'MusicRow' No. 1 Song

Darius Rucker

Darius Rucker


Darius Rucker’s latest single, “Radio,” has made it to the No. 1 spot on MusicRow’s radio chart–imagine that! Ninety-nine reporting stations from around the country spun the title 3,111 times this week to land it at our chart’s pinnacle.
Written by Ashley Gorley, Luke Laird and Rucker, the Capitol Nashville title finds a teenager enjoying the freedom of the road with memorable songs blaring on the radio. MusicRow‘s Robert K. Oermann calls the title: “Thumpy and funky…Lively, romping and impossible to resist.”
Rucker is up for CMA Single of the Year at the Nov. 6 live telecast for his 2013 single “Wagon Wheel,” which is also nominated for Song of the Year. He will film with the CMA Country Christmas two days following (Nov. 8) for a Christmas program to be broadcast nationally on ABC-TV Monday, Dec. 2. Rucker is also featured on Sandra Boynton’s Warner Bros. Frog Trouble children’s project, singing “Beautiful Baby.”

Toby Keith, Hunter Hayes Among Latest After Midnite Hosts

image001Toby Keith, Hunter Hayes, Little Big Town, Lee Brice, Randy Houser, and Tyler Farr will take turns at the mic next month as they help After MidNite celebrate its 20th anniversary. Brice and Farr will also be joined by special correspondents Jo Dee Messina and Craig Morgan, who will contribute live reports from the 47th Annual CMA Awards throughout the week.
After MidNite’s 20-week takeover began on Aug. 1 and runs through the end of the year.  Carrie Underwood, Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley, Kenny Rogers, and Darius Rucker are just a few of the guests who have already stopped in to help the show celebrate its milestone over the past few months. The show is nationally syndicated by Premiere Networks and can be heard on more than 230 affiliates by 2.7 million people weekly.
after_midnite_20th_logo_0_1375348908Guest Host Schedule for November:
Toby Keith  – Oct. 28 – Nov. 3
Lee Brice and Tyler Farr (featuring CMA Correspondents Jo Dee Messina and Craig Morgan) – Nov. 4 – 10
Hunter Hayes – Nov. 11 – 17
Randy Houser – Nov. 18 – 24
Little Big Town  – Nov. 25 – December 1

MusicRowLife: Ashley Monroe Weds

ashley monroe11111Singer-songwriter, solo artist and Pistol Annies member Ashley Monroe wed Chicago White Sox pitcher John Danks on Thursday (Oct. 24) during a ceremony in Tennessee’s Smoky Mountains, according to People.com.
Blake Shelton officiated the nuptials, and Miranda Lambert (a fellow member of Pistol Annies) served as the maid of honor. The wedding took place at Blackberry Farm, the same location that Kelly Clarkson wed this past weekend.
Danks and Monroe met in 2011 and announced their engagement in September 2012.

