CMA Awards Final Nominees To Be Announced Sept. 4

Pictured (clockwise, L-R): Lauren Alaina, Dustin Lynch, Brothers Osborne

Brothers Osborne, Lauren Alaina and Dustin Lynch will announce final nominees for The 51st Annual CMA Awards, Country Music’s Biggest Night, live from New York’s Times Square on Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 4 on ABC’s Good Morning America. Brothers Osborne will close out the Labor Day show with a performance of “It Ain’t My Fault.”

“The CMA Awards are my favorite time of the year. It’s exciting to honor Country Music’s legacy, celebrate today’s artists, and reveal the superstars of tomorrow,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer. “Unlike any other awards show, we represent a rich history of one individual music genre. And to have these three acts unveil our nominees on a national platform signifies a new era of talent and the continued growth of the industry, a core pillar of our organization.”

Nominees in select categories will be announced in the 8:30 AM/ET half-hour segment of the top-rated morning news program. The announcement will also be available via livestream on ABCnews.com/live.

Immediately following the show, the remaining categories, as well as the CMA Broadcast Awards nominees, will be revealed live on GoodMorningAmerica.com, as well as via Good Morning America’s Facebook page and YouTube channel.

 

Performers Announced For 16th Annual Americana Honors & Awards Show

Jim Lauderdale and Buddy Miller are returning as hosts of the upcoming 16th annual Americana Honors & Awards  Show and as musical director of the Americana All-Star Band. The show takes place at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 13 at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. Miller has once again assembled an incomparable band this year featuring Larry Campbell, Robbie Crowell, Jim Hoke, Jerry Pentecost, Chris Wood and the incredible McCrary Sisters.

Performers for this year’s show include Billy Bragg, Brent Cobb, Robert Cray & Hi Rhythm, Rodney Crowell, Iris DeMent, Drive-By Truckers, Rhiannon Giddens, Joe Henry, Hurray for the Riff Raff, Jason Isbell, The Lumineers, Lori McKenna, Van Morrison, Graham Nash, Old Crow Medicine Show, Sam Outlaw, Margo Price, John Prine, Amanda Shires, Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives, and Aaron Lee Tasjan.

Tickets for the 16th annual Americana Honors & Awards are available for purchase with an Americanafest conference registration, which can be bought here.

Cheri Cranford Joins AristoPR As PR/Special Events Manager

Cheri Cranford

Cheri Cranford has joined AristoPR as PR and Special Events Manager. In her new role Cranford will work with the PR team in the preparation and execution of PR campaigns as well as the planning and activation of events.

Originally from New York, Cranford moved to Nashville over 35 years ago. The industry veteran spent most of her career at Sony Music Nashville, formerly Arista Nashville and RCA Label Group, as Manager, Office Services and Executive Assistant to the music industry’s top label-heads. She handled all corporate events for Sony, including efforts surrounding the ACM awards, CMA awards, CMT awards, and the GRAMMY awards and also oversaw the planning and execution of the popular Sony Boat experience during Country Radio Seminar for over 10 years. Most recently, she served as Manager, Human Resources and Executive Assistant to GM/SVP, Program Sales at Rural Media Group/RFD-TV, and General Manager at Streamsound Records.

“Cheri is excellent at what she does,” said AristoMedia Group co-owner and AristoPR President, Christy Walker-Watkins. Her diverse experience working in our industry has provided her with a pulse on many areas in which our company operates, and we are thrilled to have her join our team.” Watkins adds, “Live event opportunities have become a fast-growing segment of our company. Comprised of marketers, branding experts, conceptualists, writers, designers, event planners and consummate tastemakers, Cheri’s strong skills suit the team and the position perfectly.”

“It is an honor and privilege to work with Christy, Matt and the amazing team at AristoMedia,” said Cranford about the new position. “Through the years, I’ve had the pleasure of working with Jeff Walker and his company, and I am truly excited about this opportunity. I look forward to this next chapter and working with the team to take the already successful AristoMedia to the next level.”

Lee Ann Womack Plots Fall Tour Dates Surrounding Upcoming Album

Lee Ann Womack has revealed additional full-band tour dates in support of her forthcoming album The Lonely, The Lonesome & The Gone, which releases Oct. 27 via ATO Records. The dates include intimate performances at LA’s Troubadour and Brooklyn’s Rough Trade, where she will perform The Lonely, The Lonesome & The Gone in its entirety.

