Academy Of Country Music Names 2024-2025 Board Of Directors

The Academy of Country Music has selected its Board of Directors for the 2024-2025 term.

Previously-announced officer roles for the Academy of Country Music for the 2024-2025 term are Chair Randy Bernard, Vice-Chair Cris Lacy, Vice-President Jeff Krones, Treasurer Carmen Romano, Sergeant-at-Arms Gayle Holcomb, Parliamentarian Duane Clark and Secretary Tommy Moore.

This year, 11 of the 13 qualifying professional categories were elected by the Academy’s membership. In addition to those elected, director-at-large positions have been appointed by the Chair, Vice-Chair and Vice-President. Directors are elected from each category based on the number of members in that category. Each director serves a staggered two-year term.

Newly-elected members of the Board of Directors include Adam Weiser, Becky Gardenhire, BJ Hill, Cameo Carlson, Chandra Laplume, Cyndi Forman, Deana Ivey, George Couri, Jon Loba, Kristie Sloan, Lee Thomas Miller, Marcel Pariseau, Margaret Hart, Meredith Jones, Scott Scovill, Tim Roberts and Ward Guenther. Martha Earls and Scot Calonge have been elected to a one-year term to fill a previous vacancy.

Newly-appointed director-at-large members of the Board of Directors include Aaron Spalding, Andy Moats, Benson Curb, Candice Watkins, Chris Lisle, Cindy Mabe, Curt Motley, Emily Falvey, Howie Edelman, Jeremy Holley, Matt Cottingham, Rod Phillips, Sally Seitz, Shawn McSpadden, Storme Warren and Tim Foisset.

“As we enter into a milestone year with the 60th ACM Awards on the horizon on May 8, 2025, this will be a year of reflection on the impact the Academy has made on our industry, and a year to look forward on what the next sixty years will look like for the Academy and country music,” shares Damon Whiteside, CEO of the Academy of Country Music. “With the guidance of these leaders in our industry and on our board, I have no doubt that the ACM will have one of the most exciting, impactful, and successful years to date, and with this dedicated group of individuals, the sky is the limit.”

The complete board is listed below.

Academy of Country Music Board of Directors 2024-2025:

OFFICERS:
Chair of the Board: Randy Bernard, RWB Management
Vice-Chair: Cris Lacy, Warner Music Nashville
Vice-President: Jeff Krones, CAA
Treasurer: Carmen Romano​, FBMM
Sergeant-at-Arms: Gayle Holcomb, WME
Parliamentarian: Duane Clark, FBMM
Secretary: Tommy Moore, Academy of Country Music

AFFILIATED:
Scot Calonge, Richards & Southern
Ward Guenther, Whiskey Jam
Deana Ivey, Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp
Scott Scovill, Moo TV

ARTIST/MUSICIAN/PRODUCER/ENGINEER:
Gena Johnson
TJ Osborne
Carly Pearce
Derek Wells

DIGITAL MARKETING/ DISTRIBUTION:
Cameo Carlson, mTheory
Margaret Hart, YouTube

MANAGER:
George Couri, Triple 8 Management
Enzo DeVincenzo, 377 Management
Martha Earls, Neon Coast
Kerri Edwards, kpentertainment

MEDIA/PUBLIC RELATIONS:
Marcel Pariseau, True Public Relations
Kristie Sloan, The GreenRoom PR

MUSIC PUBLISHER/PRO:
Cyndi Forman, UMPG
Shannan Hatch, SESAC
BJ Hill, Warner Chappel Music

RADIO:
Mike Moore, Cumulus Media
Tim Roberts, Audacy

RECORD COMPANY:
Jon Loba, BMG
Katie McCartney, Monument Records
Annie Ortmeier, Triple Tigers
Jennifer Way, Sony Music Nashville

SONGWRITER:
Lee Thomas Miller

TALENT AGENT:
Becky Gardenhire, WME
Meredith Jones, CAA

TALENT BUYER/PROMOTER:
Adam Weiser, AEG Presents

VENUE:
Jason Kane, Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo
Kevin Ream, Cheatham Street Warehouse
Troy Vollhoffer, Premier Global Production

VISUAL CONTENT:
Chandra LaPlume, Sandbox Productions

DIRECTORS AT LARGE:
Jake Basden, Sandbox Entertainment
Breland
Ryan Beuschel, The Neal Agency
Johnny Chiang, SiriusXM
Buffy Cooper, Morris Higham Management
Matt Cottingham, Lewis Brisbois
Benson Curb, Curb | Word Entertainment
Howie Edelman, Durango Artist Management
Emily Falvey
Tim Foisset, Spotify
Rusty Gaston, Sony Music Publishing Nashville
Jeremy Holley, FlyteVu
Beth Laird, Creative Nation
Chris Lisle, CLLD, LLC
Cindy Mabe, UMG Nashville
Shawn McSpadden, Range Media Partners
Daniel Miller, Fusion Music
Andy Moats, Pinnacle Bank
Mike Molinar, Big Machine Music
Patrick Moore, Opry Entertainment
Curt Motley, UTA
Chris Parr, MAVERICK
Rod Phillips, iHeart Media
Ryan Redington, Amazon Music
Mike Rittberg, Big Machine Label Group
Shannon Sanders, BMI
Sally Seitz, Apple Music
Aaron Spalding, Live Nation
Randi Tolbert, QPrime
Storme Warren, The Big 615
Candice Watkins, Big Loud
Erika Wollam Nichols, The Bluebird Cafe

