, Eddie auditioned for the announcer’s position on the Grand Ole Opry show.

Dan Rogers, Grand Ole Opry Vice President and Executive Producer, said, “Eddie has been a great friend to the Opry, to the Opry’s artists, and to listeners around the world. I have no doubt that students of the Opry and of country music will for years turn to his recorded conversations with legends including Merle Haggard, Ray Price, Connie Smith, Marty Stuart and so many more to learn about their careers and the era in which Eddie has made such an impact at the Opry and on WSM.”

In addition to his roles at WSM and Opry, Stubbs served six seasons as the on-camera announcer for The Marty Stuart Show on RFD-TV. He has served on committees with the Country Music Association, the International Bluegrass Music Association, as well as The Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum.

Stubbs earned the Country Music Association’s Large Market Broadcast Personality of the Year award in 2002. In 2012, he received country radio’s highest honor by becoming one of the youngest living inductees into the Country Radio Hall of Fame.

Spotify, UMG Ink Multi-Year Global License Agreement


Streaming service Spotify and Universal Music Group have entered into a new, multi-year global license agreement, allowing UMG to “deepen its leading role as an early adopter of future products,” according to a statement, and to offer feedback to Spotify’s development team. The two companies’ previous contract ended in early 2019.

Daniel Ek, Chairman & CEO of Spotify, said, “From their early experimentation with Marquee, to testing new experiences like Canvas, Universal Music Group has been an important partner in helping to shape the development of our marketing tools. With today’s announcement, we will expand on this level of early stage innovation and further strengthen our partnership and shared vision for helping advance artists at all stages of their careers. We’ve said all along, the goal of our Marketplace strategy is to harness Spotify’s ability to connect artists with fans on a scale that has never before existed and bring new opportunities to the industry. Together, we look forward to reinvesting in and building new tools and offerings for artists around the world.”

Sir Lucian Grainge, Chairman and CEO of Universal Music Group, said, “With this agreement, UMG and Spotify are more aligned than ever in our commitment to ensuring the entire music ecosystem thrives and reaches new audiences around the globe. Given our commitment to innovation and early adoption of music technologies, and Spotify’s leadership in the development of forward-thinking tools, our new partnership will provide our artists with new and powerful opportunities to connect with fans on Spotify’s growing platform. Working together, our teams will expand and accelerate our collaborative efforts to deliver artist-focused initiatives, strategic marketing campaigns and new offerings to provide exciting new experiences for fans worldwide.”

In April, Spotify inked a new licensing agreement with Warner Music Group.

Industry Ink: Chris Young, Blind Tiger Record Club, Musically Fed

Chris Young’s Podcast Hits Listener Milestone


Chris Young‘s new podcast, The Quad With Chris Young, a weekly series launched by the multi-platinum entertainer at the beginning of 2020, has hit a major milestone this week, notching over 100,000 listening hours since its inception. Each week Chris, along with his co-hosts and friends Josh, Haley “The Bear” and Ryan, discuss four topics: Sports, Music, Movies and a weekly Hot Take.

Nashville’s Lightning 100 Adds “Blind Tiger Record Club On Air”


The “Blind Tiger Record Club On Air” radio show debuted on Lightning 100 (100.1 WRLT) yesterday (July 20) and returns every other Monday from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. CT.

The Blind Tiger Record Club is a vinyl subscription service started in 2017 in Nashville. Members pick from four different styles and receive vinyl delivered directly to their door each month. On each new episode, Blind Tiger Record Club founder David W. Williams and Product Manager Rudy Newman host panel discussions on albums released on vinyl each month.

Musically Fed Humanitarian Effort Aids Nashville Music Industry Workers

On July 13, many behind-the-scenes workers in Nashville’s music industry were aided by the humanitarian initiative Musically Fed.

At Soundcheck Nashville, more than 140 families were given meals, fresh produce, dry goods, bottled water and other food products, courtesy of Minneapolis’s Loaves & Fishes, via two semis loaded with supplies.

Production director Jake Berry, with Just a Bunch of Roadies co-founders Charlie Hernandez and Lori Tierney, powered the Scottsdale-based Musically Fed’s effort to feed live event workers and their families in Music City. Rhino Staging, Ben Jumper of Soundcheck Nashville, Kris O’Connor of Dega Catering and dozens of others answered Musically Fed’s call to distribute meals and groceries to local gig workers.

Steep Canyon Rangers Plan New Album For October


The Steep Canyon Rangers are set to release a new album, Arm In Arm, Oct. 16 on Yep Roc Records. A new track, “Every River,” is available digitally now.
Recorded over several days at Southern Ground Studios in Nashville (which marked the first time the band recorded outside of their homebase in North Carolina) the album was produced by the Rangers with Brandon Bell. Arm In Arm follows two 2019 releases that both debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Bluegrass chart: North Carolina Songbook, an eight-song live album recorded at Merlefest featuring reinterpretations of songs from cross-generational North Carolina icons; and Be Still Moses, an 11-song collaboration between the band and the Asheville Symphony, which featured a collaboration with Boyz II Men and the Asheville Symphony on the title track. 
The band has confirmed three free drive-in concerts in North Carolina for the Summer. From their cars, fans will watch Steep Canyon Rangers perform from a state-of-the-art mobile stage truck equipped with a 16-foot LED screen with audio transmitted via radio frequency directly to cars. WNCW will live stream the show on Aug. 28.
In light of their May 8 benefit concert cancellation sponsored by Wicked Weed Brewing, the brewer will now contribute $10 per album (up to 2,000 albums) sold via the Yep Roc store to Haywood Street’s Downtown Welcome Table, an Asheville, NC-based organization that provides a fine dining experience to those living on the streets.
Steep Canyon Rangers Drive-In Tour Dates:
Aug. 27 – Brevard Music Center – Brevard, NC
Aug. 28  – The Riveter – Asheville, NC
Aug. 29 – Old Avondale Mill Site – Burnsville, NC