Dustin Lynch, Thomas Rhett, Lauren Alaina Set To Perform At Crash My Playa − 5th Year Fiesta

After four consecutive sold-out years, Luke Bryan, along with CID Presents, has announced the first wave of performers for Crash My Playa − 5th Year Fiesta set for Jan. 23-26, 2019 in Riviera Maya, Mexico.

Dustin Lynch will return for the fifth year in a row, while Thomas Rhett and Lauren Alaina will both make their first appearances at the destination event.

“So excited to have Thomas Rhett and Lauren join us for the first time at Playa,” said Luke. “I can’t even imagine doing these shows without Dustin a part of it. This makes 5 for 5!”

“I’m pumped to get down to the beach in January to hang out with Luke and play at ‘Crash My Playa’,” said Thomas Rhett. “It’s going to be a blast.”

Dustin shared, “Getting to kick off the last four years at ‘Crash My Playa’ has been amazing. I’ve made so many friends and memories and look forward to going 5 for 5 with my big bro Luke!”

“I love the beach, Luke Bryan, Thomas Rhett, and Dustin Lynch,” said Lauren. “I have a feeling this will be a trip to remember, or at least try really hard to remember. Ha! Those boys are crazy. I’m so excited and honored to be a part of it.”

The event’s host resort, the Barceló Maya, is sold-out with limited packages remaining at one of four other carefully selected tropical resorts. At all locations fans will enjoy royal treatment all weekend long including all-inclusive food and drink, 24-hour concierge service, convenient nightly shuttle transportation to the main stage performances, daily onsite activities, offsite adventures and excursions, official Crash My Playa − 5th Year Fiesta merchandise packages, and more. To see highlights from last year’s event click here.

For more information about Crash My Playa − 5th Year Fiesta 2019, visit crashmyplaya.com.

Warehouse West Entertainment Signs Publishing, Development Deals With Jordan Brooker

Jordan Brooker

Singer-songwriter Jordan Brooker has signed a publishing and artist development deal with recently launched Warehouse West Entertainment in Nashville.

Brooker, a native of Spencerville, Indiana, has been focused on his songwriting and working in the studio with Warehouse West’s Luke Wooten for his first project, which is scheduled for release later this Fall. Brooker is releasing his debut song “You Are” off of his first project on Sept. 21.

He was recently named one of AIMP’s Songwriter Class of 2018 and will be performing his final show in a series of club dates at Whiskey Row in Nashville on Sept. 20.

“I couldn’t be prouder of an artist’s music and vision than that of Jordan’s,” Wooten says. “His signing being our first as a company is a dream come true. I can’t wait to share his music and for all that will follow.”

“I could not be more ecstatic about working with Warehouse West,” Brooker adds. “Working with people and for people that you love is a blessing and I definitely have that here. I am looking forward to what the future has in store for this company and its writers/artists.”

Taylor Swift, Florida Georgia Line, Kane Brown Earn Multiple American Music Awards Nominations

The nominations for the American Music Awards were revealed Wednesday morning (Sept. 12), with several artists with Nashville ties competing in top categories.

Taylor Swift earned nods in several categories, including Artist of the Year, Tour of the Year, Album of the Year, Pop/Rock (reputation), and Favorite Female Artist, Pop/Rock.

Florida Georgia Line earned three nominations, including Favorite Duo or Group (Country), while their hit “Meant To Be” earned them nominations in the all-genre Collaboration of the Year category as well as the Favorite Song (Country) category.

Kane Brown also earned three nominations, for Favorite Male Artist (Country) and Favorite Album (Country) for his self-titled project, and Favorite Song (Country) for “Heaven.”

Maren Morris earned a nomination in the Favorite Female Artist (Country) category, alongside Kelsea Ballerini and Carrie Underwood. Morris’ hit “The Middle,” with Zedd and Grey, also earned a nom in the all-genre Collaboration of the Year category.

Thomas Rhett earned two country nominations for Favorite Male Artist (Country) and Favorite Album (Country), for Life Changes. Dan+Shay earned nods in the Favorite Duo or Group (Country) category, while their hit “Tequila” landed a spot in the Favorite Song category.

