Matt Stell Rings In Second No. 1 With Nashville’s Industry Execs

Pictured (L-R, back row): Shannan Hatch, Brendan Rich, Mike Sistad, Will Overton, Michael Martin; (L-R, front row): Lance Miller, Matt Stell, Paul Sikes, Ash Bowers. Photo: Steve Lowry

Friends, family, songwriters, and music industry execs gathered together on Tuesday afternoon (May 24) to celebrate Matt Stell‘s second No. 1 hit “Everywhere But On.” Hosted by ASCAP and SESAC, the event was held at Nashville’s The Local.

Written alongside Lance Miller and Paul Sikes, Stell also produced the track with Ash Bowers.

ASCAP’s Mike Sistad welcomed the group while also noting Sikes and Stell’s recent achievements. Sikes, a Nashville native and MTSU alum, marked his second No. 1 hit with the track. His first, Jimmie Allen‘s “Make Me Want To,” was honored just last week at Allen’s double No. 1 party.

Pictured (L-R): Lance Miller, Matt Stell, and Paul Sikes. Photo: Steve Lowry

Stell, a RECORDS Nashville recording artist, also celebrated his second No. 1 as both an artist and a writer with the tune, following his two-week No. 1 2019 hit, “Prayed For You.”

SESAC’s Shannan Hatch also took the stage to dote over Miller, saying: “I’m so glad to be here today to celebrate songwriters, and especially this one. Lance has been at SESAC longer than I have, but Lance and I have been friends since before that.”

Rather than talking about the stats of the song or Miller’s list of accomplishments as a writer, Hatch reminisced on some of her favorite moments with Miller, including his journey to Nashville to become a singer-songwriter, his time on Nashville Star, and an interesting RCA showcase.

“He was doing this showcase at Exit/In and I was standing at the back of the room. Lance just nailed it and he sounded so amazing, but in between songs Lance got a little nervous and he started talking about things and people,” Hatch recalled cheekily. “He went through the room and I think that he equally offended every person in the room. Our dear friend and songwriter, Kim Williams, laughed for years about it and said, ‘I’ve never seen anybody that could sing their way into a record deal and talk their way right out of it.'”

Michael Martin of Endurance Music Group acknowledged Sikes second No. 1 party in a week as well as the long future of success ahead of him.

“Just like we talked about last week, it’s really fun to get to celebrate with your friends in the circle that you come up in creatively. We were talking about it and this is a good habit. If we could have this all the time then, not to be selfish, but it is fun,” Martin quipped. “Paul is a triple threat: he’s a hit songwriter, an amazing musician and producer, and everyone that works with him loves him. On behalf of the Endurance family, congrats Paul, and to many, many more that’s coming.”

Before presenting Stell with a special engraved bottle liquor, Martin also highlighed Stell’s impressive knack for songwriting, noting that a benefit of COVID was that he could put more attention into his writing.

Will Overton of Warner Chappell echoed the others’ praises as he moved on to shed light on Miller, noting his hard work and determination as one of Nashville’s songwriters.

“I was very lucky to get to work with Lance because I was a new song plugger at Warner Chappell and Lance was one of the first writers that I got to work with,” Overton explained. “He’s got a heart of gold and there isn’t a more kind and patient writer out there than Lance. He’s always hustling and working hard to get his songs in the right places and himself in the right writing rooms. All of that hustle has paid off in the last few years as Lance has continued to see his songs rise to the top of the charts. We’re excited and thankful to be part of your journey, and excited for the many years of success to come.”

Pictured (L-R): Lance Miller, Matt Stell, Paul Sikes, and Ash Bowers. Photo: Steve Lowry

Next it was time to hear from the men behind the song.

Sikes thanked all of the team who worked to get “Everywhere But On” up the charts, as well as Bowers for his production skills and Stell for delivering the song with authenticity.

“I said this last week, but it truly is humbling to be up here. It’s great to get to do this with your friends and get to experience the journey with people that champion you and care about you,” Sikes offered. “It’s not about the pinnacle of this, it’s really truly about the journey and enjoying every day–going to the grind and making it happen. It’s great to celebrate this when it happens, and I just appreciate everyone in this room being a part of that in whatever way.”

Miller took the opportunity to give credit where it was due, noting Stell’s fiery vocals and Sikes contributing the song’s catchy hook to the writing process. “Nowadays you don’t run into [hooks] but [Paul] came in with a monster, and I appreciate that so much,” he gushed. “I’m thankful for this and it’s more fun playing the Bluebird when you’ve got a hit song to do. I’m proud to be a part of this community. Just like Minnie Pearl, ‘I’m just happy to be here.'”

Bowers addressed the songwriter’s as he talked about how the song is one of the few that he can remember exactly where he was when he heard it for the first time. “I was sitting at NY Pie in West Nashville in the parking lot waiting on my pizza to get ready. I’m checking emails and there was an email in there with ‘Everywhere But On.’ I listened to it and I can’t remember if it was Paul or Matt, but I texted whoever it was back and said, ‘This song is a huge smash.’ And I was right.”

Wrapping things up, it was time for Stell to take to the mic, thanking Wide Open Management, RECORDS Nashville, Sony, Endurance, his family, band, crew, and more.

“This is one of my favorite songs that I’ve ever written and I was so glad to be able to write it with these guys. I can’t thank everyone in here enough for how hard you worked–there’s just not enough names on the plaques, to be honest with you. Everybody in here has had something to do with that, and I really appreciate that,” he shared.

“In this business you hear a lot of no’s before you hear a yes,” Stell summed. “Sometimes the bad stuff feels worse than the good stuff feels good, so if you’re here tonight, let’s really take time to enjoy each other’s company. Maybe we’ll get a hangover during the week or whatever because we deserve it. We worked our asses off. We need to celebrate and make sure our highs are really damn high.”

My Music Row Story: Big Loud’s Seth England

Seth England

The “My Music Row Story” weekly column features notable members of the Nashville music industry selected by the MusicRow editorial team. These individuals serve in key roles that help advance and promote the success of our industry. This column spotlights the invaluable people that keep the wheels rolling and the music playing.

 

This edition of “My Music Row Story” is sponsored by Worldwide Stages.

 

As Partner and CEO, Seth England leads Big Loud as one of the most unique and fastest-rising businesses in Nashville; a trailblazing conglomerate that combines music publishing, management, label services, and capital investment and has changed the industry in the process. The label’s roster includes country hitmakers Morgan Wallen, Jake Owen, Chris Lane, and Hardy, as well as rising stars Hailey Whitters, Ernest, Lily Rose, MacKenzie Porter, and more.

Since joining Big Loud Publishing in 2008, England has proven his knack for landing massive song placements, signing cutting-edge, genre altering acts, and finding unique partnerships that further the label’s innovative goals, as he did when co-founding female-driven label Songs and Daughters with ACM-winning songwriter Nicolle Galyon. Big Loud Records has earned multiple Gold and Platinum RIAA certifications, 12 No. 1 U.S. airplay hits, and more than 5.5 billion global streams in 2021 alone. England has been named to multiple Billboard power player lists, including 2021 Indie Power Players and Country Power Players.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?

I was born in Terre Haute, Indiana. I grew up in Illinois right across the state line in a small town called Marshall, Illinois.

How did you get into the music business?

The pathway to it started for me when I was a junior in high school. It was by way of sports. I was a football player and I was going go play football in college. I was taking all sorts of recruiting visits and one of the problems of finding a place that I wanted to go to was the academic options [the schools’ offered]. I knew I wanted to do something unique and different. I was chasing that “never have to work a day in your life” thought, chasing something I was passionate about. At that time, I was thinking I would probably end up in sports. I ended up going to college at Greenville University and double majored in music business and marketing.

