UMPG Nashville, 50 Egg Ink Deal With Shane Minor

Pictured (L-R): Troy Tomlinson, Missy Roberts, Shane Minor, Tali Canterbury, Cyndi Forman, Jonathan Singleton, Joey Harris

Universal Music Publishing Nashville has partnered with 50 Egg Music to ink an exclusive global publishing agreement with Shane Minor.

Minor has penned hits including “Chillin’ It” (Cole Swindell), “Live A Little” (Kenny Chesney), “Beautiful Mess” (Diamond Rio), and “International Harvester” (Craig Morgan), as well as songs recorded by Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean, Chris Young, Rascal Flatts, and more.

Missy Roberts, Senior Creative Director at UMPG Nashville said, “I have long admired Shane Minor as a songwriter and human. He is a true pro and incredible asset to our roster. We are thrilled to partner with Shane and our friends at 50 Egg Music!”

Minor added, ”I’m so excited to be working with the two great teams of UMPG and 50 Egg Music. Having a joint venture with these incredible companies is both humbling and an honor.”

50 Egg’s Jonathan Singleton and Tali Canterbury added: “We couldn’t be happier to officially welcome Shane into our 50 Egg Music family. He is a fantastic writer who has the right personality to get in the room with other writers as well as artists and come out with a hit song. Working with Shane and Universal Music Publishing will be a valuable partnership for our company.”

Canterbury, Singleton and Luke Combs launched the music publishing and A&R venture 50 Egg Music earlier this year.

Rodney Crowell Signs Co-Publishing/Admin Deal With Sheltered Music

Rodney Crowell has signed a co-publishing and administration deal with Sheltered Music, a division of Blackbird Music Publishing Group, with a joint venture to develop new artist writers. 

With more than 40 years of American roots music under his belt, Crowell has a rich history of songwriting excellence and has written hits for Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Emmylou Harris, Tim McGraw, Keith Urban and more. The Texas native is a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, has written 15 number one hits, won two Grammys, and is the author of the acclaimed memoir, Chinaberry Sidewalks. In addition, he is the co-author of the New York Times best-selling book, Kin: Songs by Mary Karr and Rodney Crowell. Beyond working with some of the biggest names in country, he has also penned songs for Bob Seger, the Grateful Dead, Etta James, John Denver, and Jimmy Buffett, among others. In 2017, Crowell was honored with ASCAP’s prestigious Founder’s Award.

“It’s a privilege to get to work with Rodney, as writing great songs has always been a major part of his legacy,” commented SVP Darrel Franklin. “It is our goal to add to that iconic resume of success by creating strategic songwriting collaborations and placements for Rodney with major country artists. In addition, we will also be supporting his creative vision in developing new artist talent.” 

“It is my good fortune to collaborate with Lance Freed and Darrell Franklin in a new song publishing venture with Sheltered Music,” said Crowell. “I’m anticipating a thoroughly enjoyable ride.”

Sheltered Music, founded by The Raine Group, Keith Wortman and Blackbird Presents, formed in July 2019 and recently announced an A&R Partnership and creative development deal with producer Dann Huff.

NSAI Honors Chart-Topping Songs With Nashville Celebration

The Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI) recently celebrated several songwriters by partnering with event sponsor SunTrust for a party to honor writers of songs that reached No. 1 on the Billboard Airplay, Digital, Hot or Mediabase charts during the period of July-October 2019. NSAI President Steve Bogard and NSAI Exec. Director Bart Herbison presented attending writers with their honors.

The 20 songs recognized during the event were:

“Alive” 
Writers: Jason Ingram, Zach Williams, Jonathan Smith
Recorded by: Big Daddy Weave

“All To Myself” 
Writers: Nicolle Galyon, Shay Mooney, Jordan Reynolds, Dan Smyers
Recorded by: Dan + Shay

“Beer Never Broke My Heart” 
Writers: Luke Combs, Randy Montana, Jonathan Singleton
Recorded by: Luke Combs

“GIRL” 
Writers: Sarah Aarons, Greg Kurstin, Maren Morris
Recorded by: Maren Morris

“God’s Country” 
Writers: Devin Dawson, Michael Hardy, Jordan Schmidt
Recorded by: Blake Shelton

