Industry Ink (7/1/14)

Tom Starr

Tom Starr


Tom Starr has joined Warner Music Group Nashville’s WAR promotions team as Manager of Southeast Promotion. He replaces Tom Martens, who was promoted to National Promotion manager last month.
Starr has previously worked in promotions at Interscope (with Martens), EMI/Capitol, Jive, MCA and Elektra Records. He lives in St. Louis, and will continue working from his home office in St. Louis for the time being.
Starr can be reached at [email protected].
• • • •
Screen shot 2014-07-01 at 3.37.39 PM1Registration for the 28th annual Music Row Ladies Golf Tournament will be open Monday, July 7. The tournament will be held Aug. 18 at Old Natchez Country Club in Nashville, and will benefit the United Cerebral Palsy of Middle Tennessee.
An email containing registration information will be sent out on Monday, July 7. A registration party will be held on Thursday, July 17 at Losers (1911 Division Street), where participants can register for the tournament and enjoy drink specials from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m.
 
• • • •
SESAC’s Music Row headquarters served as the setting for a reception for Razor & Tie Publishing. The event drew several SESAC affiliates and music industry executives all taking in the casual gathering on a warm summer night.
Pictured (L-R): Razor & Tie’s Sharon Tapper, SESAC’s John Mullins and Razor & Tie’s Craig Balsam and Lisa Johnson. Photo: Terry Wyatt

Pictured (L-R): Razor & Tie’s Sharon Tapper, SESAC’s John Mullins and Razor & Tie’s Craig Balsam and Lisa Johnson. Photo: Terry Wyatt

MusicRowPics: Kayla Adams Showcases Debut Single 'Sober & Sorry'

Kayla Adams visit

Kayla Adams visit


Kayla Adams, newly signed to SSM Label Group, visited MusicRow‘s office recently to perform songs from her upcoming project. Adams made the move to Nashville nine months ago, and has attended both Nashville’s Belmont University and Los Angeles’ Musicians Institute College of Contemporary Music in pursuit of a music career.
She performed her current single, “Sober & Sorry,” which is garnering spins at MusicRow reporting radio stations and is soon to be charting. She says she was inspired to pen the song after a failed past relationship. “Sober & Sorry” was penned with songwriters Billy Atherholt and Pete Nanney.
Though the song suggests some well-crafted revenge with lines like Kerosene in my truck, been waiting all year to burn somethin’ up/ I’m tired of waiting by the phone, gonna have a little party of my own/You’ll wake up sober and sorry, Adams insists no houses were burned down. “I wanted to, but I just walked away instead.” She recently filmed the video in her homestate of Montana.
Adams also performed “Burn A Little Colder,” and “Cliche Country Nights,” which she also co-wrote with Nanney and Atherholt.
Adams has been visiting radio stations across the country to promote “Sober & Sorry,” and is set to release her debut SSM Label Group project later this year.
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Country Stars Make the 'Forbes' 100 Most Powerful Celebrity List

Taylor Swift's RED Tour. Photo: Getty

Taylor Swift’s RED Tour. Photo: Getty


By: Laura Hostelley
Each year Forbes magazine compiles a list of the world’s most powerful celebrities. The list is created by taking into consideration the earnings, press mentions and social-media reach of over 200 celebrities. Three Country superstars have earned a spot in the 2014 compilation, including Taylor Swift, Toby Keith and Kenny Chesney.
The 24-year-old Swift had her highest earnings to date with $64 million, giving her fifth appearance on the list, this time at the No. 18 spot. Her earnings largely come from the Red tour, which had 37 dates during the eligibility period, as well as recent endorsements with Keds, Diet Coke and CoverGirl.
Keith impacts the list at No. 51, earning $65 million in the past year. Keith’s wealth doesn’t come from solely from his music, but largely from his business ventures such as his own label, Show Dog-Universal, his chain of I Love This Bar and Grill restaurants, as well as his endorsement with Ford.
Chesney comes in at No. 71 this year, and earned $44 million during the eligibility period. He may have only played 29 shows during the scoring period, but crowds exceeded 30,000 at each of those dates. He is currently in the studio working on his latest project The Big Revival,  which is scheduled to be released Sept. 23.
At the top of the rankings this year is R&B singer Beyoncé Knowles who earned $115 million between the eligibility period of June 1, 2013-May 31, 2014. In the past year Knowles released her self-titled album Beyonce with almost no press coverage and embarked on her first world tour with husband Jay-Z.

