Ashley Monroe Gives Wings To New Project ‘Sparrow’ In April

Credit: Hannah Burton

Ashley Monroe is set to release her fourth album on Warner Music Nashville, Sparrow, on April 20. The project, a followup to her Grammy-nominated LP The Blade, was produced by Dave Cobb in Nashville’s RCA Studio A and inspired in part by some turmoil and emotions from Monroe’s childhood that bubbled to the surface. “I knew I wanted to work with Dave,” Monroe says. “All of his records are consistently awesome and classic, timeless, old and new all in one.”

After losing her father when she was young, Monroe and her mother grappled with defining their new roles in his absence. Through the songs she and some of her closest collaborators, including Brendan Benson and Waylon Payne, penned, Monroe and Cobb turned the experiences into moody, orchestral recordings that explore all sides of a fully formed woman unashamed of her scars.

Monroe released the music video for the project’s first single, “Hands On You,” today.

 

YouTube video

UMG Nashville Celebrates Double No. 1 Pardi

Top (L-R): Hori Pro’s Courtney Crist, Hori Pro’s Keithan Melton, Sony/ATV’s Josh Van Valkenburg, BMI’s Bradley Collins and Word’s Janine Ebach. Bottom (L-R): Song Factory’s Jennifer Johnson, Bill Butler Music’s Bill Butler, Bart Butler, Jon Pardi, Brice Long and SESAC’s Shannan Hatch (Photo: Steve Lowry) [Click photo to enlarge]

On Wednesday (Feb. 21), Jon Pardi gathered with songwriters, friends, family, and industry executives at BMI’s Nashville offices to celebrate two consecutive chart-topping singles, “Dirt On My Boots” and “Heartache On The Dance Floor.” “Dirt On My Boots,” which marked Pardi’s second No. 1 song, was penned by BMI writers Rhett Akins and Jesse Frasure as well as ASCAP writer Ashley Gorley. “Heartache On The Dancefloor,” Pardi’s third No. 1, was co-written by BMI writers Pardi and Bart Butler, as well as SESAC writer Brice Long. Butler also served as a co-producer on Pardi’s second major label album California Sunrise, which has earned gold status.

Representatives from three performing rights organizations were on hand, including BMI’s Bradley Collins, ASCAP’s Michael Martin and SESAC’s Shannan Hatch.

Pictured (L-R): Bart Butler, Brice Long, Jesse Frasure, Ashley Gorley, Jon Pardi and Rhett Akins. Photo: Steve Lowry

Pinnacle Bank made a donation to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Among those celebrating were MusicRow Magazine’s Sherod Robertson, UMG Nashville’s Mike Dungan, Sony/ATV’s Josh Van Valkenburg, Song Factory’s Jennifer Johnson, Pardi’s manager Melanie Wetherbee, Word Country’s Janine Ebach and more.

“Thanks to everybody for coming out,” Pardi said. “It was a great year last year and it’s going to be a great year this year. All I’ve been thinking about is the third record. I’m still cutting outside songs so keep sending them, songwriters. Thank you so much for believing in me and for your great songs.” He also brought his father to the No. 1 party.

“Feb. 23, 2008 is when I moved to town and 10 years later, I have three No. 1s and we are at a double No. 1 party,” he said to the applause of the crowd. A screen displayed a photo of Pardi holding a guitar with the words “Never give Up” scratched into the wood. True to his love of a good time (and a good story), Pardi shared the story behind the photo. “We carved that in with a wine opener while we were hammered in a hotel during a radio tour, so never give up.”

Jon is currently on tour with Miranda Lambert on the Livin’ Like Hippies Tour and can also be seen out on Luke Bryan’s stadium tour later this year.

Top (L-R): Sony/ATV’s Josh Van Valkenburg, Bart Butler and BMI’s Bradley Collins.
Bottom (L-R): Jesse Frasure, Ashley Gorley, Jon Pardi and Rhett Akins. Photo: Steve Lowry

 

BMLG Creative Department Promotes Two

Big Machine Label Group has promoted two in its Creative Department. Nicole Flammia has been promoted to Sr. Creative Director, Photo & Video Production, while Seth Hellman has been promoted to Director, Creative Content/Asset Manager. Both Flammia and Hellman will report to Sandi Spika Borchetta, SVP Creative.

