Primetime 'Nashville': "You’re No Angel Yourself"

NashvilleThe Schermerhorn Symphony Center made a grand debut appearance in last night’s episode of Nashville. It served as the backdrop for the crux of the episode’s fireworks. Rayna invited her two daughters, Maddie and Sophie, to the event in an attempt to cheer up a sullen Maddie. Teddy also attended the festivities, and, unbeknownst to Rayna, brought with him lover Peggy. Earlier in the episode, Teddy proposed to Peggy, giving her his mother’s ring. Though he requested that she keep the engagement a secret until he can tell Maddie and Daphne, Peggy wore the ring on a necklace chain to the party. Observant young Maddie immediately recognized the bauble, accusingly questioning why Peggy was wearing Maddie’s grandmother’s ring. The discovery forced Teddy to spill the truth of the engagement, prompting Maddie to run away.
As Teddy, Lamar, Tandy, Rayna and the rest of the broken family organized efforts to find Maddie, Teddy revealed Peggy’s pregnancy to Rayna (though, as shown earlier in the episode, Teddy is being fooled–Peggy actually had a miscarriage and tricked Teddy into believing she was still pregnant). Lamar accused Teddy and Peggy of creating the whole mess.
Meanwhile, Rayna’s sister Tandy used the gala to slyly pry into the death of her mother, who died in a car accident years ago. Tandy asked father Lamar about the last time he saw his late wife before her car accident, suspicious that he was involved with her death. His evasive response was all the evidence she needed to take her own evidence of his illegal political dealings to attorneys.
Newly signed Highway 65 recording artist Scarlett O’Connor wasn’t acclimating to life as a star easily, as evidenced by her uncomfortable reaction to a photo shoot. “Can you at least look like you are having fun?” the photographer asked her. Meanwhile, Edgehill recording artist and reality show winner Layla Grant was a natural in front of the camera, smiling and preening, prompting the photographer to compare her to a young Juliette Barnes.
Scarlett retreated to church to find her friend Zoey singing a gorgeous rendition of “Wayfaring Stranger.” The friend did her best to encourage Scarlett in her new endeavor by taking her out to a bar for drinks and karaoke. Meanwhile, the Edgehill execs loved Will’s song, so he asked if he can use Gunner’s song as his first single. After Avery Barkley, still scarred from his own bad experience with overbearing music executives, overheard the fight and later heard Gunnar perform his own song, he offered Gunnar some advice.
“It’s probably going to be big for somebody, just a matter of who,” he said. Gunnar later turned down Will’s request, sparking another fight between the songwriter and the newly signed singer.
It is clear that Juliette was still figuring out who she is in this episode; one moment she was determined to be a mature adult performer; the next minute she was ranting and stomping her foot like a moody adolescent when Rayna told her she needed to drop out of the White Lies, Red Lips Tour to spend more time with her family. “This sucks!” exclaimed Juliette. “Rayna I do not have a near-death experience to help me boost my record sales! I need this!”
It was one of the best dialogues of the episode, with Rayna snapping back, “You’re a smart girl, you’ll figure it out!”
Later, Rayna and Juliette reunited after the spat; Maddie called Juliette after she ran away. Juliette brought her to her home and tried to reason with the girl. “She quit the tour yesterday because she wants to be there for you,” Juliette said. “She told me herself that you girls mean more to her than anyone in this world – more than money, more than fans, more than me being really, really pissed off at her.” Juliette called Rayna to tell her Maddie was safe.
Juliette spent the rest of the episode figuring out how to keep her music going in a mature direction, without sacrificing ticket sales in the large arenas. She turned down an opportunity to open for the biggest country artist, fictitious character Luke Wheeler (any coincidence that one of Country music’s actual biggest stars right now is also named Luke? Likely not). Instead, she invited Layla to be her opening act. Though Layla’s excitement was obvious, it’s also clear Juliette will not be acting the mentor on the tour. When she invited Layla to her house to tell her the news, she kept her standing outside on the stoop while relaying the tour invite.
“Calm down, there’s no cameras here. Since you are quite literally singing my old songs, I thought it would be a perfect fit,” Juliette said, quickly shutting the door in Layla’s face.
Deacon was sober again, but still struggling with his damaged hand after the accident. A young lawyer who defended him perked up the sullen guitar player by asking him to dinner. Meanwhile Deacon was still attempting to mend his relationship with daughter Maddie and with Rayna.
After Maddie was safely home, Deacon called Rayna to check on her, only to find that Maddie answered the phone. What transpired is Deacon’s fledgling first attempt at being a father. He told Maddie he was glad she was safe and requested that she not run away again. He stopped just short of saying he loved her, but after he hung up, she softly called him ‘Dad,’ with a smile on her face. It’s clear that Maddie was slowly taking to the idea of Deacon as her father, as they share the same gift and passion for music. For much of the episode, she played his songs on her iPod; his songs she grew up listening to, she now understands were romantic love letters from Deacon to Rayna.
Near the end of the episode, Rayna overheard Maddie and Sophie singing a song that Deacon had recorded, “A Life That’s Good” (penned by Sarah Siskand and Ashley Monroe). Rayna was overcome by emotion, touching her throat and wondering if she herself will be able to sing again.

