Rising Women On The Row Spotlight: 5 Questions With Paradigm’s Lenore Kinder

MusicRow Magazine’s eighth annual Rising Women on the Row event will be held Tuesday, March 26, at Omni Hotel Nashville.

This year’s honorees include Sandi Spika Borchetta (Big Machine Label Group, Sr. VP Creative), Janine Ebach (Curb|Word Music Publishing, VP), Kelly Janson (Kelly Janson Management, Manager), Meredith Jones (Creative Artists Agency, Agent), Lenore Kinder (Paradigm Talent Agency, Agent), and Jennifer Turnbow (NSAI, Sr. Director of Operations).

Leading up to the event, MusicRow is spotlighting each honoree with a brief Q&A.

Lenore Kinder is at the helm of the touring careers of Kacey Musgraves, Tori Kelly, Weyes Blood, Lucie Silvas, Anna Moon, Elise Davis, TAELA, and LUME. In addition to managing the live aspect, she strategically identifies opportunities in film, TV, branding, and other avenues that elevate her clients’ repertoire. Prior to transitioning to the agency side, Kinder gained 10 years-experience as a talent buyer for AEG Presents & Messina Touring Group. She garnered a number of accolades, including Pollstar’s Rising Star award, and ACM’s Don Romeo Talent Buyer of the Year recognition, curating North American tours for Kacey Musgraves, Kelsea Ballerini and The Lumineers. She is also responsible for growing the tours of Mumford & Sons, Adele, and Imagine Dragons from clubs to arenas in the Southeast region. Kinder accelerated her career with a move to Nashville in 2006 after serving as Director of Operations at local Knoxville, Tennessee venue Blue Cats.

MusicRow: What is the biggest lesson on leadership you have learned in your career?

It is an acquired skill that requires being mentally and emotionally available to your team. You have to know when to lead, and when to step back to allow them to shine. Good leaders are not always at the front of the room, but they’re always leading the charge.

MR: Who has been one of your biggest mentors and what has he or she taught you?

From my promoter perspective, Louis Messina is someone that I look up to professionally – he empowers his team to “be the boss.” His employee retention is second to none – he is a curator of dreams not only for his clients, but also for his staff.

From my agent perspective, Jonathan Levine has been such an inspiring leader to work with and alongside. His tenacity and compassion for his clients, staff and family are unparalleled – he’s a force and I’m deeply honored to learn from the best.

My wife is another mentor – she leads with courage and kindness. Leading from fear is a lonely place to be…

MR: Describe a time that you took a big risk in your career, and how did it pay off?

Making the leap from promoter to agent didn’t feel like a huge risk professionally, but the internal change was profound. It pushed me to think outside of the box in all areas of life. I feel deeply honored to represent the clients I’ve amassed in such a short time. I like to believe my renewed perspective has helped bring them success.

MR: As Nashville continues to grow and evolve, what changes in the music industry excite you the most?

DIVERSITY; ideas that generate from a silo mentality are merely self-fulfilling prophecies. Art has no boundaries and therefore the people representing it shouldn’t either.

MR: Favorite Nashville place to hold a business meeting/lunch?

Joe’s Crab Shack

 

(City National Bank, Tri Star Sports and Entertainment Group, and Loeb & Loeb are again the Presenting Sponsors for the 2019 Rising Women on the Row.)

Ashley McBryde, Luke Combs, LANCO Earn Early ACM Wins

Ashley McBryde, LANCO, and Luke Combs are already Academy of Country Music award winners leading up to the show on Sunday, April 7, airing live from Las Vegas. McBryde earned the title of New Female Artist of the Year, while Combs earned New Male Artist of the Year. LANCO earned the New Duo or Group of the Year honor.

Country superstar Carrie Underwood, who has just been announced as a performer on the awards show, made personal phone calls to McBryde, Combs and LANCO, surprising them with their wins.

Heading into the awards show, Combs is also nominated for Male Artist of the Year, while McBryde landed a second nomination, in the Female Artist of the Year category. LANCO is also nominated for the overall Group of the Year honor at the upcoming awards show.

