Industry Pics: Abby Anderson, Eddie Montgomery, Lorrie Morgan, NSAI

Academy of Country Music Welcomes Abby Anderson to LA Office

Abby Anderson at ACM Office in Encino, California on Friday May 10, 2019. Photo: Michel Bourquard/Courtesy of the Academy of Country Music

The Academy of Country Music welcomed Black River Entertainment recording artist Abby Anderson to the office while she was in Los Angeles recently. While at the Academy, Anderson performed her current single, “Good Lord,” and songs from her most recent EP, I’m Good.

Click here to watch a video from Anderson’s visit featuring an exclusive interview and clips from her performance.

 

Grand Ole Opry Celebrates Eddie Montgomery, Lorrie Morgan Anniversaries

Pictured (L-R): Angie Gentry, Eddie Montgomery, Jennifer Montgomery; Lorrie Morgan. Photo: Chris Hollo/Courtesy Grand Ole Opry LLC

The Grand Ole Opry recently celebrated Opry membership anniversaries with Lorrie Morgan and Eddie Montgomery (Montgomery Gentry).

Montgomery commemorated the 10th anniversary of Opry membership for Montgomery Gentry, inducted on June 23, 2009. He shared the evening with friends and family including his wife Jennifer and Troy Gentry’s wife Angie.

Earlier this month, Morgan celebrated her 35th anniversary as an Opry member.

 

NSAI On The Hill

Pictured (L-R): Lacy Green, Congresswoman Martha Roby (AL-02), Congressman Ted Deutch (FL-22), Jamie Floyd, and Chris Housman. Photo: Courtesy NSAI

Congressman Ted Deutch (FL-22) and Congresswoman Martha Roby (AL-02) relaunched the bipartisan Songwriters Caucus in the 116th Congress on Tuesday (June 25). The caucus will serve as a forum for Congress to engage with America’s songwriters and explore policy issues that affect their often-unrecognized contribution to the music industry.

Bart Herbison, Jennifer Turnbow, and songwriters Lacy Green, Jamie Floyd, and Chris Housman are currently in D.C. visiting several members of Congress, including a visit with Congressman Deutch.

Promotions, Exits At Warner Music Nashville Radio & Streaming Dept.

Warner Music Nashville has promoted three members of its Radio & Streaming department, and announces two exits.

Current WAR Team Northeast / Midwest Manager Anna Cage will join the WMN Team as their National Director, overseeing artists including Blake Shelton, Brett Eldredge, Cale Dodds, Cody Johnson, Cole Swindell and Hunter Hayes. Reporting to VP Radio & Streaming, Tom Martens, the role has been held by Katie Bright who is leaving the company after seven years.

“We’re looking forward to Anna’s long-awaited return to Nashville, where her reputation as a fearless advocate for artists precedes her,” said Martens. “She has the enthusiasm and experience to make this role her own and take the team to new heights as Katie did.”

Heather Propper, who has been supporting the WAR Team since April, will make her move to the company permanently as she takes on Cage’s Northeast / Midwest Manager role and will continue reporting to WAR National Director James Marsh. In addition, Justin Newell will be stepping into the role of Team WMN’s West Coast Manager. This role is currently held by Warner Music Nashville staple Rick Young, who plans to officially take his leave in September after nearly 20 years with the company.

“It has always been very important to us at Warner Music Nashville to foster and develop talent so that we have a strong team of leaders ready to guide us forward,” said SVP Radio & Streaming, Kristen Williams. “I am so pleased that we are continuing to champion that mission with Justin’s promotion and officially adding Heather to the team. They each have an amazing drive and passion for our artists and I know that their transitions into these regions will be absolutely seamless.”

“Katie and Rick have been incredible assets for Team WMN,” added Williams. “We are so grateful to have had them both fighting for our artists day in and day out. With her fierce personality, Katie was the driving force behind nearly a dozen No. 1 singles for Blake Shelton and helped elevate artists like Brett Eldredge and Cole Swindell to multiple chart-toppers. Rick’s unmatched dogged mindset likes chasing airplay but he’s ready to be done chasing airplanes. After nearly three decades on the road, 14 of those with WMN, he deserves a break! We know they are both armed and ready for the next adventure and we are excited to champion them every step of the way.”