“Nicole is the utmost professional and an absolute joy to work with,” said Borchetta. “Her ambition and passion to find the best for our artists never stops and we appreciate her dedication. She is an important gear in our machine!”

A graduate of Belmont University, Flammia joined BMLG in 2015 with a seasoned background in video production and will continue to collaborate with the full roster of artists in managing music video and photo shoot production.

Borchetta comments, “Seth has been an amazing asset to our Creative Team. His pre-law degree mixed with analytical sensibility, sharp technical skills and creative eye are perfect for his role at Big Machine. We are fortunate to have his dedication and hard work ethic.”

A graduate of Colorado Mesa University, Hellman joined BMLG in 2011 and will continue to collaborate with the full roster of artists, managing visual content needs such as behind the scenes and EPK videos as well as asset management and delivery.

Flammia can be reached at Nicole.Flammia@bmlg.net and 615-846-7671.
Hellman can be reached at Seth.Hellman@bmlg.net and 615-345-4524.

Shane McAnally On SMACKSongs’ Five CMA Triple Play Honors, Country Music’s “Great Divide”

Pictured (L-R): Matthew Ramsey, Trevor Rosen, Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne

This week, Nashville-based company SMACKSongs, led by writer/producer Shane McAnally, Josh OsborneMichael McAnally Baum, Robin Palmer and Robert Carlton, was honored with five CMA Triple Play Awards. McAnally was honored with two trophies, which celebrate the six No. 1 songs he had a hand in writing which topped the charts in 2017. Fellow SMACKSongs writers Trevor Rosen, Josh Osborne, and Matt Ramsey were also each honored with a CMA Triple Play award, for penning three songs each that topped the country charts in 2017.

“The whole concept of the Triple Play is a really cool way to acknowledge songwriters,” Shane McAnally tells MusicRow. “It’s so hard to get a No. 1 song. It takes so many years, and so many relationships, so much has to fall in your favor, and then for that to happen three times in a year… lot more goes wrong for songwriters than right. People think that every time we write a song, it gets cut, and every time it gets cut, it’s a single and it must go to No. 1. There are so many other songs that don’t get there.

With five Triple Play awards for four writers, SMACKSongs leads the independent publishing community with the most awarded songs and writers for the 2017 CMA Triple Play Awards.

McAnally was honored for “Different For Girls” (Dierks Bentley), “I Met A Girl” (William Michael Morgan),  “Body Like A Back Road” (Sam Hunt), “If I Told You” (Darius Rucker), “Drinkin’ Problem” (Midland) and “Unforgettable” (Thomas Rhett).

Osborne was honored for “Setting The World On Fire” (Kenny Chesney/Pink),  “Body Like A Back Road,” and “Make You Miss Me” (both recorded by Sam Hunt).

Rosen was honored for two of his Old Dominion hits including “No Such Thing As A Broken Heart,” “Song For Another Time,” as well as Morgan’s “I Met A Girl,” while his Old Dominion bandmate and fellow songwriter Matt Ramsey was feted for “Song For Another Time,” “No Such Thing As A Broken Heart,” and “Make You Miss Me.”

The Triple Play honors cap off an admirable past five years for SMACKSongs. In that time, the company has earned 39 total No. 1 songs. That number does not double-count songs written by more than one SMACKSongs writer.

“The four of us are great friends. We are family,” McAnally says of his fellow SMACKSongs writers. “We were working together in several capacities. Trevor was the first writer I ever signed [to SMACKSongs]. Josh has only been here a couple of years and we had a lot of success with him even before he joined. We wrote together and it seemed like a natural fit. Same with Matt Ramsey.

“I think the timing was just right for all of us. It may not be forever. I would love to think that it is, but I’m also realistic enough to know that I would rather have them as friends than us stay too long in a business partnership. As artists grow up and as Old Dominion becomes such a viable machine of making hits, those guys may see other reasons to develop their own thing but for now it’s been a great relationship.”