 

Morgan Evans Announces European Tour For September

Morgan Evans is heading overseas for a set of six shows in Europe in September. The Australia native will play five headlining dates across multiple cities as well as a festival appearance at The Long Road in Lutterworth, U.K. The performances mark a return to the U.K. for Evans, who has built a fan base across the pond with previous headlining shows and a 2018 appearance at the C2C Festival in both London and Glasgow.

Tickets will be available starting Friday (March 29), and can be purchased via morganevansmusic.com.

This European run adds to Evans’ packed tour schedule for the year as he’ll join Rascal Flatts’ Summer Playlist Tour and make several festival performances including Tortuga Music Festival, Country Thunder, Off The Rails Festival, Carolina Country Music Festival, Country LakeShake and more.

Evans’ latest single “Day Drunk” spent 25 consecutive weeks at No. 1 on country radio in Australia, and two weeks at No. 1 on the TMN Hot 100 airplay chart, making him the first country artist to achieve the feat since 2009 when Taylor Swift reached the top of the chart with “Love Story.”

Dates for Morgan Evans’ World Tour:
Sept. 3 – Dublin, Ireland – Green Room at The Academy
Sept. 4 – Glasgow, Scotland – Oran Mor
Sept. 5 – Liverpool, U.K. – Arts Club Loft
Sept. 6 – London, U.K. – Borderline
Sept. 7 – Lutterworth, U.K. – The Long Road Festival
Sept. 9 – Berlin, Germany – Frannz Club

Tyler Farr Lands New Label Home

Pictured (L-R): Colton McGee (Director of Business and Legal Affairs, BBR Music Group), Jon Loba (EVP, BBR Music Group), Scott Safford (Safford Motley PLC), Tyler Farr, Haley McLemore (Red Light Management), Enzo DeVincenzo (Red Light Management), Jason Aldean

Tyler Farr, known for hit songs including “Redneck Crazy” and “A Guy Walks Into a Bar,” has signed a label deal with Broken Bow/Night Train Records. The venture marks the first collaboration between BBR and flagship artist Jason Aldean‘s Night Train Records.

As the newest addition to the Broken Bow family, Farr will join a roster that includes Aldean, as well as Dustin Lynch, Chase Rice, Everette and Lainey Wilson.

“I am very excited to be a part of this new chapter in my career with Broken Bow/Night Train Records,” said Farr. “I’m looking forward to working with one of my best friends, Jason Aldean, and the entire Broken Bow team. Can’t wait to see what the future holds!”

“Jason is one of the very best song guys in this town and knows the importance of a brand and doing everything you can to reinforce it. Tyler has one of the most distinctive vocals in the format and a track record of success when he records the right songs that fit his brand,” said Jon Loba, EVP BBR Music Group. “Hearing Jason and Tyler’s vision about the music they wanted to create and the brand they wanted to reinforce, Jason’s first signing was easy to green-light. Tyler fills a unique lane and I’m so excited to see what they come up with.”

“It’s cool to pursue this new endeavor in my career,” said Aldean. “I can’t think of a better way to start than signing one of my best friends. I also really believe in him as an artist and am looking forward to everyone hearing what we’re working on.”

Farr has earned three No. 1 singles to date (“Redneck Crazy,” “Whiskey in My Water,” and “A Guy Walks Into a Bar”). With his debut album Redneck Crazy released in 2013, Farr landed at No. 2 on the Billboard Country Albums Chart and No. 5 on the Billboard Top 200. With the release of his sophomore album Suffer in Peace in 2015, Farr once again landed in the Top 5 on both the Billboard Top 200 Albums and Billboard Country Albums Chart.

‘Nashville’ Alum And Pop Singer Lennon Stella Talks Empowering New Single, Opening For The Chainsmokers

Lennon Stella

Over the past seven years, Nashville-based pop artist Lennon Stella’s career would give most newcomers envy.

In 2012, Lennon (then 12 years old) and her sister Maisy (then 8) uploaded a video of the duo offering startling sibling harmonies on a cover of Robyn’s “Call Your Girlfriend.” The duo Lennon & Maisy then went viral (earning more than 30 million views to date), and soon, the sisters joined the television show Nashville, with Lennon portraying Maddie Conrad, the musically talented, tough-minded eldest daughter of country superstar Rayna Jaymes, while Maisy portrayed younger sister Daphne. The series, which aired first on ABC then on CMT, concluded in 2018. During the show’s run, the sisters grew up before a worldwide audience.