While I was in school, one choice just led to the next opportunity and then to the next one. I just kept trusting myself and those around me to keep walking through certain doors. I was promoting shows while I was in college during the off season, primarily. I was able to make a little money, not too much. Little did I know that later on when I would get to Nashville and meet Craig [Wiseman], the thing he loved most about me was that I had been a show promoter and I knew the live touring aspect.

Pictured (L-R): Big Loud’s Craig Wiseman, Joey Moi, Seth England. Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud

When did you start coming to Nashville?

I started going after my sophomore year of college. I knew that I wanted to get my foot in the door. My first summer in Nashville, I interned in the mornings for Harlan Howard Songs. I kept promoting shows [throughout college] so I was able to make a little money, save up, and when I came to Nashville in the summers, I could spend 40 hours a week doing my internships because I didn’t have the opportunity to come down in the fall or spring. I came down knowing I really wanted to get into publishing or A&R and I did an internship with Sara Knabe. She was the creative director at Harlan Howard Songs and she had just gotten out of Belmont a few years before that. In the afternoon I’d go to Vector Management. I did that my whole first summer.

You joined Big Loud in 2008. What was your vision for the company in the early years?

It starts with Craig. I met Craig in 2006. At that time, he was trying to do a lot of things. He had shown aspirations even before his partnership with Joey [Moi] and I that he wanted to do more than just traditional publishing. At the time he had Big Loud Shirt publishing, he had a joint venture with Extreme Writers Group in Nashville, he had an office in London, and he probably had 10 to 15 writers. It was a very A&R-centric company, but most of the cuts revolved around Craig. That was something he desired to evolve. He wanted to make sure the company was known as a successful publishing company for songwriters. I could tell quickly where his energy was at, his priorities, and the way that he saw the business. I had a feeling he was going to get into much more. I couldn’t have told you then where we were going to go, but I could just feel some energy between the two of us. The first couple years we started to talk about all the great things we had, but also the things we didn’t have. Joey joined us a few years later.

Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud

With the three of you leading the charge, Big Loud has become one of the most competitive indies in the Nashville music business. How do you feel that the company is different than other labels?

All three of us—Craig, Joey, and I—would be lying if we didn’t say that over the years while developing into this plan, we weren’t watching other record labels in town. We worked with Florida Georgia Line for years and worked within the Big Machine halls. We learned a lot from Scott [Borchetta] and Jimmy [Harnen] and some of their great executives there. Along the way, you pick up things you want to do like [other companies] and then how you want to do a few things different.

I think [the way we approach] artist development is different in a lot of ways. If you want to approach artist development as just one song or even three to five songs, it’s just not enough. No matter how good you are it just won’t be enough. The same is true if your first song to five songs doesn’t work. It wasn’t going to be enough anyway, so let’s keep going. Don’t get discouraged. Keep swinging. I feel like if the artist is good enough to come to our record label, we need to set up an ecosystem around them where they get an unlimited amount of swings at the ball. We preach that because we do believe and we’ve seen many examples of success by letting artists continue to try and swing. They build.

When do you feel most fulfilled in your role now?

When people acknowledge our process—not for any ego reason—we’re just so proud of our process. We’re so proud of the belief systems shared between Craig, Joey and I. It’s not just about music and business, it’s really about people, culture and camaraderie. We’ve worked very hard for that and we sometimes may be the ones to see the benefits. It takes a lot of additional man hours to care about culture. I get compliments every so often about that, people are really starting to notice. With the more forward-facing success some of our clients have, people may be looking into what’s going on behind the scenes.

Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud

Who have been some of your mentors along the way?

Certainly Craig and Joey. They have become brothers to me. Monte and Avery Lipman are big mentors in the record label space. Clarence Spalding in the Nashville artist management space. He ushered Big Loud into the Maverick partnership. That was such a special time with him. Brian O’Connell in concert promotion has always been a good friend and never makes us feel stupid for something we don’t know. Certain acts of ours have gotten bigger than we ever imagined. He was right there with us, teaching.

What’s some of the best advice you’ve ever received?

There’s a reason the word “music” comes before “business.” I think about it all the time. In a modern music era, we’ve never had more information ever. While analytics and data are guiding lights for the business part of it, I still remind myself that music comes before business. When we’re talking to our artists, we certainly need them to know that our agenda as a record label is to still encourage our artists to make music with their ears and gut inspiration. We are not making music for TikTok. We’re not making music for anyone other than yourself and the fans that you’re building. After you release it, then we can look at things pragmatically and make sure we give you great recommendations and best practices on how to elevate your career with your music.

If someone were to ask you what the secret to your success was, what would you say?

I would say two things. The first is each other. Be sentimental about it. There’s so much trust [you have to] put in other people, whether it’s myself with artists, Joey with artists, the songwriters with artists, or executives to each other. If we didn’t do so much over-communicating and making the artists feel in complete control of their career, especially with our business model, I don’t think it would’ve worked this well.

The other thing is we put songs over anything else. A hit record can launch a small name or an unheard of name. A bad record can slow down a huge name. It’s such a simple statement, but sometimes we find that too many people are worried about the “how,” the “when,” and the “if” that they may breeze right past the “what.” Maybe it’s just the way I started in the music business, but nothing comes before a song.

Black River Publishing & Sony Music Publishing Sign Global Admin Deal

Pictured (L-R): Rusty Gaston, Rebekah Gordon, Josh Van Valkenburg, Gordon Kerr. Photo: Drew DeSirey, Black River Entertainment

Black River Publishing and Sony Music Publishing Nashville have partnered for a worldwide publishing administration deal.

With the partnership, SMP will provide its global services to Black River’s publishing catalog, which includes songs written by Kelsea Ballerini, Josh Osborne, Jacob Davis, Doug Johnson, Forest Glen Whitehead, and more.

Of the deal, Sony Music Publishing Nashville CEO, Rusty Gaston, says, “Independent music publishers play a vital role in our Music Row community, and Black River has done an amazing job of identifying and developing some of the biggest hit songwriters in Nashville. It is an honor for Sony Music Publishing to support Black River in their efforts.”

Black River Publishing and its roster have celebrated numerous awards and accolades since its inception twelve years ago. The company has celebrated 30 No. 1 songs and multiple Grammy awards, including for Best Country Song with Kacey Musgraves‘ “Merry Go ‘Round” (2013) and for Best Contemporary Christian Performance/Song with For King & Country‘s “God Only Knows” (2019).

“Black River Publishing and our amazingly talented roster of writers are thrilled to be joining forces with our friends at Sony Music Publishing,” shares Black River VP of Publishing, Rebekah Gordon. “The passion for music and songwriters on both the creative and administrative teams is unmatched. I’m looking forward to celebrating many successes together.”

Black River Publishing’s roster includes Black River recording artists Josiah Siska, MaRynn Taylor, and Josh Wilson; artist-writers Hannah Kerr, Pryor Baird, and Bryan Simpson; songwriter/producers Bobby Huff, Blake Ruby, Dan Wilson, and Jason Earley; and Grammy-winning songwriter, producer and artist Josh Kerr. Black River Publishing is part of the Black River Entertainment family under the Pegula Sports & Entertainment company portfolio.