Lambert, Hemby, Galyon Honored For Chart-Topper "Automatic"

Pictured (l-r): producer Chuck Ainlay, Sony Music Nashville's Gary Overton, BMI's Jody Williams, Sony ATV Music Publishing's Troy Tomlinson, co-writers Natalie Hemby and Nicolle Galyon, Miranda Lambert, Sony ATV Music Publishing's Abbey Adams, producer Frank Liddell, Warner/Chappell Music's BJ Hill, BMI's Bradley Collins, and Sony Music Nashville's Keith Gale.

Pictured (L-R): producer Chuck Ainlay, Sony Music Nashville’s Gary Overton, BMI’s Jody Williams, Sony/ATV Music Publishing’s Troy Tomlinson, co-writers Natalie Hemby and Nicolle Galyon, co-writer/artist Miranda Lambert, Sony/ATV Music Publishing’s Abbey Adams, producer Frank Liddell, Warner/Chappell Music’s BJ Hill, BMI’s Bradley Collins, and Sony Music Nashville’s Keith Gale. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images


No, it wasn’t a remake of Miranda Lambert’s “Only Prettier” video, but a similar sock hop theme abounded at Nashville event space aVenue on Monday (June 30) as Lambert and co-writers Natalie Hemby and Nicolle Galyon celebrated Lambert’s seventh No. 1 single as an artist (and fifth as a songwriter), “Automatic.”
Industry members donned their favorite full-skirted dresses, bobby socks, hair scarves, and suits—or in the case of Sony/ATV’s Troy Tomlinson, a letterman jacket—to honor the chart-topping single with a 1950s-themed party. An archway of balloons welcomed guests as they entered the party.
Tomlinson, BMI’s Jody Williams, Warner-Chappell’s BJ Hill, and Sony Music Nashville’s Gary Overton were among those paying tribute to the song’s success.
It also marked another milestone for Lambert. “You signed with Sony/ATV 12 years ago today,” Tomlinson told the singer-songwriter. “There are very few real artists and it’s a pleasure to be in the presence of a real artist. You exemplify that.” To commemorate 12 years with the company, Lambert was gifted with a 1955 RCA Victrola record player and matching records case. Sony/ATV worked with American Pickers to find the pristine record player, and filled the records case with records from the Sony/ATV Tree catalog from the past 40 years.
Overton reminded the crowd that Lambert is the only artist to debut all five of her first albums at the top of the Country charts. Her latest, Platinum, debuted at the top of the all-genre Soundscan chart, and sales of this album have been 30 percent stronger than that of her last project.
Pictured (L-R): BMI writers Nicolle Galyon, Miranda Lambert, Natalie Hemby. Photo: Rick Diamond, Getty Images

Pictured (L-R): BMI writers Nicolle Galyon, Miranda Lambert, Natalie Hemby. Photo: Rick Diamond, Getty Images


A plaque was given to Lambert’s manager Marion Kraft, to commemorate the progression of Lambert’s career. “I’ve known a lot of managers and I’ve never met one more intimately and actively involved in the life of an artist and yet you are attentive to everyone in the industry,” said Tomlinson.
The camaraderie between the three talented songwriters was on full display. “I feel like Miranda is a little sister because she was born on the same day as my little sister and they are both spitfires,” said Hemby. “You are a trailblazer and have set the bar really high.
“I met Nicolle on the plane coming back from Key West,” she continued. “We became friends and friendship is what started this whole thing. Now I get to tell her what a great friend she is and celebrate a No. 1 song with them.”
Galyon, who was recently named one of MusicRow‘s honorees for 2014 Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year, gave an emotional thank you speech during what was her first No. 1 party for her second chart-topping single (though “We Were Us,” co-written by Galyon, reached the chart pinnacle first, the No. 1 celebration has not yet happened). She gave thanks to her parents, God, and husband and songwriter Rodney Clawson.
“These songs are our dreams but they are also our livelihood. I remember being at the No. 1 party for ‘White Liar’ [written by Hemby and Lambert], and I thought, ‘Those girls have it all,’” Galyon said, “and now I’m one of those girls. They have such character and dignity. This means someday I can show my daughter a picture (of the party) and say, ‘You can be anything you want.'”
“When we wrote this song we turned into little girls talking about our childhoods,” summed Lambert. “Our moms said be anything you want to be. So here we are in Easter dresses celebrating a No. 1 song.”
The party continued well into the evening as attendees danced and a full band played songs befitting the retro theme.