PAST CHAIRS:
Chuck Aly, Country Aircheck
Lori Badgett, City National Bank
Duane Clark, FBMM
Ebie McFarland, Essential Broadcast Media
Ben Vaughn, Warner Chappell
Ed Warm, Joe’s Live

EX OFFICIO PAST CHAIRS:
Paul Barnabee, FBMM
Charlie Cook
Rod Essig, CAA
Mark Hartley
Darin Murphy, CAA
Ken Tucker, Wheelhouse Records
Butch Waugh, Studio2bee

Post Malone Weaves Genres Together At Career-Defining Show

Post Malone performs onstage at his his F-1 Trillion Tour. Photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Live Nation

Culminating his whirlwind year, Post Malone hit the stage at Nissan Stadium on Saturday night (Oct. 19) for an unforgettable, sold-out show, marking his first NFL stadium concert.

With the sun already set and fans ready to go, country-rock singer Dan Spencer took the stage to warm up the crowd, beginning with “Weepin’ Weekend.” Spencer continued to rock out with originals such as “Eternal Platitude,” “Fat Vampire” and “Tennessee Buddha.” After thanking Post for allowing him to open, he closed up with “Coffee Shop Cowboy Blues.”

Fans were then treated to a stunning set from country duo Muscadine Bloodline. Kicking off their high energy performance with “Rattlesnake Ridge” and “Weyerhaeuser Land,” the two had fans clapping along from the start. After encouraging everyone to “sit back, relax and enjoy the show,” they continued the party with “Dyin’ For A Livin’” before slowing it down for their first-ever RIAA Platinum hit “Porch Swing Angel,” where a sea of cellphone lights illuminated the stadium. 

Gary Stanton of the duo then started to add some old school sounds in, pulling out a harmonica for “Mary Riley” and “Earle Byrd From Mexia,” breaking the stadium out into the ultimate jam session. The duo slowed it down once more for emotional “10-90,” before taking the crowd to Monroe County, Alabama performing their high energy “Devil Died In Dixie.” Stanton and Charlie Muncaster took the crowd back in time with the first song they ever wrote together “Ginny,” before closing the set with “Me On You.” 

As everyone was waiting for the man of the hour to take the stage, there was a sense of unity felt around the crowd. Whether you were a fan of his hip-hop hits or an avid listener of his country F-1 Trillion album, everyone was there to see the superstar perform a decade of music. Starting the night off with “Wrong Ones,” Post instantly made the crowd feel welcome. Fireworks and sparkler display lit up the sky throughout the tune, and continued throughout the night. After finishing “Finer Things,” Nashville welcomed him with a “Posty” chant, making the singer, and fans, feel emotional already.

Post shared that it was his first NFL stadium show, and then took the crowd back to 2019 with “Circles,” before switching back to country with “What Don’t Belong To Me.” While taking in everything that was happening, he continued to express his gratitude to every person in the audience, bringing his emotions to the forefront again. He then continued the hits with “Guy For That.” 

After a stellar vocal performance of “Chemical,” Post brought the honky-tonk vibes with “California Sober” and “M-E-X-I-C-O,” spotting some fans doing the letter dance to the latter. After taking the time to introduce his band on stage and singing happy birthday to one of them, Post electrified the stage with “Candy Paint.” 

“I want to treat you guys to a special cover tonight,” Post stated as applause was still roaring. “I want to honor someone who made me want to come to Nashville and make music.” He got the stadium roaring for the late Toby Keith before acoustically covering his “What I Didn’t Know Then.” 

In a special moment, Post invited his fan Winter onto the stage. The superstar gave Winter a guitar at a show last year, and since then, Winter had been practicing his song “Stay.” Post gave Winter a seat and a guitar, and the two flawlessly performed the track together. You could hear a pin drop in the audience. 

With everyone in the audience captivated by his every move, Post performed a three-track run of some of his biggest hits, including “I Fall Apart,” “Better Now” and “Psycho,” where fire and flashing lights punctuated the moments, adding to the star’s incredible performances. He then switched back to F-1 Trillion’s “Dead At The Honky Tonk.”

“We’d like to dedicate this next song to anyone out there who feels like even when in a crowded room, you’re all by yourself. I just want to let you know, keep rocking, keep rolling, keep being yourself and if you’re a loser, welcome to the show,” Post shared before going into “Losers.” 