Fans can vote once per day at VoteAMAs.com and on Twitter.

The show will take place Tuesday, Oct. 9 beginning at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

Favorite Male Artist (Country):
Thomas Rhett
Luke Bryan
Kane Brown

Favorite Duo or Group (Country):
Florida Georgia Line
Dan + Shay
LANCO

Favorite Album (Country):
Thomas Rhett, Life Changes
Luke Combs, This One’s For You
Kane Brown, Kane Brown

Favorite Song (Country)
“Tequila,” Dan + Shay
“Heaven,” Kane Brown
“Meant To Be,” Bebe Rexha and Florida Georgia Line

Favorite Female Artist (Country):
Kelsea Ballerini
Maren Morris
Carrie Underwood

Collaboration Of The Year
“Meant To Be,” Bebe Rexha and Florida Georgia Line
“The Middle,” Maren Morris, Zedd and Grey
“Havana,” Camila Cabello and Young Thug
“Rockstar,” Post Malone and Saint Laurent Don
“Finesse,” Bruno Mars and Cardi B

Favorite Female Artist (Pop/Rock):
Taylor Swift
Camila Cabello
Cardi B

Favorite Album (Pop/Rock):
Taylor Swift, reputation
Ed Sheeran, Divide
Drake, Scorpion

Favorite Artist (Contemporary Inspirational):
Lauren Daigle
MercyMe
Zach Williams

‘American Music Awards’ Partners With YouTube Music

dick clark productions has announced a multi-year partnership between the American Music Awards and YouTube Music, marking the first-ever presenting partnership of the show. Through this partnership, music enthusiasts can watch their favorite artists and pop culture icons come together to honor idols, newcomers and record-breakers in the contemporary music scene.

“YouTube Music’s partnership with The American Music Awards is a natural extension of the intimate artist-fan connection that is made possible on YouTube’s global platform,” said Angela Courtin, Director, Global Head of YouTube Music, TV and Originals Marketing. “The American Music Awards are the world’s largest fan-voted awards show and YouTube is the world’s largest platform for discovering music with more than 1 billion fans each month coming to be a part of music culture and engage with over 2 million artists who share their voices and art with the world.”

“YouTube brings global reach, awareness and engagement to the ‘American Music Awards’ unlike ever before,” said Mike Mahan, CEO, dick clark productions. “We look forward to enhancing the AMAs in a unique, innovative and immersive way.”

The 2018 American Music Awards will broadcast live from the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2018 at 8:00 p.m. ET on ABC.

Q&A: Dierks Bentley Fearlessly Turns A Seed Into A ‘Mountain’

This is part two of a two-part series with MusicRow Magazine’s Sherod Robertson and multi-platinum selling singer/songwriter Dierks Bentley. Read part one here.

Dierks Bentley releases his highly anticipated ninth studio album, The Mountain, on Capitol Records Nashville today, Friday, June 8. Bentley, his co-writers and producers ventured to Telluride, Colorado to write and record the project, where the Rocky Mountains provided peace and inspiration. That vibe merged with his longtime themes of devotion to his family and fans to create The Mountain.

MusicRow Publisher/Owner Sherod Robertson recently caught up with Bentley at his writing room at Nashville’s Hutton Hotel to discuss planting creative seeds, fearlessly nurturing them, and growing them into a mountain.

Are there parallels between your new album and 2010’s Up on the Ridge?

There are, but I didn’t realize that going into it. Just like there were similarities between “Somewhere on a Beach” and “Drunk on a Plane.” But I didn’t realize it until I was doing the video for “Somewhere on a Beach” so I changed the whole video and made it a sequel video.

I never even thought about the ridge and mountain connection between those two until after I’d made the record. It’s like taking the Ridge record I made with Jon Randall and mixing that with my newer music with Ross Copperman. These two sounds are kind of like mixing together the albums Black and Up on the Ridge.

Jon Randall and Ross Copperman both produced this album. What did they each bring to the table?

It’s like putting together a hockey team. You’re bringing people with different strengths, different positions, and putting it all together. I feel like I had a really good team.