It’s not lost on McAnally the irony that two of his Triple Play honors come from songs that reside at opposite ends of the country-pop spectrum, with William Michael Morgan’s “I Met A Girl,” and Sam Hunt’s smash “Body Like A Back Road.” He says country music’s current landscape mirrors where the country is politically.

“What seems to be happening is the great divide,” he says. “Things are going, which is honestly sort of reflective of what is going on politically. There’s not a lot of middle and I think that anything that is safe or in the middle right now, you might have a radio hit, I don’t know that it’s building careers, though. What is building careers are people that are far to the left and far to the right. The more pop we get, the countrier we get. I think that’s just what happens when one side gets real extreme, the other side does, too. People say, ‘Oh, it’s getting traditional again.’ It is, but with that come the answer another way.”

Though the spectrum of production choices in country music continues to broaden, McAnally says it is the stories behind the songs that keeps the music unified. He offers “I Met A Girl,” which he co-wrote with Rosen and Sam Hunt, as an example.

“We had been trying to write for Sam’s first record. During the process of making Sam’s first record, writing that song felt like a pivotal moment. When we did the demo for ‘I Met A girl,’ we really started to find a sound. We thought that song was an integral part of that, but what happened was it kicked down the door to go on to songs like ‘Take Your Time.’ It became a different part of Sam’s repertoire. It didn’t really work for Montevallo, and what’s funny about that song is that in this conversation of pop vs. country, everyone sees Sam as far left, so it’s funny that William Michael Morgan, who is the extreme opposite of that, would be the one to have a hit on it. It just tells you that the soul of all these songs is the story. The production is different, but the songs are the same. ‘I Met A Girl,’ with the right production, would have fit on Montevallo, too.”

Kid Rock And Ken Levitan Join Forces To Represent New Act Sweet Tea Trio

Kid Rock, Sweet Tea Trio, Kev Levitan

Rising country group Sweet Tea Trio has signed an exclusive management deal with Kid Rock (Robert Ritchie) and Vector Management founder Ken Levitan. The joint venture marks a first for the industry veterans, who worked together early in Kid Rock’s career.

Ritchie discovered the trio, made up of Alabama natives Victoria Camp, Savannah Coker and Kate Falcon, after they posted a video performing one of their original songs on YouTube. Ritchie invited them to perform on his eighth annual Chillin The Most Cruise last year.

“These young ladies are some of the most talented, kind hearted and hard working singers and players I have ever met,” remarks Ritchie (Kid Rock). “They are already becoming fast scholars of the road and writing songs. In my opinion they pick up where the Dixie Chicks and Pistol Annies meet. They are 100% country and I look forward to sharing my 30 years in this business to get them an honest shot at the big time.“

“The three of us feel so honored that Kid Rock and Ken (Levitan) have given us this incredible opportunity. The entire team with Kid Rock and Vector feels like a family and we cannot wait to see what the future holds,” says Sweet Tea Trio. “We give all the glory to God and we are so excited! We love our country music family and are looking forward to making music, hitting the road, and hopefully giving country music a sugar rush!”

The Trio will open for country group Alabama later this month, and will continue opening for Kid Rock on his American Rock n Roll Tour. They released a self-titled EP last June produced by Jason Wyatt, which debuted at No.11 on the iTunes Country chart.

Cindy Mabe Named Latest Honoree At Country Music Hall Of Fame’s Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum

Back Row (L-R): Gary Scruggs; Dave Berryman, president of Gibson Guitar Corp.; Sarah Trahern, chief executive officer of the Country Music Association; former Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum honorees Nancy Shapiro, Bonnie Garner and Kay Clary; Abi Tapia, senior public programs manager at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum; and Kyle Young, chief executive officer of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Front Row: Former Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum honoree Liz Thiels and 2018 honoree Cindy Mabe   Photo Credit: Erin Allender

Cindy Mabe, President of Universal Music Group Nashville, was honored by the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Wednesday night at its 11th annual Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum in the Museum’s Ford Theater. The Forum is presented annually to honor a music industry leader who exemplifies the legacy of Louise Scruggs.