In addition, Womack will return to this year’s AmericanaFest with two special performances. On Thursday, Sept. 14, she’ll play her annual Lee Ann Womack & Friends show at the Music City Roots Tent (at Peabody and 6th Ave). The night will include an exciting lineup of all-star guests, to be announced soon.

On Saturday, Sept. 16, Womack will perform a stripped-down set at the Country Music Hall of Fame’s Ford Theatre, followed by and Q&A with journalist and author Peter Cooper, where she’ll discuss her East Texas upbringing and diverse musical influences that shaped The Lonely, The Lonesome & The Gone.

Produced by Womack’s husband Frank Liddell and largely recorded at the legendary SugarHill Studios in Houston, Texas, the album features songs mostly co-written by Womack.

Upcoming tour dates:
Sept. 8 – The Family Arena – St. Charles, MO*
Sept. 9 – U.S. Cellular Center – Cedar Rapids, IA*
Sept. 10 – St. Croix Casino – Turtle Lake, WI
Sept. 14 – AmericanaFest, Music City Roots Tent – Nashville, TN
Sept. 16 – AmericanaFest, Country Music Hall of Fame – Nashville, TN
Sept. 22 – Charleston Civic Center – Charleston, WV*
Sept. 23 – Erie Insurance Center – Erie, PA*
Sept. 28 – Trans-Pecos Festival – Marfa, TX
Oct. 7 – Museum of Appalachia – Clinton, TN
Oct. 20 – Music In The Mill – Hickory, NC
Oct. 27 – Resch Center – Green Bay, WI*
Oct. 28 – Target Center – Minneapolis, MN*
Oct. 29 – Bridge View Center – Ottumwa, IA
Nov. 1 – The Troubadour – West Hollywood, CA – tickets here
Nov. 3 – Lafayette Cajundome – Lafayette, LA*
Nov. 4 – Bell County Expo – Belton, TX*
Nov. 7 – Rough Trade – Brooklyn, NY – tickets here
Jan. 5 – The MusicFest at Steamboat – Steamboat, CO
Jan. 23 – Kent State Universtiy at Tuscarawas – New Philadelphia, PA
Feb. 4 – Cayamo Cruise – New Orleans, LA
Feb. 16 – Arizona Musicfest – Scottsdale, AZ

* denotes show w. Alan Jackson

Charity Notes: Chris Young, Lady Antebellum, Eric Church

Chris Young, Lady Antebellum Help Those Affected By Hurricane Harvey

Chris Young has launched a GoFundMe to provide direct support to the victims of Hurricane Harvey, and donated $100,000 to benefit the Red Cross and other local disaster relief organizations throughout Texas. While Young is a native of Tennessee, his Texas roots run deep – not only does he have family and close friends in the path of the hurricane, Chris lived in Arlington before signing with RCA Records, has toured extensively throughout the state and owns a home in the direct eye of the storm.

“As everyone knows, Texas was hit Friday by Hurricane Harvey which made landfall as a category four hurricane, the largest storm to hit the area in decades,” said Young. “Port Aransas, Rockport, Corpus Christi, Houston and so many other places are going to be dealing with so much damage and loss of life for a long time to come. I’m worried about the people there — my friends, family and neighbors — and I want to help. I’m starting this GoFundMe campaign in an effort to help everyone in Texas that has been affected by this hurricane.”

To donate, visit gofundme.com.

Trio Lady Antebellum is also pitching in to help those affected by Hurricane Harvey. After the trio was forced to cancel their Houston show on Saturday (Aug. 26), the band decided to donate all merchandise sales from Friday’s Dallas show to Hurricane Harvey relief efforts.

 

Eric Church Band’s Sixth Annual Put A Club In My Hand Tournament Raises Funds For MusiCares

Pictured (L-R): Michael Todd (ECB Crew), Marshall Alexander (ECB Tour Staff), Christina Scholz (MusiCares), Craig Wright (drums), Driver Williams (electric guitar), Lee Hendricks (bass), Jeff Hyde (Ace. Guitar). Photo: David Schenk

The Eric Church Band held its sixth annual “Put a Club In My Hand” golf tournament raising $203,818 for MusiCares®, the charitable arm of The Recording Academy® which provides a safety net of assistance for those in the music industry to help with medical, financial, and personal emergencies. The invitation-only tournament was held Monday, Aug. 21 at Gaylord Springs Golf Links in Nashville. With this year’s contribution, the tournament has raised nearly $850,000 for the charity since its inception in 2012.

