Breaking: Clay Hunnicutt Steps Down From Big Loud Records [Exclusive]

Clay Hunnicutt. Photo: Delaney Royer

Clay Hunnicutt has stepped down from his position as Big Loud Records’ President effective today, July 5, MusicRow has learned exclusively.

“I leave Big Loud knowing that we started something very special and look forward to seeing how this incredible roster of artists continue to take it to the next level. I’ll never forget the amazing memories made as I venture into future opportunities. Thank you to this team who defies the odds and makes Big Loud truly great.” Hunnicutt said.

The indie label was launched in 2015, with Hunnicutt at the helm. Big Loud Records was founded by partners Craig Wiseman, Joey Moi, Kevin “Chief” Zaruk and Seth England, and leads a roster of artists including HARDY, Chris Lane, Jake Owen, MacKenzie Porter, Mason Ramsey and Morgan Wallen.

Prior to his work at the label, Hunnicutt spent more than 15 years with iHeartMedia.

“Big Loud is grateful for our time spent with Clay (Hunnicutt) heading our Records team. He is a top-rate executive, incredible leader, and one of the hardest-working professionals we’ve ever met. Clay’s future is limitless, and we look forward to collaborating with him in the years to come.  We can’t thank you enough, Clay.” Wiseman, Moi, Zaruk and England said via a statement.

Big Loud has not named a replacement for Clay at this time. Hunnicutt can be reached at clayhunnicutt615@gmail.com.

Riley Green Discusses His New EP, Radio Success, And Touring With Brad Paisley

Riley Green’s life has been a whirlwind of studios, writing rooms, tour buses, and radio station conference rooms since he signed with Big Machine Label Group barely 16 months ago.

He’s earned a No. 1 single with “There Was This Girl,” and released his four-song EP Get That Man A Beer last month. His follow up single, “In Love By Now,” is climbing the radio charts.

“I don’t know if it will ever really sink in, all that is going on,” he says. “I couldn’t even dream that I would have a record deal, so that was kind of a victory in itself. The other thing is, we had the number one single, and I think we put the next single out the next Monday, so it never stops, it’s just kind of wide open.”

Alabama native Green had been making regular trips to write songs in Nashville–“There Was This Girl,” written with Erik Dylan, was the result of one of those regular migrations. After an indie EP in 2017, Green found himself in a four-way bidding war among several Nashville labels, before signing with Big Machine in March 2018.

“I ended up with four different labels, Warner Brothers, Universal, Big Loud, and Big Machine,” he recalls. “They were all great. At the end of the day, a lot of it has to do with where I felt I was going to get the most attention. Big Machine came to me with ideas they loved, I really felt they were going to stick by my brand that I had already built.”

He recalled signing his deal at Joe’s Bar in Chicago. “Jimmy [Harnen] and them gave me a bottle of Crystal and we walked around the streets of Chicago. I didn’t sign that night, but we still drank the champagne.”

“In Love By Now,” is a slice of heartbreak wrapped in up-tempo ‘90s reminiscent sounds. Green penned the track alongside Marv Green, Ben Hayslip and Rhett Akins, the artist and writer behind ‘90s hit “That Ain’t My Truck,” which can still be heard on country radio.

“That guy in the song I think plays pretty well the aw shucks I lost her kind of thing. I grew up listening to that kind of country music, but also I was writing with a lot of ‘90s country guys and that doesn’t hurt at all. It just gives a different way to write a song that’s been written a lot of times, I guess.”

Green is the sole writer on another standout song on the EP, “Numbers On The Cars,” written about his great uncle’s battle with Alzheimer’s.

“I watched him kind of go from the guy who was always talking, always cutting up, to the quietest one in the room. He was the big NASCAR Fan, a big fisherman. That was one of those things I just knew he’d always be able to tell me, who drove what car and what the numbers were, who the sponsors were. So it was odd to do a song about Alzheimer’s and NASCAR I guess, but it’s cool to see how people can take it and make it about their own situation or their own family member.”

Green has seen first-hand the impact of those songs on fans over the past several weeks, as he’s been on the road opening shows for Brad Paisley.

“Going out in front of someone else’ fans is something I’ve never been able to do. His fans are more traditional country music fans and Brad’s whole team is great. That’s the one good thing about country music, is all these artists who have been doing this for 20-something years, he was where I was at one time and he gets it. Everyone helps each other out. I can say we’re not roughing it on this tour. He’s got catering and he rented out a Laser Tag and Go-Kart venue after a show in Montana. He takes good care of us, but I’m sure the pranks are coming,” he says of Paisley’s notorious tour pranks.

