Ty Williams

“Barn On The Rooftop”

Cherry Heart

tywilliams102609Ty Williams is releasing his single “Barn On the Rooftop” to country radio and the video, shot by Chad Denning, is currently gaining momentum at video outlets and dance clubs around the country. The song is a perfect introduction to the world of Ty Williams. It’s rowdy, loud and most of all… fun. And then there’s that horn section. Williams wrote or co-wrote 8 of the songs on his upcoming album.

See the Video: http://www.tywilliams.com/barnvideo

The Ty Williams story begins near our nation’s capital.

“Music was one of the few things in our life that remained a constant,” recalls Williams. “My grandma played the piano in the Farnham Baptist Church in Virginia, and my sister and I would sit in the choir loft next to her singing out of the hymnals. It was a small town…a farmer’s town… and country music wasn’t just a genre, it was way of life in my family and a soundtrack to our colorful lives.”

Later as a soldier in the Army National Guard, Ty earned the rank of sergeant during Operation Iraqi Freedom. It was then Ty seriously began pondering the uplifting power of music.

“For three minutes at a time I could take them somewhere else through one of my songs,” says Williams. “In the middle of a desert and this war, I found hope, I found reason. The music saved my life and I was born again.”

“My live show mixes all genres and feels like a party,” he continues. “I work hard as a songwriter to tell great stories. I admire Garth and Reba for building their careers one handshake, one fan, one song at a time.”

www.tywilliams.com

David St. Romain

“That’s Love”

Matchless Music Group/Edgehill

dsromain102609America got a taste of David St. Romain’s promising talents when he made the finals of Nashville Star in 2007. Now David is delivering on that promise, releasing a brand-new single called “That’s Love” through newly formed Matchless Music Group that showcases what his followers have been raving about for years.

Hailing from the central Louisiana town of Alexandria, David has steadily built his reputation as an entertainer who plays high energy shows. While on Nashville Star, David struck up a working relationship with one of the producers Shawn Pennington, who has managed acts such as Big & Rich, Gretchen Wilson, Randy Owen (Alabama), and Cowboy Troy.

By 2008, David and Shawn were working together to find songs and beginning the process of recording a new album. David also collaborated on songs of his own with Nashville writers. Out of those collaborations came David’s lead single “That’s Love.” The song tells the story of hard-working peoples’ sacrifices to provide for their families. David’s own clan expanded in early 2009 with the birth of his second daughter, and he wanted to represent that bond in the first single.

“I hope people look at this album as a slide show of my life,” he continues. “Every song holds true with my experiences, and that goes back to how I choose which songs I record. Whether I write it or not, a song has to make me feel something the first time I hear it.”

http://www.myspace.com/davidstromain

Jamie Tate

“One Beer Away From Loving You”

Bodell Records/Edgehill

jtate101909b22-year-old North Carolina native Jamie Tate is releasing her single “One Beer Away From Loving You.” She’s enlisted the help of Edgehill Music to promote and market the single as it hits country programmers’ desktops. It goes for adds Monday, October 26.

A performer since the age of four, Tate has a long history of performance that ranges from southern honky tonks to classical theaters. While in high school, Tate was given the opportunity to perform in the London New Year’s Day Parade as well as the Gala Concert Series celebrating the Queen’s Golden Jubilee in Westminster Central Hall.

“I first sang with my dad onstage at the age of four!” recalls Tate. “I remember him sayin’ right before we went on, ‘Now, try to remember the words,’ or ‘When we get offstage, everyone is going to want to talk to you and take your picture.’ It was at that young age that I began performing. I loved it, I still love it, and I will always love it.”

http://www.jamietatemusic.com/

Skaggs, Morgan Among ICM Award Winners

morganRicky Skaggs, Craig Morgan and Tracy Lawrence were among the winners at the 15th Annual Inspirational Country Music (ICM) Award Show, held last night (10/16) at the Trinity Music City USA Auditorium. Skaggs was selected Mainstream Country Artist of the Year, and joined The Whites to perform “Salt of The Earth.” Morgan received Video of the Year for his single “God Must Really Love Me” and performed the song during the show. Lawrence won Mainstream Inspirational Song of the Year for “Up To Him.” Point of Grace, who recently crossed in to the country music arena with the poignant hit “How You Live (Turn Up the Music),” won Vocal Group of the Year.