Miranda Lambert Hits Top Five On MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart

Miranda Lambert. Photo: Robert Ascroft

Miranda Lambert jumps from No. 14 to No. 5 this week on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart. The singer is a co-writer on her own “If I Was A Cowboy” as well as Morgan Wallen’s “Thought You Should Know.”

Shane McAnally notches his third consecutive week at No. 1 this week, with credit from songs such as “Never Wanted To Be That Girl” (Carly Pearce & Ashley McBryde), “23” (Sam Hunt), “AA” (Walker Hayes), “No Hard Feelings” (Old Dominion), and “Everyone She Knows” (Kenny Chesney).

Ashley Gorley (No. 2), Ernest (No. 3) and Jesse Frasure (No. 4) join Lambert and McAnally in the top five.

The weekly MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart uses algorithms based upon song activity according to airplay, digital download track sales and streams. This unique and exclusive addition to the MusicRow portfolio is the only songwriter chart of its kind.

Click here to view the full MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.

Ernest Blossoms On MusicRow Radio Chart

Ernest earns his first No. 1 as an artist on the MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart with “Flower Shops” featuring Morgan Wallen. He has achieved six previous No. 1s as a songwriter starting in 2020 with FGL’s “Blessings” and, most recently, “Wasted On You” by Wallen, which went No. 1 in April. 

Ernest co-wrote “Flower Shops” with Ben Burgess and Mark Holman.  It is also the title track to his debut album which came out in March. 

In addition to several festival appearances this summer, Ernest is serving as opening support on select dates of Wallen’s “Dangerour Tour.” Click for more tour information. 

Click here to view the latest edition of The MusicRow Weekly containing the MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart.

DISClaimer Single Reviews: RaeLynn Delivers ‘Best Single Of Her Career’

Tempo rules today in DISClaimer.

It sounds like the country acts are gearing up for summertime by issuing sunny toe tappers. Check out the energy in the new tracks by Kylie Morgan, Nate Smith, Kassi Ashton and our joint Disc of the Day winners, Chris Janson and RaeLynn.

The DISCovery Award goes to a dude billed as CWBY. That’s “cowboy” without vowels. I usually dislike hip-hop flavored country, largely because one reason that I’m a country fan is that I love to hear people singing and playing real instruments. Records with men yelling at me just don’t appeal. But this in spite of his undeniable influences, this guy does sing, and sing well.

NATE SMITH / “Whiskey On You”
Writers: Nate Smith/Lindsay Rimes/Russell Sutton; Producer: Lindsay Rimes; Label: Sony
–The power voiced newcomer soars into the summer sky with this rocking ode to surviving a breakup. Ringing guitars and a relentless rhythm section back his ferocious singing. I remain a big fan.

INGRID ANDRESS / “Seeing Someone Else”
Writers: Ingrid Andress/Jesse Frasure/Derrick Southerland; Producers: Ingrid Andress/Sam Ellis; Label: Warner
–Her vocal range is on full display here as she transitions from a darkly intimate alto in the verses to a blazing soprano in the choruses. The lyric isn’t what you might expect from the title. The “someone else,” is another side of herself. Melodically, it hews closer to sophisticated pop than anything else.

CWBY / “Insecure”
Writers: Gerald Mithcell/Nick Shoffner; Producer: none listed; Label: CDX
–Previously self-billed as “The Cannabis Cowboy,” this California guy has a piercing tenor voice that is tinted with equal parts of country and hip-hop. The track is all electronic loops and bloops, the melody is spare and there is a ton of audio processing. But there is a certain sincerity here as he calls out a lover’s anxiety and uncertainty.

BRETT ELDREDGE / “Wait Up For Me”
Writers: Mark Trussell/Brett Eldredge/Heather Morgan; Producer: Mark Trussell; Label: Warner
–“Songs About You” continues to rise as the single. Here’s another taste from his upcoming album by that title. It’s a video of a sultry, stately love ballad that promises a night of passion. Steady piano chords back his instantly intimate baritone.

JENNA PAULETTE / “El Paso”
Writers: Jenna Paulette/Jacob Durrett/Robyn Collins; Producer: none listed; Label: JP
–She’s in CMT’s “Next Women of Country” class of ‘22. In this gentle slowie, Jenna’s on the road and wistfully missing her cowboy who has “a way with that lasso/Pulling me back to El Paso.” Breezy and sweet.

CHRIS JANSON / “Keys to the Country”
Writers: Ashley Gorley/Chris Janson/Dallas Davidson/Zach Crowell; Producer: Zach Crowell; Label: Warner
–Rollicking and romping. The lyric covers tiresome, well-worn territory–riding and rolling in his pickup truck headed for the farmer field with ice cold beer and his honey. But the sheer joy and energy in the performance are utterly irresistible. I’m in.

KYLIE MORGAN / “Love Like We’re Drunk”
Writers: Kylie Morgan/Jeff Garrison/Brian White; Producers: Ben Johnson/Shane McAnally; Label: EMI
–Her pert, girlish singing voice contrasts with the slammin’ beats in the production of this neighborly upbeat ode to fellowship, happiness, unity and togetherness. Jaunty, if not exactly timeless.

MATT STELL / “Man Made”
Writers: Brett Sheroky/Ian Christian; Producer: Matt Stell/Ash Bowers; Label: Records
–“If a man made anything, it’s ‘cause a woman made that man.” If there’s one thing that is true of all good country music, it’s a beautifully crafted lyric. Like this one.

DANNI LEIGH / “My Arms Stay Open Late”
Writers: Melba Montgomery/Danni Leigh; Producer: none listed; Label: BFD/Audium
–Danni has been absent from the scene for 15 years. Her twanging, vibrato-vocal, two-step comeback is as solidly country as all get out. No wonder: Her cowriter is one of the greatest female traditionalists in the genre’s history.

JEFF “SKUNK” BAXTER & CLINT BLACK / “Bad Move”
Writers: Jeff Baxter/Clint Black/CJ Vanston; Producers: Jeff Baxter/CJ Vanston; Label: BMG/Renew
–Rock & Roll Hall of Fame member Baxter is famed for his guitar mastery in Steely Dan and The Doobie Brothers. For his solo album, he recruited a variety of stellar lead vocalists. This collaboration features a bluesy performance by country star Black, blended with rocking, ear grabbing instrumental complexity. Brilliantly recorded and superbly listenable.

MITCHELL TENPENNY & TEDDY SWIMS / “Elephant In the Room”
Writers: Sam Sumser/Christian Griswold/Jaten Dimsdale/Mitchell Tenpenny/Sean Small; Producer: Sean Small/Jordan Schmidt/Sam Sumser; Label: Sony
–Pop, pop, pop, without the slightest nod toward Tenpenny’s country constituency.

RAELYNN / “I Love My Hometown”
Writers: RaeLynn/Corey Crowder/Brian Kelley/Canaan Smith; Producer: Corey Crowder; Label: Round Here
–Everything works here. Her Texas-twang vocal, the delightful lyrics, the terrific energy in the uptempo track, the stuttering guitar solo, the zippy production values. For my money, it’s the best single of her career to date.

My Music Row Story: Make Wake Artists’ Chris Kappy

Chris Kappy

The “My Music Row Story” weekly column features notable members of the Nashville music industry selected by the MusicRow editorial team. These individuals serve in key roles that help advance and promote the success of our industry. This column spotlights the invaluable people that keep the wheels rolling and the music playing.

 

This edition of “My Music Row Story” is sponsored by Worldwide Stages.