 

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“I remember sitting on my bed when I was a kid and trying to learn chords, learn how to make beats and how to be a musician,” began an emotional Post. “I sat down on the edge of my bed and said, ‘one of these days I’m going to be a musician.’ Thanks to y’all, we made it happen.” 

After the cheers of the crowd swept through the stadium, he than began to talk about his family, including his three-year-old daughter, whom he wrote the next tune for. After shouting out all the parents in the crowd, Post captured everyone’s heart with “Yours,” before turning the dial back up with “White Iverson.” 

With the bevy of Nashville stars on his album, fans were eagerly wondering if anyone was going to join Post for the party. Just in time, he welcomed Blake Shelton out onto the stage to perform their hit “Pour Me A Drink.” 

To continue honoring Nashville stars, he covered Brad Paisley‘s “I’m Gonna Miss Her,” before firing up the crowd with “Go To Hell.” As soon as the notes started for the next track, excitement filled the stadium as Post sang his recording-breaking hit “I Had Some Help,” closing the country chapter of the night.

As the set began winding down, there was still more to give. After an enthralling performance of “Rockstar,” Post wanted to share one more note of encouragement with his fans.

“It seems like a lot of the time, you look around in this world and there’s not enough love,” he began. “To anyone who feels like they’re alone, you are not alone. You rock so much and no one on this planet can tell you what to do with this life. It does not matter what you want to do in this world, do it the best you can, do it the hardest you can, because no one can stop you from living your dreams.” 

After filling their hearts with hope and gratitude, Post gave fans the ultimate closing of the show with “Congratulations” and “Sunflower.” 

The “F-1 Trillion Tour” will wrap up this week in Post’s home state of Texas with two shows in Houston and two shows in Austin.

Taylor Phillips Re-Enters MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart Top 10

Taylor Phillips

Taylor Phillips has re-entered the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart, sitting at No. 7 this week. “Fix What You Didn’t Break,” “I Am Not Okay,” “Liar” and “This Town’s Been Too Good To Us” all helped the songwriter jump five spots.

Zach Bryan remains in the No. 1 spot for the seventh consecutive week with “28,” “American Nights” and “Pink Skies.” Chris Stapleton stays at No. 2 with “Think I’m In Love With You.”

Ashley Gorley (No. 3), Riley Green (No. 4) and Jessie Jo Dillon (No. 5) round out this week’s 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.

Country Music Hall Of Fame Inducts John Anderson, James Burton & Toby Keith

Pictured (L-R): John Anderson, James Burton and Tricia Covel attend the Class of 2024 Medallion Ceremony at Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Three more outstanding record-makers were added to the historic Country Music Hall of Fame last night (Oct. 20) during a star-studded Medallion Ceremony in the Hall’s CMA Theater. John Anderson, James Burton and Toby Keith became the 153rd, 154th and 155th members of the esteemed institution.

CEO of Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Kyle Young speaks onstage at Class of 2024 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Each inductee was honored with heartfelt remarks and performances of some of their enduring songs. The Hall of Fame’s CEO Kyle Young welcomed the crowd of supporters and industry member’s with a Merle Haggard recording from the museum’s archive, as each inductee had a personal connection to Haggard.

Young recognized the Hall of Fame members who had been lost since last year’s ceremony, including Keith, Kris Kristofferson and Joe Bonsall. He also welcomed the Hall’s Circle Guard, including Board chair Jody Williams, who spoke, as well as the Hall of Fame members who were in attendance to support the new additions to the family.

CMA CEO Sarah Trahern shared a few words about giving the news to the inductees, and spoke about finding out that Keith had been selected for induction the day that the news broke that he had passed.

Del McCoury Band performs onstage at the Class of 2024 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

John Anderson was the first to be heralded. A career video recounted his journey from Apopka, Florida to Nashville, where he made a mark with his unique vocal stylings. Influenced by Country Music Hall of Fame members Lefty Frizzell, Merle Haggard and George Jones as well as Levon Helm of the Band, Anderson fashioned his own breathy, note-bending vocal approach, and created iconic country hits like “Seminole Wind,” “Straight Tequila Night” and his top-selling “Swingin.” Between 1981 and 1995, Anderson notched 20 top 10 country singles and five No. 1 hits.

To honor him, Shawn Camp lended his voice to Anderson’s “I Just Came Home to Count the Memories,” the Del McCoury Band thrilled with a delightfully-bluegrass take on “Would You Catch a Falling Star” and Lucinda Williams shared a favorite of hers, “Wild and Blue.”

Bobby Braddock, John Anderson and Kyle Young pose onstage Class of 2024 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Anderson’s medallion was presented by Country Music Hall of Fame member Bobby Braddock, who shared funny stories about working with the fellow Floridian and commented on his dedication to making his own way in the music industry.