“Good Vibes” 
Writers: Zach Crowell, Ashley Gorley, Chris Janson
Recorded by: Chris Janson

“Haven’t Seen It Yet” 
Writers: Danny Gokey, Ethan Hulse, Colby Wedgeworth
Recorded by: Danny Gokey

“I Don’t Know About You” 
Writers: Ashley Gorley, Michael Hardy, Hunter Phelps, Jameson Rodgers
Recorded by: Chris Lane

“Knockin’ Boots” 
Writers: Gordie Sampson, Hillary Lindsey, Jon Nite
Recorded by: Luke Bryan

“Living”
Writers: Dierks Bentley, Ross Copperman, Ashley Gorley, Jon Nite
Recorded by: Dierks Bentley

“Love You Too Late” 
Writers: Michael Carter, Brandon Kinney, Cole Swindell
Recorded by: Cole Swindell

“Nobody” 
Writers: Mark Hall, Bernie Herms, Matthew West
Recorded by: Casting Crowns feat. Matthew West

“Old Town Road” 
Writers: Billy Ray Cyrus, Jocelyn Donald, Lil Nas X, Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, YoungKio
Recorded by: Lil Nas X feat. Billy Ray Cyrus

“Prayed For You” 
Writers: Ash Bowers, Allison Veltz-Cruz, Matt Stell
Recorded by: Matt Stell

“Rearview Town” 
Writers: Bobby Pinson, Kelley Lovelace, Neil Thrasher
Recorded by: Jason Aldean

“Reason” 
Writers: Jonathan Lowry, Chad Mattson, Chris Stevens
Recorded by: Unspoken

“Rumor”
Writers: Lee Brice, Ashley Gorley, Kyle Jacobs
Recorded by: Lee Brice

“Some Of It” 
Writers: Eric Church, Clint Daniels, Jeff Hyde, Bobby Pinson
Recorded by: Eric Church

“Southbound” 
Writers: David Garcia, Josh Miller, Carrie Underwood
Recorded by: Carrie Underwood

“The Ones That Didn’t Make It Back Home” 
Writers: Paul DiGiovanni, Chase McGill, Justin Moore, Jeremy Stover
Recorded by: Justin Moore

Gorley, Veltz, Copperman Take Top Three On MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart

Ashley Gorley remains at No. 1 this week on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart, while Laura Veltz moves up into the No. 2 position and Ross Copperman moves into No. 3.

Luke Combs occupies the No. 4 position, and Jesse Frasure rounds out the top five at No. 5.

The MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart, published every week, uses algorithms based upon song activity garnered from airplay, digital downloaded track sales and streams. This unique and exclusive addition to the MusicRow portfolio is the first songwriter chart of its kind.

Click here to view the full MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.

Warner Chappell Music Names Rich Christina Sr. VP, A&R

Rich Christina

Warner Chappell Music, the global publishing arm of Warner Music Group, has announced Rich Christina will join the company as Sr. VP, A&R. Christina was previously Sr. VP and Head of East Coast A&R for Sony/ATV Music Publishing.

New York-based Christina will report to Ryan Press, Warner Chappell Music’s President, A&R, U.S.

“Rich and I have known each other for nearly 30 years, and I’m thrilled to reunite with him in his new post at WCM,” said Warner Chappell Co-Chair & CEO Guy Moot. “His track record as both an established record exec and a publisher has been one of the most exceptional and consistent in the industry. He’s been a creative force behind countless hit songwriters, artists, and producers, driven by great ears, instinct, and taste. As we continue to transform the Warner Chappell culture, we’re all thrilled to welcome him on board.”

“Rich is one of the most well-respected A&R execs in the business, with strong relationships throughout the songwriter community,” said Press. “Major artists and developing talent alike have relied on him to help guide and grow their careers, and we look forward to having him join our growing A&R team.”

“This is a fantastic time to be joining Warner Chappell,” said Christina. “Guy, Carianne, and Ryan are spearheading a dynamic approach to publishing that is hugely inspiring. They’ve made some outstanding signings in the last few months, and set a clear direction for the company. I’m beyond excited to join them on the journey and help nurture an environment where the focus is on songwriters and their art.”