 

Chris Kappy is the founder and owner of management company Make Wake Artists, and is in his sixth year as manager for superstar Luke Combs. During that time, he has grown the Make Wake roster by adding the talents of Niko Moon, Hailey Whitters, Drew Parker, Flatland Cavalry, Jackie Lee, Tyler Dial, Red Shahan, The Panhandlers and Keller Cox.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?

I grew up in Stone Mountain, Georgia. I was born in Texas and lived there for two years. We moved to St. Louis and lived there for two years. My dad worked for the airlines. We moved to Georgia when I was five so I grew up in Stone Mountain.

I ended up going to Georgia State University. It was a commuter school then, now it’s a traditional campus. That’s where my love for music started. I grew up in a household of music. My mom was a big believer in The Temptations, the Four Tops, Otis Redding, and Gladys Knight. My dad listened to big band music. As I was coming up, I was listening to pop radio. Z-93 and 96 Rock out of Atlanta were the stations I was listening to.

Pictured (L-R): Kappy, Luke Combs, Niko Moon

What got you interested in country music?

I met a girl in college that introduced me to the band BlackHawk, and I was like, “What is this magic?” The harmonies were insane. “Goodbye Says It All” was the first song of their’s I ever heard. Then I started digging into country music and I really fell in love with bands like Shenandoah, Diamond Rio, and Little Texas. That’s the world I got into as I was listening to everything from Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Hootie and The Blowfish, and Sister Hazel. I fell in love with country.

How did you get into the music business?

In 2000 I was working in IT selling web hosting and stuff like that. I was killing it, I was doing very well for myself for my late twenties. A good friend of mine, Andy Levine, said, “You should come work for me. We’re gonna do this thing called The Rock Boat where we put bands on a cruise ship and go out to sea with their fans. I’ll pay you a third of what you’re making now, but you’ll be in the music business.” I was like, “Man, that’s a great idea. I should do this.” And I did. I quit my job and I went to go work for Andy. That started a 15-year relationship with bands and their fans on a cruise ship in the ocean.

Sister Hazel was the catalyst. They were my college band that I fell in love with. I would travel to go see them play anywhere and everywhere. To this day, I still am very close with all the guys in the band. We’re all very good friends and I still love their music. I learned from them how important it was to have the relationship with the fan. Their big hit was “All For You.” They had all these unbelievable songs, but they had a relationship with their fans that was beautiful. They cared so much about them and then they created The Rock Boat. From that event, it spawned off to Kiss, John Mayer, Florida Georgia Line, Paramore and 311. So for 15 years, I traveled with rabid fan bases, took 2,500 of their biggest fans on vacation, and essentially gave them a backstage pass for four days in the Caribbean. I thought I had the greatest job in the world.

Pictured (L-R): Kappy, Drew Parker

How did you end up in management?

I was living in Huntington Beach, California when I got a phone call from a buddy of mine named Bradley Jordan. Bradley calls me and says, “You’ve always wanted be a manager your whole life. That’s all you’ve ever talked about and you’re not doing it. You’re in your early forties. If you don’t do this, you’re going to regret it.” I was like, “Man, you’re right.” You have to have a friend like that to be able to tell you that. I packed everything up, broke my lease and moved to Athens, Georgia in November of 2014.

Bradley was [promoting] a Sam Hunt show at the Georgia Theater. This is when Sam was just blowing up. He put the show up for sale on Oct. 31 and it sold out in four minutes. He had me that day as the runner for that show, so I’m driving Brad and Sam all over town. I saw the kind of relationship they had and I was like, “I can do this.” I didn’t know what a point was on an album, I had no idea what a publishing deal was, but I remembered [a conversation I had] on a cruise with Brandi Carlile. Brandi and I had become very good friends and I remember talking to her asking, “Do you think I could do this?” She goes, “Kappy, I don’t even know what points are. I don’t care. You can do this.” That’s what I needed to hear.

[A little while later], I get a phone call and it’s Bradley. He said, “I found your guy. His name is Luke Combs.”

What was your first meeting with Luke like?

[We organized a show for Luke.] He shows up with the band in the van. They unload and start loading in and I meet Luke. He’s a nice guy. They’re starting to soundcheck and I’m like, “This guy can flat out sing!” I got to experience that moment that you have when you see Luke for the first time. The charisma and the passion that he had was there without even being in show mode. The show was awesome. I was like, “This is the guy. I want to manage this guy. I’ve got to get him another show to show him that I have some yank.”

[After another show,] I told him, “I’d like to manage you.” He goes, “What do you know about management?” I said, “Not a lot, but I got you this show. I’ve been around a lot of managers. I know that I can work just as hard as they can. I can be just as passionate as they can. Nobody will out-care me or out-appreciate what you bring to the table and we’ll do this together.”

He said, “Let me go talk to three managers in Nashville.” So he came to talk to three managers here in Nashville and all of them said he was a songwriter. He calls me up and says, “Hey, I met with all three managers.” I said, “What’d they say?” He goes, “You tell me what you want then I’ll tell you what they want.” I was like, “I want you to stand on stage every night and sing your songs, just like you do, and connect with the crowd. I’ll handle everything else.” He goes, “You’re my manager.”

I moved here Sept. 6 of 2016 and we got started.

Pictured: Kappy and Luke Combs embrace after Combs wins the CMA Entertainer of the Year

What was it like when you guys got to Nashville?

Early on I asked Luke what one of his goals were. He’s like, “Man, I drive this piece of crap Dodge Neon. I need a safe car. I don’t know if the brakes are going to work, it doesn’t have AC, and I have to drive this to writes and I hate it because people see me in this and this isn’t indicative of who I am.” I was like, “Alright, I won’t take any commission from you until we can buy you a new car—however long that takes.” I wasn’t rich. I had a small amount in savings and thought things would get going pretty quickly.

So we started and we had no money coming in. We had just enough money to pay the bills and if we didn’t have enough, I would pull money out of my savings to put gas in the van and stuff like that. Soon I am destitute. I have less than $50 to my name. Every night I’m taking the merch bin to the green room and taking all the food and water and stuff that’s left behind and putting it in there so I have something to eat. No one ever knew. Every penny that came in that was left over went into a Maxwell House coffee can that sat on top of Luke’s refrigerator. We would just stack cash in there. We were doing that and I was bleeding my account dry trying to figure it out. I sold stuff and did whatever I could to just make it work. I was driving our Sprinter van everywhere because I [had to sell] my car. I was going to meetings in this giant Sprinter and people were just laughing at me, but I couldn’t let Luke know that.

We saved enough money. We had $15,000 and we bought a 2013 Ford Fusion for him. That next weekend we did a show. We had $500 left over and Luke goes, “I got my car now. Take commission.” It was $75 bucks and I felt like I was Mark Cuban. The very next day we got a phone call that somebody had pulled out of an ATV park show and they were desperate to get somebody, so we got a $10,000 offer. Three days later we got an offer to play a private for a guy whose daughter was graduating high school. He offered us an obscene amount of money. Instantly we made all this money and I was like, “We’re gonna make it.”

Pictured (L-R): Hailey Whitters, Kappy

Now Luke is one of the biggest stars in our format, and you’ve added more artists and team members to your management company. Did you ever see yourself building out Make Wake to what it is now?

Absolutely not. I had no idea that it was going to turn into this. As I sit around my office and see the Niko Moon plaques, and I see the shows for Hailey Whitters, Flatland Cavalry and Drew Parker… I never thought I’d come to town and create a management company that would have 10 artists on the roster and 17 full-time employees. That was never a part of the plan. I have the weight of the careers of our artists on my shoulders and the weight of the employees that I have to take care of for them and their families. I never thought that I would ever have to worry about that stuff.