Luke Combs’ Grand Ole Opry Induction Slated For July 16

Pictured: John Conlee, Chris Janson, and Craig Morgan invite Luke Combs to be the next member of the Grand Ole Opry. Photo: Chris Hollo/Grand Ole Opry

Luke Combs will be officially inducted into the Grand Ole Opry on Tuesday, July 16. The CMA and ACM Award-winning artist made his Opry debut less than three years ago and was surprised with the Opry invitation on June 11 by Opry members John Conlee, Chris Janson and Craig Morgan.

Among the Opry members scheduled for the July 16 show are the Opry’s newest member, Kelsea Ballerini, Joe Diffie, The Gatlin Brothers, Vince Gill, Janson, Del McCoury Band, Morgan, and Mark Wills. Tickets are on sale now at opry.com.

Tree Vibez Music Promotes Two

Emily Peacock, Adam Romaine

Tree Vibez Music, founded by hitmaking country duo Florida Georgia Line, has promoted two staffers, with Emily Peacock and Adam Romaine rising to new roles. Peacock has been named Creative Director, while Romaine’s role has been expanded to Creative Director/Tour Manager.

Peacock is an Indiana native with eight years of music business experience, including previous stops working for Bob DiPiero, Tom-Leis Music, and Advanced Alternative Media (AAM).

Since the company’s founding, Romaine has worked as manager of the Tree Vibez Music Bus. This mobile studio, which allows artists and writers to work together on the road, has now hosted over 100 of the industry’s top songwriters, and visited more than 200 cities on tour.

“Anyone who books a TVM writing session is aware of Emily’s superior attention to detail,” says TVM General Manager Leslie T. DiPiero. “She has an enviable work ethic and insatiable love of country music songs. Her dedication to our team and writing roster is invaluable.”

TVM founders and FGL members Tyler Hubbard and Brian Kelley add, “Emily has been a light of positivity since the day she walked through the doors of Tree Vibez,” shares Kelley. “We are so thankful to have her on our team.” Hubbard adds, “Her excitement for life and music inspires the whole building and her ability to build everyone up is so admirable. She continues to motivate every writer on the roster to be the best version of themselves. We love you Em and are so thankful for you.”

“Adam has been a huge asset to TVM and brings such a special gift to the family,” note Hubbard and Kelley. “Adam loves to invest in all the writers’ lives and has a way of bringing out the best in people,” shares Kelley. Hubbard adds, “It takes a special person to manage the TVM Bus and be on the road every weekend connecting the writers and artists and creating opportunities for everyone to flourish. Adam does that so well. We are so thankful to have him on our team.”

DiPiero says, “Adam’s passion for songwriters fuels the TVM Bus every week and his natural instincts for writer combinations is one of our secret weapons. The added bonus is everyone wants to hang and create with ‘Romie’ since he is one of the best guys you will ever meet.”

The Tree Vibez roster includes Corey Crowder, James McNair, RaeLynn, Daniel Ross, Jordan Schmidt, Canaan Smith, Jared Mullins, and Ernest. The company has earned nine No. 1 hits, 26 singles, and 140 releases to date.

Opry Entertainment Group Honored With Nine 2019 Telly Awards

Current Opry NextStage Class member Tenille Townes. Photo Credit: Danielle Piazza

The Opry Entertainment Group has won nine Telly awards in three categories for their unique, online content series. Winners included Opry Debut segments on Travis Denning, Tenille Townes, and Abby Anderson and a documentary segment on Ashley Campbell.

Within Opry Entertainment Group, the digital content team is made up of seasoned filmmakers who actively produce innovative, creative web content covering lifestyle, food, cocktails, music and more across the social channels of their iconic entertainment brands including the Grand Ole Opry, Ole Red, Ryman Auditorium and 650 AM WSM. All of the content is published on YouTube, where together, the channels exceed half a million subscribers and over 225 million views.