US DOJ Invites Public Comments in Consent Decrees Review

DoJAfter hearing impassioned arguments from songwriters, publishers, performing rights organizations, digital radio representatives and other members of the music industry, the US Department of Justice is inviting additional public input. The department asks songwriters, composers, licensees, and service providers, to provide information and/or comments relevant to whether the BMI and ASCAP consent decrees continue to protect competition.
The deadline to receive comments is Aug. 6, 2014.
Specifically, comments and information are requested for the following questions:

  • Do the Consent Decrees continue to serve important competitive purposes today? Why or why not? Are there provisions that are no longer necessary to protect competition? Are there provisions that are ineffective in protecting competition?
  • What, if any, modifications to the Consent Decrees would enhance competition and efficiency?
  • Do differences between the two Consent Decrees adversely affect competition?
  • How easy or difficult is it to acquire in a useful format the contents of ASCAP’s or BMI’s repertory? How, if at all, does the current degree of repertory transparency impact competition? Are modifications of the transparency requirements in the Consent Decrees warranted, and if so, why?
  • Should the Consent Decrees be modified to allow rights holders to permit ASCAP or BMI to license their performance rights to some music users but not others? If such partial or limited grants of licensing rights to ASCAP and BMI are allowed, should there be limits on how such grants are structured?
  • Should the rate-making function currently performed by the rate court be changed to a system of mandatory arbitration? What procedures should be considered to expedite resolution of fee disputes? When should the payment of interim fees begin and how should they be set?
  • Should the Consent Decrees be modified to permit rights holders to grant ASCAP and BMI rights in addition to “rights of public performance”?

All comments should be submitted by email to [email protected] and will be posted in their entirety for public review at justice.gov. Information that parties wish to keep confidential should not be included in their comments.
Comments may also be sent, preferably by courier or overnight service, to the following address:
Chief, Litigation III Section
Antitrust Division
U.S. Department of Justice
450 5th Street NW, Suite 4000
Washington, DC 20001

Lifenotes: Musician Jack L. Solomon

Jack L. Solomon

Jack L. Solomon


Accomplished musician Jack L. Solomon died Tuesday, June 24 in Nashville. He was 71.
Born Feb. 12, 1943 in Columbus, Ohio, Solomon moved to Nashville and began playing guitar with The Jones Boys with George Jones, and later on session recordings with Jones, Dolly Parton, Marty Robbins, Alabama, Pete Drake, Bobby Bare, Ernest Tubb, Mel Tillis, Webb Pierce, The Oak Ridge Boys, Leon Russell, Andy Williams, B. J. Thomas, David Allan Coe, Slim Whitman, Jim Lauderdale, and his wife, Melba Montgomery, among others.
Solomon was a 32nd degree Mason, loved riding his Harley-Davidson motorcycles, and playing golf. He is survived by his wife, Melba Montgomery Solomon, and four daughters, Tara Denise Solomon, Diana Lynn Cirigliano, Melba Jacqueline Chancey, and Melissa Solomon Barrett, as well as five grandchildren, Dannielle, Kai, Mollie, Bella, and Little Jack, and also two great-grandchildren, Jonas and Ian Maxwell. Jack is also survived by his sister, Jean Solomon Ticer and niece, Diane Holt.
Family and friends gathered for a celebration of life on Friday, June 27 at Harpeth Hills Memory Gardens and Funeral Home in Nashville. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Shriners Hospitals For Children were encouraged and appreciated.