Presented by EMI Nashville and produced by Big Hearted Babes, the sold-out, all-day event that included an 18-hole scramble for 156 golfers including artists, musicians, tour staff, music industry professionals and more was supported by 29 sponsors including EMI Nashville, Messina Touring Group, Q Prime, All Access Coach Leasing, William Morris Endeavor, Sig Sauer, AB Jets and Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey family of brands.

 

The Swon Brothers Announce Fall Tour

Zach and Colton, The Swon Brothers, aren’t pulling any punches as they gear up for their About Last Night Tour, which begins on Sept. 1 in Port Lavaca, Texas, with a string of full-out dates pushing through the end of the year.

The brothers, who have been performing professionally since childhood, are excited to unveil a brand new stage set and some rocking new music for their fans.  They will be joined on select dates by singer/songwriter and fellow Voice alum, Caroline Glaser.

“We take our live show very seriously because we always want to give our audiences something special and we are so excited about this tour,” says Colton Swon.

“From the stage design to the set list, we’ve had so much fun planning this and we cannot wait to get out on the road!” says Zach Swon.

“About Last Night” Tour 
Sept. 1 – Port Lavaca, TX
Sept. 7 – Huntsville, AL
Sept. 8 – Morganton, NC
Sept. 9 – Buckhannon, WV *
Sept. 15 – Rockaway Beach, NY *
Sept. 16 – Hershey, PA
Oct. 6 – Aurora, CO
Oct. 8 – Highlands, NC
Oct. 20 – Flint, MI *
Oct. 21 – Wind Lake, WI *
Nov. 11 – Tulsa, OK

*featuring Caroline Glaser

More dates to be announced.

Kenny Chesney Says Farewell To Summer With Record-Breaking Boston Stadium Shows

Photos by Jill Trunnell

Kenny Chesney pulled off two more record-breaking shows in Boston last weekend, playing to a record 121,624 people over two nights at Gillette Stadium. The summer-ending stadium shows have become a tradition for Chesney, who took 2017 off from touring but still hit the city to play for his No Shoes legion of fans there.

“I had waited all summer to get to these shows,” said Chesney. “It takes a lot of focus to make records, but it’s the No Shoes Nation that feeds me. When we started listening to the tapes for the live record, it really struck me how much this music means – and how much the people who come out to these shows feed my soul. There are no words for it… beyond, just, ‘wow. Obviously, we’re not in stadium mode, so we made the decision to really lean into the music, really put the focus there. We’d not gotten to play these songs – and these two shows were our tour end without the tour!”

Saturday night’s show included a special guest: Chesney brought out his good friend Uncle Kracker for a four-song mini-set that included “When The Sun Goes Down,” “Follow Me,” “Midnight Rider/Cowboy” and “Drift Away.” He also introduced his mother to the crowd to resounding cheers during the show and reminded fans about Kelly Swanson, the fan/cancer patient from the previous year who’d not wanted to take her ball cap off, but ended up rubbing bare heads with Chesney. He brought her out onstage and she thanked the No Shoes Nation for the strength and inspiration to carry her through her battle with cancer.

The shows, the 16th and 17th appearances in Boston for Chesney, bring No Shoes Nation’s ticket total to 968,612 since 2005.

Carter Winter Signs With Roc Nation

Carter Winter has signed a publishing deal with Roc Nation.

Winter recently finished his second studio project, The Whiskey In Me, which was produced by Mark Bright and Chad Carlson and reached the No. 4 spot on iTunes and No. 34 on Billboard‘s country albums chart. He is a spokesperson for Durango Boots and has his own line of boots coming out soon.

“I signed with Roc Nation and could not be more excited or thankful to be part of this incredible family,” said Winter. “To have the brilliant individuals associated with this business and movement believe in me is more than I could have ever imagined. Love the ones who love you. Do the best for those who want the best for you.”

Roc Nation announced a publishing partnership with Warner/Chappell Music last year as well as a joint venture, Rhythm House, with songwriter/producer/publisher/DJ Jesse Frasure.

Honor Thy Music: Preserving Country Music History In The Digital Age

When iconic country songwriter Bob McDill left his life’s work—217 legal pads filled with handwritten lyrics to more than 200 recorded songs, some of which would become classics like Alan Jackson’s “Gone Country” or Keith Whitley’s “Don’t Close Your Eyes”—it was a boon for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.