“These honors spotlight our commitment to producing superior quality content featuring unique approaches to artist-centered storytelling,” said Scott Bailey, Opry Entertainment Group president. “We are thrilled that the Opry Entertainment video production team was recognized for their exceptional work, which offers a unique look at the Opry, Ryman, and the city of Nashville and allows fans to deepen their connection with the artists they love.”

Telly Award wins included:

GOLD
“Better Half – Christina Ballard – Designer of Old Smokeys Boots” (Documentary: Individual)
“Family Tradition – Ashley Campbell Follows in Her Late Father’s Footsteps” (Documentary: Individual)

SILVER
“Why Not Me – The Sonny Melton Story” (Documentary: Individual)
“My Opry Debut – Travis Denning” (Documentary: Individual)
“My Opry Debut – Tenille Townes” (Documentary: Individual)
“My Opry Debut – Abby Anderson” (Documentary: Individual)

BRONZE
“Backstage at the Ryman – Tori Kelly” (Editing)
“Backstage at the Ryman – Tori Kelly” (Live Events)
“Opry NextStage – Tegan Marie – In the Making” (Documentary: Individual)

Founded in 1979, the mission of The Telly Awards is to honor excellence in video, across all screens. It first began with local, regional and cable television commercials, with non-broadcast video and television programming added soon after. Today, the Telly Awards recognize a new era of digital content as well, including web series, VR, 360 and beyond.

MusicRow Pics: 31st Annual MusicRow Awards

Pictured (L-R): MusicRow Publisher/Owner Sherod Robertson, Kathie Lee Gifford, and Alecia Davis. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

The 31st annual MusicRow Awards were celebrated Wednesday night (June 26) during an all-new, expanded ceremony in Nashville.

Held at the War Memorial Auditorium, the gala attracted top music industry executives and talent to reveal winners in an expanded 11 category lineup, including attendees Tenille Townes, Dann Huff, Jeremy Bussey (“Girl Goin’ Nowhere”), CAA, and UMG Nashville. Also presented at the 2019 MusicRow Awards were the Top 10 Album All-Star Awards, recognizing session musicians achieving the most marks on albums that charted in the top 10 of Billboard’s albums sales chart throughout the prior year. See full winner list here.

MusicRow Publisher/Owner Sherod Robertson co-hosted with respected television host, entertainment journalist, writer and producer, Alecia Davis. During the ceremony, a surprise appearance was made by national television personality Kathie Lee Gifford.

Supporting Sponsors for the 2019 MusicRow Awards were CAA; Keller, Turner, Andrews, Ghanem, PLLC; Vaden Group|Elliott Davis. Partners for the 2019 MusicRow Awards were City National Bank and RAM.

For a full recap, read Robert K. Oermann’s writeup here.

 

Pictured (L-R): MusicRow‘s Lorie Hollabaugh, Jessica Nicholson, Haley Crow, Sherod Robertson, Alex Kobrick, Eric Parker and LB Rogers. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured: 2019 Talent Agency of the Year winners CAA. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured: Capitol Records Nashville’s Caylee Hammack. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow.

 

Pictured (L-R): Morgan Clark and David Ross. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured (L-R): Ellen May, Kristin Cantrell, and Becky Harris. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s Amanda Terranova, Zach Green, Edie Emery, Tim Fink, and Jenna Smith. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured (L-R): Bob and Leslie DiPiero. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow.

 

Pictured (left): Big Loud Records/Tree Vibez Music artist HARDY. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured: Sea Gayle Records artist CJ Solar. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured (L-R): Blain Rhodes, Tom Luteran, Josh Van Valkenburg, Josh Tomlinson, and Katie Kerkhover. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured (L-R): Craig Campbell, guest, and James Elliott. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured: Songwriter Tofer Brown. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured: Nashville School of the Arts Trey Jacobs and guests. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Pictured (L-R): Jamie Bruno (Being Bob Music/Tom-Leis Music), Bob DiPiero (BMI Icon/Hall of Fame Songwriter), Leslie T. DiPiero (Tree Vibez Music), Emily Peacock (Tree Vibez Music), and Jason Gantt (2019 Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year Nominee). Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

DJ Moose. Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

 

Photo: Steve Lowry for MusicRow

Warner Chappell Music Extends Deal With Songwriter Caroline Watkins

Warner Chappell Music (WCM) has extended a worldwide publishing deal with Nashville native and singer/songwriter, Caroline Watkins. She is currently touring and will open for country superstar Brett Eldredge in Massachusetts on Aug. 9-10.