Given the hectic schedule of touring, and time spent in the studio working on a full album, Green hasn’t yet splurged on much to celebrate his success.

“I’ve talked myself out of a lot of things because I don’t have much time. There’s no reason to buy a big fancy truck because I wouldn’t be able to use it, I’m on a bus or a plane all the time. I will say that since I’ve had a little bit of success, I don’t mind spending money on guitars anymore. I don’t think I ever had a really nice guitar until I signed a record deal. I thought, ‘Well, I’m doing this for a living now and I can make money off of it. So now I have a little collection of like 12 or 15 guitars.”

He jokes he still has a long way to go to catch up with Paisley’s collection.

“He’s got like 15 guitars on stage at all times,” he jokes. “If I have a career like he does, I’ll get plenty of guitars.”

Weekly Chart Report (7/5/19)

Click here or above to access MusicRow’s weekly CountryBreakout Report.

Ken Burns Pulls Back The Curtain On ‘Country Music’ [Excerpt]

[The story below is an excerpt from a piece included in the recently released 2019 MusicRow Awards print issue. To read the full interview, pick up a copy at musicrow.com or subscribe to MusicRow.]

Eight years. 101 artist interviews. Nearly 600 music cues. An in-depth study of the stories, songs and artists behind a century of country music.

On Sept. 15 the highly-anticipated eight-episode, 16-hour documentary Country Music will premiere on PBS stations, helmed by acclaimed director Ken Burns.

Burns, alongside producer/writer Dayton Duncan and producer Julie Dunfey, and a team of 15-20 researchers and filmmakers, sifted through nearly 100,000 photos (3,400 of which made it into the final series).

“I was surprised at how open people were,” Burns says. “They were going into attics, pulling out old boxes of photos and footage.”

Since the debut of 1981’s Brooklyn Bridge, Burns has built a reputation for painstakingly researched, unflinchingly authentic documentaries such as 1994’s Baseball, 2009’s The National Parks: America’s Best Ideas, and, in 2017, the harrowing 10-part, 18-hour examination of the history of the Vietnam War. He first set his scope on music with 2001’s 10-part, 19-hour series Jazz

A friend of Burns’ suggested the idea of following the intense Vietnam War documentary with a series on country music, noting that like jazz, country music is a uniquely American art form. Burns presented the idea to Duncan, who quickly agreed. “I said, ‘Yes, as long as I can write it,’” Duncan says. “At its best, country music is filled with universal human experiences or emotions, and does what great art does.”

“We want to either be introducing people to this great American music, or for people who already like country music, we hope they will hear some stories that they weren’t familiar with,” Burns says. “For some people who might have a stereotype of what they think country music is, or a bias against it, we hope if they watch our film, they will find things that surprise them.”

Instead of relying heavily on historians, Country Music allows artists including Vince Gill, Ricky Skaggs, Marty Stuart, Rosanne Cash and Kathy Mattea to guide viewers throughout the series.

“There are a number of artists who have important things to offer in our early episodes, where it talks about things that happened before they were alive or when they were little,” Duncan says. “Then, at a certain moment around episode, say seven or eight, they enter the story as characters in their own life.”

Burns and his team began doing interviews in fall 2012. Of the 101 artists who were interviewed throughout the making of the film, 20 percent are now deceased, including Merle Haggard, Roy Clark and Little Jimmy Dickens.

“We started by age and worked our way back,” Duncan says. “The very first interview was with Little Jimmy Dickens. The second interview we did, that same day, was Harold Bradley. Our third, which we did in Tulsa, was Roy Clark. The fourth was Wanda Jackson, who of course is still with us. We just missed getting an interview with George Jones,” he notes; the legendary entertainer and “He Stopped Loving Her Today” singer died in April 2013.

[Read more in MusicRow‘s 2019 Awards print issue, available at musicrow.com or with MusicRow subscriptions.]

Nic Dugger Named President of Midsouth Chapter of Television Academy, NATAS

Nic Dugger has been elected President of the Midsouth Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Scientists, NATAS. TNDV: Television owner Dugger most recently served as Vice President of the Board as well as the Student Awards Chairman, and has served the organization for 22 years.