Mark Your Calendar – July 2014

brett-eldredge-400x379Single Add Dates

July 7
Justin Moore/Home Sweet Home/Valory Music Co.
Ariana Hodes/Brand New Key/Ocala-Big Round
Presley & Taylor/Kickin’ Back/SMG
Rick Monroe/Fire’s Out/MRG Recordings
July 8
Florida Georgia Line
/Dirt/Republic Nashville
July 14
Brett Eldredge/Mean To Me/Atlantic-WMN
Chase Bryant/Take It On Back/Red Bow
Colt Ford/Workin’ On/Average Joes
Layce Whitworth/Tomboy/Heartland Records

July 21
Maddie & Tae/Girl In A Country Song/Dot Records

jack-clement_for-one-and-for-allAlbum Releases

July 1
Jim Lauderdale/I’m A Song/Sky Crunch Records
Old Crow Medicine Show/Remedy/ATO Records
Colt Ford/Thanks For Listening/Average Joes
David Loving/Potato In Rio/Tall Horse Records
July 8
Mary Sarah/Bridges/144 Entertainment
July 15
Cowboy Jack Clement/For Once and For All/I.R.S. Records Nashville
July 22
Sammy Kershaw/Do You Know Me? – A Tribute To George Jones/Big Hit Records

fourthIndustry Events

July 4

  • Music City July 4th: Let Freedom Sing! with Billy Currington Ashley Monroe, Striking Matches and the Nashville Symphony Orchestra
  • Americana/UK Music conference during the Maverick Festival at Easton Farm Park in East Suffolk

July 14
CMA first ballot due 5pm CT
July 17-19
NAMM at the Nashville Music City Center
July 27
CMA National Broadcast Personality of the Year submissions close

Clif Doyal Agency Celebrates 30 Years

clif doyal1

Clif Doyal


The Clif Doyal Agency is celebrating 30 years. Originally formed in 1984 in Oklahoma City, the agency moved to Nashville in 1991. At the time the agency was already booking artists including Little Texas and a pre-stardom Toby Keith.
The Clif Doyal Agency also provided turn-key talent buying for venues across the country, overseeing shows by Merle Haggard, Waylon Jennings, Rascal Flatts, Martina McBride, Trisha Yearwood and others. Doyal, along with wife and business partner Kathie Bartel Doyal, also worked with Lonestar, Ricochet, Deryl Dodd, Pearl River and more.
“It was a very heady time,” reflects Doyal. “We were rocketing headlong into the last “boom” of the Country music industry in the 90’s and I soon found myself being courted by almost every label head and major booking agency in town to help them with their new artists. I would never take on an act that I didn’t believe in. I grew up in the live performance world and the honky tonk and nightclub circuits myself, and I knew if you couldn’t cut it there, you were going to have a hard time maintaining a career, so it was those kinds of acts that I looked for.”
They later formed a new division, Sedalia Productions, which acquired a collection of live concert videos originally filmed at Doc Severinsen’s on Oklahoma City. Sedalia Productions released Ray Price Live in Concert (later licensed and released as The Cherokee Cowboy).
In 2001, Kathie was diagnosed with Stage IV breast cancer, and the couple moved their Music Row offices into their Nashville home. Around the same time, Doyal’s business manager Clyde Bright introduced him to an artist in need of a publicist. From there, CDA Promotions-Nashville (now called CDA Publicity and Marketing) launched and served a roster of clients that has included The Roys, Thompson Square, Shawna Russell, Stella Parton and others.
After Kathie Doyal passed away in 2004, the booking and video divisions of the Clif Doyal Agency closed. In 2006, Doyal married Patti Lumbers and she joined CDA Publicity as photographer and editor. In 2008, Doyal co-founded the independent label Way Out West Records with Tim Russell and his niece Shawna Russell.  Russell was its flagship artist, followed by LiveWire, which signed in 2011.
In December 2011, the Clif Doyal Agency was acquired by Big Sky Media Nashville, and is now part of an umbrella of artist service companies that offers booking, management, publishing, publicity, marketing and label divisions, all helmed by Doyal, who serves as COO and Managing Partner. Big Sky Media has offices in Nashville and Oklahoma.
 