Ross brings so much youth, modernism, creativity and a great vibe. He’s just the happiest, most positive person I’ve ever been around. Nothing’s impossible and he’s always game for anything.

And I’ve never met anybody who can speak to musicians like Jon Randall. We worked together on Black. He just has a crazy vocabulary and a real calmness in the studio– a real pro and loves to geek out on stuff.

I used to read about people having executive producers, and thought that was kind of odd. But Arturo Buenahora is involved in everything about the album. He’s your biggest champion, and he’s digging around Music Row for great songs. He’s helped me put together great bands and there to say “no” to any idea or song that’s not right. He’s completely unbiased and if it’s a song is part of his publishing company, he’ll let you know.

When deciding which songs to put on an album, do you test them on the live audience to see the reaction?

I do, but it can be tricky. I played “Drunk on a Plane” one time in a theater and the reaction was terrible. They were really quiet, and they didn’t get it. And I was like, “See, that’s not a hit.” Maybe it was hard to hear the words or I didn’t set it up very well. And it threw me off the song for a little bit. Playing a song live is definitely not the most trusted barometer of whether or not it’s a hit.

It’s your gut and you can ask people around you. It’s like the stock market, where if everyone knew the answer, everyone would be a millionaire. But a song is probably harder, because nobody—even your record label or professional consultants—no one knows. That’s what makes it great. It’s like there’s an intangible thing about a hit song that you cannot use math to discover.

You’ve taken a few stylistic detours during your career. Where do you fall on the pendulum of being completely fearless versus taking calculated creative risks?

That’s a great question. I’m definitely totally fearless but there can be a fault with that too. When I quit everything to make a bluegrass record I wasn’t thinking about the business or touring. Behind my back, people were saying I was crazy and would never headline a tour again. I didn’t know any of it at the time, because luckily, people I count on like my manager Mary Hilliard Harrington, kind of shielded me from that.

I have a flip phone, so I don’t read Twitter or Instagram because it interferes with creating songs and albums. I want to put all my focus into this one thing I’ve been given a chance to do. How many people get to go to Mike Dungan’s office and try to get a record deal? I’m one of the few that’s got this great platform, and so to water down my work with my brain being filled with negativity, or thoughts about the business, or what other people are doing, or how radio’s going to react to it, it is not beneficial to making the best music. And it’s not being totally grateful for the platform I’ve been given. I just feel like I’m cheating everybody if I’m doing that.

I make pretty fearless decisions. When you’re planting a seed, which is what making an album is, you can’t let too many people have access to it or they’re going to crush it. You need to let it get some roots, and then you can bring people over to see what you’re growing. And still be protective of it, but you can allow other voices to be added. But at the end, it’s mine and so I guess I can live and die by my decisions.

And that’s something I’ve learned over time. The bluegrass record was the ultimate fearless decision. If I had been smart I would have made one song on it for radio. But I think since Up on the Ridge, I’ve really tried to make great albums and not focus on anything about a tour or writing a song that has a title that would sound good as a tour title.

So this is your ninth studio album with Capitol Records. I used to work for Mike Dungan back in the ‘90s at Arista. What’s your favorite thing about UMG Chairman and CEO Mike Dungan?

I am so sheltered from some of the drama at record labels on Music Row. I hear stories from other artists that are going through creative control issues—where they can’t even pick out the font on their album cover. And even big artists being told what songs to record.

With Dungan, it’s been nothing but a joy. He’s a record label president who loves music and the lifestyle. He’s fun. He loves his people. He’s like the Herb Kelleher of country music—the guy who started Southwest Airlines. He empowers the people around him. He does an annual event where the artists get together and play just for the staff. I’m not even allowed to bring my wife. It’s just to make it about the music one night a year, so that people remember why we’re doing what we do.

And he’s let me pick all my own singles. Over the years, I’ve learned the hard way that it’s better to listen to him and everyone at Capitol sometimes, than to just power your way through something. The biggest blessing I’ve had is that I side with him and I’ve had the support of that whole label, who have all been great people.

One other thing about Dungan, at some point he needs to start buying t-shirts that cover up his belly.

But that’s something else we can get into.