The Nashville/Midsouth Region, founded in 1984, encompasses North Carolina (except Asheville) and Tennessee, and the TV market of Huntsville, AL. In addition to granting the Midsouth Regional Emmy Awards, the chapter awards scholarships, honors quarter-century industry veterans with the Silver Circle, conducts Regional Student Television Awards of Excellence for high schools, offers a free nationwide job bank, provides member discounts, and participates in judging Emmy entries at regional and national levels.

“Nic has been one of the most active members of our chapter since become an intern in 1997,” says NATAS Midsouth Executive Director Geneva Brignolo. “He volunteered while a student at Middle Tennessee State University, and went on to provide his mobile units for our live telecasts when he started TNDV: Television in 2004. We are proud of Nic, and we look forward to many years of service to come.”

This new appointment adds to a growing list of accolades for Dugger, which includes TNDV’s recognition as Nashville’s Overall Small Business of the Year in 2016. He also joined the list of the Nashville Business Journal’s 40 under 40 in 2017, and was selected for the 2018 Distinguished Alumni Award by Middle Tennessee State University, its highest honor.

Band Of Heroines: Carrie Underwood, Miranda Lambert & Maren Morris Lift Up Talented Newcomers [Excerpt]

[The story below is an excerpt from a piece included in the recently released 2019 MusicRow Awards print issue. To read the full interview, pick up a copy at musicrow.com or subscribe to MusicRow.]

As Maren Morris held court earlier this year at country music’s Mother Church, the Ryman Auditorium, on her GIRL: The World Tour, the sense of camaraderie between two superstars was as spiritual as it was physical, as Miranda Lambert quietly joined Morris (and hit songwriter Natalie Hemby) at the Ryman’s center stage, both hugging Morris before lifting their intertwined voices in song on “Virginia Bluebell,” a track Hemby co-wrote on Lambert’s 2009 album Revolution. They followed with “I Wish I Was,” from Morris’ 2016 debut album Hero. The fact that the musical selections were both deep album cuts speaks to mutual admiration Lambert and Morris hold for each other, as musicians, as artists with their own singular perspectives, and as women in control of their artistry and businesses. 

“This moment was not planned, but it made my heart explode,” Morris later stated on social media.

As spontaneous as the moment was, it played perfectly within the female-first framework Morris has crafted with her recently-released album GIRL, along with her recent radio single of the same name, and her GIRL: The World Tour, with openers Kassi Ashton, Cassadee Pope, RaeLynn, Tenille Townes, and Hailey Whitters.

And Morris isn’t alone. This year, three of country music’s superstars—Miranda Lambert, Morris and Carrie Underwood—are bringing an all-female slate of talent on their headlining tours. Last month, Underwood launched her Cry Pretty Tour 360, alongside Maddie & Tae and Runaway June. 

“We have to lift each other up because no one is going to do it for us,” Underwood says. “We have to do it ourselves. We’re all just out there trying to work together, work hard and show our fans and the industry what we can do.”

In September, Lambert will reprise her Roadside Bars and Pink Guitars Tour, with acts Morris, Elle King, Pistol Annies cohorts Ashley Monroe and Angaleena Presley, Ashley McBryde, Tenille Townes, Caylee Hammack, and more. This isn’t Lambert’s first all-female tour lineup; her 2015 iteration of the tour (which she originally conceived in 2009) was also an all-female bill, with openers including RaeLynn, Clare Dunn, Courtney Cole and Ashley Monroe.

“I’ve always supported other women, and other women have always supported me, and I’m in a girl band. When we were talking about the tour, I felt like it should be an all female lineup. Roadside Bars and Pink Guitars has been a running theme throughout my career, and they generally turn out to be the most fun tours,” Lambert muses. “They’re all amazing artists that have something important to say.”

The hope is that if country radio isn’t going to listen to what female artists have to say, that concertgoers and promoters will.

A recent study by Stone Door Media Lab’s Jeff Green found that over the past 44 years (1974-2018), female artists (including solo female artists, duos or groups with a female vocalist and duets that included a female artist) have achieved 27 percent of the Top 15 singles on country radio. The number of female artists notching songs in the Top 15 on country radio fell to an average of 21 percent from 2007-2018. Over the past five years, that number continued to plummet, to a 16 percent average. 