Christina launched his career in 1991 at Atlantic Records as a Mix Show Coordinator, working with Big Beat label founder (and current Atlantic Chairman/CEO) Craig Kallman. He moved into A&R after bringing Robin S’s No. 1 record, “Show Me Love,” to the company. He soon began working with Everything But The Girl, Brandy, Changing Faces, Craig David, Mark Morrison, and the Space Jam and Dr. Doolittle soundtracks.

After 12 years at Atlantic, in 2004 Christina joined Sony/ATV, serving first as Senior Director and later as Vice President of A&R. In 2009, he moved to EMI Music Publishing as Senior Vice President of Creative, returning to Sony/ATV three years later when the latter acquired EMI. While at Sony/ATV, he signed and/or developed artists, writers, and producers such as RedOne, Jessie J, Stargate, The Neighbourhood, Shep Goodman, Charlie XCX, and Gaslight Anthem.

Christina has most recently worked with songwriters such as Boi-1da (Drake, Ed Sheeran, Eminem, G Eazy, Lana Del Rey), Ricky Reed (Lizzo, Halsey, Leon Bridges, Maroon 5, Bomba Estero), Sam Hollander (Panic! At The Disco, Fitz and the Tantrums, Blink 182), Billy Walsh (Post Malone), and Vinylz (Drake, Chris Brown, Travis Scott, J Cole, G Eazy), along with a roster of artists including Charli XCX, Nomani Kordei, and Shaed. He’s helped develop such smash singles as “God’s Plan” by Drake, “Truth Hurts” by Lizzo, “Señorita” by Camilla Cabello & Shawn Mendes, “No Guidance” by Chris Brown featuring Drake, “Trampoline” by Shaed, and many more.

Entertainment One Inks Deal With Kalie Shorr

Pictured (L-R): Jamie Starling, eOne Business Affairs; Chris Taylor, eOne Global President Music; Kalie Shorr; Aaron Pearce, Vintern Songs CEO; Todd Roberts, eOne VP of A&R Music Publishing

Entertainment One has signed Kalie Shorr to a publishing deal via a joint venture with Vintern Songs. Earlier this year, Shorr released the album Open Book, and was a writer on each of the project’s 13 tracks.

“I definitely thought about the album like an essay of what my last year was like,” she told MusicRow shortly after the album’s release in September. “I thought well, if I was writing this like an essay of what my last year was like, ‘Too Much to Say’ is the thesis statement, ‘Escape’ is my background and my childhood, and then the breakup happens and you see how that all plays out, and then ‘The World Keeps Spinning’ brings me back into the family stuff and ‘Angry Butterfly’ is like the concluding paragraph.”

In addition to the deeply personal music she has contributed to her own album, Shorr has had songs featured in Paramount’s Yellowstone, CMT’s Nashville and the NFL, as well as recent singles from Honey County, Miranda Glory, and Will Jay.

eOne’s Global President, Music, Chris Taylor, says, “We are blown away with the depth of Kalie’s songwriting ability and are already integrating her talent with our teams in Nashville and Los Angeles. Not only is she a fantastic artist, but we can’t wait to utilize her work and take her work into new realms like TV and film.”

Aaron Pearce, CEO of Vintern Songs, added, “Kalie is an amazing triple threat singer/songwriter/musician. She is a true artist, a fabulous writer, and I couldn’t be more thrilled to be in business with her.”

Shorr says, “Songwriting is my passion, both to tell my own story and help other artists articulate theirs. As someone who writes in several different genres, eOne and Vintern are the perfect partners to help me take big steps in multiple directions. I feel so supported by them, both as an artist and as a songwriter, and I’m excited to see the doors we will open together. ”

Shorr is currently on tour with LeAnn Rimes for her You and Me and Christmas Tour and will be playing Nashville’s New Year’s Eve concert, Jack Daniel’s Music City Midnight, with Keith Urban, Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit, The Struts, Amanda Shires, Bren Joy and the Fisk Jubilee Singers.

Michael Knox, Kathy Spanberger Discuss peermusic’s New Nashville Office, The State Of Songwriting [Interview]

peermusic Nashville Sr. VP, Michael Knox. Photo: Haley Crow

In 2019, peermusic has been on the move—on many fronts.

peermusic relocated its Nashville office to 55 Music Sq. E., Ste. C—a space that previously housed SESAC’s offices, and remodeled the building to include more writer rooms, and communal, creative spaces.