 

Studio Bank Announces $40+ Million in Capital Raise

Studio Bank has exceeded its goal of raising $40 million in initial capital, which satisfies the minimum amount stated in the organization’s regulatory applications.

The bank raised this funding from over 325 subscribed investors, with most of the campaign efforts focused over four months between October 2017 and January 2018. Over 85 percent of the bank’s shareholders will be local Nashville-area investors.

“We are honored by such a phenomenal response from the Nashville community,” said Aaron Dorn, Chairman, President, & CEO. “This level of local support is an emphatic confirmation that Nashville needs a modern bank to serve its amazing creators with a unique and boutique approach to banking. That’s the very reason we’re starting this company.”

Nashville music industry executive Ron Cox, who serves as co-founder of Studio Bank, and was previously co-founder of Avenue Bank, serves as Executive VP of Studio Bank and oversees the music, arts, and entertainment division.

The founding team continues to focus its attention on completing the regulatory approval process and preparing for its official launch anticipated later this year.

Pop Artist Andreas Moss Inks Deal With Curb Records

Andreas Moss

Electro-pop singer-songwriter Andreas Moss recently inked a deal with Curb Records, as the first artist to be part of their new pop music endeavor.

Nashville-based Moss also signed a management deal with Jonathan “Jono” Scarlet‘s Nashville-based MINT Artist Management and Creative Agency. Scarlet, a New Zealand native, has managed acts including Parachute Band, Detour 180 and Rapture Ruckus.

Debuting in late 2016 with the viral hit, “Thinking About You,” which earned over 3 million streams on Spotify, Moss followed up with “Stuck In My Feelings.” His newest single is “Lonely,” featuring Melanie Pfirrman.

Moss’ debut EP is set to release later this spring, with forthcoming tour dates scheduled in support of Juicy J, Fetty Wap, and Cheat Codes.

“Andreas is an incredible talent that needs to be heard,” Scarlet says. “We’ve built such a close friendship over the past year, and I’m very excited to manage his career going forward. Coming from New Zealand, I’ve always been drawn to working with international acts, and with Andreas, we can now add a Swedish-born American to the list!”

MINT Inc. is located at 509 3rd Ave. S. in Nashville.

 

Jack White Offers Two Nashville Performances Ahead Of New Album Release

Jack White. Photo: Jo McCaughey

Jack White is set to perform two surprise live Nashville performances this week, Thursday, March 15 and Friday, March 16, at Third Man Records.

The performances, which will take place at Third Man’s “Blue Room,” support his upcoming third solo album, Boarding House Reach, which will release on March 23. Joining shows will be Quincy McCrary, Carla Azar, Dominic Davis, and Neal Evans.

Doors will open at 8 p.m. on March 15, and at 9 p.m. on March 16.

No physical tickets will be issued — guests will be admitted only with a valid ID required, and audience members must be 18 or older.

Third Man Records emphasized that fans can only attend one of the two shows, issuing a warning on its site:

“IF YOU PURCHASE TICKETS FOR BOTH NIGHTS OR IF A FRIEND PURCHASES ON YOUR BEHALF, BOTH TICKET PURCHASES WILL BE CANCELLED AND YOU WILL NOT BE ALLOWED TO ATTEND EITHER SHOW.”

CRS New Faces Of Country 2018 Talent Announced

The artists selected to perform at the Country Radio Seminar (CRS) 2018 New Faces of Country Music show on Feb. 7, 2018, have been announced. Slated to appear at the closing night event of the seminar are Lauren Alaina (UMG), Luke Combs (Sony), Michael Ray (Warner) and BMLG’s Midland and Carly Pearce.

Co-sponsored by the Academy of Country Music (ACM) and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, the annual new artist showcase is one of the most-anticipated events each year at CRS. Performances will be powered by Live Nation and take place in the CRS Performance Hall.

Dinner tickets for the 2018 New Faces of Country Music Show are sold-out. The $599 regular registration rate for CRS 2018, held Monday, Feb. 5-7 at the Omni Nashville Hotel, is available at CountryRadioSeminar.com. On Dec. 5, the CRS rate increases to the final rate of $699. In addition, a limited number of Omni Hotel rooms are still available.