Kelsea Ballerini earned the first No. 1 country single by a solo female artist in more than 15 months when her single “Miss Me More” crowned the Mediabase chart the week of June 10 (the song topped out at No. 2 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart).  Morris’ “GIRL” reached the Top 10 on the Country Airplay chart, and on the Mediabase chart as of June 10. Runaway June’s “Buy My Own Drinks” became the first Top 20 country radio single by an all-female group since 2005.

It’s a bit of welcome news, given that in December 2018, the downward trend in country radio airplay for female artists hit a new low when, for the first time, there were zero female artists in the Top 20 songs on the Country Airplay chart. 

Newcomer artists who can’t claim a hit at country radio are less familiar to country listeners and country music concertgoers, which makes these artists less competitive when it comes to netting slots on major country tours. 

The cycle of rejection doesn’t sit well with Underwood.

“You try to figure out what the issue is and when you get back, ‘The song’s not testing well,’ or ‘She’s not testing well,’ I feel like everybody’s just over it,” Underwood says. “It’s frustrating because I see Maddie & Tae, Runaway June and so many other people who have got the goods, they have incredible songs, they are genuinely talented, and nice people who work their tails off. It’s frustrating to see them work for so long, to make minimal gains. We have to put our money where our mouth is and take women on the road with us and lift each other up.”

Underwood is the most-recent female artist to garner a nomination in the coveted Entertainer of the Year category at either the Country Music Association (in 2016) or the Academy of Country Music Awards (in 2017).

The most recent female artist to take home either honor? Taylor Swift, who was named Entertainer of the Year by both the CMA and ACM back in 2011.

Lambert, Morris and Underwood all are primed to upend the nearly decade-long drought in the EOY categories. However, while awards nominations and wins are deserved, each artist is following a higher purpose: to remind country listeners, programmers and the industry that female artists can—and do—sell out venues and tours and are worthy of being played on country radio.

[Read more in MusicRow‘s 2019 Awards print issue, available at musicrow.com or with MusicRow subscriptions.]

Bobby Bones Show Makes Top 5 In iHeartRadio’s Inaugural Top 100 Podcast Chart Week

iHeartRadio is tracking the popularity of its podcasts with its new iHeartRadio Top 100 Podcast Chart featuring the most listened-to podcasts on iHeartRadio each week. iHeartRadio’s multi-media personality Bobby Bones is among the Top 5 on the new list, which will be compiled each Monday. iHeartRadio is home to more than 250,000 podcasts.

This week’s top five includes:

  1. The Ron Burgundy Podcast
  2. The Bobby Bones Show
  3. The Joe Rogan Experience
  4. The Breakfast Club
  5. The Ben Shapiro Show

Bill Anderson To Be Honored At Love From Music City Gala

Bill Anderson

Love From Music City, a nonprofit founded by Shanda and Robb Tripp, announced today that country music legend and Grand Ole Opry star ‘Whisperin’ Bill Anderson will be honored with the lifetime achievement award on Thursday Sept. 5.

Bluegrass stars Daily and Vincent will headline the gala and perform live on stage. The event will take place from 7 – 9:30 p.m. at the Bluegrass and Yacht Club (550 Johnny Cash Pkwy.) in Hendersonville, Tennessee.

Love From Music City (LFMC) supports and sponsors orphan projects in 12 countries including the U.S. and underwrites three orphanages in the country of Haiti; one is exclusively for handicapped children.

The Love From Music City Gala is an entertaining fundraiser to bring businesses and people of the community together to help reach many hurting people in our own community and bring hope to those suffering abroad.

General admission is $125 per person; Exclusive VIP admission is $250 and adds premier reserved table seating at the front of the room and a special “Meet & Greet” with our guest stars in the VIP lounge. Tickets are available now.

Willie Nelson Debuts Two New Products in Hemp Remedy Line

Willie Nelson‘s hemp-infused product line with his wife Annie, Willie’s Remedy, is rolling out two new products: Willie’s Remedy Relief Balm and Willie’s Remedy Tea. 

The new offerings infused with full-spectrum hemp oil arrive close on the heels of the brand’s debut of its flagship product, Willie’s Remedy Coffee, and Willie’s Remedy Hemp Oil Tincture. The Remedy Relief Balm is inspired by a cannabis topical that Annie Nelson created in her kitchen and has used for years, along with her husband, his band and numerous friends. The muscle balm contains shea butter, coconut oil, and full spectrum hemp flower oil concentrate, as well as menthol, plant-derived Vitamin E, organic lavender and CO2-extracted arnica concentrate.