It's Beginning To Look A Lot Like CMAs – Street Closings Alert

CMA_KeyArtDowntown Nashville drivers should start planning their alternate routes as preparations for the upcoming CMA Awards begin and street closings start happening beginning next Monday. Production setup for the ceremonies will require several street closings around the Demonbreun area. The 47th Annual CMA Awards will air live from the Bridgestone Arena at 7 p.m. CT Nov. 6.
Monday, Oct. 28
Beginning at 6:00 AM/CT, the Northside lane of Demonbreun Street will close between Fourth and Fifth Avenues South.
Friday, Nov. 1
At 6:00 AM/CT, Fifth Avenue South will close between Demonbreun Street and Broadway. The right lane between the Hilton driveway and Broadway will remain open for northbound traffic only.
Saturday, Nov. 2
At 6:00 AM/CT, Sixth Avenue South will close between Demonbreun Street and Broadway.
Sunday, Nov. 3 
At 6:00 AM/CT, Demonbreun Street will close between Fifth and Sixth Avenues South.
Monday, Nov. 4
At 9:00 AM/CT, Fifth Avenue South will completely close between Demonbreun Street and Broadway.
Wednesday, Nov. 6
-At 6:00 AM/CT, Sixth Avenue South will close between Korean Veterans Blvd. and Demonbreun Street.
-At 6:00 AM/CT, Fifth Avenue South will close between Korean Veterans Blvd. and Demonbreun Street.
-At 6:00 AM/CT, Demonbreun Street will close between Fifth and Fourth Avenues South.
-At 6:00 AM/CT, the Fourth Avenue Southbound curb lane (West) will close between Broadway and Demonbreun Street.
-At 6:00 AM/CT, Demonbreun Street will close between Eighth and Sixth Avenues South.
-At 6:00 AM/CT, Seventh Avenue South will close between Demonbreun Street and Broadway.
-At 6:00 AM/CT, McGavock Pike will close between Eighth and Seventh Avenues South.
Saturday, Nov. 9
At 8:00 AM/CT, the Northside lane of Demonbreun Street will close between Fourth and Fifth Avenues South.
Sunday, Nov. 10
At 8:00 AM/CT, the Northside lane of Demonbreun Street will close again between Fourth and Fifth Avenues South.
The Northside lane of Demonbreun Street will re-open between Fourth and Fifth Avenues South no later than 6:00 PM/CT on each day  it is closed. Fourth Avenue South will re-open between Broadway and Demonbreun Street no later than 10:00 PM/CT on Wednesday, Nov. 6. All other roads will re-open no later than 4:00 AM/CT on Thursday, Nov. 7; except Fifth Avenue South, which will re-open between Demonbreun Street and Broadway no later than5:00 PM/CT on that day. In addition, Sixth Avenue South between Demonbreun Street and Broadway, and Demonbreun Street between Sixth and Fifth Avenues South will re-open no later than 6:00 AM/CT on Saturday, Nov. 9.

McBride, McCreery, Joey+Rory Win Big at ICM Awards

Martina-McBride-2011-300-Single

Martina McBride


The 19th Annual ICM Faith, Family & Country™ Awards were held Oct. 24 at The Fellowship at Two Rivers to honor artists, songwriters, radio personalities and others in the genres of Christian and Inspirational Country Music. Winners included Rascal Flatts for “Mainstream Inspirational Country Song” and “Video,” Martina McBride for “Mainstream Country Female Artist” and Scotty McCreery for “Mainstream Country Male Artist,” Joey+Rory for Mainstream Country Duo or Group, along with the top Inspirational Country Music artists.
2013 ICM Winners:
ENTERTAINER:
Kali Rose
MALE VOCALIST:
Tommy Brandt
FEMALE VOCALIST:
Mary James
VOCAL DUO / VOCAL DUO PERFORMANCE:
Steve Richard & Laura Dodd
VOCAL GROUP OR BAND:
Sunday Drive
MAINSTREAM INSPIRATIONAL COUNTRY SONG:
“Changed” Rascal Flatts
MAINSTREAM COUNTRY MALE ARTIST:
Scotty McCreery
MAINSTREAM COUNTRY FEMALE ARTIST:
Martina McBride
MAINSTREAM COUNTRY DUO OR GROUP:
Joey+Rory
INSPIRATIONAL COUNTRY SONG:
“They Don’t Stay Little Long Enough” Chuck Hancock
SONGWRITER:
Chuck Hancock
VIDEO:
“Changed” – Rascal Flatts
MUSICIAN:
Dennis Agajanian
COMEDIAN:
Chonda Pierce
RADIO STATION/NETWORK:
Inspirational Country Radio Network
NEW ARTIST:
Charee White
YOUTH IN MUSIC AWARD:
The McDougal Kids
FAITH, FAMILY, & COUNTRY MOVIE:
Spirit of Love, the Mike Glenn Story – Film It Productions
Produced by Darla Rae
RADIO PERSONALITY:
Marty Smith
INSPIRATIONAL BLUEGRASS ARTIST:
The Roys
MUSIC EVANGELIST:
Russ Murphy
TELEVISION NETWORK:
RFD TV
2013 LIVING LEGEND:
Gene Higgins

Industry Ink (10/25/13)

attends the T.J. Martell Foundation's 38th Annual Honors Gala at Cipriani 42nd Street on October 22, 2013 in New York City.

Pictured (L-R): Scott Borchetta, Anne Stanchfield and Scott Nygaard of Target Corporation

Scott Borchetta honored the Target Corporation with the Spirit of Excellence Award earlier this week during the T.J. Martell Foundation’s 38th Honors Gala Tuesday night (Oct. 22) in New York. Borchetta is a past honoree himself of the gala, and introduced the award with a humorous video honoring Target’s commitment to music before his speech at the event.

