Warner/Chappell Music Signs Donovan Woods

Donovan Woods

Donovan Woods

Warner/Chappell Music has signed a worldwide publishing agreement with songwriter/recording artist Donovan Woods. The Ontario, Canada native has released four solo projects, and has penned songs for Tim McGraw, Charles Kelley, Billy Currington, Alan Doyle and more.

“I’m really excited to join the team at Warner/Chappell Nashville,” said Donovan. “They were the first publisher I got to know when I arrived in Nashville, and they were supportive and encouraging right off the bat, so it makes sense to me that the next chapter in my work moves forward with them.”

Ben Vaughn, Executive Vice President, Warner/Chappell Nashville, added, “We’re very happy to be a part of Donovan’s career as he continues to further expand into the Nashville market. From Tim McGraw and Charles Kelley, to the city’s top A&R, everyone is coming to understand how powerful Donovan’s songwriting is, and we can’t wait to help him take things to the next level.”

Woods has also announced a string of North American tour dates, including stops in Nashville, New York, and Toronto, in support of his latest album; Hard Settle, Ain’t Troubled will be released in the U.S. this summer.

Bill Anderson Renews Publishing Deal With Sony/ATV Music Publishing

Pictured (L-R): Terry Wakefield, Sr. VP Creative, Sony/ATV; Bill Anderson; Troy Tomlinson, President/CEO, Sony/ATV

Pictured (L-R): Terry Wakefield, Sr. VP Creative, Sony/ATV; Bill Anderson; Troy Tomlinson, President/CEO, Sony/ATV

Songwriter and country music icon “Whisperin’” Bill Anderson has been churning out hit songs for seven consecutive decades, and this month, Anderson re-signs once again with Sony/ATV Music Publishing. The six-time Songwriter of the Year award-winner first signed with Tree International, now owned by Sony, in 1958.

Troy Tomlinson, president/CEO of Sony/ATV said, “Few music publishers have the honor of ever getting to work with a writer of the stature of Bill Anderson. Even fewer, are able to maintain a relationship that spans decades. We consider it a privilege to represent a legendary songwriter like Bill Anderson and the body of work that he has created over the years.”

Anderson has penned hits for artists including “Whiskey Lullaby,” (Brad Paisley/Alison Krauss), “A Lot Of Things Different,” (Kenny Chesney), “Give It Away,” (George Strait), and “Country,” (Mo Pitney). Other well-known songs include “Still,” “City Lights,” “The Tips Of My Fingers,” “Po’ Folks,” “Mama Sang A Song,” “8X10,” and many more.

“I’m honored that they still want me and my songs at Sony/ATV,” said Anderson. “Those guys are the best music publishers and song guardians in the world.”

With 40 studio albums and seven No. 1 singles to his credit, the Grand Ole Opry and Country Music Hall of Fame member is set to release an autobiography Whisperin’ Bill Anderson: An Unprecedented Life In Country Music on Sept. 1.

ASCAP Slates Christian Music Awards For September

ASCAP logoASCAP will hold its 38th annual Christian Music Awards on Monday, Sept. 26 at Nashville’s Rocketown. The new date marks a move to the fall this year, from the event’s usual spring celebration.

Led by Michael Martin (VP, Nashville Membership) as well as ASCAP President and Chairman of the Board Paul Williams, the invitation-only event will honor ASCAP’s most-performed songs of the year, as well as the PRO’s top songwriters and publishers in Christian music.

Tina Crawford Promoted, Jesse Frasure Exits Major Bob Music

Tina Crawford

Tina Crawford

Major Bob Music has promoted Tina Crawford from Director of A&R to VP of Major Bob Music.

Crawford assumes the position recently vacated by executive/ producer/ songwriter Jesse Frasure, who has departed the company to pursue other opportunities.

In her new role, Crawford will continue with many of her previous responsibilities such as song pitching and developing the company’s writers and artists, in addition to handling day to day administrative duties to build the Major Bob brand.