By the age of 16, Watkins landed her own round at the Bluebird Café and before graduating high school, signed her first deal with WCM. She was recently selected as the second-ever recipient of Miranda Lambert’s “Women Creators” scholarship at Belmont University, where she studied music and business. Just last year, her music made its silver screen debut in the romantic drama, Forever My Girl, starring Alex Roe, Jessica Rother, and John Benjamin Hickey.

Watkins is currently writing and recording for her first EP.

Blanco Brown, BBR’s Jon Loba On Launching “The Git Up” And Bringing “TrailerTrap” To Country Radio [Interview]

Blanco Brown’s infectious viral hit “The Git Up” has music lovers across the globe getting down to what he calls “TrailerTrap,” a country-rap hybrid of 808s, guitar, some lap steel, snares, and lyrics that touch on both his rural and urban upbringing—not to mention Brown’s customized line dance for “The Git Up” that spurred #thegitupchallenge. The track follows in the wake of the recent red-hot explosion of the country trap microgenre, as evidenced by Lil Nas X’s 12-week reign atop the Billboard Top 100, with the 3x Platinum-selling  “Old Town Road,” as well as its remix featuring Billy Ray Cyrus.

Brown’s “The Git Up” is notching some impressive chart distinctions of its own. “The Git Up” has topped Spotify’s global and domestic Viral 50 chart for the past couple of weeks, and crowning Spotify charts in countries including Australia, France, and Germany along the way. The song is the most-streamed, on-demand country track this week, with 13.5 million streams, and has generated more than one million video clips on social media platform TikTok. Brown welcomed fellow BBR Music Group/BMG labelmate Lainey Wilson for an official dance tutorial video #thegitupchallenge, which has more than 4 million views on YouTube.

YouTube video

“When you have a true hit record, like this is, you’re trying not to get in the way of it,” BBR Music Group Exec. VP Jon Loba. “This is one is one of those once in a lifetime records. It is connecting across every demo. There is young, old, country, urban, black, white, international, domestic. There are absolutely zero barriers to this, which is the perfect opening for Blanco because, from the moment I met him, he made it clear he wants his music to have a unifying purpose.”

This week, track was released to country radio, with an official country radio tour happening in July, bolstered by early support from heavy hitters in the country radio community.

“The song was extremely catchy and fun and the man’s lyrics were totally country. Unique is an understatement!” Cumulus’ NASH Director of Programming John Shomby recalls of first hearing the track.

Prior to signing with BBR Music Group last year, Brown had already earned a Grammy nomination for his work with Childish Gambino, provided vocals on Fergie’s Double Dutchess album, wrote for R&B singer Monica, and did background vocals and arrangements on of Kane Brown’s early demos and EPs.

Blanco was raised in Atlanta, but spent his summers in Butler, Georgia (the town counted a population of 1,972 residents in 2010), and grew up soaking in both urban and country sounds. His recently released, four-song EP deftly blends the nuanced, detailed storytelling of country music with dance-ready beats as he traces his childhood in “Ghett Ol’ Memories,” and weathers heartbreak on “Georgia Power.”

MusicRow recently spoke with Brown and BBR Music Group’s Jon Loba about the viral success of “The Git Up,” and the stories behind the music on Brown’s new EP.

 

MusicRow: With this song exploding as quickly as it has around the world, how has that changed or impacted the marketing plan you had in place from the beginning?