Downtown Nashville Getting New Restaurants; Tootsies Expanding

tin roof logo A building permit has been issued to bring a Tin Roof bar and restaurant to the heart of downtown Nashville, occupying the space previously held by Hatch Show Print. According to a permit, the restaurant will occupy two floors at the 316 Broadway location. Construction will be helmed by Shaub Construction Co.; the permit is valued at $1.5 million.
Tin Roof has popular Nashville/Brentwood locations in the Music Row area on Demonbreun, and another location in Cool Springs. The restaurant chain also boasts locations in nine other cities.
 
city cafe logoTin Roof is not the only new restaurant coming to the downtown Nashville area. Chattanooga-based City Cafe Diner, which is open 24/7, has plans to open a new establishment at 111 Broadway, located above the Rock Bottom Restaurant and Brewery.
 
tootsies200Nashvillians and tourists heading to the Ryman might have noticed some construction happening at Tootsies Orchid Lounge; the popular music venue is expanding, adding approximately 3,500 square feet to its location at 422 Broadway. The additional space will be used for a third bar and stage.

Black River Latest Label To Partner With Clear Channel

black river entertainment logo1Black River Entertainment is the latest label to ink a broadcast and digital revenue-sharing agreement with Clear Channel Entertainment. The deal will include Clear Channel’s 850 stations across 150 markets, along with its IHeartRadio digital platform.
“Black River has proven its ability to find, develop and promote an extraordinary set of artists with outstanding musical talent and a genuine passion for country music,” said Clear Channel CEO Bob Pittman.  “Clear Channel is delighted to work together with Black River artists, helping lead the way to a sustainable digital music industry that benefits everyone – artists, fans, record labels, and broadcasters.”
The independent label is home to Craig Morgan, Kellie Pickler, Glen Templeton, and the John King Band. The company is also home to Black River Publishing, Black River Management, and two historic Nashville studios, Sound Stage and Ronnie’s Place.
“Every day at Black River, we are focused on finding ways to develop our roster of incredibly talented artists for a long-term career in country music,” said Gordon Kerr, CEO, Black River Entertainment.  “We are thrilled to enter into this partnership with Clear Channel and to deliver more for our artists while continuing to bring fans music they love.”
Clear Channel has also formed similar agreements with Warner Music Group, Big Machine, Dualtone, Glassnote Entertainment Group, Wind-Up Records, and several more in recent months.

Industry Snapshots (10/17/13)

Pictured (L-R): Michael Knox and Thomas Rhett.

