BREAKING: John Prine Succumbs To Coronavirus

John Prine

Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member John Prine passed away on Tuesday, April 7 at age 73, at Vanderbilt University Medical Center due to complications from COVID-19, a spokesperson for the Prine family has confirmed to MusicRow.com.

Following a sudden onset of COVID-19 symptoms, he was hospitalized on Thursday, March 26. On Saturday, he was placed on a ventilator and listed in critical condition. His wife/manager, Fiona Whelan Prine, was diagnosed earlier and had quarantined herself from her husband since he was at risk. John Prine was a two-time cancer survivor and had other health issues weakening his immune system.

Prine was presented with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award earlier this year. He wrote or co-wrote such hits as Don Williams’ “Love Is on a Roll,” Bonnie Raitt’s “Angel From Montgomery,” Lynn Anderson’s “Paradise” and George Strait’s “I Just Want to Dance with You.” But his true importance is measured by his influence on other artists and their universally held respect for him.

During a five-decade, 25-album career, the singer-songwriter amassed a devoted cult following. Two of his albums won Grammy Awards. The Americana Music Association named him an Artist of the Year in 2005 and 2017. BMI gave him its Troubadour Award in 2018. He was a pioneer in self-marketing music via his own label.

John Prine was born Oct. 10, 1946 in Maywood, Illinois, a Chicago suburb. He wrote his first songs at age 14. Prine worked as a mailman in the Windy City throughout the 1960s. In 1970, he performed at an open-mic night at the Chicago folk club The Fifth Peg.

Singer-songwriter Steve Goodman (1948-1984) saw him and became Prine’s champion. He brought Kris Kristofferson to a Prine show at The Earl of Old Town in the summer of 1971. Also in the audience were pop star Paul Anka and actress Angela Lansbury.

At The Bitter End in New York, new fan Kristofferson introduced Prine’s music to Atlantic Records executive Jerry Wexler (1917-2008). Wexler signed Prine the next day.

John Prine appeared as the troubadour’s debut LP in 1971. He would perform many of its songs for the rest of his life. They included the chilling army-veteran portrait “Sam Stone,” the wry “Illegal Smile” and the “blow up your TV” song “Spanish Pipe Dream.” Bette Midler popularized its old-folks ode “Hello in There.”

Raitt made “Angel From Montgomery” her own, although John Denver, Carly Simon, Tanya Tucker, Old Crow Medicine Show and others have recorded it.

“Paradise” was the collection’s most popular song. It has been recorded by The Everly Brothers, Jackie DeShannon, Johnny Cash, Tom T. Hall, Dwight Yoakam, John Fogerty and dozens of bluegrass bands. In 1975, Lynn Anderson made it a mid-sized country hit. The John Prine album was voted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2015.

He followed it with 1972’s spare, folk-flavored Diamonds in the Rough. Its “Souvenirs” was sung by Goodman, The Country Gentlemen and Maggie Bell, among others. “The Late John Garfield Blues” was recorded by his benefactor Kristofferson. John Prine was nominated as 1972’s Best New Artist at the Grammy Awards.

Sweet Revenge appeared in 1973. This included such perennial Prine favorites as “Please Don’t Bury Me,” “Christmas in Prison” and “Dear Abby.” Its “Grandpa Was a Carpenter” was recorded by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Lonesome Standard Time.

In 1975, David Allan Coe had a hit with “You Never Even Called Me By My Name.” Prine co-wrote it with Goodman, but refused to take any credit so that his leukemia stricken pal could earn more royalties.

Steve Cropper produced 1975’s Common Sense. Joining Prine on the record were J.D. Souther, Glenn Frey, Jackson Browne, Goodman and Raitt. He closed out his Atlantic tenure with Prime Prine, a best-of collection. That 1976 LP is now the artist’s only Gold Record.

He embarked on a rigorous touring schedule, building up a loyal fan base by staying on the road for up to nine months of the year. He also began spending time in Nashville with Jack Clement (1931-2013).

His recording contract was picked up by Asylum. He made his debut on the label with 1978’s folk-rock collection Bruised Orange. Produced by Goodman, it included “That’s the Way the World Goes ‘Round,” later cut by Miranda Lambert, Norah Jones and Green on Red.