Even in the midst of filming for Nashville, Stella began working her own music, and her own perspectives, into the show, including “Saved” and “Without Warning.”

Now 19, Stella has one solo EP to her credit, titled Love, Me, which released in 2018. The release signaled that Stella had grown into her own, both as a person and an artist.

“It’s amazing having that freedom,” she says of creating the EP. “There’s no boundaries and there’s no one telling you what you can and can’t do. You can just create with amazing people. It’s the best feeling. With the show, I was on that for six years and that gave me the time to explore and not have any pressure of ‘Oh I have to put something out,’ because I was putting music out through the show or I was filming and didn’t have time.”

Stella launched her first headlining outing, the Love, Me Tour, earlier this week with two sold-out shows in Toronto, and performs her first stateside show tonight in Boston.

“We just did all the rehearsals so I feel a little pressure, but I think it’s more the pressure I put on myself,” Stella told musicrow.com, before launching the tour. “I feel so comfortable in the people that are coming to the show. I feel accepted for who I am, and with social media I feel connected to them all already. I’ll read their DMs and know how they feel about the music so in that sense I don’t feel pressure from others as I do myself. The thing for me is to find the dynamic of the show. I’m so comfortable just playing my guitar but I also want songs where I can jump around and have fun.”

In anticipation of the run of shows, Stella just released a new track, “Bitch (takes one to know one),” which she penned with co-writers Erin McCarley, Thomas Troelsen, and Kate York, and produced by Rob Knox.

“Usually I always write from something I’m feeling or an experience, but Erin came up with the idea of the concept and brought it to me. It was the idea of a guy calling a girl a bitch and having the response of ‘It takes a bitch to know a bitch.’ It was a bit of girl power thing, and we painted a picture and made a story around that. It’s a cool message if it’s said correctly.”

The vocals for “Bitch (takes one to know one)” were recorded in Nashville, with the production via Los Angeles. Though being so well-known for her work on Nashville, when it came time to create her own solo album, Stella opted to keep her creative home in Nashville’s ever-diversifying music scene, instead of decamping for other music hotspots.

“I love the creativity that comes from here and that everyone is so loving and supportive of each other,” she says. “That’s so rare and inspiring to be around. I’ll always be in Nashville. I love to go to New York or L.A., and be able to come back and have my base here.”

Later this year, she will open shows for The Chainsmokers and 5 Seconds of Summer on their North American tour–including a show at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena.

“I’m so excited. I remember when my manager told me I got the opening slot, it was my sister’s birthday and I was on the plane and I was about to take off. I was hysterically bawling and I freaked out. At that point, I’ve never toured before, so it’s crazy that my first tour is happening the same year that I will be opening for them.”

She looks at her own headlining shows as somewhat of a warmup for those opening slots.

“After I finish my tour, I feel like I’ll have ideas of what I want to change or improve on. The Chainsmokers are a totally different genre than me, so I think that’s why they asked me to do it. So hopefully what I do with my set now, it’ll just get better for those shows.”

And yes, with all of those high-profile collaborations with the likes of Halsey and Kelsea Ballerini that The Chainsmokers are known for, it’s probable that we might see Stella making a cameo during The Chainsmokers’ set.

“That’s definitely something that’s been talked about, for sure. I can imagine that happening.”

YouTube video

 

 

Dan + Shay Donate Merch Proceeds To Aid Those Impacted By Midwest Floods

Dan+Shay. Photo: Patrick Tracy

Dan + Shay are using some of their concert proceeds to help those affected by the recent floods in the Midwest. During Thursday evening’s (March 21) show in Omaha, Nebraska, the recent Grammy winners revealed they would donate proceeds from their merchandise sales to the American Red Cross.

“At the show, it was spontaneous,” the duo’s Dan Smyers said. “We met some of the people that have been affected and are hurting from this massive disaster, and we knew that we needed to give back. Just before the end of the show, we announced it from the stage. We’re thrilled to play a small part in helping rebuild the community.”

The floods followed a recent winter storm which brought snow and wind to the Rockies and Plains regions of the United States. Flooding has impacted areas of Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, and South Dakota.