Pictured (L-R): Michael Knox and Thomas Rhett. Photo: Music Knox


Producer Michael Knox is celebrating his 13th produced chart-topping song. Thomas Rhett‘s “It Goes Like This” is his 13th chart-topper; earlier in the month, the Knox-produced “Night Train” (Jason Aldean), also topped the charts.
Recently elected to the 2013-2014 ACM Board of Directors, Knox is best known for his production work with Aldean.
Other notable production credits include Bush Hawg, Rachel Farley, Trace Adkins, Thomas Rhett, Big SMO, Kelly Clarkson (collaboration on “Don’t You Wanna Stay,”) Ludacris (collaboration on “Dirt Road Anthem,”) Luke Bryan & Eric Church (collaboration on “The Only Way I Know” w/Jason Aldean), Montgomery Gentry, Randy Owen, Josh Thompson, Frankie Ballard, Hank Williams Jr., Brother Trouble and Chuck Wicks, among others.

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Pictured (L-R):  Gary Haynes, Sarah Trahern, Marv Green, Lisa Harless and Tim Nichols.

Pictured (L-R): Gary Haynes, Sarah Trahern, Marv Green, Lisa Harless and Tim Nichols.


After purchasing a special Monday evening at Haynes Galleries at the T.J. Martell’s 2013 Honors Gala Auction, GAC’s Sarah Trahern invited 30 of her good friends, family and colleagues to an intimate gathering sponsored by Haynes Galleries that was catered by Frances Pilkington’s and Jan Sweeney’s team from Something Special and Phil Wilson and Jonathan Mohan from West Meade Wine and Liquor Mart provided the fine wines and creative spirits. It was an exclusive concert with two of Music City’s finest talents, Tim Nichols and Marv Green. Regions Bank Music Row senior officer, Lisa Harless, helped package the event.

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Team Orbison Presented The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network PurpleStride 2013 in Nashville, raising over $74,000.
To continue the charitable legacy of Roy and Barbara Orbison, Team Orbison joined The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network as the presenting sponsor of the PurpleStride 2013.

TEAM ORBISON1

Team Orbison

Stillwell Signs To Kevin Harvick, Inc. Roster

matt stillwell1

Pictured (L-R): KHI’s Kevin Harvick and Matt Stillwell. Photo: Kevin Harvick Inc.


Matt Stillwell has signed to the Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) roster. The two have announced a partnership designed to drive growth and innovation in the area of corporate sponsorship and branding. Stillwell is the first music client signed to the KHI roster, which primarily consists of auto racing and professional athlete management. Under the agreement, KHI plans to use their experience through their NASCAR relationships and cohesively extend them into the country music genre.
KHI is co-owned by NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Kevin Harvick and his wife, DeLana. In its NASCAR operations, the company has demonstrated expertise in marketing through sponsor activation, sales and promotion, event management, advertising and public relations. KHI recently began to focus its efforts more on athletes and sponsors in and out of the auto racing industry, including Harvick, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone (MMA), Jeff Burton (NASCAR) and Jason Gore (PGA).
Stillwell broke into the country music scene with his single “Shine” debuting at No. 25 on iTunes country chart and the accompanying music video reaching No. 5 on CMT Pure and breaking into the Top 10 on GAC’s Top 20 Country Countdown.

'CMT Artists of the Year' Honorees Revealed

cmt logo111Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, Hunter Hayes and Tim McGraw will be feted this year during the 90-minute CMT special, CMT Artists of the Year. The televised event will air live for the first time on Tuesday, Dec. 3 at 8 p.m. ET.
Past artists named as CMT Artists of the Year include Aldean, Bryan, Kenny Chesney, Eric Church, Toby Keith, Lady Antebellum, Miranda Lambert, Brad Paisley, Taylor Swift, Carrie Underwood and Zac Brown Band.
CMT Artists of the Year is executive produced by Michael Dempsey. John Hamlin and Margaret Comeaux serve as executive producers for CMT.

Big Machine Music Signs Singleton

Pictured (L-R): Big Machine Music’s Tali Giles, Jonathan Singleton, BMM’s Mike Molinar and Alex Heddle.

Pictured (L-R): Big Machine Music’s Tali Giles, Jonathan Singleton, BMM’s Mike Molinar and Alex Heddle.