“Willie’s Remedy is all about giving people easy access to the healing benefits of hemp in the same way we look to other plants for wellness,” Mrs. Nelson said. “By expanding our product line to include a topical, tea and decaf coffee we hope to bring this amazing plant to new audiences.”

All products are available online and at select stores beginning in July, in time for Willie Nelson’s 4th of July Picnic in Austin.

Willie’s Remedy is also a sponsor of the Outlaw Music Festival Tour which begins in September and features Robert Plant & the Sensational Space Shifters, Luke Combs, Bonnie Raitt, The Avett Brothers, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, Alison Krauss, Gov’t Mule, Brothers Osborne, and Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real. Willie headlines the 17-city tour and is celebrating the release of his new studio album, Ride Me Back Home.

Ross Copperman Highlights ’90s Country Hits, Rising Nashville Singers On Latest ‘Homegrown Kids’ Installment

Ross Copperman has been busy in the studio for the past several months, co-writing songs with Kenny Chesney and Ed Sheeran, producing the recently-released debut album from BBR Music Group trio Runaway June, and taking part in the ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp in Nashville.

But this songwriter-producer, who counts nearly 20 No. 1 hits, has also been working as an executive producer on a fun side project that welcomes some of Nashville’s talented youth performers to lend their voices to some of the most uplifting ‘90s country hits.

As the second installment of the Homegrown Kids series, Homegrown Kids: ‘90s Country features 10 of country music’s most well-known tracks, including the Dixie Chicks’ “Wide Open Spaces,” The Judds’ “Love Can Build a Bridge,” Garth Brooks’ “The River,” Martina McBride’s “Happy Girl,” Toby Keith’s “Should’ve Been A Cowboy” and more.

Dana Anderson (known for work on children’s music projects including VeggieTales, Songs for Worship and Getty Kids) and session singer/arranger David Wise produced the album, which released June 28.

“I wanted to do something for the parents to enjoy maybe on a long ride to the beach, you know? To hear [Joe Diffie’s] ‘John Deere Green’ and be like, ‘I haven’t heard that song forever,’” Copperman says. “And maybe the kids will sing along too, because it’s kids singing it. Everybody loves ’90s country and I thought it could be fun.”

They brought in a group of 10 youth singers from Nashville and the surrounding areas to perform the tracks. Some of the singers already have their own followings, such as Marisa McKaye, a featured vocalist on several tracks. McKaye released her first EP at age 12, and in 2017, she debuted as the youngest Song Suffragette at Nashville’s The Listening Room.

“I think there are so many kids on this project that will go on to be future stars, then it’s going to be cool for them to look back and go, ‘Oh yeah, I sang on that Homegrown Kids record when I was like 15.’” Copperman says.

Looking ahead to future installments of the Homegrown Kids series, Copperman muses the series could evolve into featuring original songs.

“Also, since the concept of albums is kind of starting to go away in general, I would love to just drop a song on streaming. Kids Bop already did ‘Old Town Road,” or else we would have done that. But I would love to do a version of Blanco Brown’s ‘The Git Up.’

“But my whole goal is I wanted these songs to have a positive message, and to give kids an outlet to get in a studio and sing on a record, just to get that experience so young. It’s about music education and having fun.”

Homegrown Kids Track Listing:

  1. “Wide Open Spaces” — (The Dixie Chicks: Susan Gibson)
  2. “Should’ve Been a Cowboy” — (Toby Keith: Toby Keith)
  3. “Meet in the Middle” — (Diamond Rio: Chapin Hartford, Jim Foster, Don Pfrimmer)
  4. “The River” — (Garth Brooks: Garth Brooks, Victoria Shaw)
  5. “John Deere Green” — (Joe Diffie: Dennis Linde)
  6. “Down on the Farm” — (Tim McGraw: Jerry Laseter, Kerry Kurt Phillips)
  7. “Heartland” — (George Strait: Steve Dorff, John Bettis)
  8. “Happy Girl” — (Martina McBride: Beth Nielsen Chapman, Annie Roboff)
  9. “Love Can Build a Bridge” — (The Judds: John Jarvis, Naomi Judd, Paul Overstreet)
  10. “Life’s a Dance” — (John Michael Montgomery: Allen Shamblin, Steve Seskin)