Loba: I honestly felt like we had to build a domestic story before we could really engage the other territories. But with this success, we haven’t had to wait for that build. Instead of doing domestic US and then the world, everything is happening together. Also, usually you would build a story or a brand in the country space, and if it had a chance to work in other genres, then you take that story to the other genres. With this record, those other genres are already coming to us. They’re already jumping on board. But Blanco’s intention has always been to live in the country music space. 

With country radio, I really wanted to build a story and have radio coming to us saying, “What is this? Tell us more about it.” And then we would develop a radio plan. That’s exactly what has happened—it’s just happened at an enormously accelerated pace. The discussions we are having now with radio I thought they would happen in September or October, and that we’d go for for airplay on a Blanco single the top of next year, but we have been overwhelmed by the connection to this song.

MR: How did you discover each other?

Loba: I happened to be in LA for some meetings and Zach Katz was running [BMG] North America at the time. He and I were sitting in his office and he said, “Hey, a lawyer friend is coming in and he’s probably bringing in an urban act, so you are welcome to stay, but if you have any other work you need to get done, don’t feel like so have to stay,” so I bounced out of his office to make a couple calls. Ten minutes later I got a text from him that said, “Get in here immediately.” I walked in and Blanco started playing. I was just completely blown away. And I thought immediately what he is doing is not just genre-bending, but genre-defining. 

I said, “You can clearly do any kind of music you want, but where do you want to live?” and he said, “I want to be a country artist first.” And if you go back, there’s a YouTube video from 2006 where he’s being interviewed and they ask him about making his own music. Even then, he says he’d mix country and trap music.

MR: Blanco, how did you first realize music was something you had a talent for?

Brown: My whole family sang and played music. My dad put a guitar in my hand at age five, because he played guitar and I guess he wanted me to play. I remember growing up, listening to Tim McGraw, and Johnny Cash. My uncle wrote like little country songs and my dad would play on the guitar. But at the same time I was listening to Outkast and people like that in the hood. So I always had both sides of the genres stuck in my head. 

Really, my influences just came from being in the hood around the rap music and then in the country around the country music and then bringing country music back to the hood. My auntie lived with us and we all stayed in a two-bedroom apartment—there were like 12 of us. Brick walls and even the floors were like concrete. If you had to drill a nail in the wall, you were drilling into the brick. So growing up like that influenced my music.

MR: What were some of the early venues you played?

Brown: Me and my brothers, we were in a R&B group called Times 3 and we would play clubs that we weren’t supposed to be in, like Club 3 in Atlanta. We would come home, do homework, practice, then go do shows. People would always be like, “How are you playing these clubs?”

MR: When did you start incorporating elements of country music into your art?

Brown: I started infusing country music with it in like 2008. My friends would laugh, like, “Man, you black, you can’t love country music.” I was like, “I mean look at Darius Rucker,” and they were like, “Man he tricked everybody, he was with Hootie and the Blowfish.” I was like, “You might have a point but I’m still going to play country music.” Around 2011, I started mixing it with 808s and then starting calling it Trailer Trap.

MR: What was the process for building “The Git Up”?

Brown: I started with a lap steel, but then I played it for the first time. I made a dope couple of riffs and I picked out the riff that stood out to me most. Then I looped it and added a beat box, 808s, snares, high hats and stuff. And then after I added that, I was like, “Man, this right here so fun, it brings me so much joy.” I decided to write my dance onto that. I said, “I can write a song to this, but why not give people something to smile and have joy to, just like it’s bringing to me?”

YouTube video

 

MR: What was your reaction to the success of “Old Town Road,” and did its success affect the promotional plan for “The Git Up”? 

Loba: I thought we would probably have to fight to get [“The Git Up”]  through gatekeepers and I thought we would find a specialized audience. Then, I was in the Berlin airport getting ready to fly to London for C2C and I saw the Lil Nas X record  popping up everywhere on Spotify and Apple. And I was like, ‘What is this?’ When I heard it, I got so insanely excited. It was the first realization to me that we were right, there is a huge consumer demand for this. 