Big Machine Music has signed singer-songwriter Jonathan Singleton to an exclusive publishing agreement. Singleton’s string of hit singles includes “Let It Rain” and “Red Light” (David Nail), “Why Don’t We Just Dance” (Josh Turner), “Don’t” (Billy Currington), and “Chasing Airplanes” (Gary Allan). He has also had album cuts on Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, Blake Shelton and Little Big Town.
“The highest caliber of songwriter today, Jonathan is exactly the kind of unique talent that we are honored to represent at Big Machine Music,” said Mike Molinar, VP of BMM. “I’m so proud to welcome him to our family.”
“I am more than excited to be a part of the Big Machine team. I expect great things from them and hope I live up to their expectations,” added Tennessee native Singleton, who is originally from Jackson.
Singleton recently completed the solo record entitled The Getaway, which will be released independently this year. Previously, he founded the group Jonathan Singleton and The Grove.

Underwood To Be Honored During CRS 2014

carrieThe Country Radio Broadcasters’ Board of Directors announced Carrie Underwood as the recipient of the 2014 Artist Humanitarian Award. Underwood will be honored during the opening ceremonies of Country Radio Seminar (CRS) on Feb. 19, 2014.
“In a format rich with artists that are generous with their time and talents for a wide variety of worthy causes and needs, Carrie Underwood has distinguished herself with her depth of kindnesses and commitment to making a positive difference,” stated CRS President Charlie Morgan.
Underwood established the C.A.T.S. (Checotah Animal, Town, and School) Foundation to focus charitable efforts on her hometown community in Checotah, Okla. She has been part of countless other charitable endeavors, including Pedigree’s Pet Adoption Campaign, Make-A-Wish Foundation, Save The Children, trips to Africa for American Idol’s “Idol Gives Back,” a USO Tour in the Middle East, celebrity fundraisers for City of Hope, and much more. Her recent international Blown Away Tour donated one million dollars from tour proceeds to the American and Canadian Red Cross for disaster relief.
Past recipients of the annual award have included Rascal Flatts, Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, Trace Adkins, Randy Owen, Toby Keith, Brad Paisley, Brooks & Dunn, Reba, Vince Gill, Garth Brooks and Charlie Daniels, among others.
CRS 2014 will be held Feb. 19 – 21, 2014, in downtown Nashville, Tenn.

MusicRowPics: Sara Evans Artist Visit

Sara Evans Artist Visit

Sara Evans Artist Visit


Sara Evans visited the MusicRow offices on Tuesday (Oct. 15) to preview new music from her forthcoming album.
“Slow Me Down,” Evans’ first single from the project, was penned by Jimmy Robbins, Marv Green and Heather Morgan.  Evans and her team also showed MusicRow staff a behind-the-scenes look at her new video for “Slow Me Down.” The clip was produced by Peter Zavadil, one of Evans’ long-time collaborators. “If you have a great lyric, you can do anything with it,” says Evans. “I’m not super fast with releasing music, but nothing goes on an album that I don’t love.”
The passionate singer-songwriter is willing to go to the mat for a song she’s enthusiastic about. She talked about her former chart-topping hit, “Suds In The Bucket” as an example. “I believed in that song even when others didn’t. I had to fight to get it on the album, and fight for it to become a single.”
She also previewed the uptempo “Put My Heart Down,” as well as the exquisitely country, fiddle-laden “Better Off.” The song was penned by Karyn Rochelle. “This song is so me and so perfect and country,” says Evans. Songwriter Shane Stevens thought the song would be perfect for Evans and pitched it to her. “It is one of the most country things I have recorded in a long time,” says Evans.
Evans’ life has been a whirlwind recently, as she just returned from performances in Australia with Alan Jackson, and she’s been traveling to Nashville frequently to record her upcoming project. She lives in Mountain Brook, Ala. with husband Jay Barker and their blended family of seven children.
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On The Cover – Chris Young (Oct./Nov. 2013)