During an in-depth interview, Mabe discussed her career and the importance of maintaining an artist-centered focus while embracing industry change. She has used a unique marketing approach to help guide many recording artists to commercial success, including Luke Bryan, Alan Jackson, Brad Paisley, Chris Stapleton, Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban. Mabe began her career at Arista and RCA Records before moving to Capitol Records Nashville to head the marketing department. She rose to senior vice president at the label and helped oversee the merger of Capitol/EMI with Universal Music Group in 2012. Mabe is the highest-ranking female on the Billboard Power 100 working in country music. Mabe was also named as one of MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row in 2013.

Past honorees of the Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum include Denise Stiff, Liz Thiels, Mary Martin, Bonnie Garner, Sarah Trahern, Nancy Shapiro, Kay Clary, Jo Walker-Meador, Dixie Hall and Traci Thomas.

Weekly Chart Report 2/23/18

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

DisClaimer: Bluegrass In The Springtime

Today’s stroll through the field of bluegrass is as refreshing as springtime.

Highlights include outstanding outings by such stars of the genre as The Grascals, The Infamous Stringdusters and Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver.

Finishing in a dead heat for Disc of the Day are the chart-topping Lonesome River Band and the reigning Vocal Group of the Year Flatt Lonesome.

Our DisCovery Award goes to The Farm Hands.

LONESOME RIVER BAND/Wrong Road Again
Writers: Allen Reynolds; Producers: Lonesome River Band; Publishers: Universal Songs of PolyGram, BMI
– Perched at No. 1 on the current bluegrass chart is this lively remake of Crystal Gayle’s 1974 country smash. Award winning Sammy Shelor’s rippling banjo leads the sprightly way with the stellar harmony singing of his band mates turning the tune into an extra audio delight. This veteran group has long been one of my faves. Here’s one more reason why.

DOYLE LAWSON & QUICKSILVER/Life To My Days
Writers:Jerry Salley/Lee Black/Devin McGlamery; Producers:Doyle Lawson; Publishers: Banner/Extry Good/Christian Taylor/Winding Way/Dixie River, SESAC/BMI/ASCAP
– Year after year, bandleader and Bluegrass Hall of Famer Lawson attracts and trains his genre’s finest vocalists. This philosophical song about making the most of your time on earth deservedly enters the bluegrass top-10 this month.

THE GRASCALS/Sleepin’ With the Reaper
Writers: Becky Buller/Grant Williams; Producers: The Grascals; Publishers: Goodnight Sparky/Fun Money, BMI
– The new album by these Nashville favorites is titled Before Breakfast, and it kicks off with this haunting story song. The married guy gets in over his head with a temptress who has dark intentions. Co-writer Buller, by the way, has a new solo CD coming out next month.

VALERIE SMITH & LIBERTY PIKE/Small Town Hero
Writers: Sarah Majors/Penny Clark/Katy Clark; Producers: Valerie Smith; Publishers: Nashgrass/Sony-ATV Harmony, ASCAP
– A couple of counties south of Music City lies the charming village of Bell Buckle, TN. Smith rules the bluegrass kingdom there, issuing a string of homemade CDs. Her sturdy, earnest voice anchors this ode to small-town values. It’s the theme song of her current collection, Small Town Heroes.

DONNA ULISSE/Back Home Feelin’ Again
Writers: Donna Ulisse/Marc Rossi; Producers: Doyle Lawson; Publishers: Uncle Hadley/Marc My Words, ASCAP
– Singer-songwriter Ulisse is a leading light of today’s influx of female bluegrass performers. She’s currently midway up the Bluegrass Unlimited chart and climbing with this lilting, winsome, nostalgic ditty. She is the reigning Bluegrass Songwriter of the Year whose current collection is titled Breakin’ Easy.

STEVE MARTIN & THE STEEP CANYON RANGERS/Caroline
Writers: Steve Martin; Producers: Peter Asher; Publishers: None listed
– Movie star Martin is merely an adequate banjo player. The Steep Canyon Rangers are a somewhat average band. But in this case, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Together, they create delightful listening experiences like this comedic tune about a guy who can’t help talking about his ex while on a dinner date. Taken from The Long Awaited Album (yes, that’s the CD’s title), it has just entered the charts.