We had always planned to release his debut EP the week before CMA fest. But when he brought us “The Git Up,” he showed us the short video clip of himself doing the dance. We wanted to move fast, so we put that up. We knew it was going to take a couple of weeks to get it up on all the DSPs so we uploaded it directly to SoundCloud. Then it started getting picked up by creators on TikTok and Triller and Instagram and it exploded from there. I think it’s important to note that all our friends at the streaming services recognized as well that “The Git Up” would probably be a phenomenon and that it would do that on its own. So when we released the EP, the streaming services have not focused on “The Git Up.” They wanted to focus on the EP and let “The Git Up” do its own thing.

MR: When did you realize the international potential for this song?

Loba: I realized that there were absolutely zero barriers to this song was when our French office said, “Hey, we want to take this to radio.” Because France is, traditionally, such a domestically-focused market. They don’t have a lot of incoming international repertoire and when Shazam started exploding in that country and our team said, “Hey, we want to go chase this.” That sort of proved to me that this is a completely borderless, limitless song.

MR: This song has been serviced to country radio and a radio tour is happening soon. Given the success of this song on streaming platforms, why is it so important to make a concerted effort at country radio?

Loba: With Blanco, I knew from that first meeting that he wanted to be deep in that country community. Say whatever you want, you can’t say this song isn’t country. And you have behind that song a man whose actions will show our country radio family that he intends to be there. When you look at icons in our format, they usually came from the fringes. I remember with Jason Aldean, in those early days JoJamie Hahr and everyone were tearing out their hair because people were saying, “That’s not country. That’s rock ‘n’ roll.” And now Jason’s one of the biggest mainstays in country music and changed the genre along the way. It’s bold to say something like this about this so early, but I know Blanco Brown and I know his heart. I know given the opportunity he’ll be in the genre as long as he wants, and as long as the genre wants him. 

Vanderbilt To Partner With National Museum Of African American Music

Vanderbilt University is joining with the National Museum of African American Music in a long-term partnership to enrich educational and research opportunities around the musical legacy of African-American composers, performers and supporters and their impact on American culture and musical history.

The university’s pledge of foundational support, which totals $2 million in in-kind contributions and direct financial support, will expand the museum’s archival collection, contribute to innovative programming, support the completion of the facility and more.

Chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos announced the innovative partnership at the museum’s sixth annual Legends Gala held last night (June 27) at the Music City Center. “We are proud to partner with the National Museum of African American Music in building global awareness of the musical legacy and impact of African American composers, performers and supporters,” Zeppos said. “This museum will expand the opportunities of our Vanderbilt community, Middle Tennesseans and visitors from around the world to engage in learning and discovery.”

Included in Vanderbilt’s partnership with the museum is a collaboration with the university’s Jean and Alexander Heard Libraries to support an expanded collection of books, scores, sound recordings and material objects related to African American music. This collection will be available for loan, display and study at the museum and will also serve as an important resource for scholarly research on Vanderbilt’s campus.

“The National Museum of African American Music will be an outstanding addition to Nashville’s rich community resources, and this partnership will continue to extend Vanderbilt’s preeminent academic experience beyond the classroom,” said Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs Susan R. Wente. “I look forward to the myriad programming, collaborations and scholarly research projects that this partnership makes possible, and to further encouraging our students to embrace lifelong learning experiences that spark or enhance our appreciation for creativity.”

Vanderbilt, in collaboration with the museum, will host speaker events that will include prominent guest lecturers, panel discussions and performances. Departments across the campus will host the events to encourage the broadest engagement by faculty, students and staff. The speaker series will launch after the museum opens.

The university and museum also envision future faculty research endeavors and Immersion Vanderbilt projects for undergraduate students that may be designed around museum holdings and ongoing collaborations between the many university classes that reflect the museum’s repertoire.

“I’m pleased that Vanderbilt’s continued strong role as a community advocate and partner for organizations that align with the university’s values is reflected in this foundational gift and partnership,” said Vice Chancellor for Government and Community Relations Nathan Green.

The museum, scheduled to open in downtown Nashville in early 2020, will be one of the only such resources in the country solely dedicated to educating, preserving and celebrating the influence that African Americans have had on all genres of music—including classical, country, jazz and hip hop.