“These are like finding lost books of the bible or apocryphal pieces that people talk about,” Carolyn Tate, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Sr. VP of Museum Services, tells MusicRow. “To find a body of work that has been saved or put to paper like that is phenomenal.”

Donations such as McDill’s are also increasingly rare, in an age where songwriters rely more on computers than paper when crafting country radio’s latest hits.

“These days when you go into a writing room, nine out of 10 songwriters open up their computer,” says Kix Brooks, who has made several donations to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum over the course of his 30-plus year career.

“The thing they most love [at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum] are those handwritten song lyrics for the songs that you were working on that turned out to be hits,” he says. “I can’t imagine how much paper I’ve dumped over the years that they would have cared about and looking back, fans would have too. But I did find a piece of ‘Red Dirt Road,’ and a piece of ‘Only In America,’ where I was working on it. Some of the lyrics I started with, kind of made me smile, but they were happy to get those. I wish I had done a better job of sending that stuff.”

“As historians, we have to point out how strong the written word is,” Tate says. “We hope it sends a message to other songwriters and folks in town that these things are so meaningful to history and take another look around their own basements.”

While country music fans are no doubt familiar with the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s ever-rotating exhibits, as well as the 776-seat CMA Theater, 213-seat Ford Theater, the Taylor Swift Education Center and the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s work with Hatch Show Print and RCA Studio B, the operation has long chronicled the complex and far-reaching history of country music’s stars and industry members.

Since 1987, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum has been accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, which certifies that the museum operates and manages its collection of more than 2+ million artifacts at the highest standard of quality. Those items include 200,000+ recordings, as well as stage costumes, manuscripts, instruments, and more eccentric pieces including artwork from painter and muralist Thomas Hart Benton.

Accreditation with the American Alliance of Museums requires a tedious reaccreditation process every 10 years. The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is one of only 1,000 museums nationwide that have earned that accreditation.

Pictured (L-R): Governor Haslam, Bob McDill, and Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Kyle Young

In the quest to expand on the museum’s archives, Tate and her team regularly visit with artists, songwriters, industry members, as well as families and estates of artists, seeking new items to be cataloged and archived.

“We are the most careful movers in town and we are free,” Tate says. “We go in with white gloves and pick though delicate items. We always respect that someone has let us in their homes and that they are letting us handle their history. Historically-savvy industry members will come to us and say, ‘I’m closing this office and we are moving. Come and look through our documents and files and see what the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum needs.”

Once items are brought back to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, they are cataloged and photographed, and meticulously maintained. The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s 43,000 square feet of dedicated archival storage includes space for digitizing older documents, and a luthier shop for maintaining musical instruments.

“We spend a lot of time and resources collecting born digital items and converting them to make sure the data doesn’t become corrupt,” Tate says.

Tate says it is not only imperative for artists, but for publishers, publicists, performing rights organizations, recording studios, radio stations, labels, management companies, talent agencies and more to donate items and correspondence to help preserve the history of country music.

In the digital age, it is not only written lyrics that are increasingly important, but the myriad of documents that are now routinely sent electronically, which chronicle the industry’s history—press releases, calendars, set lists, day sheets, recording studio time logs, contracts, publishing and/or royalty statements and more. Items that seem mundane in the light of day-to-day operations for most music industry members, including datebooks, calendars, tour itineraries, set lists and journals, can prove invaluable in documenting where the industry was and what was happening at any point in an artist’s career.

“Things that seem out dated now are an incredibly important look back at that time in history,” Tate says. “We have a diary here Janie Fricke’s, before she got her own record deal. She was doing demos, so she would be singing for Coca-Cola in the morning and then she would be cutting her own songs in the afternoon. The variety of her sessions with singers and musicians in town is huge because it speaks to that incredible breadth of work that make up Nashville.”

Kix Brooks

“When I first got to town, the Hall of Fame was one of the first places I went,” recalls Brooks. “And it was exciting to see all those things and the way they had been kept. After decades in a duo, you collect so much stuff. We bought a warehouse to keep this stuff in, and we called the Hall of Fame and said, ‘My kids don’t want all this stuff. We are getting to the point of what do we do with it?’ It’s exciting that they really do care about it, and humbling that memorabilia like the awards, or those envelopes that had your name on them when you opened them, are valuable.”

“If you are managing an artist, you could be thinking about everything that is going out on your artist or if it is their first arena tour or first opening slot for a superstar,” Tate says. “Everybody is in the business of music should be documenting those moments. Bring those to us.”