Dan + Shay, whose songs “Tequila” and “Speechless” have been mainstays on the country sales and radio charts, will launch the second leg of their sold-out headlining Dan + Shay The Tour next weekend in Madison, Wisconsin. The tour runs through April, leading up to the duo joining Florida Georgia Line’s Can’t Say I Ain’t Country Tour in June.

Rising Women On The Row Spotlight: 5 Questions With NSAI’s Jennifer Turnbow

Jennifer Turnbow

MusicRow Magazine’s eighth annual Rising Women on the Row event will be held Tuesday, March 26, at Omni Hotel Nashville.

This year’s honorees include Sandi Spika Borchetta (Big Machine Label Group, Sr. VP Creative), Janine Ebach (Curb|Word Music Publishing, VP), Kelly Janson (Kelly Janson Management, Manager), Meredith Jones (Creative Artists Agency, Agent), Lenore Kinder (Paradigm Talent Agency, Agent), and Jennifer Turnbow (NSAI, Sr. Director of Operations).

Leading up to the event, MusicRow is spotlighting each honoree with a brief Q&A.

As Sr. Director of Operations at Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI), the world’s largest not-for-profit songwriters trade organization, Jennifer Turnbow oversees day-to-day operations and finances for the 50-year-old organization and its 2008 acquired entity, The Bluebird Cafe. Turnbow serves as co-director of NSAI’s annual fundraiser, Tin Pan South Songwriters Festival, which has become the largest songwriter-only festival in the U.S. over the past decade. At NSAI, she plays an integral role in advocacy for American songwriters, including on Capitol Hill for the passage of the Music Modernization Act. Since its victory, Turnbow has overseen the selection of songwriters for the board of the Mechanical Licensing Collective and Dispute Resolution and Unclaimed Funds Committees. Additionally, Turnbow staffed the Copyright Royalty Board trial for NSAI, which won songwriters the largest pay raise in digital mechanical royalty history. Her service extends to Nashville women’s organization SOURCE, where she is serving as Secretary of the Board of Directors. She is also a 2016 graduate of Leadership Music. Following her graduation from Vanderbilt University in 2005, she launched her career at NSAI as the organization’s Finance Director.

MusicRow: What is the biggest lesson on leadership you have learned in your career?
The only way to lead is by setting the example. I will never ask any of my staff members to do anything I wouldn’t gladly do alongside them and often I will, even when unnecessary, because I want them to know how much I value their work and their time.

MR: Who has been one of your biggest mentors, and what have they taught you?
Bart Herbison, NSAI’s Executive Director, is obviously my biggest mentor. Bart took a chance on me when I was 21, straight out of college and couldn’t tell you how to navigate to Music Row from my sorority house at Vanderbilt University. He has taught me so much, it’s hard to narrow it down from matters of broad scope like songwriter advocacy policy and politics and how to run a trade association, to more practical lessons like to trust my gut.

MR: Describe a time that you took a big risk in your career, and how did it pay off?
Funnily enough, probably the biggest risk in my career happened before I was even employed. When I was interviewed for the Finance Director position at NSAI, my very first real job, I was asked if I was familiar with Quickbooks, to which I answered “yes” even though I had never worked in Quickbooks in my life. It wasn’t exactly a lie…I was “familiar” that there was a product called Quickbooks, but had Bart known at the time that I had never worked in Quickbooks, I don’t think I would have been hired. I ended up being offered the job on a Friday, went to the bookstore and bought Quickbooks for Dummies that afternoon, and taught myself enough by Monday morning to not get caught in my “little white lie.”

Since I’ve been at NSAI, my biggest risk was probably advocating for producing NSAI’s 50th Anniversary show at the Ryman Auditorium in 2017, which was a huge financial risk and I had no experience producing a show of that size. We pulled it off and it led to now doing our annual awards show at the Ryman, which has really allowed us to honor songwriters in a grander way – and I’ve learned to produce a live show of that size! I’m realizing that apparently self-teaching is my preferred form of risk management!

MR: As Nashville continues to grow and evolve, what changes in the music industry excite you the most?
My work on the Music Modernization Act makes its implementation and the formation of the Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) the most exciting change for me right now. I was sitting in the room engaged in the conversation when the structure for the MLC was envisioned. Getting to witness it develop into a physical entity that will completely change the way we license digital mechanicals is pretty amazing.