Anderson was emotional and full of gratitude when he stepped up to the podium. He thanked everyone in his village, from his family to friends, band members, business partners and even the doctors who take care of him.

“I can’t say how much this means to me. For an old boy, who took off from his hometown with a guitar and $40, it’s been a long and winding road,” Anderson said. “It’s one of the greatest honors that anybody in our profession could ever have, to be on this stage. I want to thank the good Lord up above for giving me a love of music that has sustained me and kept me living, dreaming and working. I hope I never have to quit.”

Post Malone performs at the Class of 2024 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Next, it was time to honor Toby Keith. His video highlighted the Oklahoma native’s consistency as a hit-maker for his nearly 30-year career. Between 1993 and his death in 2024, Keith notched 42 top 10 country hits and 20 chart-toppers, and he sold more than 40 million records. His expertise as a songwriter was frequently underlined, with most of his material being written or co-written. His propensity for the tough, tender and humorous side of life yielded such hits as “As Good as I Once Was,” “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue” and “Hope on the Rocks.” Keith’s patriotism was also celebrated. A savvy businessman, he launched his own successful record label and publishing company.

Post Malone thrilled the CMA Theater with the first performance honoring Keith. He humbly took on “I’m Just Talkin’ About Tonight,” sharing his love for the icon throughout the performance. Eric Church then appeared and did a beautifully touching cover of “Don’t Let The Old Man In” and Blake Shelton wrapped it up with a delightful mash-up of “I Love This Bar” and “Red Solo Cup,” which turned into a full-hearted sing-along.

Tricia Covel and Randy Owen at the Class of 2024 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Hall of Fame member Randy Owen gave the Medallion presentation, sharing emotional words about how much love Keith shared for the Alabama group.

Keith’s widow Tricia Covel shared words about her husband in his honor. She did a beautiful job, letting the crowd in on his dedication to songwriting, to the troops, his family and resisting to play the Nashville game and sticking to his guns. The crowd supported her, wiping tears from their eyes.

“Thank you to the Country Music Hall of Fame for honoring him with this induction. He didn’t get the chance to hear the news that he had been inducted,” Covel said with a soft cry. “I have a feeling, in his words, he thought ‘I shoulda been.’ Toby, we know you know—you are in the Country Music Hall of Fame.”

Brad Paisley performs at the Class of 2024 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Finally, it was time to honor James Burton. The guitar slinger’s impact on musicians, regardless of genre, was made clear in his career video. By age 14, Burton counted himself as a Louisiana Hayride staff musician and created the memorable guitar lick for “Susie-Q” by Dale Hawkins. He then impressed a young star on the rise, Ricky Nelson, and joined his band where he crafted influential rockabilly licks and solos on more than 40 hits. As an in-demand studio picker, he played on records for artists ranging from Merle Haggard to the Beach Boys. He then led Country Music Hall of Fame member Elvis Presley’s band from 1969 to 1977, followed by stints backing John Denver, Country Music Hall of Fame member Emmylou Harris and others in bands and on records.

To honor him, Elvis Costello and John Jorgenson rocked out on “Believe What You Say.” Brad Paisley, who commended Burton for making Paisley guitars cool, showed off his skills with “Workin’ Man Blues.” Country Music Hall of Fame members Vince Gill and Emmylou Harris along with Rodney Crowell shared their admiration with “Til I Gain Control Again,” and then Gill and Harris reappeared with none other than Keith Richards for a infectiously fun performance of “I Can’t Dance.”

Emmylou Harris, Keith Richards and Vince Gill perform at the Class of 2024 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Gill had the honor of presenting Burton’s Medallion. He told funny stories about Burton, and also emotionally shared how much working with the guitar hero has meant to him.

Burton approached the podium with two of his grandchildren. He kept it short and sweet, sharing his shock and gratitude for the honor.

“All the guys I worked with are my heroes. Thank you God for giving me a small part to be with these people,” Burton said. “I’m so honored.”

The ceremony concluded with a performance of “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” led by Country Music Hall of Fame member Tanya Tucker.

The Medallion All-Star Band consisted of Jen Gunderman (keyboards), Tania Hancheroff (vocals), Mike Johnson (steel guitar), Rachel Loy (bass), Jeff King (electric guitar), Jerry Pentecost (drums), Deanie Richardson (fiddle and mandolin), Mica Roberts (vocals), Biff Watson (bandleader and acoustic guitar) and Charlie Worsham (acoustic guitar, banjo and vocals).

Morgan Wallen Notches Third Week At No. 1 On MusicRow Radio Chart

Morgan Wallen notches a third week at No. 1 on the MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart with “Lies Lies Lies”.

The track was written by Jessie Jo Dillon, Josh Miller, Daniel Ross and Chris Tompkins.