It doesn’t scare me, it’s just a lot to deal with. I’m lucky I have fantastic people out there that I can call on. I’m the first person to say if I don’t know something. I have great people that I can pick up the phone and call. I talk to either Kerri Edwards, John Peets, Clarence Spalding, or Marion Kraft once a week.

What’s something people might not know about you?

I lost 200 pounds. That’s something people might not know about. I ended up having gastric bypass surgery. I didn’t have good control of my weight, it was an unhealthy relationship. I knew that I needed to get control of it.

I remember being in the hospital after getting it done and being so depressed. I was thinking, “I can’t believe I just had to do this. You were such a loser. You couldn’t get this done.” Then I thought, “No, this is not how you need to be thinking. You just didn’t have a handle on it. You didn’t have control. You needed to get control and you got control.” I’ll see people now who haven’t seen me in forever and they’ll be like, “Woah, I didn’t even recognize you.” I talk about it because I want people to know that there shouldn’t be a stigma around it.

If someone was to ask you what your definition of success was, what would you say?

Being able to shop at Whole Foods without looking at prices. (Laughs)

When you sit with an artist and you’re like, “What are your dreams? What are your passions? What are your goals?,” and you can accomplish those. Some of them are extremely realistic, some of them are over the moon, but if you’re able to do that, that’s success. Seeing an artist on stage, seeing their fans sing their songs back to them—they’re so elated and they come off the stage and they’re like, “They were singing my songs!” That’s it, man. There’s nothing better than that.

A Look Into A History-Making No. 1 With Carly Pearce & Alexa Campbell [Interview]

Carly Pearce & Ashley McBryde. Photo: Courtesy of Big Machine Label Group

Over the past few years, country music has seen quite an increase in collaborations between some of the format’s biggest and brightest stars.

A hearty amount of the most successful collabs and highest rising songs of the last few years have been duets from artists such as Jason Aldean and Carrie Underwood (“If I Didn’t Love You”), Ryan Hurd and Maren Morris (“Chasing You”), Chris Young and Cassaddee Pope (“Think Of You”), and Blake Shelton and Gwen Stafani (“Happy Anywhere”), to name a few.

However, the number of female-driven collaborations has been few and far between before Carly Pearce and Ashley McBryde decided to join forces on their recent No. 1 single “Never Wanted To Be That Girl.”

Released in mid-September of 2021, the track is sung from the perspective of two women discovering the man they’re involved with has someone else, and finds the two women considering their own blind spots.

“I was in the middle of writing [29: Written In Stone] and had the idea to have another collaboration,” Pearce shares with MusicRow. “I’ve always loved Ashley, her music and the way she sang, so I just asked her if she would ever write a song with me. I reached out to her and she said yes.

“We had an honest conversation that day and she was trying to be sensitive to what I was going through in my personal life. Through that experience that I had, we were able to talk about something that so many women have been on at least one side of, but in a lot of cases, both sides of.” She continues, “We didn’t really know what we were writing until we had the first verse and the chorus, which is not typical. You don’t usually start writing and form it as you go, but in this case we really did write it from top to bottom. It almost wrote itself.”

“Never Wanted To Be That Girl” saw early signs of success as it became the most added single upon its release to country radio. Only months after its debut, the pair were also able to give a stirring performance of the track at the CMA Awards last November, and took home the Music Event of the Year at the 2022 ACM Awards in March 2022.

As Pearce carefully explains, there are a lot of things that must align for a song to be a single at country radio, and especially so when two artists are involved.

“Every star has to align and, in this case, it really did. Ashley was in a place where she could have it be her single and I wanted it to be my single,” the Kentucky-bred singer-songwriter gushes. “It all felt so meant to be and it’s crazy to see what it has done. It has been so special to see the power of music, honesty and vulnerability, which I think country music does the best.”

Carly Pearce & Alexa Campbell at the 57th Annual ACM Awards. Photo: Courtesy of Big Machine Label Group

In addition to the song’s success at country radio, the single’s accompanying music video has also racked up its own list of nominations, including Video of the Year at the 2022 ACM Awards and Collaborative Video of the Year at the 2022 CMT Music Awards.

The video’s director and Pearce’s photographer, Alexa Campbell, made her directing debut with the picturesque video which brings the song’s gripping story to life in vivid color.

“I got the idea for it when we were in the studio. Carly was about to record the song and I was there filming her,” Campbell recalls. “You can only hear a song for the first time once, so I just remember how it made me feel… I thought of my niece. She is seven and is at that age where she is starting to talk about what she wants to be when she grows up and the type of boys she likes at school. None of our conversations are ever about heartbreak or anything bad happening, though. It really got me thinking about how no little girl ever wants to grow up and have this happen to them.

With the storyline, Campbell wanted to incorporate the theme of Pearce and McBryde looking at themselves in the mirror and not recognizing who they see based on their individual circumstances. All taking place in one night, the pair recognize what was happening and both realize that they deserve better.

“I didn’t want to focus on the guy at all, but I thought he was necessary for the story to progress,” Campbell shares. “I really wanted to be intentional about him only being in the background and really focusing on Carly and Ashley’s emotions.”

She continues, “When it came to the end with them driving and coming together at the stoplight, I had actually overheard Carly’s idea for it. She had said something about them meeting at the grocery store, and I just thought it would be really cool to have them meet at a stoplight because in any kind of small town affair, you probably know who it is or you know of them. I wanted to try to incorporate that really small town feel of even when you’re on a night drive you could see her.”

YouTube video

The smash hit marks only the second female duet to top the country charts in 30 years since Reba McEntire and Linda Davis‘ “Does He Love You” from 1993. It also lived in the top 10 alongside another female duet chart-topper, Elle King and Miranda Lambert‘s “Drunk (And I Don’t Wanna Go Home),” further demonstrating the push for female representation in the country format.

“I have felt like [over the last few years] we’ve made such strides. I’ve felt positive about the women that I’m surrounded by in this industry, as well as the ladies that are ahead of and behind me,” Pearce notes. “I think you can see it in the last year with what has happened with me, or the way that this song and Elle King and Miranda Lambert’s song was the first time in the history of country radio that two female collaborations were inside the top 10 at the same time.

“Seeing what’s happening to people like Lainey Wilson, I think it’s a really amazing time to be a female,” she continues. “What we’ve been lacking over the last however many years is that we need to really focus on the music and the art that’s coming through, and not so much on the lack of it. We just need to really give these songs and artists a chance, and I feel like we’re starting to really see that.”

Pearce and McBryde have a packed summer ahead of them as Pearce serves as direct support on Kenny Chesney‘s “Here And Now 2022” tour, which will visit nearly two dozen stadiums and a handful of newly added amphitheaters through August.

Pearce and Campbell also have some plans and projects in the hopper as Pearce continues working on her highly-anticipated next project and Campbell teases new directing credits in the works.

Keith Whitley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Joe Galante To Be Inducted Into Country Music Hall Of Fame

Keith Whitley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Joe Galante will be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

The inductees were revealed Tuesday morning (May 17) via a virtual press conference by Hall of Famers Brooks & Dunn.

Whitley will be posthumously inducted into the Country Music Hall Of Fame in the Modern Era category. Lewis was selected for induction for the Veteran Era category. Renowned Nashville label head Galante will be inducted in the Non-Performer category.