OctNov13Chris Young has accomplished more by the age of 28 than some artists do in a lifetime. Already a Grammy-nominated recording artist, he’s also a dynamic live performer consistently in demand, an international ambassador for his genre, a talented songwriter with five No. 1s to his name – by the way, he wrote four of them – and a handsome charmer to boot. Now, with his recently released fourth album, A.M. (RCA Nashville), the man known for his classic baritone and melt-your-heart ballads has suddenly revealed himself to be king of the good time, too, with lead single “Aw Naw” electrifying crowds and storming up the charts.
Still, when all is said and done, it only takes two words to sum up the career of Chris Young: Definitely Country.
“I’ve always loved Country music, and I really liked singing it as a kid,” Young remembers. “So I was like, ‘That’s what I want to do.’ I just kind of always knew.” His first record purchase was Keith Whitley’s L.A. to Miami, followed by the likes of Randy Travis, Tracy Lawrence and Brooks & Dunn. He sang so much around the house that he jokes his parents “blocked him out.” But as puberty approached, the young tenor found himself facing adversity for the first time. “I was singing all of Vince Gill’s stuff, and then my voice changed,” Young laughs. “For about a year there, I thought, ‘Oh my God, I’m ruined. It’s the end of the world!’ And then I realized I could sing Randy Travis songs. It worked out well.”
Young co-wrote six of the eleven tracks on the record, including  “Aw Naw,” which sets the tone immediately. An irreverent story about what Young calls “an accidental party – ‘Hey, I just came to have one, and ended up staying all night,’” it’s got an addictive four-on-the-floor vibe that’s tailor made for live sing-alongs, and a tongue-in-cheek title that’s both ridiculous and ridiculously inescapable. “It’s just a slang way of saying, ‘Oh, hell no,’” Young explains. “The guy that brought it up was [co-writer] Ashley Gorley. He goes, ‘Aw naw!’ And it was like, ‘How do you spell that?’”
Combined with the album’s equally raucous title track, one might expect A.M. to be something of a concept album about things getting crazy after midnight. Instead, “It’s things that you wouldn’t necessarily expect,” says Young, citing tracks like power ballad “Lighters In the Air” and a tender, traditional love song called “Goodbye” as evidence that there’s something deeper going on in the hours before the dawn. “‘Lighters in the Air’ is about meeting someone and falling in love at a concert, losing yourself in that night with the band playing in the background,” he says. “And ‘Goodbye’ – when you look at the title, you might assume it’s a breakup song. But it’s about a relationship worth fighting for, showing up at somebody’s house in the middle of the night and trying to work it out.”
More than anything, A.M. is defiantly, definitely Country. “Everybody’s got a definition of what Country music is,” Young says. “Never before has it been so broad as to what can be on a Country radio station, and what Country music can be. It really just has to be what you feel as an artist.” With its double guitars and occasional moments of arena-rock glory, A.M. sounds unlike any album Young has ever made – but that doesn’t change what he calls the “core principle” of his music: “I’m never going to lose the acoustic guitar and the steel and the story in the song,” he says. “When I open my mouth, I sound Country. No one’s going to confuse my records with being outside of the genre. Will I push some boundaries for some people? Hopefully. But I’m a Country singer.”
Label: RCA Records Nashville
Current Album: A.M.
Current Single: “Aw Naw”
Current Video: “Aw Naw”
Current Producer: James Stroud
Hometown: Murfreesboro, TN
Management: Marion Kraft, ShopKeeper Management
Booking: WME
Recent Hits: Five No. 1 singles (“Gettin’ You Home,” “Voices,” “You,” “The Man I Want To Be,” and “Tomorrow”)
Awards: 2011 American Country Awards for Breakthrough Artist Of The Year and Single Of The Year (for “Voices”)
RIAA Certs To Date: Gold album – The Man I Want To Be.  Gold singles – “Gettin’ You Home,” “Voices,” “You,” and “The Man I Want To Be.” Platinum single – “Tomorrow.”
Special TV/Film Appearances: ABC’s CMA Awards, Good Morning America, Nashville, Katie, and Jimmy Kimmel LIVE!. CBS’ ACM Awards, Grammy Nominee Concert, The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, and The Talk. FOX’s American Country Awards and Fox & Friends. The Ellen DeGeneres Show.
Birthday: June 12, 1985