Writer's Notes: Troy Verges

Troy Verges

Troy Verges


Rumors abound about the house near Music Row where songwriters Troy Verges and Brett James have set up shop. Maybe Kris Kristofferson stayed there when it was a boarding house in the ’60s. Perhaps Patsy Cline hid a secret lover next door. Was Kip Moore spooked by a ghost when he lived in the room upstairs? Regardless, one thing is undeniable about the more than 100-year-old building: the volumes of hit songs being created there.
It’s where Verges, Barry Dean and Hunter Hayes penned the artist’s current single “Tattoo,” which is scaling the radio charts alongside another Verges and Dean co-write, “Day Drinking,” penned with members of Little Big Town.
Verges and Hayes were first paired by Universal Music Publishing Group’s Cyndi Forman, who had a hunch her fellow Louisiana natives would hit it off. Following the success of their collaborations including 2013 BMI Song of the Year “Wanted,” the duo re-teamed for four cuts on the artist’s latest album.
Similarly, Verges’ writing with pals Kip Moore and Blair Daly led straight to No. 1, with Moore’s “Beer Money.”
“Hunter and Kip are two guys in town that I’ve worked with that have the most clear vision of themselves as artists,” says Verges. “It makes it easy to write songs with them because they know exactly what they want to sound like and what their message is. It frees you up creatively to follow their lead. By the time we wrote ‘Beer Money,’ Kip had already been touring and knew what his audience wanted. In those cases, the songs come out sounding like them, not me, which makes them great artists. And I get to help them shape that.”
Verges and Hunter Hayes at the BMI Country Awards.

Verges and Hunter Hayes at the BMI Country Awards.


• • • •
Verges isn’t exaggerating when he says his 10th birthday was “fortuitous.” That’s the day his parents surprised him with a trip to the music store where they let him pick out his first guitar.
The Shreveport native discovered The Eagles and Bob Dylan while combing through his parents’ record collection. He played in bands and dabbled in songwriting, first while attending Middle Tennessee State University, then at Belmont University, where he picked up an equally fortuitous card from a campus cork board. It was for an internship at Pat Higdon’s Patrick Joseph Music. Before Verges even graduated college, Higdon signed him as a songwriter. (Verges landed at UMPG after it purchased Higdon’s company.)
It took a few years for Verges to gain traction as a writer. “I’d have a party if I got a hold,” he says. But he kept plugging away, often traveling to Oklahoma to write with Brett James, who had returned there after losing his record deal. (In one of Nashville’s best stories of songwriter destiny, the further James got from music—he enrolled in and quit medical school twice—the harder fate worked to pull him back.) “Around 2001, things blew up for Brett and me at the same time. It was a crazy way to get where we ended up,” says Verges. Their collaboration led to Verges’ first cut, “Love Is A Sweet Thing,” on Faith Hill’s Breathe album and James’ eventual return to Nashville. Following closely were their co-penned No. 1s by Jessica Andrews (“Who I Am”) and Martina McBride (“Blessed”), written with Hillary Lindsey.
“There were so many women on Country radio at that time: Faith, Shania and Martina were the biggest artists in our format,” says Verges, who enjoys exploring the female perspective through writing. “The production on their singles seemed more outside-the-box, and since I didn’t grow up being a massive Country fan, I tried to put as much rock in that I could. I hope we get more females on the radio today.”
When Verges’ career took off, it zoomed at breakneck speed. In a year and a half time span, he was awarded 2001 MusicRow Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year, an award for new writers, and 2002 overall Songwriter of the Year from NSAI and BMI.