Joe Galante, Jerry Lee Lewis and Keith Whitley (Lorrie Morgan attending on Whitley’s behalf) are announced as the Country Music Hall of Fame class of 2022. Photo: John Russell/CMA

“When I heard the news I was being inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, it was the first time in my entire career I was speechless,” says Galante. “I’m humbled, beyond honored and honestly, I’m still trying to wrap my head around this.”

“To be recognized by country music with their highest honor is a humbling experience,” says Lewis. “The little boy from Ferriday, LA listening to Jimmie Rodgers and Hank Williams never thought he’d be in a Hall amongst them. I am appreciative of all those who have recognized that Jerry Lee Lewis music is country music and to our almighty God for his never-ending redeeming grace.”

“In my heart, this feels like an absolutely appropriate honor, but at the same time, I know that Keith would be painfully humbled, and even shy about accepting an induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame,” says Grand Ole Opry star, Lorrie Morgan, who was married to Whitley until his untimely passing. “Music was all about emotion to Keith. It was personal. There were so many great artists he admired, even worshipped. To stand in their company in the Hall of Fame would’ve been overwhelmingly emotional for him. I am thrilled to see him honored this way, and for what it means to my children, Morgan and Jesse Keith; to Keith’s grandchildren; the Whitley family; and to the many, many fans who continue to point to Keith as one of the all-time greats.”

“This year’s inductees are trailblazers who each paved their own unique path within country music,” says Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer. “Jerry Lee, Keith and Joe each found their musical callings early in life and displayed a strong-minded and fierce passion for music making. In very different ways, they all have left a lasting impact on the industry and generations of fans alike. I am thrilled to welcome this deserving class into the Country Music Hall of Fame.”

“Our new inductees come from three very different places, but in October they will be enshrined in the very same place,” says Kyle Young, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Chief Executive Officer. “Jerry Lee Lewis is a God-fearing rabble-rouser from a Mississippi River town, way down South. Keith Whitley was a Lefty Frizzell-loving country boy from rural Kentucky. And Joe Galante is a game-changing executive from the urban northeast. They all filled our worlds with music. They are all deserving of our respect and adulation, and their elections into the Country Music Hall of Fame ensure that respect and adulation will endure through the ages.”

A formal induction ceremony for Galante, Lewis and Whitley will take place at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in the CMA Theater this fall. Since 2007, the Museum’s Medallion Ceremony, a reunion of the Hall of Fame membership, has served as the official rite of induction for new members.

Bios for each inductee are below:

Joe Galante. Photo: Courtesy of Joe Galante

Non-Performer Category – Joe Galante

When then RCA Records transferred Joe Galante from New York to its Nashville office in 1974, he never imagined he’d still be in Music City 49 years later. Nashville certainly had no clue how the 24-year-old “New Yorker” would transform the Country Music industry, becoming the longest-tenured major-label head in its history. During his 39 years with what is now known as Sony Music Nashville, Galante displayed marketing acumen, strategic sense and tenacious competitiveness that motivated other labels and raised the bar for the industry at large.

Galante grew up in Queens, NY as the oldest of three children in a typical Italian family household. He attended catholic schools for his primary education and graduated from Fordham University in the Bronx with a finance and marketing degree.

Galante joined RCA Records in New York as a budget analyst in 1971, shortly after graduating from Fordham. The move to Nashville came at a time when the label wanted to develop more decision-making autonomy within its Country division. Galante, who had moved into product management by the time, had little familiarity with Country Music outside the occasional crossover hit he’d heard on New York radio, but he learned the music and the business from RCA giants Jerry Bradley and Chet Atkins.

Galante entered a closed system that often viewed outsiders with suspicion, yet what he had initially envisioned as a two-year assignment turned into a life’s path. In less than a decade, Galante succeeded Bradley as the head of RCA’s Nashville office, that promotion coming after he had led and re-imagined the division’s promotion and marketing departments. It’s no coincidence that RCA Nashville’s first Platinum album — 1976’s Wanted! The Outlaws compilation — came after Galante’s arrival. He also helped steer RCA’s late-1970s and early 1980s crossover successes with such artists as Waylon Jennings, Ronnie Milsap, Sylvia and Dolly Parton.

Galante was 32 when he took the helm at RCA Nashville, the youngest person to ever lead a major label’s Nashville division. Under his leadership, RCA became Country’s top label in 1982 and held that spot for 11 years.

He shepherded the multi-Platinum ascendance of Alabama using a pop marketing model. He signed a wide roster of talent including Clint Black, Kenny Chesney, Sara Evans, Vince Gill, The Judds, Martina McBride, Lorrie Morgan, K.T. Oslin, Carrie Underwood, Keith Whitley, Chris Young and others.

In 1990, Galante married Phran Schwartz in Nashville before the couple returned to New York where he was named President of RCA Record Label – U.S., becoming the first Music Row label chief to run a major label’s entire U.S. operation. His signings while there included the Dave Matthews Band, SWV and Wu-Tang Clan.

He came back to Nashville in 1994 as chairman of RCA, which had been purchased by Bertelsmann and operated under the name BMG/Nashville, including both the RCA and BNA Records labels. In 2000, Arista Nashville came under the BMG/Nashville umbrella with a roster that included Brooks & Dunn, Alan Jackson and Brad Paisley. In 2004, BMG/Nashville became the first label group of the SoundScan era to place three Country albums — Jimmy Buffett’s License to Chill (RCA/Mailboat), Kenny Chesney’s When the Sun Goes Down (BNA Records) and Alan Jackson’s What I Do (Arista Nashville) atop the Billboard 200 chart in a calendar year.

In 2006, Galante oversaw the evolution of BMG/Nashville into Sony BMG Nashville, with the addition of the former Sony Nashville and its Columbia Nashville imprint, with artists like Miranda Lambert, Gretchen Wilson and Montgomery Gentry. Sony BMG Nashville became Sony Music Nashville in 2009. Galante exited Sony Music Nashville as chairman in 2010.

While his record label prowess remains a highlight of his legacy, his dedication to mentoring younger generations of music professionals is perhaps one of his most admired and impactful contributions. Since leaving Sony Music Nashville, Galante has served as a mentor-in-residence for Nashville Entrepreneur Center, where he founded Project Music. He is also a founding member of Leadership Music, now in its 33rd year.

Galante has been a member of the Country Music Association Board of Directors since 1978 and the CMA Foundation Board of Directors since 2011, serving as chairman of both organizations. In 2021, CMA honored him with the J. William Denny Award, to honor a lifetime of dedication, distinguished service and meritorious contributions to the CMA Board of Directors. Additionally, he received the Bob Kingsley Living Legend Award from the Opry Trust Fund in 2015, becoming the second person, after national radio host Kingsley, to be so honored.

Galante has served as a consultant to BMG Music and Morris Higham Management, and he has chaired the Music City Music Council, a group of leaders dedicated to further establishing Nashville’s position as the global music capital.

He currently serves on the boards of Pinnacle Financial Partners and Cumberland Pharmaceuticals. He also serves on the board of Fishbowl Spirits, LLC, and on the Music Advisory Council for Abe’s Garden, an Alzheimer’s care and learning center. He established the Phran Galante Memorial Fund for Lung Cancer Research at the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, in the wake of Phran’s passing in September 2019.

Galante has raised the bar for executives in the Country Music industry — whether they were working for him, in concert with him or competing against him. He becomes the third chief of Sony Music Nashville to join the Country Music Hall of Fame, following Atkins (1973) and Bradley (2019).

As Trahern says, “Nashville would not be Nashville without Joe Galante.”