“Tina is a great asset to our publishing company and we look forward to developing new writers and working our catalogue with her at the helm. We will miss Jesse and are happy for all of his successes and wish him well in his new venture,” says Bob Doyle, CEO of Major Bob and Bob Doyle & Associates.

Sony/ATV, Carole-Ann Mobley Sign Josh Martin

Pictured (L-R): Attorney Scott Safford, BMI’s Leslie Roberts, SATV’s Josh Van Valkenburg, SATV’s Luteran, Mobley, Martin, Attorney Matthew Beckett, SATV’s Hannah Williams

Pictured (L-R): Attorney Scott Safford, BMI’s Leslie Roberts, Sony/ATV’s Josh Van Valkenburg, Sony/ATV’s Tom Luteran, Carole-Ann Mobley, Josh Martin, Attorney Matthew Beckett, Sony/ATV’s Hannah Williams

Sony/ATV and Carole-Ann Mobley have jointly signed singer-songwriter Josh Martin to a worldwide publishing contract. Martin, a Kentucky native, moved to Nashville in 2013.

Martin said, “There was an overwhelming feeling of joy and excitement when Carole-Ann and I met with the Sony/ATV team for the first time. Now, going to work every day in Music City knowing that I have some of the most well respected and experienced professionals on my team is huge motivation for me to continue to hone in my craft and strive for great things! I’m super excited to see what the future has in store for us and am confident that with Carole-Ann and Sony/ATV working together, there will be no boundaries.”

Mobley remarked, “I’m incredibly excited to get to partner with my friends at Sony/ATV. We have had tremendous success together over the years and I am confident we will again with Josh. I wanted to create the right team that felt the immediate passion that I did when I first heard Josh sing. Not only is he an incredible musician and gifted vocalist, he also has something special to say as a songwriter. Tom, Hannah, Josh, Troy and rest of the team are the exact right fit for us.”

Sony/ATV’s Tom Luteran stated, “The first time Carole-Ann played me some of Josh’s demos I was blown away. His rich tone and his unique lyrics grabbed me and never let go. I am looking forward to working with Carole-Ann on this musical journey. She adds her impressive experience and expertise to the mix for a perfect combination.”

Combustion Music Signs Anthony Olympia To Publishing Deal

Featured Above (L-R): Combustion Music’s Kenley Flynn, Safford Motley’s Kelly Donley, Combustion Music’s Chris Van Belkom, Anthony Olympia, Combustion Music’s Chris Farren, Safford Motley’s Scott Safford

Pictured (L-R): Combustion Music’s Kenley Flynn, Safford Motley’s Kelly Donley, Combustion Music’s Chris Van Belkom, Anthony Olympia, Combustion Music’s Chris Farren, Safford Motley’s Scott Safford

Combustion Music has signed writer, producer and musician Anthony Olympia to a worldwide publishing deal.

The Louisville, Kentucky native relocated to Nashville in 2011, and immersed himself in the country music scene.

“Anthony is a true triple threat: writer, producer, and musician. We at Combustion can’t wait to dig in and help realize his true potential,” said president Chris Farren.

“There couldn’t be a better company for me,” Olympia said of Combustion Music. “I anticipate the next few years to be some of the best of my career.”

Exclusive: YouTube Pop-Up Space Nurtures Nashville Songwriters

Songwriters Lacy Green and Kalie Shorr in the writing room as part of YouTube Space in Nashville. Photo: YouTube

Songwriters Lacy Green and Kalie Shorr in the writing room as part of YouTube Space in Nashville. Photo: YouTube

Reclining on couches in a spacious writing area at Black River Entertainment’s multi-use facility in Nashville, songwriters Tenille Arts, Lena Stone, and Jessica Roadcap are writing and rewriting lyrics, testing melody combinations, and throwing out bridge ideas. Guitar cases and laptops cover tabletops and floors. The creators make equal use of guitars and smartphones.

“What do you think of cursing, of using the word ‘damn’?” Stone asks her co-writers.

“What would CMT think of the word ‘damn’?” Roadcap quips.

For now, they keep it in.