• • •

1384396_574348699285560_1886001798_n

Catch This Music’s Rebekah Long, Shawn Bowling, Shona Robertson Burr, CTM owner Eddie Robba, Debi Cochran, Brandon Perdue and Brody Maves.

Catch This Music Recording Studio celebrated its two-year anniversary Wednesday (Oct. 23) in its back lot with a Fall cookout. Friends and clients gnoshed on brats and burgers while helping the studio celebrate its birthday.

 • • •

CarolynCorlew_MsSrAmerica_reaction_med

Carolyn Corlew


Longtime Charlie Daniels Band background vocalist Carolyn Corlew was crowned Ms. Senior America Thursday (Oct. 24) at the National pageant at Resorts Casino Hotel’s Superstar Theater in Atlantic City, NJ.  The competition featured 34 women ages 60 and older from around the country. Corlew won the title of Ms. Senior Tennessee on April 27th.
“I am thrilled, honored and so excited about wearing this crown for the next year,” said Corlew. “These women were over the top – there were professional dancers, opera singers from Broadway…I sang a bluesy Etta James song and we had a 93 year old that rocked the competition. I’m blown away. From this point it’s spirit, mind and then body – it’s gotta come from within. I’ve got a 20-pound dress on and a crown and I’m proud to represent all the senior women of America!”

SunTrust adds Michael Ribas

MichaelRibas

Michael Ribas


SunTrust has added Michael Ribas as Mortgage Loan Officer to its Personal Banking services in the Music Row office. Ribas brings over eight years of experience to his role, originating residential loans to SunTrust Music’s clientele, helping first time homebuyers and private wealth clients. He has a proven track record with SunTrust Mortgage, becoming a member of the Bank’s Chairman’s Club for being one of its top performers.
“Michael Ribas is service-oriented, highly motivated and passionate about helping clients with residential financing needs; he will be a great asset to our team,” says Andrew Kintz, Managing Director of SunTrust Sports & Entertainment division.
Ribas is a member of the Junior Chamber of Commerce and is involved with the Vanderbilt Alumni Committee. His hobbies include pick-up basketball and training for marathons.

Weekly Chart Report (10/25/13)

SPIN ZONE

Sony Music Nashville recording artist Angie Johnson recently performed at WEIO’s Barn Bash in promotion of this week’s No. 32 single, “Swagger." Pictured (L-R): RG Jones, Sony Music Nashville; Kelly Green, WEIO GM; Angie Johnson; WEIO on-air personality Ken Folkes; and Sony Music Nashville's Rusty Sherrill.

Sony Music Nashville recording artist Angie Johnson recently performed at WEIO’s Barn Bash in promotion of this week’s No. 32 single, “Swagger.” Pictured (L-R): RG Jones, Sony Music Nashville; Kelly Green, WEIO GM; Angie Johnson; WEIO on-air personality Ken Folkes; and Sony Music Nashville’s Rusty Sherrill.


After spending 15 weeks on MusicRow’s chart, Darius Rucker’s “Radio” rides the airwaves to No. 1 with 3,111 spins. Meanwhile, Keith Urban and Miranda Lambert’s “We Were Us” quickly approaches the No. 1 spot, landing at No. 2 in its seventh week on the chart. Eli Young Band’s “Drunk Last Night” climbs to No. 3, while Eric Paslay’s “Friday Night” falls to No. 4. The Band Perry’s “Don’t Let Me Be Lonely” sits at No. 5. Rounding out the Top 10 this week is Jake Owen’s “Days of Gold” at No. 6, Joe Nichols’ “Sunny and 75” at No. 7, Cassadee Pope’s “Wasting All These Tears” at No. 8, Brad Paisley’s “I Can’t Change The World” at No. 9 and Love and Theft’s “If You Ever Get Lonely” at No. 10.
Lady Antebellum’s “Compass” is the week’s greatest gainer. The song continues to head north on MusicRow’s chart, rising to No. 28 with another 368 spins. George Strait’s “I Got A Car” makes a solid debut at No. 61 with 310 spins. Florida Georgia Line’s “Stay” jumps to No. 18 with another 300 spins, while Urban and Lambert’s “We Were Us” reaches No. 2 with an added 246 spins. Finally, Jerrod Niemann’s “Drink To That All Night” hits No. 57 with an extra 233 spins.
MusicRow welcomes five stellar debuts this week, with Strait’s “I Got A Car” debuting at No. 61, Kacey Musgraves’ “Follow Your Arrow” at No. 64, The Sins Country’s “Muscadine” at No. 77, Will Hoge’s “Strong” at No. 78 and Taylor Made’s “Somewhere Between” at No. 80.
Frozen Playlists: KWCK, WUCZ, KDKD, KFTX, KIAI, WXXK, WAAG
Lee Brice celebrated the kick-off of his headlining "The Otherside Tour" with some radio and industry friends at the House of Blues in Boston, MA, on Oct. 10. Pictured (L-R): Ginny Rogers (WKLB) John Innamorato (Livenation), Brice and Haley McLemore