Whisperin’ Bill Anderson Sits Down With MusicRow For ‘Unprecedented’ Interview

Whisperin’ Bill Anderson: An Unprecedented Life in Country Music is an autobiography that offers an intimate peek inside the life of Bill Anderson, one of the most prolific songwriters in country music history. Anderson’s songs have been recorded by Ray Price, Roy Clark, Eddy Arnold, Steve Wariner, Connie Smith, Lefty Frizzell, Wanda Jackson, Lynn Anderson, Jim Reeves, Conway Twitty, Brad Paisley, Kenny Chesney, George Strait and many, many others. He has also released more than 40 studio albums and has reached the No. 1 spot on the country charts seven times.

MusicRow recently sat down with the iconic tunesmith to talk about his career, his current book, and how at age 79, he is still chasing his childhood dream. 

MusicRow: Your first autobiography, Whisperin’ Bill was published in 1989. What was the inspiration behind writing another autobiography?

Bill Anderson: A lot of things happened in my life and in my career between 1989 and 2016. The original book was written following a really turbulent time in my personal life. My wife had been in a terrible automobile accident and she nearly died. She had very serious brain injuries. It was a traumatic time for me. We had a six-year-old son and I was trying to keep my life, my career, and my marriage together. It was very therapeutic to write that book.

I felt like this time, if I was going to write a book, it needed to focus more on the business side and more on the second career that I had been fortunate enough to have. Peter Cooper had a tremendous vision for the new book. I’m not sure that I could’ve done it without him. I was totally shocked when he wanted to do it. Betty Hofer, who was doing PR for me at the time, reached out to Peter. I said, “Betty, don’t waste your time. He ain’t got time to do that.” And low and behold, he jumped at it. When he did that and I saw the excitement and perspective he brought, I thought, “Yeah, this is something I want to do.”

What was it like working with Peter Cooper on this book? What impact did he have on the process?

Well he’s so demanding and he’s so hard to get along with [laughs]. Seriously, Peter is such a great guy! We have so much in common. I was born in South Carolina and he’s from South Carolina. We both love sports, baseball and country music. And we have a really good relationship and friendship, over and apart from the business. He was so accommodating. He would come out to my office and bring his laptop and we’d sit there and talk. I would email him what I had written and he would get back to me on it.

He also gave me the title of the book. I don’t think I would have ever said my career was unprecedented. He saw it from that perspective with me getting away from songwriting and the music business, in general, for a period of almost 10 years. And then coming back and having as much or more success the second time around at an advanced age.

Country artist and singer-songwriter Bill Anderson shares stories of his book, Whisperin’ Bill Anderson: An Unprecedented Life in Country Music, with MusicRow Publisher/Owner Sherod Robertson. Photo: Haley Crow

What was your experience recording the audio for this book?

First, I had no idea how hard it was and how long it was gonna take. Man, you can go in and cut a record and you’re in there for three minutes. For the book, you’re in there for three weeks. Peter knew Thomm Jutz who has a studio at his house out near where I live. Peter had worked on updating Tom T. Hall’s autobiography and had done the audio book. He worked with a lady who produces audio books named Andi Arndt from up in Virginia. And Andi came down and she knew exactly how to do an audio book. I thought, “Well, if I don’t say the word exactly the way I’ve got it written it won’t matter,” but oh yes it did! I would hear, “Oops, you didn’t say that exactly the way you wrote it.”

So the recording of the book has to be verbatim?

Yes, it has to be verbatim which surprised me. And it inhibited me a little bit in the beginning because I’d want to ad lib. But there’s a reason for that. Some people listen to the audio recording and read the book and listen at the same time. And for that reason, you have to do it exactly the same.

The digital recording is so much easier to do than it would’ve been years ago. I produced a series of comedy albums back in the ’80s on Lewis Grizzard. Lewis was a southern humorist; not a comedian. His work was very much in demand. And this was in the days before you could do it all digitally. We were down on the floor splicing tape together, and every time Lewis would say, “Uhh..,” we had to cut that out. So you physically have to cut the tape and tape it back together.