THE FARM HANDS/Rural Route
Writers: Daryl Mosley; Producers: Lonnie Lassiter & Ethan Burkhardt; Publishers: Songs of Daryl, ASCAP
– Everyone is picking their brains out here, guitar and dobro, in particular. The toe-tapping tune skips along with a built-in smile. The band lacks a distinctive lead vocalist, but when the four members sing together in harmony, magic happens. Other highlights of its new Colors CD include remakes of “Nashville Skyline Rag,” “They Don’t Make ‘Em Like My Daddy Anymore” and “Sin City.”

THE INFAMOUS STRINGDUSTERS/What’s Going On
Writers: Brooks/Cleveland/Gaye; Producers: James Tuttle & Jon Gold; Publishers: none listed
– Marvin Gaye goes bluegrass? I’m afraid so, complete with a dazzling acoustic instrumental jam in mid song. These hot-picking crazies are in the midst of a series of cover recordings of rock classics. The current batch also includes tunes by My Morning Jacket, The Allman Brothers, Daft Punk and The Cure.

SHANNON SLAUGHTER/That Old Country Road
Writers: Rusey Hendrix/Shannon Slaughter; Producers: Wes Easter, Randy Kohrs & Shannon Slaughter; Publishers: Sonic Hill/Elite Circuit, no performance rights listed
– Slaughter is perhaps best known in bluegrass circles as a songwriter for Blue Highway, Lonesome River Band, IIIrd Tyme Out, Lou Reid, Larry Stephenson and others. His second solo CD, Never Standing Still, illustrates that he’s a fine interpreter of his own stuff. His homespun tenor conveys loads of warmth on this jaunty romantic ditty.

FLATT LONESOME/All My Life
Writers: Paul Harrigill/Tim Stafford; Producers: Flatt Lonesome & Danny Roberts; Publishers: Truegrass/Daniel House, BMI
– With two consecutive IBMA Vocal Group of the Year honors under its belt, Flatt Lonesome is flying high. It’s a measure of how great these six musicians are that this somber yet uptempo hit single isn’t even the strongest track on its CD Silence In These Walls. The absolutely jaw dropping gospel ballad “Draw Me Near,” the heart-tugging, lovelorn “It’s Just Sad” and the soaring, contemplative “Where Do You Go” are just three other standouts on an album that has brilliance around every corner. You won’t find better country picking and singing anywhere on this planet.

Golden Woman: Maren Morris Celebrates First No. 1 Song

Pictured (L-R): busbee, Laura Veltz, Maren Morris, Jimmy Robbins. Photo: John Shearer [Click photo to enlarge]

Last night (Feb. 21), Maren Morris returned to what she called “the scene of the crime,” when she brought the Music City community to music venue The Crying Wolf in East Nashville, the place where Morris held her debut album launch party two years ago, and also where she shot the cover for her debut Columbia Nashville album, Hero.

On this evening, Morris and company were celebrating her first solo No. 1 single, “I Could Use A Love Song.”

“I remember three or four years ago coming to the No.1 party for Little Big Town’s ‘Tornado’” recalled Morris, a BMI songwriter. “I was standing at the back at BMI and just thinking, ‘I want to have that validation someday. I want to be making a speech like this and Jody Williams always assured me that I would someday.”

She also thanked her co-writers Jimmy Robbins and Laura Veltz, as well as longtime champions, Big Yellow Dog Music’s Carla Wallace, and her manager Janet Weir.

“Carla, you were one of the first people to sit me down and forcefully say, ‘You are an artist. You’re not just a writer. Stop saying you are just a writer, cause that’s not true. I remember really needing that fire under my a**. Janet, thank you for getting so excited with me about my demos. I feel like I can talk to you about anything and you are right there with me. You inspire me every day to be the example to someone, that you don’t need to be a b**ch to get things done.

“This is the speech I’ve wanted to make for so long,” she continued, tearing up before thanking her husband-to-be, fellow artist Ryan Hurd. “Ryan, I really could have used a love song years ago and every day you give that to me. I can’t wait to marry you next month.”

“I Could Use A Love Song,” which has also been certified Gold, is the third single from Morris’ debut album on Columbia Nashville.

“No matter how long of a career I get, this will always be one of the most important ones I’ve been a part of,” said ASCAP writer Jimmy Robbins. “You are two of my favorite people in the world.” He also gave thanks to busbee, Weir, as well as to Round Hill and Columbia Nashville, and to his wife Sarah Robbins.