Michael Knox, who has produced 23 No. 1 hits in his career, contributed to 45 million singles and 20 million albums sold, and is known for his longtime work with Jason Aldean, was promoted to Sr. VP, peermusic Nashville. The company recently celebrated the renewal of contracts for two writers—Jaron Boyer and Michael Tyler.

Tyler and Boyer each have songs on Aldean’s current chart-topping album, 9, and have co-written hits including Aldean’s “Girl Like You” and Dierks Bentley’s “Somewhere On A Beach,” among others. Other recent peermusic hits include “There Was This Girl” (Riley Green), “Rearview Town” (Aldean), and “Love You Too Late” (Cole Swindell).

Ken Burns’ recent documentary Country Music featured the story of peermusic founder Ralph S. Peer, producer of the famous “Bristol Sessions,” the 1927 recordings from the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers, which are considered the “Big Bang” of country music; Ralph Peer II, son of Ralph S. Peer, currently serves as Chairman and CEO of peermusic.

peermusic President/COO Kathy Spanberger celebrates her 40th year with peermusic this year and is responsible for all creative and administrative operations, including direct supervision of all U.S. signings to peermusic in the pop, urban, Latin, and country space, as well as overseeing peermusic’s international operations in Australia and Canada. Under her tenure, peermusic has seen a 25% year-over-year increase in global receipts. Spanberger began her career at peermusic in 1979 as an assistant to Ralph Peer II and went on to become one of the first female execs to serve as President and COO at a music publisher.

Michael Knox. Photo: Haley Crow

MusicRow spoke with peermusic Knox and Spanberger about peermusic’s relocation of its Nashville office, the company’s role in Burns’ Country Music documentary, and the state of music publishing.

MusicRow: peermusic recently relocated to 55 Music Sq. E.. Why was it so important for peermusic to remain located in the Music Row area?
Knox: Well, we went round and round about it because so many people were moving off the row. A lot of people, as you know, are moving out and going downtown or out by I-440. For a while there we were like, “Wow man, we’ll just take what we can get,” because they were knocking everything down. Then this spot opened up and I was like, “That’s a vintage-looking place where we’re not jumping into a corporate office visual, where we can still kind of be part of Old Nashville.”

What was your vision for the new space?
Spanberger: Well, my first thing was I had to make sure Michael Knox was happy [with the space]. Few of our offices outside of New York are in big office buildings. It’s just not the feel of the company that we want, because it’s a family-owned firm. Here, the whole feel of it is modern but still original.

Knox: The main thing I wanted was to keep the creative people in the same space, so they bump into each other. They create together, they feed off each other. You bump into your co-writers and you bump into your co-writers’ co-writers. It’s hard to find that kind of space that feels like a living room when you’re walking around. I wanted people to bump into each other and say, “Wow, this is our club. This is where we hang out.” That was the biggest part of the direction of the attitude you see. Being in publishing, that’s the big battle we have is you want to make those people want to be at your company. I mean, it’s not about the money at the end, it’s about where do you feel most comfortable. You want to have a place where other writers go. I mean, the place felt great.

peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow

What has been your approach to building a team of writers?
Knox: I’ve been working with Michael [Tyler] since he was 13. He’s a small-town America kid, but his melodies are really advanced. He’s singing about our target audiences. I met Jaron through cutting a song of his on Jason’s [album]. The first cut he ever got was “I Ain’t Ready to Quit,” I believe. He wrote it with Thomas Rhett. I brought Jaron in, and he and Michael hit it off, because that’s what I was hoping. I was looking for a mentor, and an up-and-coming producer mixed in with the new artist. Then, I just started building other people around that, and trying to create an environment where nobody does the same thing, so when they’re in the same room together, they cover so much area.

We’re a record label in a sense, with a mindset for developing talent. Our target audience is every A&R person and artist. We have to find a way to make them say, “I want my artist to be like that songwriter.” Our songwriters today would have been artists in the ’70s. My goal is to find artists that are exceptional songwriters.