Lee Brice celebrated the kick-off of his headlining “The Otherside Tour” with some radio and industry friends at the House of Blues in Boston, Mass., on Oct. 10. Pictured (L-R): Ginny Rogers (WKLB,) John Innamorato (Livenation), Brice and Haley McLemore


Upcoming Singles
October 28
Little River Band/You Dream, I’ll Drive/Frontiers
Mitch Goudy/Blow These Speakers Out/Third Floor Records
Blackjack Billy/Get Some/Bigger Picture
Sheryl Crow/Callin’ Me When I’m Lonely/Warner Bros.-WMN
Eric Church/The Outsiders/EMI Records Nashville
November 4
Tyler Farr/Whiskey In My Water/Columbia Nashville
Luke Bryan/Drink A Beer/Capitol
George Strait/I Got A Car/MCA Nashville

Robby-SouthofMe-101413-PP


New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
George Strait/I Got A Car/MCA – 61
Kacey Musgraves/Follow Your Arrow/Mercury Nashville – 64
The Sins Country/Muscadine/GTR Nashville – 77
Will Hoge/Strong/Prospector-Crescendo – 78
Taylor Made/Somewhere Between/LG Records – 80
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
George Strait/I Got A Car/MCA – 27
Jerrod Niemann/Drink To That All Night/Arista Nashville – 17
Justin Moore/Lettin’ The Night Roll/Valory Music – 17
Kacey Musgraves/Follow Your Arrow/Mercury Nashville – 16
Eric Church/The Outsiders/EMI Nashville – 13
Lady Antebellum/Compass/Capitol – 13
Dan+Shay/19 You+Me/Warner Brothers – 12
Brett Eldredge/Beat Of The Music/Atlantic-Warner Bros. – 10
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Lady Antebellum/Compass/Capitol – 368
George Strait/I Got A Car/MCA – 310
Florida Georgia Line/Stay/Republic Nashville – 300
Keith Urban feat. Miranda Lambert/We Were Us/Capitol Nashville-Hit Red Records – 246
Jerrod Niemann/Drink To That All Night/Arista Nashville – 233
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Josh Pruno/Cut Offs/Lawrence Music Group – 210
Laura Bell Bundy/Two Step/Big Machine – 202
Ryan Broshear/Make Each Moment Last/Painted Horse – 200
Aaron Watson/July In Cheyenne/HTK Records – 197
LoCash Cowboys/Best Seat In The House/Average Joes Entertainment-Tenacity Records – 188

Thomas Rhett stopped by Nashville Mornings at 103 WKDF in Nashville prior to his It Goes Like This release on The Valory Music Co. Tues., Oct. 29. Pictured (L-R): Becca Walls, Rhett, Marty McFly.

Thomas Rhett stopped by Nashville Mornings at 103 WKDF in Nashville prior to his It Goes Like This release on The Valory Music Co., which releases Tuesday, Oct. 29. Pictured (L-R): Becca Walls, Rhett, Marty McFly.


Lew Dickey (second from R) and JT Batson (R) pose with guests at the NASH Bash at Atlanta's Terminal West, which featured host Kix Brooks and performances by Kellie Pickler, Laura Bell Bundy, Jaida Dreyer and Kenny Rogers. (Photo credit: Austin Holt)

Lew Dickey (second from R) and JT Batson (R) poses with guests at the NASH Bash at Atlanta’s Terminal West, which featured host Kix Brooks and performances by Kellie Pickler, Laura Bell Bundy, Jaida Dreyer and Kenny Rogers. (Photo credit: Austin Holt)