Pink Cadillac (1979) was Prine’s Memphis rockabilly album. Storm Windows (1980) was recorded in Muscle Shoals. John Prine moved to Nashville in 1980. Fed up with major labels, he formed his own Oh Boy Records with manager Al Bunetta (1943-2015). His debut for it was a 1982 holiday single, “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus.”

In 1983, country superstar Don Williams gave Prine his first No. 1 hit, “Love Is on a Roll.” The songwriter co-wrote it with Nashville tunesmith Roger Cook. “Jackie O” was a collaboration with John Mellencamp on the rock star’s 1983 Platinum album Uh-Huh.

Prine’s first Oh Boy LP was 1984’s Aimless Love, primarily recorded at Clement’s studio in Nashville by co-producer Jim Rooney. Its song “Unwed Fathers,” co-written with Bobby Braddock, was popularized by Tammy Wynette, Gail Davies and Johnny Cash.

Steve Goodman died in 1984, just as his “City of New Orleans” was becoming a standard. Prine sang Goodman’s songs in concert throughout the rest of his own life.

The Grammy-nominated German Afternoons (1986) repeated the Aimless Love studio recipe and included two more Prine evergreens. “Speed of the Sound of Loneliness” was sung by Nanci Griffith, Kim Carnes, Amos Lee and Gove. “I Just Want to Dance with You,” co-written with Cook, became a 1998 No. 1 hit for George Strait.

A long hiatus followed German Afternoons, interrupted only by his single “Let’s Talk Dirty in Hawaiian” (1987) and a live CD (1988).

For his return, Prine teamed up with Tom Petty’s Heartbreakers on 1991’s The Missing Years. Its cast included Bruce Springsteen, Phil Everly, David Lindley, Petty, Raitt and producer Howie Epstein (1955-2003). The album earned John Prine his first Grammy Award. Its song “All the Best” was covered by the Zac Brown Band in 2017.

Rhino Records saluted him with a 1993 boxed set titled Great Days: The John Prine Anthology. Epstein re-teamed with the songwriter for 1995’s Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings.

In Spite of Ourselves (1999) was an acclaimed album of country classics recorded in Nashville as duets with Trisha Yearwood, Connie Smith, Melba Montgomery, Emmylou Harris, Patty Loveless and other female artists. The CD’s title tune was sung with Iris DeMent. It was included on the soundtrack of Daddy & Them (2001), a film which featured Prine on screen alongside Billy Bob Thornton.

He re-recorded many of his early favorites for Souvenirs (2000) so that Oh Boy would have its own versions. In addition to Prine and Goodman, the company also issued works by Kristofferson, Todd Snider, Donnie Fritts, Shawn Camp and more.

John Prine was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2003. The following year, he contributed his rendition of “My Old Kentucky Home” to Beautiful Dreamer: The Songs of Stephen Foster. The collection won a folk Grammy Award.

Fair & Square (2005) earned Prine his own Grammy, his second. The CDs cast included Camp, Alison Krauss, Jerry Douglas, Mindy Smith, Pat McLaughlin and Dan Tyminski, among others.

On 2007’s Standard Songs for Average People, he sang vintage tunes with Mac Wiseman (1925-2019). Oh Boy issued a multi-artist tribute CD to Prine in 2010. The Singing Mailman Delivers (2011) contained performances taped in 1970 prior to his commercial debut.

For Better Or Worse (2016) was a sequel to In Spite of Ourselves, this time pairing Prine with Lee Ann Womack, Kathy Mattea, Miranda Lambert, Kacey Musgraves, Krauss and more.

In 2018, John Prine released his first new collection of original material in 13 years. Titled The Tree of Forgiveness, it became his highest-charting Billboard album, was nominated for three Grammys and spawned eight promotional videos.

Funeral arrangements have not yet been announced.

Luke Bryan Delays Tour, Album Release

Luke Bryan. Photo: Jim Wright

Due to the spread of the COVID-19 novel coronavirus, Luke Bryan has announced he is delaying both the release of his upcoming album Born Here Live Here Die Here, as well as his Proud To Be Right Here Tour.

The album, which was set to be released later this month, has been pushed back to Aug. 7, 2020 while the tour will now launch July 10, 2020 in Orange Beach, Alabama, and will wrap Oct. 30 in Bossier City, Louisiana. The tour was originally set to launch May 28 in Cincinnati, Ohio. Morgan Wallen, Caylee Hammack and Runaway June will continue on the new tour dates.

The Nashville show at Bridgestone Arena is still set for July 30.