A large sign emblazoned with YouTube’s logo hangs on the wall above. The video content giant’s logo is carefully displayed on pillows and other items throughout the intricately decorated room.

Pictured (L-R): Lena Stone, Tenille Arts, Jessica Roadcap. Photo: YouTube

Pictured (L-R): Lena Stone, Tenille Arts, Jessica Roadcap. Photo: YouTube

That’s because parts of the Black River Entertainment facility have been taken over, temporarily, by YouTube. On May 17, YouTube welcomed Nashville-based, all-female collective of singer-songwriters, Song Suffragettes, to the pop-up space. Fifteen songwriters, divided into five groups, participated in writing workshops to create original songs within a three-hour timeframe.

Later that evening, during a live taping, they will perform the songs in five separate acoustic performances, which will also be available on the Song Suffragettes’ YouTube Channel.

In one of the facility’s full-fledged studio control rooms, songwriters Kalie Shorr, Lacy Green and Emily Landis discuss their own country-flavored composition, accented with ‘90s pop leanings. It marks the first time Green and Landis have written together.

“It’s like speed dating,” Shorr says, describing the co-writing process.

 

YTN7-TenilleArts_JessicaRoadcap

Pictured (L-R): Tenille Arts, Jessica Roadcap. Photo: YouTube

Over the past few years, YouTube has become the dominant platform for distributing video-based content. As more creators have turned to YouTube for creative exposure, they also brought their need for education, as well as adequate space and equipment to create quality video content. YouTube has opened Spaces in nine markets, including Los Angeles and New York, to provide a space for creators to craft new content.

“YouTube is about creators, and songwriters are essential to the creation of music,” says Anjali Southward, Head of U.S Music Publishing Business Development for YouTube, and a former EMI Music Publishing employee. “We want to invest in the songwriter community, and show songwriters that YouTube can be a home for them. Nashville is a very natural place, being the songwriter capital of the world.”

SongSuffragettes_YouTube_Photo1

Kalie Shorr, Lacy Green and Emily Landis rehearse for their performance as part of YouTube Space. Photo: YouTube

YouTube previously worked with Nashville studio Ocean Way on a similar pop-up space, and has connected with the city’s top publishers to select participants in these pop-up writing spaces, with an eye toward curating long-term relationships with creators and educating them on YouTube’s benefits for creators, including Music Insights, Content ID and Vevo.

“It’s cool because I got my start on YouTube,” says Shorr. Celebrity blogger Perez Hilton found Shorr’s videos on YouTube in 2012. Her single “Fight Like a Girl” has since drawn the attention of SiriusXM’s The Highway. “I grew up in a small town in Maine and there was no place to play, so I set up my webcam in my bedroom and that’s where I found my first audience. So to see their support of what we do is really cool. It’s cool to challenge yourself and say, ‘Can I write a song in three hours that I would want to perform and have online?’ It’s cool that they re so innovative and it’s cool to see the tech-music crossover and pushing boundaries and finding new ways to create.”

Song Suffragettes, led by founder Todd Cassetty, was created to showcase the talents of many of Nashville’s rising female songwriters. Song Suffragettes launched in 2014 and has grown to become the biggest weekly show for Nashville music venue The Listening Room. Given the dearth of female artists and songwriters on the country charts in recent years, these participating writers note the value of both a group such as Song Suffragettes and the marketing platform YouTube provides.

“It’s an all-ships-rise mentality,” says Green. “What’s good for any of these girls is great for all of us in general, but especially because we all also collaborate. If any one of us does something with this song we have just written … for example, Kalie’s got ‘Fight Like a Girl’ out right now, and that’s great for Kalie, but that’s also great for her co-writers Lena [Stone] and Hailey [Steele]. “

Hailey Steele, Krysta Nick, and Amber DeLaCruz rehearse as part of YouTube Space. Photo: YouTube

Hailey Steele, Krysta Nick, and Amber DeLaCruz rehearse as part of YouTube Space. Photo: YouTube

Back in the writing room, Shorr, Green and Landis discuss how to divvy up lyrics for the song’s performance that evening, before deciding to stay with one lead singer and let the other co-writers sing harmonies, to keep the audience’s focus on the lyrics. “The cool thing for me, as the writer in the co-write, is to get on camera, even though I’ll be singing harmonies,” says Landis. “It’s appreciating the songs and the people who write the songs, not just the people who sing the songs.”