Charlie Cook On Air: The Problem With Diary Measurement

Charlie Cook

Charlie Cook


About six weeks ago I wrote about the incredible summer country music stations had in 2013. At the time I attributed some of that success to the amazing tour schedule this year by superstars like Jason Aldean, Taylor Swift, Brad Paisley, Kenny Chesney and Blake Shelton. I don’t remember a year when fans could experience this much live music over a few weeks time.
Not only were the headliners creating this excitement but up and down the roster of opening acts legitimate superstars were coming to the market. Miranda Lambert, Jake Owen, Eric Church, Chris Young and on and on. It was one of those summers where, if you lived in a major market, you could stand still and watch the Top 40 come to life every weekend.
WKLB shot to the top of the PPM ratings in Boston for the first time during the summer, enjoying their best ratings ever. WYCD in Detroit, which has often been the number one station in town, too had a great couple of months while country concerts dominated second only to the Tigers. The same for Pittsburgh and WDSY.
I know having the performers come to town brings with it extra effort on the programming and promotion staffs and this extra effort is what drove the ratings, but at that time I wondered if the live performances or the strength of the music itself was the driver. I said I thought it was more the live music.
Now to be fair, many country stations, in PPM markets, did gangbuster this Summer and even markets where the superstars did not visit did well. The summer Nielsen Audio ratings are now in for diary markets and the results are more mixed than in PPM markets. Many things play into this.
First PPM, even with the limited amount of meters in the market, is much more reliable (and of course immediate) than the diary system. I am becoming more and more disenchanted with the diary system as Nielsen Audio struggles with finding people (under 50) willing to keep the diary. Add to this the challenge of having listeners keep an accurate record of their habits.
What did you have for lunch Tuesday? What station did you listen to from noon to 3 p.m.? What time did you get home Monday night? What was the final score of the Vikings/Giants game? (Yeah I know, who cares?)
There were 55 diary markets reported for the summer book that had Country stations in them. In those 55 markets I counted 89 country stations. Thirty-six of them were down and 44 were up. Many stayed the same. Some markets, like Tulsa and Albany, saw all three of their stations go up. Quite a feat that speaks to the format itself. Nine markets, each with at least two stations, saw all of the stations fall.
As an aside Jackson, Miss. went from 12 percent of the audience listening to Country music to 9.4 percent listening. Really? Have you been to Jackson? Do you really think less than 10 percent of the people in Jackson listen to Country music? It’s friggin’ Mississippi. Do you think Nielsen Audio needs to improve their measurement system in Jackson? That is the problem with diary measurement. But if we look at all 55 markets maybe we can get a feel for the format’s strength this past summer in smaller markets.
I wish the excitement of the live performances could trickle down to markets like Jackson, Dayton and Grand Rapids. I have a tendency to tell programmers to find a way to make similar excitement on the air but this may be easier said than done. There are a number of superstars bring their own excitement. This has been a good music year for a handful of big acts but what about all of the new acts that are not yet established on the radio? With Thomas Rhett being on the Aldean tour, this was a real boost for building his familiarity in the larger markets the tour played, but I wonder how that translates to smaller markets who have yet to see how exciting an act his really is.
This might also be the biggest year for new acts hitting the top of the charts. I’m not sure if the listener can differentiate between Rhett, Brett Eldridge, Tyler Farr, Eric Paslay, Charlie Worsham , et al. Now it is incumbent on the record companies and radio stations to make these acts as familiar in the smaller markets as in the large ones. This will help drive ratings everywhere.
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow.)

Thomas Rhett Previews Debut Album in Nashville

thomas rhett1

Thomas Rhett

Valory Music Co. singer-songwriter Thomas Rhett welcomed industry members to a very appropriate setting for his private album preview taping for Sirius XM The Highway–Nashville’s songwriting mecca, The Bluebird Cafe. Rhett’s debut album, It Goes Like This, releases Oct. 29.