Tate notes Sony Music Nashville’s Luke Combs and his team as one recent example of those forward-thinking organizations. Tate recalls that in commemorating Combs’ first No. 1 party celebrating “Hurricane,” his team gave the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum a shirt from his first music video.

“That was a great idea,” Tate says. “You can bet that his early career is documented at the Hall of Fame now, and it was as easy as them being gracious enough to say, ‘This is important to be mentioned,’ and to be given the artifacts.”

Items such as those from Combs and Fricke are essential, personal mementos that enrich the story of country music because they document some of the earliest moments from an artist’s career.

“They are not all Gold records or awards, but they are precious to the history of country music,” Tate says.

To donate digital items to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, email: archives@countrymusichalloffame.org

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum offers the following examples of items that can be important to maintain throughout an artist’s career, to preserve a legacy for future generations of country music fans:

Clothing: stage wear, including accessories (boots, jewelry, belts, hats, ties, etc.) or items of personal clothing that have significance, as well as clothing worn at awards shows, live performances, and in music videos.
Musical instruments, especially instruments an artist or writer learned to play on, or used to write songs, record, and perform with. The Museum is particularly interested in instruments with connections to specific performances or events in an artist’s life and career.
Awards: CMA, ACM, Grammy, and other industry trophies, plaques, certificates, etc.
Song manuscripts and objects used in the songwriting process, especially handwritten lyrics, including snatches of lyrics to unfinished songs, which help document the creative process.
Photographs: candid photos, from baby pictures and family photos, to the present.
Audio Recordings: studio demos, home recordings, live performances, rehearsal tapes, songwriter work tapes/demos, etc.
Film/Video: Professionally-produced footage of live performances, interviews, music videos, etc. (the Museum can accept most formats, but prefers Quicktime). Home Movies and Video
Personal and business correspondence, including fan mail
Business Documents: these include contracts, lead sheets, publishing and royalty statements.
Gifts/mementos from fans. Datebooks, Calendars, Journals, Tour Itineraries, Set Lists
Born Digital Items: music, documents, calendars, web presence only publications
Obsolete Media: floppy discs, hard discs, zip drives, Cyquest drives, Photo prints/negatives
Correspondence/notes/cards

Billy Ray Cyrus To ‘Set The Record Straight’ In November

Billy Ray Cyrus upcoming album Set The Record Straight, which releases Nov. 10, will be packed with collaborations with Joe Perry, George Jones, Loretta Lynn, Bryan Adams, Glenn Hughes, Jencarlos Canela, and Ronnie Milsap, as well as with Cyrus’ daughter Miley Cyrus.

“I’m so excited to share this collection of music. These are some of my favorite songs. Some are new and have been an intricate part of ‘Still The King’ story lines. Others are new mixes and different styles of songs that allowed me to experiment with the diversity that is so much a part of my musical being. There are some collaborations with my musical heroes and a special tribute to one of my greatest influences of all time – Ronnie Van Zant and the members of Lynyrd Skynyrd. In this being the 40-year anniversary of that tragic crash that impacted me and so many others fans around the world, I wrote and recorded ‘The Freebird Fell’,” Billy Ray Cyrus said.

Momentum will continue for Cyrus’ new album Aug. 29 when he appears on “Carpool Karaoke: The Series” alongside his family, including Miley, Noah, Tish, Brandi, Braison and Trace during their sing-along to “Achy Breaky Heart” (Muscle Shoals Mix), which is included on Set The Record Straight.

Set The Record Straight Track Listing:
1. “Tulsa Time” Feat. Joe Perry
2. “I Wanna Be Your Joe” (New Mix)
3. “Achy Breaky Heart” Feat. Ronnie Milsap On Piano (Muscle Shoals Mix)
4. “You Good”
5. “I Want My Mullet Back”
6. “Country Music Has The Blues” Feat. George Jones & Loretta Lynn
7. “Thin Line” Feat. Shelby Lynne
8. “Hey Elvis” Feat. Bryan Adams & Glenn Hughes
9. “I Wouldn’t Be Me”
10. “Stand” Feat. Miley Cyrus
11. “Hey Daddy”
12. “The Freebird Fell”
13. “Achy Breaky Heart 25” (Spanglish) Feat. Jencarlos Canela
14. “Tulsa Time” (Rokman Remix)
15. “Worry”