In partnership with Hangout Music Festival and AEG Presents, Wallen has announced a three-day Sand In My Boots Festival coming to Gulf Shores, Alabama on May 16–18. The event coincides with the Hangout Festival’s 15 year anniversary and will feature Wallen’s closest friends, favorite artists and musical influences.

“Lies Lies Lies” currently sits at No. 9 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart and No. 5 on the Mediabase chart.

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

DISClaimer Single Reviews: Jelly Roll’s Vocal Is Full Of ‘Gripping Passion & Believability’

Jelly Roll. Photo: Eric Ryan Anderson

In these troubling times, the country stars are offering comforting messages this week.

To varying degrees, Tim McGraw, Jelly Roll, Dolly, Reba, Tanya and Bailey Zimmerman are all singing of hope and empowerment. Among them, Jelly Roll has the outstanding effort and wins the Disc of the Day prize.

I was thunderstruck by the vocal quality of Taulia Lave, who is a complete unknown to me. He easily wins the DISCovery Award du jour.

TAULIA LAVE / “Modern Day Cowboy”
Writers: Errol Collier/Taulia Lave; Producer: Austin Stanley; Label: Country Boy Records
– The production perks up your ears from the first deep-bass notes. Then the man begins to sing and OMG. Gorgeous voice. Gorgeous tempo track. This is packed with audio dynamics—steel, percussion, twang guitar, propulsion, echo. Lave, known as “Big T” is a Samoan with a voice of satin. He hails from Hawaii, a state whose natives have always included many great vocalists. Take it from me, this man is one of them.

REBA McENTIRE / “Happy’s Place”
Writers: Carole King/Doug Sisemore/Reba McEntire; Producer: Doug Sisemore; Label: Rockin’ R Records
– This rhythmic bopper is the theme song from the Hall of Famer’s new NBC sitcom, which premieres tomorrow (Oct. 18). She invests it with plenty of energy. The instrumental break is a bland disappointment. The writer credits are newsworthy.

WARREN ZEIDERS / “You For A Reason”
Writers: Alex Maxwell/Rivers Rutherford/Warren Zeiders; Producers: Ross Copperman, Warren Zeiders; Label: Warner Records
– The love didn’t last, but he has no regrets. CMT award winner Zeiders is such a strong vocalist, and sings this ballad with loads of heart.

KELSEA BALLERINI / “First Rodeo”
Writers: Alysa Vanderheym/Hillary Lindsey/Jessie Jo Dillon/Karen Fairchild/Kelsea Ballerini; Producers: Alysa Vanderheym, Kelsea Ballerini; Label: Black River Entertainment
– This is a soft-focus, pastel watercolor of sound. Ballerini dials it down to a whispery, conversational delivery while the dreamy ballad swirls in gentle washes around her. Lovely listening.

TIM McGRAW / “People Like Us”
Writers: Scooter Carusoe/Tom Douglas; Producers: Byron Gallimore, Tim McGraw; Label: Big Machine Records
– Very uplifting. McGraw sings a lyric that offers unity, hope and heart. We’re all in this together, and if we want to build a better tomorrow we have to do it in brotherhood. This guy has always been a champion song magnet.

KASHUS CULPEPPER / “Out Of My Mind”
Writers: Brian Elmquist/Kashus Culpepper; Producer: Brian Elmquist; Label: Big Loud/Mercury Records
– This has a cool, unusual sound with multiple tempo and chord changes. I don’t hear it as “country,” however.

BAILEY ZIMMERMAN / “Holding On”
Writers: Austin Shawn/Blake Whiten; Producer: Austin Shawn; Label: Warner Music Nashville/Elektra Entertainment
– The vocal sounds very “processed” in this plodding ballad. The production is a dense sounding onslaught of electronics. Pass.

JELLY ROLL / “I Am Not Okay”
Writers: Ashley Gorley/Casey Brown/Jason Deford/Taylor Phillips; Producer: Zach Crowell; Label: BBR Music Group
– This is arguably his finest vocal performance to date, full of gripping passion and believability. For troubled souls everywhere: “When it’s all said and done/I am not okay/But it’s all gonna be alright.” This turbulent-but-uplifting track deserves to be a No. 1 record.

DON LOUIS / “Drunk And Alone”
Writer: Don Louis; Producer: Kipp Williams; Label: Money Myers Entertainment/EMPIRE
– They broke up. It sounds like they are both drowning their blues in booze. He at least has the satisfaction of knowing she calls him when she’s loaded and needy. The track bops along merrily, and he sings with fine finesse. I’ve been liking this guy all along, and the hunk is named one of Music City’s Most Beautiful People in the current issue of Nashville Lifestyles magazine.

DOLLY PARTON, MADDIE & TAE, JESSIE JAMES DECKER & CALLIE TWISSELMAN / “Gonna Be You”
Writer: Diane Warren; Producer: Jimmy Robbins; Label: DiNamic/CTK Records
– The massed female voices combine to offer a song of sisterhood. It’s about buddies who will always have your back. Friendship has seldom sounded so downright wise and wonderful. The upbeat anthem is from the soundtrack of the hit comedy movie 80 For Brady, which I also recommend.