It’s no surprise your book is filled with fascinating stories about your life. You recount how, on your very first tour, you made such little money you couldn’t afford breakfast or gas. And at the same time, you were informed you no longer had enough college credits to graduate. How did you not let something like that derail your dreams?

I probably owe that to my mom and dad because the only thing my mom and dad ever asked me to do, was to graduate from college. They let me run around when I was in high school, play music all hours of the night. They never tried to push me away from a career in music, but at the same time they said, “Whatever you do, please get that education.” It would’ve broken my mom and dad’s heart [if I didn’t graduate].

I was only five credit hours short. And so I found a summer school in Atlanta at a little college called Oglethorpe University, which oddly my dad had attended when he was young. They had the shortest summer school I could find so I left Nashville and packed it up and went back to Atlanta and lived at mom and dad’s. Oddly enough, during those five weeks living at their house, I wrote some songs, some that got recorded– so it wasn’t a total waste of time. [laughs]

And perhaps I didn’t get discouraged because on that very first tour, we laughed so much that we didn’t notice how hungry we were. When you’ve got Bill Anderson, Roger Miller and Donny Young, who later became Johnny Paycheck, all riding in a car driving through Arizona, it’s hard to get too depressed.

Although you had achieved tremendous success, you experienced some tough times both in your career and financially in the early 1980s. In the book, you are very candid about this experience. Why did you want to share such a personal part of your life?

I don’t know. I think I probably thought if I was reading a book about somebody, I’d want to know as much about them as I could find out. I wasn’t ashamed of anything that happened. I was lucky enough to come out on the other side of it. Maybe by sharing it, I could inspire somebody else along the way. It was tough. I feel very fortunate and very blessed that I was able to work through it. It never occurred to me not to share it.

What was the biggest impetus that pulled you out of that, to keep you going with the second half of your career?

It’s when Steve Warner recorded and had a number one record with “The Tips of my Fingers,” a song I had written 32 years before. That was a wake-up call. I thought the music business had passed me by. I thought I had nothing left to say, nothing left to offer. And here’s this song that I wrote 32 years ago that goes to No. 1. One day it just dawned on me, “You know, I could write another song like that.”  

And we didn’t have No. 1 parties when I first came along in the music business. And my goodness gracious, I had no idea how the numbers had changed, how much more money you could make from a song in 1992 than you could in 1962. That’s when I really begin to think about getting back in and trying to write. I had really been away from it. Everybody was co-writing and the music was changing. I’m thinking, “I don’t know these people and they don’t know me.” I called Vince Gill and I said, “Wait a minute, maybe I can do this.” And so Vince was such an inspiration and a big help to me.

On the other side of the coin, you’ve interviewed almost everyone in this business. What was one of your most memorable interviews you’ve ever conducted with an artist?

I was interviewing Merle Haggard one time when I did the “Bill Anderson Visits With The Legends” on XM Radio. I didn’t know Merle all that well but I did know him because we worked the occasional date together. And I was sitting there having a good time with him. He’s opening up to me and we’re talking about all kinds of things. Somewhere off the top of my head I said, “Merle, I’ve never told you this. I’ve never had the chance to. But I want to say this to you while I’m looking at you face-to-face.” I said, “You’re my favorite country singer.” And he just stared at me for minute, and he didn’t speak. I looked over there and a tear started running down his face.

It absolutely got to him. And I said, “Man, I didn’t mean to make you cry. I’m just trying to pay you a compliment.” He was very gracious and said it just meant a lot to him for me to say that to him. That was very memorable.

I enjoy being on the other side. I think being on both sides of the microphone has helped me. I think as an interviewer, having been the interviewee so many times, I think I know a little bit more about what to ask somebody, and maybe what not to ask them.

Last question: You wrote your first song at age 10. You started your first band at 15 and began chasing your dreams of a career in music.  Is there part of you still chasing those dreams?

It’s sorta like the dog that chasing cars all of his life. He finally catches one and doesn’t know what to do with it.

If I ever caught my dream, I wouldn’t know what to do with it. The fun is in the chase.

The related audio CD of the book, Whisperin’ Bill Anderson: An Unprecedented Life in Country Music, is also available and is up for Grammy consideration for Best Spoken Word Recording.