MR: Favorite Nashville place to hold a business meeting/lunch?
Midtown Café and Tavern have never let me down and they are walking distance from my office.

(City National Bank, Tri Star Sports and Entertainment Group, and Loeb & Loeb are again the Presenting Sponsors for the 2019 Rising Women on the Row.)

Joe Kelly Purchases CDX, Relocates Office

Joe Kelly

Joe Kelly has become the sole owner of CDX, a delivery system for labels and artists to supply their upcoming singles to all full-time US country stations, international presenters, satellite providers, syndicators and programming consultants.

Kelly began his career working for CDX, which was owned by Country Music Hall of Fame Broadcaster Charlie Douglas and national record promotion veteran Paul Lovelace, in 1992 and remained with the company until 1999 before venturing into in-house label radio promotion.

“This is a very exciting time for us. When I started with CDX, clients’ music was distributed via the then new medium of CD,” said Kelly. “Today, our clients’ singles are digitally distributed via InstaTrack e-blast, and also included on our regular CD compilation disc.”

The new office is located at 920 Twin Elms Court, Nashville, TN 37210. Kelly can be reached at joe@cdxnashville.com or at 615-292-0123.

Chris Housman Receives Inaugural Todd Givens Memorial NSAI Scholarship

Rising songwriter-artist Chris Housman has received the inaugural Todd Givens Memorial Scholarship from the Nashville Songwriters Association International.

Originally from Hanston, Kansas (population: 200), Housman taught himself to play the fiddle at age seven. Singing followed, which led to the formation of a traveling family Bluegrass/Gospel band, opening for major country acts, and fronting a punk rock band. Since attending Belmont University, he has been actively writing songs and performing (upright bass and vocals) around the country while touring colleges.

“Chris is already making a name for himself in the industry,” said NSAI membership representative Erin Kidd. “With instinctive writing intuition and a voice that can melt hearts, he’s one of our most signable artist/writers. From our first meeting, his talent, passion, and likability has been obvious and undeniable.”

Todd Givens was the head of NSAI’s tech department and unexpectedly passed away on Feb. 27, 2018.  Givens was involved with the Screamin’ Cheetah Wheelies, and the Eric Hamilton Band for many years. Band members and front men Mike Farris of the Wheelies and Eric Hamilton have agreed to help mentor Housman and future scholarship recipients.

The Oak Ridge Boys Planning Two Dave Cobb-Produced Albums

The Oak Ridge Boys have revealed two upcoming albums, both to be helmed by Nashville producer Dave Cobb.

Cobb, known for his work with artists including Chris Stapleton and Jason Isbell, also produced the group’s 2018 release 17th Avenue Revival, and first worked with the Oaks on 2009’s The Boys Are Back. The first of the two upcoming projects will mark the group’s first Christmas album in four years, to be released later in 2019. Another album, filled with classics and standards, is slated for 2020.

“Dave Cobb has the unique ability to record in a raw, honest, almost retro way that sounds fresh,” says Oak Ridge Boys member Duane Allen. “Part of our last album with Dave was recorded around one microphone with Dave playing acoustic guitar about six feet away. He told us that he wanted us to sing ‘together,’ and listen to, and watch, each other. The result was pure magic, and we wound up recording the entire album with that same attitude.”

They will continue work with Nashville-based indie label Lightning Rod Records for the projects. Lightning Rod Records launched in 2007 and has released albums from Jason Isbell, Amanda Shires, Paul Cauthen and more.

“Partnering with the Oak Ridge Boys and Dave Cobb for last year’s 17th Avenue Revival has been one of the most enjoyable experiences of my career – both critically and commercially,” said Logan Rogers of Lightning Rod Records. “The Oaks and their team are total pros, and it’s obvious why they have been successful for so long. I’m excited to see what kind of studio magic the Oaks and Cobb create this time around.”

The Country Music Hall of Fame members, inducted in 2015, have sold more than 41 million albums, and earned more than 30 Top 10 hits, including the No. 1 singles “Elvira,” “Bobbie Sue,” “American Made,” and more.