HUESTON / “Bottle In My Hand”
Writers: Brandon Sammons/Cory Hueston/Matt Ferranti; Producer: Bsamz; Label: Silver Wings Records
– He has a very ear-catching voice, kinda strangled, soulful and aching. The production is pop, but the lyric of closing a dive bar down and losing it all to alcohol is country all the way.

TANYA TUCKER / “Do We Want To Win”
Writers: Chuck Cannon/Reggie Hamm; Producers: Chuck Cannon, Mark Joseph; Label: TT
– It’s kinda political and also about a relationship. The tempo drags, there’s a whole lotta spoken word passages, and the chorus seems to be the only hook in the song.

BREAKING: UMG Nashville Ups Damon Moberly To Sr. VP Of Promotion

Damon Moberly. Photo: Kurt Ozan

Universal Music Group Nashville has promoted Damon Moberly to Senior Vice President of Promotion, effective immediately.

“Damon is such a champion of great artists and songs,” says UMGN Chair & CEO, Cindy Mabe. “His passion for music and his skillset of building people and teams makes him the perfect person to lead our promotion team to new depths. I’m honored to have Damon in this new role.”

With over 25 years at the label group, most recently as Sr. Vice President and head of the Mercury Nashville radio promo team, Moberly kicked off his country radio promo career with Shania Twain’s launch of Come On Over. Since then he has elevated the careers of Sammy Kershaw, Terri Clark, Sugarland, Jamey Johnson and many more.

Moberly has worked on special projects such as an Eagles single at country radio, the breakout hit “I’m A Man of Constant Sorrow” off the massive No. 1 O Brother, Where Art Thou? motion picture soundtrack, a No. 1 hit for Jon Bon Jovi featuring Jennifer Nettles with “Who Says You Can’t Go Home” and Lionel Richie’s Billboard 200 No. 1 album, Tuskegee. He has helped build critical acclaim and success for artists including the incomparable Chris Stapleton, the groundbreaking duo The War And Treaty, 12-time chart-topper Billy Currington, award-winning duo Maddie & Tae, and rising stars Priscilla Block, Dalton Dover, Luke Grimes, Bryce Leatherwood, Josh Ross and Sam Williams.

“I’ve been fortunate to call Mercury Records Nashville my only label home for the past 26 years,” shares Moberly. “I’m honored to now work with all the UMG Nashville imprints and artists alongside the best promotion pros in the business. Thanks to Cindy Mabe for this opportunity.”

My Music Row Story: Downtown Music’s Emily Stephenson

Emily Stephenson. Photo: Ebru Yildiz

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.

Emily Stephenson serves as Downtown Music’s President of Publishing, overseeing all publishing efforts under the division, including Downtown Music Publishing, Songtrust and Sheer. Collectively, Downtown Music Publishing services over 360,000 songwriters and manages nearly five million copyrights globally.

Prior to her current role, Stephenson served as Downtown Music Publishing’s Vice President of Business Operations and, during her 12+ year tenure at the company, has been at some point responsible for each aspect of publishing administration and client services for Downtown’s songwriter and publishing clients, including Spirit Music Group, Ryan Tedder, Big Yellow Dog and the John Lennon Estate. Since her appointment as President in 2023, Stephenson has been instrumental in leading all publishing efforts, resulting in key signings including Grammy-nominated songwriter and award-winning artist, Raja Kumari, Laurie Anderson, Josh Ramsay and notable indie rock band The National.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?

I grew up just south of town in Franklin. My parents both graduated from Vanderbilt and never left. They were both athletes at Vanderbilt—my dad played football and my mom played tennis—and then dad became a physical therapist and mom was a math teacher. I had a wonderful childhood. Franklin was an amazing place to grow up. I’m the oldest of four siblings, so our house was always full of life.

How did music become part of your story?

There’s no real musicality in our family, but growing up in the area, I was around it. Our community was full of songwriters and musicians, so I was hyperaware of the creativity that was and is so core to Nashville.

Photo: Courtesy of Stephenson

What was college like?

I went to Auburn University and studied Communications with a minor in Spanish. I started as a Math Education major because I wanted to do what my mom did, but that was very hard. [Laughs] I switched to Communications and I loved it. During my time at Auburn, I was an athletic tutor for the public speaking course that everyone had to take, which was fun.

As part of the Communications program, you had to do a full semester internship. I knew I wanted to go into music—at that point I had started getting my hands on demos that were being passed around had become obsessed with music discovery. Since there were no music internships in Auburn, Alabama, I came back to Nashville during my last semester of college and did an internship at an artist management company.

What was that internship like?