“That visual is also so important to us,” says Southward. “We really want to create an environment where songwriters feel creative, but also encompass what YouTube is about, which is having this amazing visual component. We believe there is value in songwriters having a presence in the digital world.

“I think the beauty of YouTube is that anyone can have a chance,” Southward continues. “All it takes is having a passion for something. It’s great that people go to YouTube and find these artists they may never have heard before. They become followers and fans. So we love that we are part of this process, helping people build their careers and business. I don’t think we ever substitute for what goes into the real A&R and development process, but it is such a great avenue, and for many — they can earn royalties even if they aren’t signed to a publisher. I actually have heard a lot of my friends in the creative community in A&R say they use YouTube to find talent. Then they go and talk to them and go on to the rest of the process. We love being part of this process. I hope this is a launching pad or an opportunity for these writers to continue on to more success. The tree of success has many branches, and we’d love to be one of the branches.”

Kalie Shorr in the writing room during the pop-up YouTube Space at Black River Entertainment.

Kalie Shorr in the writing room during the pop-up YouTube Space at Black River Entertainment.

Three ASCAP Songwriters Celebrate First No. 1 Singles

Pictured (L-R): Felix McTeigue, Cole Taylor, Matt Dragstrem. Photo: Ed Rode

Pictured (L-R): Felix McTeigue, Cole Taylor, Matt Dragstrem. Photo: Ed Rode

ASCAP hosted a party at its Nashville office on Wednesday (May 25) to honor a trio of writers that secured their first No. 1 song. The two titles being honored — “Anything Goes” and “Sippin’ on Fire” — were recorded by Florida Georgia Line and produced by Joey Moi.

ASCAP’s Mike Sistad first spoke about the huge party Florida Georgia Line threw in Las Vegas for all of their writers, producers, and others. He noted, “As fun as that was, today is about honoring these three writers for their first No. 1.”

Pictured (L-R): Mike Sistad, ASCAP; Felix McTeigue; Cole Taylor; Beth Brinker, ASCAP; Matt Dragstrem; Robert Filhart, ASCAP. Photo: Ed Rode

Pictured (L-R): Mike Sistad, ASCAP; Felix McTeigue; Cole Taylor; Beth Brinker, ASCAP; Matt Dragstrem; Robert Filhart, ASCAP. Photo: Ed Rode

Sistad then introduced Felix McTeigue as a co-writer on FGL’s “Anything Goes.” Other writers on the song were Craig Wiseman and Chris Tompkins. Although Wiseman was in attendance, he decided to let the spotlight solely shine on McTeigue receiving his first accolade.

Wiseman is a partner in Big Loud Mountain, which has a publishing interest in all three songs.

Pictured (L-R): Felix McTeigue, Craig Wiseman, Cole Taylor, Matt Dragstrem. Photo: Ed Rode

Pictured (L-R): Felix McTeigue, Craig Wiseman, Cole Taylor, Matt Dragstrem. Photo: Ed Rode

McTeigue thanked both writers and Lori McKenna for being the reasons he moved to Nashville.

ASCAP’s Beth Brinker spoke about Matt Dragstrem and how he first came to Nashville to be an artist, but decided to take the songwriter’s path while attending Belmont. He was celebrated for co-writing his first No. 1 with Cole Taylor, FGL’s “Sippin’ on Fire.”