Jerry Lee Lewis. Photo: Sean Gowdy

Veterans Era Artist Category – Jerry Lee Lewis
When 21-year-old Jerry Lee Lewis arrived at Memphis, TN’s Sun Records, he was introduced to owner Sam Phillips as a man who could play the piano the way Chet Atkins played guitar. That description may have piqued Phillips’ curiosity, but, truth was, Lewis didn’t sound a thing like Atkins, and he played the piano like nothing anybody had ever heard before.

Lewis’ ferocious, key-pounding style derived from a combustible mix of cultural sources — the Assembly of God holiness church of Ferriday, LA; Haney’s Big House, a chitlin’ circuit nightclub on the other side of town where Lewis witnessed a young B.B. King and all manner of other blues and R&B acts; the Jimmie Rodgers records embedded deep within his formative memories; the Al Jolson 78s played before Gene Autry matinees at the local movie house; and Hank Williams’ mournful wail carried across the air via “The Louisiana Hayride.” Those things all came together in Lewis and came out through his fingers with the speed of lightning and the force of thunder.

He is, as music historian Colin Escott has noted, “a rock ‘n’ roller who could never quite get the Country out of his soul, and a Country singer who could never forget rock ‘n’ roll.”

The first record Sun released on Lewis was a cover of Ray Price’s “Crazy Arms,” cut while the original was still on the charts. The first hit, though, came with a song originally recorded by R&B singer Big Maybelle but that Lewis had learned via a Natchez, MS, DJ named Johnny Littlejohn. “Whole Lot of Shakin’ Going On” simultaneously spent two weeks in 1957 atop Billboard’s Country and R&B best-sellers charts, peaking at No. 3 on the Top 100. The following year saw follow-up “Great Balls of Fire” top the Country chart for another two weeks.

Controversy derailed Lewis’ early success, but not before Lewis hit the Country Top 10 three more times with “You Win Again,” “Breathless” and “High School Confidential,” each of which peaked higher on the Country charts than they did on the pop side.

In the 1960s, Lewis left Sun for Smash Records. Where Sun had emphasized Lewis’ abilities as a boogie-woogie rock-and-roll piano man, Smash producers Jerry Kennedy and Eddie Kilroy decided to focus on his Country side. They returned him to the radio with songs like “Another Place Another Time” and “What’s Made Milwaukee Famous (Has Made a Loser Out of Me).” That may have seemed like a radical idea given Lewis’ wild-man reputation, but it also fit the moment. Within months of Lewis having his first chart-topping Country hit in 11 years — “To Make Love Sweeter for You” in 1969 — Johnny Cash, Sonny James and Conway Twitty, all singers who’d hit it big during the dawn of rock and roll, topped the Country charts, as well.

The Country hits continued into the 1970s as Lewis moved to Smash’s parent label, Mercury Records, and later the Nashville division Elektra Records. He reached No. 1 with “There Must Be More to Love Than This,” “Would You Take Another Chance on Me” and a cover of the Big Bopper’s 1950s rock and roll classic, “Chantilly Lace.” He hit the Top 5 with a pair of signature ballads, the 1977 waltz “Middle Aged Crazy” and the 1981 honky-tonker “Thirty Nine and Holding.”

In all, he placed 28 Top 10 Billboard Country singles across four decades, a greater number of hits over a longer period of time than what appeared on the pop charts, where only a half-dozen sides made the Top 40.

Lewis has continued to record as his acolytes take him into the studio and as subsequent generations discover his music, even recording a 2011 live album at Jack White’s Third Man Records. His name has appeared in Country hits by George Jones (“Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes”), John Michael Montgomery (“I Love the Way You Love Me”), Tim McGraw (“Southern Voice”) and the Statler Brothers (“How to Be a Country Star”) — though, of course, nobody drops his name more in their songs than he does himself.

“Whole Lot of Shakin’ Going On” is now part of the National Recording Registry. That and “Great Balls of Fire” are in the Grammy Hall of Fame. While those two records are, by far, his most famous, those who know his catalog more deeply understand that he has full mastery of a century’s worth of popular music, from 19th-century minstrel tunes to the songs of Tin Pan Alley standards to classic rock.

Lewis joins Sun Records compatriots Cash, “Cowboy” Jack Clement, Phillips and Elvis Presley in the Country Music Hall of Fame. He is also the fourth member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s founding 1986 class of inductees to also gain membership in the Country Music Hall of Fame, along with Presley (1998), the Everly Brothers (2001) and Ray Charles (2021).

While Lewis now joins a select group, he also remains uniquely individual in that company. “My style of Country Music is just me,” Lewis told the Associated Press in 2017. “I wouldn’t know how to do anyone else’s.”

Keith Whitley. Photo: Courtesy of Keith Whitley

Modern Era Artist Category – Keith Whitley
Most Country Music Hall of Fame careers are marked by their longevity. It’s not a requirement, though. Lefty Frizzell, Jim Reeves, and the Louvin Brothers’ Ira Louvin all died in their 40s. Patsy Cline was just 30 at the time of her passing. The first two performers inducted into the Hall of Fame — Jimmie Rodgers and Hank Williams —were gone by 35.

Four years seven months and 10 days passed between Keith Whitley’s first appearance on the Billboard Country singles charts and his death on May 9, 1989, at 34. It’s the briefest chart span of any Hall of Famer during their lifetime, nearly six months shorter than Williams’.

From another perspective, Whitley had a 30-year career, one that began when he was 4 years old, dressed in a black cowboy outfit and singing Marty Robbins’ “Big Iron” and George Jones’ “A Wandering Soul” for talent shows around his hometown of Sandy Hook, KY.

Whitley made his radio debut at age 8, appearing on singer Buddy Starcher’s show on WCHS-AM in Charleston, WV. In his teens, he formed a bluegrass band, the East Kentucky Mountain Boys, with his brother Dwight, performing on WGOH-AM in Grayson, KY, and once a month on a UFH television show out of Hazard, KY. During that time, he met future Hall of Famer Ricky Skaggs, and the two teens bonded over their shared love of the Stanley Brothers. Whitley and Skaggs soon began performing the Stanleys’ songs together, and within months, Ralph Stanley hired them as members of his Clinch Mountain Boys.

Whitley recorded several albums with Stanley, as well as two early 1970s albums with Skaggs — Tribute to the Stanley Brothers (Jalyn Records) and 2nd Generation Bluegrass (Rebel Records). After leaving Stanley’s band, he joined J.D. Crowe and the New South from 1978 to 1982.

Whitley had been coming to Nashville since his teens, having been told by Mac Wiseman that his real future was in Country Music, and he moved there after leaving Crowe’s band. He met Lorrie Morgan in a studio at Acuff-Rose Music, where Morgan worked as a receptionist and Whitley was cutting the demo of “Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind,” which would become a chart-topper for George Strait. Whitley and Morgan married in November 1986.

By that time, Whitley had been signed to RCA Records by then-Vice President of Nashville Operations Joe Galante. Whitley’s debut EP, 1984’s A Hard Act to Follow, achieved little success, its two singles peaking outside Country’s Top 40. A full-length album, L.A. to Miami, fared better the following year, putting “Miami, My Amy” into the Top 20 followed by three Top 10 singles — “Ten Feet Away,” “Homecoming ’63,” and “Hard Livin’.”

Whitley found his artistic and commercial breakthrough with the next album, 1988’s Don’t Close Your Eyes. Three tracks produced with Garth Fundis – the title track, “When You Say Nothing at All” and “I’m No Stranger to the Rain” — found a perfect blending of bluegrass and honky-tonk traditions into contemporary Country, giving Whitley his first No. 1s. They still resonate more than 30 years later, a trio of singles with few parallels in terms of impact.