I already had a feeling I wanted to go into publishing—I wanted to support songwriters and their work. But looking back, the artist management firm was a great overview into the full picture of the music industry. I got a glimpse into what it takes to make and release an album, prepare for a tour, write a treatment for a music video, and all the in-betweens.

What happened next?

After graduation, I moved home to Nashville and waited tables at the J. Alexander’s in Cool Springs for a few months while I was job hunting, and then got a call one day from Bluewater Music Group because I had been recommended for a position. I went there and worked for Jessica Myers, who taught me so much. Something that makes Bluewater really unique is their global collection strategy. Bluewater was a really great way for me to understand and make connections with international collection societies and learn the landscape in different territories. I was there for about a year.

Photo: Courtesy of Stephenson

Then what happened?

That first year out of college in Nashville was a blast. I was in a group of friends who were all getting our feet wet in the industry. Many of us are still working in publishing and the songwriters have gone on to have really successful careers.

Although I loved my friends and family in Nashville, I knew I wanted to move to New York. I was starting to look for jobs in the city and found Downtown Music. I really liked their roster and how they were approaching publishing. I applied for open role in publishing administration, specifically for international collections. I knew I was qualified because of my work at Bluewater, but I wasn’t hearing back from Downtown.

One day I was so deep down the research rabbit hole of this company that I found the then-President, Justin Kalifowitz’s, personal website. He had his personal email address on his website, so I emailed him. I said something to the effect of, “I want to work for your company and I think what you guys are doing is amazing. I’ve applied for this job and I haven’t heard back, but next time you’re in Nashville, let me know. I would love to take you out for coffee.” He replied, “I’ll be in Nashville next week. Let’s get coffee.”

We met a few times over the course of the next several months. One day he called me and said he was in town and had a job he wanted to talk to me about. We went to lunch and about two weeks later, I moved to New York. That was 12 and a half years ago.

Tell me about your time in New York.

I was in New York 2012 to 2018. I was hired in under our Songtrust division, which had just recently launched. Songtrust is a publishing offering where anybody can sign up. When I joined, we could only administer catalogs in Canada, the U.K. and the U.S., so I came in and did several society affiliations, a couple of sub-publishing deals and just really expanded the territory of our offering. It was a really small shop at the time, so I was doing royalty processing, copyright registrations, label copy, client services, finance and tax forms and more. At the time we hadn’t built the technology we have now, so everything was done manually and I learned how to do so much.

Songtrust grew substantially and we had a lot more volume, so I grew that operations team. About three years into it, the leadership team approached me about doing global expansion for the Downtown Music Publishing catalog.

What did that entail?

It wasn’t exactly the same because they already had a relationships in place. It really was more about overseeing international relationships, so I moved over to Downtown and led what we called International Administration. It was a great way for me to get to know the clients and get to know the catalog.

At the time, Downtown was aggressively buying catalogs and signing deals. The Downtown office in New York had one of the top studios in Manhattan in the back, and so you might ride the elevator up with A-List, Grammy winning artists or run into current chart toppers in the kitchen. It was really fun. We were building something exciting and everyone was invested, engaged and happy.

Photo: Courtesy of Stephenson

What else sticks out from that time?

I came in at such early stages of Songtrust, and even when I moved over to Downtown, I realized I could change the way things are done in a really positive way. The leadership was so open to that, so I wanted to seize that moment. I did a lot to take establish trust within Downtown. I was responsive on email, I was showing up early and staying late—I wasn’t overworking myself, I was just excited. I realized I was at this company that was going to go on to do great things and I was in early.

What was next for you?

Downtown wanted to start a Client Services department so that songwriters could reach someone who is not A&R or their creative contact, but can talk royalty, copyright, deal and licensing matters. I was well positioned given my history to do that, so we created that department and brought on a co-head to lead it with me. I was talking to our clients every day and creating a really good rapport with them.

In 2018, I moved back to Nashville because I had my first baby. Being in our Nashville office was so awesome because I was back to hearing songs being written on the other side of the wall and seeing writers come in and out every day. It was a jolt back to the basics.

Then in 2022, my role changed again to a Business Operations role, which was a launching pad to take a larger leadership role at the company. That’s how I got integrated into how management worked—finance, HR, legal, etc.

How did you become President of the company?

I was nine months pregnant with my third baby and our CEO Andrew Bergman was visiting Nashville. We went to dinner and he said, “We want you to take your maternity leave and enjoy your time off, but when you come back, we want you to run the publishing company.” I was dumbfounded. I came back from maternity leave in January of 2023 in this new role. It’s been a lot of work, but so much fun.

What were your goals when you started out?

At the time we had sold our owned assets and were shifting focus to an admin-only business. My main goal was to figure out how to make this company successful and compelling for rights-owners on an administration margin. I also did a lot of work initially to assess how we’re structured, who we have doing what and what types of deals we’re going after, and fully committing to us being an admin business. Our staff, clients and prospective clients needed to understand what it is that we can do for them and how that’s unique. One big initial task was to put Downtown Music Publishing and Songtrust to sit under one management.