The album, produced by Jeff Stevens and Jody Stevens, follows Bryan’s 2017 project What Makes You Country, and contains Bryan’s recent chart-topper “What She Wants Tonight,” which marked his 24th No. 1 overall.

Bryan announced the delay for the album and tour on April 7. See his note below:

Trace Adkins, Jason Crabb, T. Graham Brown To Perform Grand Ole Opry Easter Special

The Grand Ole Opry plans to host a special Easter celebration on Saturday’s (April 11) installment of the long-running show. Trace Adkins, an Opry member since 2003, is scheduled to host and perform on the show on Circle Television. Adkins will be joined by two-time Grammy winner Jason Crabb and Grammy-nominated T. Graham Brown.

“As people around the world prepare for an Easter weekend like none of us have ever seen before, we’re thrilled that three of the most soulful voices to ever visit the Opry stage have signed on to bring community and great music to us this Saturday night,” said Dan Rogers, Opry vice president and executive producer. “I know they’ll deliver not only their hits, but also some praise and hope from the Opry stage to fans worldwide.”

The Opry will be broadcast live Saturday, April 11 at 8 PM ET / 7 PM CT on Circle, and on Gray TV stations, DISH Studio Channel 102, Sling TV and other TV affiliates in addition to a companion live stream on Circle All Access Facebook and YouTube channels. TV and radio personality Bobby Bones will host the Circle telecast, while Opry announcer Charlie Mattos will join the Opry’s radio audience at the announcer podium. Embracing today’s technology, the Opry will be broadcast and streamed with a very small production team. The show’s artists will perform acoustically at a recommended social distance across the Opry stage.

Since the Saturday night Opry telecast will be an Easter celebration, the one-hour show will be re-broadcast on Circle Television on Easter Sunday 10 ET/ 9 CT and 6:30 PM/ 5:30 ET. Fans around the world can also tune in to the broadcast on the Opry’s flagship radio home, 650 AM-WSM and several other outlets.

Drake White Sets Five-Song EP For April 24


Drake White will release a new five-song EP, Stars, on April 24, via his own label Reverend White Records. He recently released the lead single “Eat, Drink & Dream,” which White co-wrote with Grayland James and Tommy Cecil.

White co-wrote three of the EP’s five tracks, which also features writers including Ben Burgess, Josh Kerr, Alysa Vanderheym, Adam Hambrick, Andrew DeRoberts and more.
The album follows a 2018 live album, as well as an EP, Pieces, released that same year via BMLG. In 2016, White released the full-length project Spark, via BMLG’s now-defunct Dot Records.

Stars tracklist:

1. Luckiest Man (Ben Burgess, Josh Kerr, Alysa Vanderheym, Cary Barlowe)
2. Mix ‘Em With Whiskey (Ryan Beaver, Rodney Clawson, Adam Hambrick, Andrew DeRoberts)
3. Eat, Drink & Dream (Drake White, Tommy Cecil, Greylan James)
4. My Favorite Band (Drake White, Ross Ellis, Dan Fernandez, Michael Whitworth)
5. All Would Be Right With The World (Drake White, Tommy Cecil, Matt Alderman)

Live In The Vineyard Goes Country Rescheduled For November

The third annual Live In The Vineyard Goes Country has been rescheduled for Nov. 4-6, 2020 in Napa, California. Tickets for the event are only available through certain radio station promotions and via presenting sponsor CMT. The multi-day show was originally slated for April 29.

Last year’s event featured headliners Brad Paisley and Little Big Town, and gathered fans, music artists and California-based winemakers for unique performances and culinary experiences.

The 22nd installment of Live In The Vineyard, which was originally set for November, has been moved to early 2021.

Maren Morris Earns 1st Multi-Format No. 1 With “The Bones”

Maren Morris. Photo: Harper Smith

While “The Bones” spends its fifth week at No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart, Maren Morris notches her first multi-format No. 1 with the Platinum-certified hit going No. 1 on both the Billboard Adult Pop Songs and Mediabase Hot A.C. charts, as well. The song’s 45-week climb to the top marks the longest ever rise to No. 1 on both charts.

In addition, “The Bones” remains in the Top 10 this week on the Country Aircheck chart nine weeks after reaching No. 1 for two consecutive weeks in February, which made it the first solo female back-to-back No. 1 since 2012.