Storme Warren hosted the event, and, unbelievably, the taping marked only the second time that Thomas Rhett has ever performed at the Bluebird Cafe. Among the songs he performed in the intimate setting were “It Goes Like This,” “Beer With Jesus,” “Something To Do With My Hands,” and his upcoming single, “Get Me Some of That,” which his father Rhett Akins co-wrote with Cole Swindell and Michael Carter.
Before introducing another song from the project titled “Whatcha Got In That Cup,” Rhett recounted some sage advice from songwriter Craig Wiseman on the importance of carefully selecting songs to record as an artist. “I was a new writer, and Craig told me, ‘I write a lot of songs. I might not remember writing this song tomorrow, but you will be singing this song for the rest of your life.'”
Of course, being the songwriter behind hits including Florida Georgia Line‘s “‘Round Here” (co-written with Rodney Clawson and Chris Tompkins) and other songs can get confusing when Rhett performs his version of those songs for fans. “They will come up to me and say, ‘Why are you singing cover songs?'” he said, laughing.
He went on to perform another song he co-wrote with Luke Laird and Barry Dean, “1994,” which was later recorded by Jason Aldean. “We were trying to write a ballad that day, and we didn’t like what we were writing,” says Thomas. The ballad was a love song involving a guy, his girl, their preferred romantic spot, and Joe Diffie music spilling from their boom box. “Luke is one of the best at making beats, so he played a loop he’d been working on and sang that line, ‘1994/Joe Diffie comin’ out the stereo,’ and we started writing the song from there.” Rhett recalled being floored when he got the call that Aldean wanted to record it. “They said it was the only song in the listening session that he had wanted to hear more than once,” said Thomas. Rhett also revealed just how the song has impacted his life. “Joe Diffie texted me after that. We text maybe once a month. We actually have a photo of his face next to our tour bus that we hit as we are getting onto it, like they do in sports. It’s mullet Joe Diffie from the Regular Joe record.”
Thomas Rhett’s original career plan was to get a job selling insurance; he studied communications at Lipscomb University while getting more serious about his songwriting, and credits Warner/Chappell’s Ben Vaughn with spurring him into songwriting. “I was playing shows with my cover band at the time, and Ben saw me play. He asked if I could write songs and said that I should try it more. I said, ‘How much are you going to pay me?’ and so they signed me up as a songwriter.”

thomas rhett2

Pictured (L-R): Rhett Akins and Thomas Rhett


He invited his father, songwriter Rhett Akins to the stage for several collaborations. Rhett performed his own 1995 hit, “That Ain’t My Truck” before trading lines with Thomas on “Boys Round Here,” which was recorded by Blake Shelton. Rhett commented on the recent father-son accomplishment of having a hand in half of the songs in the Top 10 during one week. “You can’t plan that,” said Rhett. “To have songs written by one of us and recorded by Justin Moore, Billy Currington, Lee Brice, Thomas, Florida Georgia Line to all be recorded and released around the same time and to all go that high on the charts. I don’t know why God allowed that to happen, but it did. Even Scott Borchetta can’t make that happen–or maybe he can,” Rhett quipped.
Rap and rock influences are evident in Thomas’ music and songwriting, and he says it just comes naturally. “The first rap song I heard when I was about 9-years-0ld was DMX‘s “Ruff Ryder’s Anthem,'” said Thomas. “My dad is a songwriter, so of course, I couldn’t escape Country. I knew every Tim McGraw, Garth Brooks and Brooks & Dunn song on the radio when I was growing up.”
They ended with a rendition of “Parking Lot Party,” recorded by Lee Brice. “Lee wasn’t scheduled to write with us that day,” said Rhett Akins. “Luke [Laird], Thomas and I were writing that day, and Thomas didn’t like anything we were coming up with,” he laughs. “We took a lunch break and came back, and Lee happened to walking out of the building as we were walking in. He asked if we had an hour or so to write a song and said he needed an uptempo song. He’s got a fun-loving personality, and had been doing a lot of emotional ballads, so he wanted something uptempo, and we came up with ‘Parking Lot Party.'”
The pride that Rhett Akins took in seeing his son’s success was evident throughout the event; the family collaboration is one more of those classic Nashville moments that the Bluebird Cafe can now add to its fabled history.
Another fun tidbit: racecar driver Danica Patrick was also in attendance.
Pictured (L-R): SiriusXM Producer John Marks, SiriusXM The Highway host Storme Warren, Rhett Akins, Thomas Rhett, G Major Management PresidentVirginia Davis, Big Machine Label Group VP John Zarling and The Bluebird Café  C.O.O./President Erika Wollam Nichols. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Pictured (L-R): SiriusXM Producer John Marks, SiriusXM The Highway host Storme Warren, Rhett Akins, Thomas Rhett, G Major Management President Virginia Davis, Big Machine Label Group VP John Zarling and The Bluebird Café C.O.O./President Erika Wollam Nichols. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images