“With our dedication to expanding the horizons of musical education, I am excited for the possibilities of this partnership to elevate the cultural and intellectual life of our campus, community and region,” said Mark Wait, the Martha Rivers Ingram Dean of the Blair School of Music and professor of music. “A museum focused on African American music will offer many opportunities for student and faculty engagement and will further elevate Nashville’s profile as a center for all genres of music.”

Vanderbilt’s relationship with the National Museum of African American Music began several years ago, and the ties were strengthened by the late Vice Chancellor for University Affairs and Athletics and Athletic Director David Williams II, who served as co-chair of the museum’s campaign steering committee and was an early supporter.

“I am deeply grateful to Chancellor Zeppos and the entire Vanderbilt University leadership team for their commitment to and investment in our mission. This partnership with one of the nation’s best research universities will dramatically enrich the reach and impact of our programming, and we look forward to the many new opportunities we will be able to offer our community and visitors as a result,” H. Beecher Hicks III, president and chief executive officer of the National Museum of African American Music, said. “I am also deeply grateful for the legacy of impact that David Williams had on the museum in its formative years, and for his and Gail Williams’ generous support.”

For more information on the museum, visit the NMAAM website.

Trisha Yearwood Teams With Kelly Clarkson, Don Henley, Garth Brooks On ‘Every Girl’ Album

Photo Credit: Russ Harrington

Trisha Yearwood has revealed the track listing and special guests on her upcoming new project, Every Girl, and has unlocked the pre-order for the upcoming album today. It arrives in stores and digitally on Aug. 30, and includes collaborations with Kelly Clarkson, Garth, and Don Henley. It also notably showcases the talents of a bevy of female writers as well, including Lucie Silvas, Caitlyn Smith, Patricia ConroyAshley McBryde, Gretchen Peters, and more.

Additionally, a Limited Edition version of the album, featuring special cover art in vinyl and CD, will be available for pre-order on Yearwood’s official Talk Shop Live channel for a limited time. She will reveal the limited edition cover and discuss the album live on Talk Shop Live today at 5 P.M. CT.

She enlisted the talents of longtime producer Garth Fundis for the new project. The two have maintained a creative partnership that dates back to her double-platinum classic self-titled 1991 debut, and flourishes once again on these 14 songs.

The album includes songs such as the soaring and sweeping “Tell Me Something I Don’t Know” [feat. Kelly Clarkson], the heartfelt ballad “What Gave Me Away” [feat. Garth Brooks], and elegant closer “Love You Anyway” [feat. Don Henley]. An avowed Linda Ronstadt fan, Yearwood reached out to songwriter Karla Bonoff for a collaboration and ended up recording an emotionally charged take on “Home,” originally cut by Bonnie Raitt.

“I approached this album without any pressure or expectations,” said Yearwood. “I’m so grateful the songs were there. I found 14 tunes I couldn’t live without. You want people to recognize you as an artist, but you also want to take them somewhere they haven’t necessarily been with you before. With the freedom of no expectations, I got back to that feeling I felt on my first album, like I have to do this and put it out there. Over the years, I let go of worrying about perfection. I just wanted to have a good time. I realized maybe that’s when you do your best work.”

This fall, Yearwood launches her first solo tour in five years. The “Every Girl On Tour” kicks off October 3rd with a special three-night engagement with the Nashville Symphony at Schermerhorn Symphony Center. The 22-city trek continues throughout the U. S. with stops in New York, Boston, Atlanta, Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Fort Worth, Minneapolis, Jacksonville, and more.

Every Girl Full Track List:

  1. Workin’ On Whiskey
  2. Find A Way
  3. Home
  4. Every Girl In This Town
  5. Tell Me Something I Don’t Know (Featuring Kelly Clarkson)
  6. What Gave Me Away (Featuring Garth Brooks)
  7. Something Kinda Like It
  8. When Lonely Calls
  9. Matador
  10. I’ll Carry You Home
  11. Drink Up
  12. Bible and A .44
  13. Can’t Take Back Goodbye
  14. Love You Anyway (Featuring Don Henley)