Michael, you have been with peermusic Nashville for nearly a decade. What is it about working at peermusic that keeps you excited?
Knox: It’s very important for people at each [peermusic office] to have our vision of things. It’s great having Kathy and Mr. Peer to support my vision. Also, allowing me to produce and do these other things like having my own radio show and Music Knox Records, that’s a lot of gifts that peermusic gives me. I also think it helps my process of working with all the writers here. I feel like the key is keeping people motivated and excited. I want them to feel more like part of a team, instead of all this pressure of “Hey, if you don’t get a cut immediately, you’re gone.”

Artists seem to rely more on the same teams of co-writers for their albums. Do you see that shifting?
Knox: I think that’s deteriorating a little bit because now you only see three or four people at the cream of the crop. You see a lot of hits but not a lot of money. You see a lot of people winning awards but they’re only selling 80,000 records. You’re like, “Well, that’s got to change at some point.” I get it. I genuinely get it, because there’s a bulk of people I go to that I know have that right sound for what I do, but you still have to have that mindset of best song wins, because our biggest songs aren’t from the clique.

The thing about pop and country where we are, is [pop artists] can have one monster hit and it’s billions of streams, where we have to have four of those to equal that. In the pop world, and their camps, their audience is a lot bigger than ours. We have to have eight great songs, and a few album cuts. We don’t have the same privilege as some markets.

peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow

The country audience is different. We’re a club audience. They come to the clubs, they sit through a four-hour show. They want to hear multiple great songs. If you have one incredible, through the roof hit, of course you’re going to get an audience there, but over time they’re going to get tired of paying 30 bucks to go hear one song.

That’s the pressure for us, and the pressure with the cliques or the writing teams. They’re great taking off because everything’s so unique and new. New [songwriter] camps always do great at the beginning, but they recycle their ideas and then you come into the third album and you’re in trouble. If you look at Jason’s world, I’ve changed writing crews multiple times. It’s because we’re moving with the element of what we’re doing. It took me three or four years to build the team around him now; you have got to have the mindset of, “In five years, I’ve got to be doing something different.” I don’t think that some teams are thinking further than, “Oh my god, we just had a hit, so let’s put all 12 songs on there.” I think that just hurts in the long run.

And there are so many hit songs that were written years before they were recorded.
Knox: “Drowns the Whiskey” is seven years old. It took two demos to get us to hear it. Jaron Boyer and Michael Tyler have got five or six songs on Jason’s new record, and some of those are years and years old. It just takes time for things to find their place, especially given how competitive it is right now with getting an outside cut in general.

peermusic played an important role in the recent Ken Burns documentary Country Music. What kind of increase in interest and sales have you seen since the documentary came out?
Spanberger: Well, the documentary appearance has garnered the most interest in Jimmie Rodgers we’ve seen in probably the last 15 to 20 years. There was like a quadruple spike for Wikipedia searches and Google searches for Jimmie Rodgers after the documentary aired. There was a increase in monthly listeners on Spotify—It increased by 300,000 listeners per month.

Knox: I should say that just on a side route, [Ralph Peer II] told me that he’s gotten more phone calls and messages from people he hasn’t heard from in like 20 years, congratulating him on the documentary. It’s been very impactful for the company as well as on Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter family and their music.

What are the biggest opportunities you see in the publishing space in the next 5-10 years?
Knox: peermusic started out with the first songwriter, the father of country music and the first family songwriting team: Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter family. My goal is to just keep that moving forward and finding this next generation version of that. We all want to evolve into what’s happening, but you still want to find people who understand melody and who understand writing a great lyric.

Spanberger: Music is really is becoming more and more global. One of the things I’ve always felt very strongly about with Nashville is that, if I could get every songwriter I’ve ever worked with anywhere in the world to come learn how to write songs in Nashville, I would, because the craft of songwriting there transcends genres in my opinion. It’s wonderful to have a bigger presence there to perhaps expand on that philosophy going forward. Our company has 30 different offices around the world and I found in the last five years, that artists and writers from all over the world—Australia, Korea, the United Kingdom, you name it—they want to come and write in Nashville. It has become an international destination like never before for creative and songwriting opportunities from people all over the world.

peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow

Ashley Gorley Returns To Pinnacle Of MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart

After falling below Luke Combs last week following a 16-week reign at No. 1, Ashley Gorley is back on top of the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart. With five charting songs, Gorley maintains the pinnacle spot with co-writer credits on Brett Young’s “Catch,” Chris Janson’s “Good Vibes,” LOCASH’s “One Big Country Song,” Thomas Rhett’s “Remember You Young” and Dustin Lynch’s “Ridin’ Roads.” Combs drops down to the No. 2 spot, with 12 charting songs.