For a new version of Lefty Frizzell’s “I Never Go Around Mirrors,” Whitley convinced writer Whitey Shafer to craft an additional verse. On the day Whitley recorded the song, he visited Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens near his house in Goodlettsville, TN, and read the new lyrics over Frizzell’s grave.

One month after “I’m No Stranger to the Rain” hit the top of the charts, Whitley passed away in his home.

Unlike so many of his fellow Country Music Hall of Fame members, he never performed at the CMA Awards. He never became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. (Unknown to him, his invitation had been set for three weeks after his death.) His first Gold-record certification, for Don’t Close Your Eyes, came two months after his death, and his Grammy Awards nominations and CMA Awards came posthumously. A completed third album, I Wonder Do You Think of Me, came out in August 1989 and added two more singles, the title track and “It Ain’t Nothin’,” to his streak of No. 1s.

Whitley has been gone now for almost as long as he lived, and his legacy is immeasurable, influencing subsequent generations of Country singers and songwriters the way that icons like Frizzell and Williams influenced him.

What Country Music would have looked like without Whitley’s music — especially that trio of game-changing singles — is unimaginable. Tim McGraw, inspired by his love of Whitley’s music, moved to Nashville, arriving on the day Whitley died. A young Trisha Yearwood heard Don’t Close Your Eyes and dreamed of working with the same creative team, leading her to ask Fundis to produce her records. Chris Young signed with RCA in part because it had been Whitley’s label.  Dierks Bentley, Alan Jackson, Alison Krauss, Blake Shelton and others have acknowledged Whitley’s influence. Dozens of artists have covered his material on record or in concert.

Perhaps Garth Brooks, who specifically noted that Whitley deserved to be in the Hall of Fame during his own induction announcement in 2012, put it best recently. “Keith Whitley,” he said, “is the definition of Country Music.”

Bobby Karl Works The Room: Opry Spotlight Shines On Jamey Johnson, Ricky Skaggs

Pictured (L-R): Bill Anderson, Jamey Johnson

Bobby Karl Works The Room

Chapter 655

To put it in Biblical terms, a visit to the Opry always “restoreth my soul.”

Saturday’s Grand Ole Opry show (May 14) was both musically and spiritually uplifting, plus historically significant. Fittingly, the audience was packed to the rafters.

“It’s Jamey Johnson’s induction night,” Charlie Worsham told the cheering crowd. “It’s Ricky Skaggs’ 40th anniversary. I won my first ACM Award here last night [as Acoustic Guitar Player of the Year].” Worsham also pointed out that Opry bandleader/drummer Eddie Bayers was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame this month. So it was, indeed, an epic night at the hallowed institution.

Bill Anderson did the honors inducting Jamey. He related the story of inviting Jamey to join the cast in March. By then, Jamey had been a guest on the show dozens of times. Bill told him he would never be back as a guest. “I’ve been thrown out of a lot of places,” Jamey responded.

“We’re not kicking you out,” said Bill on Saturday night. “We’re welcoming you in.” He gave Jamey the Opry Membership statuette, a model of the Opry microphone stand. Jamey is member #228 in the show’s 97-year history.

“I don’t have to tell y’all how much this means to me,” responded Jamey. “I’ve been dreaming about this since I was a kid. And I’m not a kid anymore, as you can tell by the gray in my beard. I prayed for it every day.”

Bill said, “This is one more example of our prayers getting answered.” Backstage, he added, “This is as important for the Opry as it is for Jamey.”

Jamey wore a new, custom jacket by Manuel for his big night. Congratulatory, welcoming gifts arrived from the Opry’s Dan Rogers, Carrie Underwood and Rhonda Vincent.

Pictured (L-R): Ricky Skaggs, Jamey Johnson

Meanwhile backstage, Ricky Skaggs was cutting into a massive sheet carrot cake slathered with vanilla icing (including an icing guitar) while Opry boss Dan Rogers and Opry talent manager Gina Keltner presented him with a beautiful framed poster commemorating his 40th anniversary with the show.

“I’m so proud to be associated with an organization that cares so much about music history — country music, bluegrass music, gospel,” Ricky said. During a pause in his onstage anniversary celebration, he and the audience watched video congratulations from Marty Stuart, Garth Brooks, Trisha Yearwood and Keith Urban.

The show began with The Opry Square Dancers, followed by Larry Gatlin, Deana Carter, Gary Mule Deer, Worsham and Anderson. Jamey’s set included “Between Jennings and Jones,” “In Color” and, with his cowriter Bill Anderson, “Give It Away.”

Ricky’s performance included “Heartbroke” and “I Wouldn’t Change You If I Could.” Following the video tributes, Jamey joined him at center stage. With just their own mandolin and guitar accompaniment, the two honorees performed a stunning, brother-duet rendition of “Near the Cross,” which is the first song that Jamey ever learned to play on guitar. It earned the pair of celebrants a wildly enthusiastic standing ovation.

The halls and dressing rooms backstage were full of mingling friends — Kid Rock, Mark Wills, John Daly, Beverly Keel, Blake Harris, proud papa #1 Howard Johnson, proud papa #2 Gary Worsham, Jessie Schmidt, George Gruhn, Bret Wolcott, Melonie Cannon (papa Buddy cowrote “Give It Away” with Bill & Jamey), Regina Stuve, Bobby Cudd, Billy Paul, and The Whites. (Papa Buck White, 91, is now living with Ricky and Sharon White, reported Cheryl White).

George Jones Museum queen Nancy Jones arrived in a wheelchair, looking thin but still exhibiting her indomitable personality. I am told she has been so gravely ill with COVID that she died in the hospital twice and was revived. She said her recovery has taken seven months and demonstrated to Jamey that she can now walk again.

“I have to give my testimony,” she told him. “God spoke to me while I was in the hospital.”

“Did He sound like George Jones?” quipped Jamey.

“No, His voice wasn’t that deep,” Nancy replied.

Speaking of COVID, Ricky reported that his bout with the disease had led to the loss of his hair, which has now inexplicably grown back curly.

ACM honoree Charlie Worsham was playing a guitar that Vince Gill had given him. The Country Music Hall of Famer had played it when he taped Crossroads with Sting. Charlie was so moved by the generosity that he cried when Vince gave it to him.

Then there was the Deana Carter connection. It turns out that she was also on the show on March 19 when Jamey was invited to become an Opry member. We briefly mused about whether or not she should leap barefoot into honoree Ricky’s arms the way she so memorably did when he presented her with a CMA Award in 1997. I urged her not to repeat the exuberant stunt, for fear of injury to them both, now 25 years older.

Bill Anderson reported that he has recorded a new duet with Dolly Parton and that they are making a music video for it next week. He was recently taped for an upcoming PBS documentary about Minnie Pearl.

As for his feelings about his new fellow Opry cast member: “I knew he was one of us,” said Bill. “I knew he had a country heart and a country soul.”

Jamey Johnson’s induction into the Opry cast continues a recent string of artistically valuable additions to the venerable show’s lineup. These include Luke Combs (7/16/19), Gene Watson (2/7/20), Rhonda Vincent (2/6/21), Lady A (2/14/21), Carly Pearce (8/3/21), The Isaacs (9/14/21), Mandy Barnett (11/2/21) and Lauren Alaina (2/12/22).

I can’t close without saying how much I value the friendship and hospitality I always feel from Gina and “Opry Dan.” People like them really do restore your spirits.