“It was a whirlwind,” says Verges. “To go from ‘if I can keep my deal one more year’ to having a year like that. I was lucky. I didn’t know I was going to win the NSAI Award, and Pat Higdon got my parents to the ceremony without telling me. It was a magical moment. They stayed for the BMI Awards, and I didn’t know I was going to win that either. I went from not even being invited to winning Songwriter of the Year.”
• • • •
A lot has changed on The Row since Verges arrived. Songwriting success is increasingly harder to achieve for a myriad of reasons, including the sales landslide, longer single cycles, and artists co-writing much of their own material. Technology has boosted some parts of the industry (DIY recording) while decimating others (sales).
“I was lucky to land in town when I did, and get involved with the group of people I did: Pat Higdon, Whitney Williams and Joe Fisher,” says Verges. “They believed in me enough to stick with me when it didn’t make sense on paper. I was keeping my head down and trying to write better and better songs. It seems like that is less possible today, because there are fewer slots.”
On the flip side, Verges notes that changes in technology have resulted in increased opportunities, especially for indie artists. “It’s easier and less expensive to record an album than it used to be, which means more diversity in our genre,” he says. “It feels like it is as diverse as it has ever been, which I love. With satellite radio there are more opportunities for artists to be heard and you can look on the screen to see who it is and go check them out.”
Changes in recording technology has eased Verges’ production work, which includes projects by Daniel Tashian and New Orleans artist Anders Osborne. Verges co-produced and co-wrote songs on Caitlyn Smith’s album, which yielded the hits “The Heart of Dixie” (Danielle Bradbery) and “Wasting All These Tears” (Cassadee Pope). “It’s the funnest part of this process because you get to write all these songs and take your time recording them, and get exactly the right players and mix it,” says Verges. “It is different than the demo process which you have to cut off due to budget or time.”
While the industry has evolved, the way to navigate Nashville has not—after all, it worked for Verges. “Be nice, be persistent, be patient,” he assures. “As long as I’ve been here, it’s held true that people who are really talented and have a good work ethic eventually get where they want to go. The flip side is also true—if you are really talented, but you’re a jerk, you might have a short run of success, but it will go away because no one will want to work with you. And keep writing. I don’t know anyone who looks back at what they wrote six or seven years ago, that they thought was awesome in the moment, and isn’t almost embarrassed by it today. The more you do something, the better you get at it. Songwriting is no different. Nashville has some of the best writers and artists in the world, especially the core group I’ve been writing with since I started: Brett, Hillary Lindsey, and Blair Daly. They are my dream collaborators.”
• • • •
Did you know? Verges’ wife Ariel and her sister Danielle are co-owners of Ani & Ari corset atelier in Edgehill Village, which has dressed Carrie Underwood, Miranda Lambert, The Pistol Annies, Connie Britton and Hayden Panettiere.
Verges and his UMPG team in 2013: Top row (L-R): Amanda Merki, Executive Assistant to Kent Earls, UMPG Nashville; Ron Stuve, VP of A&R/Special Projects, UMPG Nashville; Whitney Williams, Creative Director, UMPG Nashville; Missy Wilson, Senior Creative Director, UMPG; Tammy Helm, Manager of Administration, UMPG Nashville; Travis Gordon, Creative Manager, UMPG Nashville; Freeman Wizer, Creative Director, UMPG Nashville
Bottom row (L-R): Kendall Connell, Receptionist, UMPG Nashville; Cyndi Forman, Vice President, Creative, UMPG Nashville; Troy Verges; Kent Earls, Executive Vice President/General Manager, UMPG Nashville; John Mark Capers, Catalog and Studio Manager, UMPG Nashville