Laura Veltz moves up to No. 3, Zach Crowell shifts to No. 4 and Ross Copperman is at No. 5 this week on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.

The MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart, published every week, uses algorithms based upon song activity garnered from airplay, digital downloaded track sales and streams. This unique and exclusive addition to the MusicRow portfolio is the first songwriter chart of its kind.

Click here to view the full MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.

Industry Pics: AIMP Nashville, Morris Higham Management

AIMP Fall Party, Whiskey Jam Takeover

Pictured (L-R): Colin Rushing (SoundExchange), Teri Nelson-Carpenter (Reel Muzik Werks LLC, AIMP National Chair & LA Chapter President), John Ozier (Reservoir Media, AIMP Nashville Chapter President), Ree Guyer (Wrensong, AIMP Nashville Chapter Vice President), Brad Peterson (Regions Bank), Ross Ellis (artist/songwriter and SoundExchange member), Robert Carlton (SMACKSongs), Tim Hunze (Anthem Entertainment), Courtney Crist (Mojo Music & Media), and Dale Bobo (Big Deal Music Group, AIMP Nashville Treasurer).

The AIMP Nashville Chapter held their annual AIMP Nashville Fall Party, presented by SoundExchange, Monday night (Nov. 25) at Never Never in Nashville. Event partners included St. Jude and Royalty Wealth Group.

After the party, AIMP Nashville hosted its first-ever takeover of Whiskey Jam at Winners Bar & Grill. The following writers and artists performed, all of whom are signed with an indie publisher: Brinley Addington, Adam Hambrick, Jessi Alexander, Matt McGinn, Colin Elmore, Alex Hall, Austin Jenckes, Ryan Beaver, Emily Falvey, Hayley McLean, and Emily Hackett.

 

“Morris Higham Presents at The Bluebird Cafe” Celebrates Final Evening Of Series

Pictured (L-R): Morris Higham Management’s Robert Filhart, EMI Nashville recording artist Brandon Lay, Big Machine recording artist Carly Pearce, InGrooves recording artist Brett James, singer/songwriter Johnny Dailey, Morris Higham Management’s Kyle Quigley, and ACM’s Erick Long.

“Morris Higham Presents at The Bluebird Cafe” returned on Tuesday (Nov. 19) to a sold-out house. The final show in this year’s series featured Carly Pearce, Brandon Lay, Brett James and Johnny Dailey. The event raised over $2,600 with proceeds benefitting ACM Lifting Lives.

The evening followed “Morris Higham Presents at The Bluebird Cafe” shows held in May and August, and the three-night series collectively raised over $7,000 for various industry charities including CMA Foundation, MusicCares and ACM Lifting Lives.

“We are incredibly grateful to Morris Higham and The Bluebird Cafe for creating this special evening to benefit ACM Lifting Lives,” shares Lifting Lives Executive Director Lyndsay Cruz. “Year after year, they have given back to the community in so many generous ways. By choosing Lifting Lives, they have empowered us to continue our goals to improve lives through the healing power of music.”

Luke Combs Ends Ashley Gorley’s 16-Week Reign On ‘MusicRow’ Top Songwriter Chart

After a 16-week reign, Ashley Gorley has been dethroned from the top spot by Luke Combs who jumps 12 spots to No. 1 on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart with an impressive 17 charting songs. 16 of Combs’ credits are co-writes from his new album What You See Is What You Get that released Nov. 8, while one co-writer credit comes from the Carly Pearce and Lee Brice collaboration, “I Hope You’re Happy Now.” Gorley moves down one slot to No. 2.

Ray Fulcher also feels the effects of Combs’ rise, bringing him up 13 slots to No. 4 with eight co-writes on What You See Is What You Get.

The MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart, published every week, uses algorithms based upon song activity garnered from airplay, digital downloaded track sales and streams. This unique and exclusive addition to the MusicRow portfolio is the first songwriter chart of its kind.

Click here to view the full MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.