“The Bones” has earned Morris other accolades, as well. When the song first hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in February, it marked the first time since 2016 that a solo country female artist had two No. 1s from the same album, including Morris’ “GIRL” from the GIRL album.

Additionally, Morris’ latest single “To Hell & Back” was the second most-added at country radio last week, with 41 first week stations.

John Shomby Exits Cumulus


John Shomby, PD for Nashville’s WKDF and Director of Programming for Cumulus Nashville, has left the company, Cumulus has confirmed with MusicRow Magazine.

Shomby was promoted to Program Director of NASH FM 103.3 (WKDF) in 2017 after joining as the NASH Director of Programming in 2016. His career includes time at Max Media Hampton Roads, where he was Operations Manager for their five-station cluster, KLIF Radio, KAAM/KZPS in Dallas, and Cumulus’s seven-station cluster in Augusta.

Chris Tomlin To Celebrate Good Friday Worldwide With New TV, Radio Special

Chris Tomlin has found an alternate way to share together and worship on Good Friday with a new one-hour special “Good Friday – Worldwide,” which will be broadcast globally with Partners TBN, K-LOVE, Air1, and on over 30 national radio stations on April 10. The television broadcast alone will be seen and heard in over 32 countries.

After his annual Good Friday Nashville concert was forced to postpone until 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Tomlin was committed to find a way to maintain the tradition of bringing people together to worship, and decided to film the special, which will air on Friday, April 10 at 7 p.m. CT with Tomlin leading in worship, a message from Max Lucado, and guest appearances by Pat Barrett, We The Kingdom and Matt Maher.

“This is a moment aligned by God to touch millions of lives,” said Tomlin. “What was originally thought of to be ‘Good Friday Nashville’ in an arena of maybe 16,000 is now going to be a night of worship with millions on a global scale. While we can’t be together physically for the safety of our families and of the world, we can worship together in our homes. This is a unique moment in time and may be one of the most powerful Easter weekends we will ever experience in our lifetime.”

The live special was filmed last month at the TBN studios outside Nashville under the guidance of local health officials and safety protocols determined by the CDC.

Industry Vet Marty Martel Passes

Industry veteran Marty Martel passed away peacefully in his sleep on Sunday, March 29.

Donald Robert “Marty” Martel was born in Ogdensburg, New York on March 9, 1939. He made his debut into the country music world back in the 1950s and enjoyed a career as a successful touring artist, a talent and booking agent, and a show promoter in Nashville with his company Midnight Special Productions.

Martel also spent many years of his life dedicated to the legends of the country industry, advocating for their place in the Hall of Fame and the recognition they deserved. Over his 40-year career as a talent manager and booking agent, he would represent some of country’s most iconic artists including managing the career of Johnny Paycheck. During the course of his career he also established a successful “Legends Fest” touring show.

Martel is survived by his children Brittney Amara Martel, Kristopher Martel, Deron Martel, Tami West, Dennis Morefield, and Shannon Martin along with his 15 grandchildren.

A memorial/celebration of life will be held at Our Lady Of The Lake Church in Hendersonville, TN as soon as the family is permitted to do so. Details will be made available publicly as soon as they are finalized. Any donations/cards/flowers may be sent to 2144 Erin Lane, Mt Juliet, TN 37122, C/O Brittney Amara.

Thomas Rhett, Lindsay Ell, More Send ‘Gratitunes’ To Vanderbilt Medical Staff This Week


Thomas Rhett, Lindsay Ell, Walker Hayes, Shane McAnally, Sara Evans, the Nashville Sounds and more will be sending ‘Gratitunes’ to the medical staff at Vanderbilt University Medical Center this week through performances and words of encouragement on their personal Instagram page.

‘Gratitunes’ is a consumer-generated platform and initiative that kicked off last week on National Doctors’ Day with dedicated ‘Gratitunes’ from Brad Paisley, Dustin Lynch, Jewel and more. Artists encouraged people nationwide to visit gratitunes.com to add their own ‘Gratitune’ to a playlist, which will be made available to all COVID-19 VUMC Assessment Sites and the hospital throughout the next month to help lessen stress and anxiety, and lift spirits.

Once a ‘Gratitune’ is shared, individuals will receive a unique graphic with their dedicated tune that can be shared across social media platforms, using hashtags #Gratitunes and #VUMCHeroes, encouraging others to do the same. All social media posts of encouragement using the collective hashtags will be collected for the staff to read.