Verges and his UMPG Nashville team in 2013: Top row (L-R): Amanda Merki, Executive Asst. to Kent Earls; Ron Stuve, VP of A&R/Special Projects; Whitney Williams, Creative Director; Missy Wilson, Senior Creative Director; Tammy Helm, Manager of Administration; Travis Gordon, Creative Manager; Freeman Wizer, Creative Director
. Bottom row (L-R): Kendall Connell, Receptionist; Cyndi Forman, Vice President, Creative; Troy Verges; Kent Earls, Exec. VP/GM, UMPG Nashville; John Mark Capers, Catalog and Studio Manager.

Troy Verges Brief Discography

“I Want Crazy” Hunter Hayes (No. 1 Country)
“Wanted” Hunter Hayes (No. 1 Country – 2 weeks)
“Beer Money” Kip Moore (No. 1 Country)
“Who I Am” Jessica Andrews (No. 1 Country)
“Blessed” Martina McBride (No. 1 Country)
“Wasted” Carrie Underwood (No. 1 Country – 3 weeks)
“This Mystery” Marco Borsato & Sita/Polydor (No. 1 Netherlands)
“Raincoat” Kelly Sweet (No. 1 AC)
“You Save Me” Kenny Chesney (No. 3 Country)
“I Would’ve Loved You Anyway” Trisha Yearwood (Top 5)
“With Me” Lonestar (Top 5)
“Tonight I Wanna Be Your Man” Andy Griggs (Top 5)
“The Heart of Dixie” Danielle Bradberry (Top 15)
“Didn’t You Know How Much I Loved You” Kellie Pickler (Top 15)
“Drugs or Jesus” Tim McGraw (Top 15)
“Famous” Kelleigh Bannen
“Day Drinking” Little Big Town (Upcoming album)
“Storyline” Hunter Hayes (Upcoming album)
“Tattoo” Hunter Hayes (Upcoming album)
“Flashlight” Hunter Hayes (Upcoming album)
“Nothing Like Starting Over” Hunter Hayes (Upcoming album)
“Shotgun Rider” Tim McGraw (Upcoming album)
“Hang a While” Kip Moore (Upcoming album)
“Get Into Something” Kip Moore (Upcoming album)
“Wild Boy” Danielle Bradbery (Upcoming album)
“A Perfectly Good Heart” Taylor Swift (Taylor Swift album)
“Crazy Dreams” Carrie Underwood (Carnival Ride album)
“Naked With You” Celine Dion (One Heart album)
“The Man You Love” IL Divo (Il Divo Album)
“Don’t Give Up On Me” Jason Aldean (Wide Open album)
“Stronger” Faith Hill (Greatest Hits & Cry albums)
”Paris” Faith Hill (Fireflies album)
“This Is Me” Faith Hill (Cry album)
“Love Is A Sweet Thing” Faith Hill (Breathe album)
“Telluride” Tim McGraw (Set This Circus Down album)
“Sleep Tonight” Tim McGraw (Dancehall Doctors album)
“I Wish I Was Wrong” LeAnn Rimes (Family album)
“This Time Tomorrow” LeAnn Rimes (Family album)
“The One You Love” Paulina Rubio (Border Girl album)
“We Can Dance” Bon Jovi

Chase Rice To 'Ignite The Night' in August

chase ricealbum1Columbia Nashville/Dack Janiels artist Chase Rice will release his full-length project, Ignite The Night, on Tuesday, Aug. 19. The Chris DeStefano-produced project follows Rice’s RIAA Gold-certified single, “Ready Set Roll.” The release date, Aug. 19, is meaningful for Rice, as it marks his late father’s birthday.
“Words can’t really express how grateful I am to all the people that came together to make this album happen,” said Rice. “Starting with the fans, who come to my shows night after night and sing my songs back to me – I wouldn’t have a career without them, and I’m excited to get new music out so we can keep the party going. The fact that this album is coming out on my dad’s birthday makes it that much more meaningful. I hope I do him proud.”
Ignite The Night Album Track Listing (* denotes release on physical edition only):
Standard Edition:
1. “Ready Set Roll” (Rhett Akins, Chris DeStefano, Chase Rice)
2. “Do It Like This” (Dallas Davidson, Chris DeStefano, Ashley Gorley)
3. “Beach Town” (Chris DeStefano, Jon Nite, Chase Rice)
4. “MMM Girl” (Rodney Clawson, Lynn Hutton, Chase Rice)
5. “Beer With The Boys” (Chris DeStefano, Ashley Gorley, Chase Rice)
6. “Carolina Can” (Scooter Carusoe, Chase Rice)
7. “We Goin’ Out” (Chris DeStefano, Shane Minor, Chase Rice)
8. “Gonna Wanna Tonight” (Shane McAnally, Jon Nite, Jimmy Robbins)
9. “Look At My Truck” (Ross Copperman, Blair Daly, Colt Ford, Chase Rice)
10. “U Turn” (Zach Crowell, Shane Minor, Chase Rice)
11. “50 Shades Of Crazy” (Chris DeStefano, Jon Nite, Chase Rice)
12. “What’s Your Name” (Zach Crowell, Nicolle Galyon, Matt Jenkins)
13. “How She Rolls” (Brian Kelley, Chase Rice)
14. “Jack Daniels & Jesus” (Amanda Flynn, Brian Kelley, Chase Rice)
15. “Whoa” (Russell Dickerson, Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Jesse Rice, Chase Rice)(Produced by Scott Cooke)*
iTunes Party Edition:
15. “Party Up” (Featuring Colt Ford) (Ross Copperman, Blair Daly, Colt Ford, Chase Rice)
16. “Country In Ya” (Adam Sanders, Chase Rice)
17. “Best Beers Of Our Lives” (Chris DeStefano, Shane Minor, Chase Rice)
18. “Ride” (Joseph Somers-Morales, Cody Tarpley)