“She was still working at Big Yellow Dog when this song happened, and it was because of her that the session happened. You are everything. You are amazing. The biggest gift ever was that this song went No.1 the week our first baby was born. So I felt like it was God saying, ‘You know, Sarah, you are awesome.’”

Front Row (L-R): busbee, Laura Veltz, Maren Morris, Jimmy Robbins. Back Row (L-R): ASCAP’s Mike Sistad, BMLG’s Mike Molinar, BMI’s Jody Williams, Big Yellow Dog’s Carla Wallace, Sony Nashville’s Randy Goodman, Janet Weir, and Round Hill’s Josh Saxe. Photo: John Shearer [Click photo to enlarge]

BMI writer Laura Veltz was moved to tears, saying, “This is a very meaningful day. These two people are my community. I moved to Nashville 10 years ago…I’m so thankful for Nashville and I love this community of people so much.”

Among those celebrating were Big Yellow Dog’s Carla Wallace, Big Machine Music’s Mike Molinar, Round Hill Music’s Sarah Robbins and Mark Brown, Sony Music Nashville’s Randy Goodman and Shane Allen, and Morris’ co-producer on the track busbee.

Others who were on hand to celebrate include MusicRow Magazine’s Sherod Robertson, CMA’s Brandi Simms, and Country Aircheck’s Lon Helton, who noted that Morris is a rare artist to have earned Grammy, CMA, and ACM Awards, all before notching her first solo No. 1 song. Pinnacle Bank was also a partner at the No. 1 party.

“What’s going on with Sony Music Nashville now, in the past three years was defined in such a huge part by you Maren and you Janet,” Sony’s Randy Goodman said. “You have redefined the legacy of these great imprints, of Columbia and brought a new sense of purpose and focus for us and you chose to plant your flag with us and we will never, ever forget that. It has defined who we are and the success that we are having. We are very, very proud of that.

“Your decision to come with us and be with us meant the world. It changed our dynamic, it changed our culture, it changed our future and I can’t tell you how much that means and Janet you are part of that as well. Thank you for believing in us. That has meant the world.”

BMLG Records Adds Riley Green To Roster

Pictured (L-R): Back Row – BMLG Records SVP Promotion Matthew Hargis, BMLG Records National Director of Promotion Michelle Kammerer, BMLG CMO Mike Rittberg, Rogue Management’s Joe Lee, Greenberg Traurig attorney Jess Rosen, BMLG EVP of Legal Affairs Malcolm Mimms; Front Row – BMLG Records President/BMLG EVP Jimmy Harnen, Riley Green, and BMLG President/CEO Scott Borchetta

Riley Green is having a good week. He has just been announced as the newest artist on the BMLG roster, following the announcement of his signing to music publisher Warner/Chappell Nashville earlier this week.

The Alabama native joins an imprint which includes Florida Georgia Line, Brett Young, Drake White, Danielle Bradbery and Ryan Follese. Led by President Jimmy Harnen, BMLG Records recently celebrated its 25th No. 1 radio hit.

“As the industry shifts and musical tastes change, we will continue to stay on the cutting edge of how artists connect and break through,” says BMLG’s Scott Borchetta. “Understanding all media and opening new doors is essential. Riley has great natural instincts on how to connect in our multimedia world and is perfectly suited to take full advantage of BMLG’s entire platform.”

“Last November I first heard Riley’s music and instantly became a HUGE fan!” exclaimed Harnen. “Shortly after that I experienced two sold-out shows with screaming fans each night singing along to every word. Riley is one of the most charismatic, yet down to earth people I’ve ever met so we are WAY in!”

“I signed with BMLG Records because they truly love my music,” added Green. “They are very passionate about what they do and understand what I’m trying to do. I felt like I was a part of their team as soon as I met Jimmy Harnen. His love for music and the artist is obvious. I’m confident they will be able to get my message out to country music fans everywhere.”

Green’s original music has already tallied millions of streams while his latest music video for “Bury Me In Dixie” has been viewed over a million times since last fall. An avid outdoorsman, Green is also known for starring in his own hunting show on DirtRoadTV.