Matt Dragstrem poses with Big Loud Mountain team. Pictured (L-R): Jordan Kolodka, Craig Wiseman, Matt Dragstrem, Matt Turner, Kimberly Gleason. Photo: Ed Rode

Matt Dragstrem poses with the Big Loud Shirt team. Pictured (L-R): Jordan Kolodka, Craig Wiseman, Matt Dragstrem, Matt Turner, Kimberly Gleason. Photo: Ed Rode

Dragstrem mentioned that this single was the very first song he wrote after receiving his publishing deal. ASCAP’s Robert Filhart introduced Cole Taylor, who was most happy that his parents made the drive up from Georgia just to be at this event. He was also cheered on by the Universal Music Publishing Group staff.

Cole Taylor poses with UMPG staff. Pictured (L-R): Missy Roberts; Ron Stuve; Cole Taylor; Kent Earls, Executive VP/GM, UMPG; Travis Gordon; Missy Roberts; and Amelia Varni

Cole Taylor with UMPG staff. Pictured (L-R): Missy Roberts, Ron Stuve, Cole Taylor, Kent Earls, Travis Gordon, Amelia Varni. Photo: Ed Rode

Also speaking at the party and distributing No. 1 hardware were Holly Lane with the CRB and Brandi Simms of CMA.

Spirit Music Group, Josh Osborne Strike Catalog Deal

Josh Osborne. Photo: Moments By Moser

Josh Osborne. Photo: Moments By Moser

Spirit Music Group has acquired Josh Osborne’s co-published interest in songs written while he was a staff writer for Black River Publishing.

The announcement was made Wednesday (May 25) by David Renzer, Chairman and CEO, Spirit Music Group and Daniel Hill, President, Spirit Music Nashville.

Osborne’s catalog features nearly 500 songs, including nine No. 1 hits, which will now be published globally by Spirit Music Group. Spirit’s deal with Osborne also encompasses a number of his unreleased songs. Black River still owns their portion of these songs.

“We’re thrilled and honored that Josh Osborne has chosen Spirit Music Nashville as the home for his incredible catalog of hits. Josh’s catalog not only contains some important #1 country hits, but with the new Sam Hunt single ‘Make You Miss Me’ and with our strong team in Nashville working the catalog we’re sure there will be more hits to come from this incredible collection of great songs,” Renzer said.

“Josh Osborne is a talented and prolific songwriter who has had amazing success in recent years. This catalog represents much hard work and inspiration, and we are proud that he has entrusted this valuable body of work to Spirit Music Nashville,” Hill said.

Among the nine No. 1 country hits included in Spirit’s acquisition of Osborne’s catalog are “Come Over” and “Wild Child” by Kenny Chesney; “Drunk Last Night” by Eli Young Band; “My Eyes” and “Sangria” by Blake Shelton; “Leave the Light On” and “Take Your Time” by Sam Hunt; “John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16” by Keith Urban and “We Are Tonight” by Billy Currington.

After five years with Black River Publishing, Osborne joined SMACKSongs as a partner in June 2015.

Annie Tate Signs Two Songwriters To Ghost Hollow Music

Pictured (L-R): Tenasie Bowe, Annie Tate, Matt Keyler

Pictured (L-R): Tenasie Bowe, Annie Tate, Matt Keyler

Songwriter Annie Tate has signed two songwriters to Ghost Hollow Music. A new venture, the company is independently owned and operated by Tate.

The company’s two new signings, Tenasie Bowe and Matt Keyler, were discovered when Tate was judging a songwriting competition in 2015. After hearing the song they submitted, she looked them up on YouTube, contacted them and began co-writing. She signed them to Ghost Hollow Music on Friday (May 20) and refers to them as “Ghost Writers.”

Tate said, “I am so excited to start this new venture with young people who I believe in and continue to encourage and mentor because they really want to say something with their music. I came to Nashville and made a career writing songs I hoped would raise the bar on Nashville writing in the way that all the great Nashville writers who came before me had done and to whom I owe all my success. … I can only hope to encourage some part of the next generation of Nashville writers to keep reaching higher and writing songs that might possibly change the world because they ‘say something.'”

Tate’s writing credits include Rodney Atkins’ “If You’re Going Through Hell,” Emerson Drive’s “Moments,” and Reba McEntire’s “Somebody,” among many others.