I do feel like we accomplished the goals that we set out to do early on, and did it pretty quickly and aggressively. I also wanted to be transparent with our team. I host quarterly town hall meetings with the company where I share financials, business plans, our yearly goals and objectives and how we’re thinking about things because I want people to come to work and feel like they’re connected to the work they’re doing and the vision of the company.

What would you say is your favorite part of your job?

The people. Over half of our management team has worked together for over a decade. When I was coming into the role as President, I was really nervous because there were so many people that I had worked with for so long. My colleagues have put a lot of trust in me. The people I get to work with every day are wildly smart and creative.

Our clients are the exact same way. Getting to work the clients we support is so rewarding. Not only do they have incredible catalogs – they’re just good people.

Who have been some of your mentors?

The leadership at Downtown has been so good to me over the years. Justin thinks about music in a way that’s so out of the box, and through all of his successes has always remained accessible. Andrew finds the perfect balance between challenging me but also respecting when I push back. Generally the leadership at Downtown has always been really good to me.

What moment have you had that your teenage self would think is so cool?

I just told this story to someone. We signed Colbie Caillat at the end of 2022. She was my ringback tone in high school. Her music has meant so much to me through different seasons in my life, and years later I was sitting in a room with her signing a deal. I feel like it’s important to not stop getting starstruck. There’s nothing wrong with being a fan.

MusicRow Magazine Releases 2024 Publisher Print Issue

MusicRow Magazine has released its 2024 Publisher Issue print edition. This highly-anticipated annual resource includes the 2024 Publisher Directory, listing Nashville’s top publishing companies as well as organizations available for songwriters.

“As one of Nashville’s most respected publications thanks to our dedicated and passionate team, we eagerly anticipate creating our annual MusicRow Publisher print issue each year for both our valued industry professionals and music enthusiasts alike. This issue in particular stands out as a comprehensive guide for the songwriting and publishing side of country music, celebrating the achievements and contributions of those who work behind the scenes to bring music to life,” shares Sherod Robertson, Owner/Publisher of MusicRow Magazine.

Back again in the 2024 Publisher Issue is the State of the Union roundtable, this time featuring Warner Chappell’s Spencer Nohe, UMPG’s Roxy King, Big Machine Music’s Alex Heddle and BMG’s Amy Hendon Scott.

Elsewhere, NSAI’s Bart Herbison tells MusicRow about the issues facing songwriters, and Downtown Music Publishing’s Emily Stephenson is the subject of the popular My Music Row Story column.

For the 2024 Publisher Issue, Nashville hitmakers Charlie Handsome, Ernest and Chandler Walters spoke with MusicRow about the making of Post Malone’s blockbuster F-1 Trillion album.

MusicRow’s 2024 Publisher Issue also highlights the work and careers of some of Nashville’s most in-demand songwriters, including Sony Music Publishing’s Connie Harrington, Warner Chappell’s Jordan Reynolds, UMPG Nashville’s Tanner Adell, King Pen Music/SMACKSongs/Warner Chappell’s Pete Good, Concord Music Publishing/Chromatic Music’s Lauren Hungate and Story House Collective/Essential Music Publishing’s Matthew West.

COJO Music/Warner Music Nashville artist Cody Johnson graces the cover of the 2024 Publisher Issue. Johnson has established a following of passionately loyal fans who regularly sell out shows across the country. The artist that media has touted “just might be the future of real country music” has skyrocketed to success with five celebrated albums, including Leather, Human: The Double Album, A Cody Johnson Christmas, Cody Johnson & The Rockin’ CJB Live and Ain’t Nothin’ To It; plus an award-winning feature-length documentary, Dear Rodeo: The Cody Johnson Story. He has amassed 7.5 billion global streams and three No. 1 singles.

Johnson received five nominations for the upcoming 58th Annual CMA Awards including Male Vocalist of the Year, Album of the Year for Leather, Single of the Year for “Dirt Cheap” and two nominations in the Music Video of the Year category for both “The Painter” and “Dirt Cheap.”

Single copies of MusicRow’s 2024 Publisher Issue are available for purchase at musicrow.com for $50, and are included with yearly MusicRow subscriptions.

Aaron Raitiere Jumps Into Top 10 On MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart

Aaron Raitiere. Photo: Alysse Gafkjen.

Aaron Raitiere has entered the top 10 on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart. He sits in the No. 8 spot this week with “4x4xU” and “You Look Like You Love Me.”

Zach Bryan remains in the No. 1 spot for the sixth consecutive week with “28,” “American Nights” and “Pink Skies.” Chris Stapleton stays at No. 2 with “Think I’m In Love With You.”

Riley Green (No. 3), Ashley Gorley (No. 4) and Jessie Jo Dillon (No. 5) round out this week’s 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.