Also on hand to perform were Jason Crabb, Randy Houser, Adam Gregory, Carter Twins, Halfway to Hazard, Cherryholmes, Katalyst, Jordyn Shellhart, CrossCountry the Band, James Payne, Del Way, Tommy Brandt, Dennis Agajanian, Greg McDougal and Amanda Fessant.

Wayne Elsey, CEO & Founder of charity Soles4Souls, went barefoot as he presented an award to raise awareness for the more than 300 million children worldwide who do not have shoes.

Voted on by the CCMA membership, the 2009 ICM Awards will be aired on TCT Networks, The Worship Network, and more channels, which reach a combined 500 million people throughout the world.

Complete list of winners:
Entertainer of the Year CrossCountry the Band
Male Vocalist Tommy Brandt
Female Vocalist Sandra Dee
Vocal Duo The Roys
Vocal Group Point of Grace
Mainstream Inspirational Country Song “Up To Him,” Tracy Lawrence
Mainstream Country Artist Ricky Skaggs
Christian Country Song “Good Ole Boys,” James Payne & Del Way
Songwriter Russ Murphy
Video “God Must Really Love Me, Craig Morgan, Director, Eric Welch
New Artist Steve Richard
Musician Dennis Agajanian
Comedy Act Barry McGee
Radio Personality Leon Joplin
Radio Station WCWV, Summersville, WV
Living Legend Award Ken Holloway
Inspirational Bluegrass Artist The Isaacs
Youth In Music Award Matthew Wacaster
Music Evangelist of the Year Russ Murphy
Faith, Family, & Country Movie Fireproof, Provident Films
Television Network TCT Network

Point of Grace

Point of Grace

Gwen Sebastian

gsebastian101209Gwen Sebastian’s debut single “Hard Rain” on Open Road Record/Lofton Creek Records is being released to country radio Oct. 12. She’s currently at work on her upcoming album, and she also has a holiday release available now called Christmas In July.

Born to a ranching family in Hebron, North Dakota (pop. 800), Sebastian’s childhood summers were spent rounding up cattle on the farm and cooking with her mother in the kitchen. But when she turned  her attention to music, she had a built in audience: she and her brother are but two of an incredible 117 grandchildren in her extended family.

“Before I could even walk, I would sit beneath the organ as my grandma played. I would watch her feet play the pedals,” recalls Gwen. By age 11 she became the local church organist, and by her early teens she was regularly performing on stages alongside her parents at local weddings, fairs and bars around North Dakota.

Once she arrived in Nashville, Sebastian became a regular performer at the Wildhorse Saloon, and moved on to play at fairs, festivals, casinos and clubs all over the country. She has opened for acts including Taylor Swift, Sugarland, and Phil Vassar. Sebastian enjoys the creative songwriter community in Music City and the opportunity to co-write with hit songwriters. “I want my fans to really connect with me and I feel that through my songwriting is the best way they can,” she explains.

http://www.gwensebastian.com/
http://www.myspace.com/gwensebastian

Next Big Nashville Emphasizes Broad Musical Landscape

jmw_nbn08

Jason Moon Wilkins at NBN 08.

What started as a small, one-off event in 2006 is working to change the perception of Music City. Next Big Nashville, holding its fourth annual event Oct. 7-10, offers a mix of music festival and business conference that spotlights our town’s thriving non-country constituency. NBN has grown and evolved at a staggering rate with attendance skyrocketing from 3000 in 2006, to 9000 in 2007, and 15000 last year. A conference was added along the way, with the 2009 event set to host about 140 performers and an expanded seminar.

In 2006, the first Next Big Nashville was held as a three-day concert that stemmed from an article focusing on the city’s rock scene by then Tennessean / Rage scribe Jason Moon Wilkins. “The article and party were really to capture the zeitgeist of what was happening at that time which was—and now has born even more fruit—the biggest explosion of non-country music in Nashville in its history, as far as number of signings, amount of interest and sales,” recalls Wilkins. “Between Kings of Leon, Paramore, Be Your Own Pet, and at the time Pink Spiders, it just seemed like time to do something that connected the dots.” Putting together 33 bands to play over three days at the Mercy Lounge and Cannery Ballroom, Wilkins and Movement Nashville’s Ethan Opelt co-founded what would become an annual event without even realizing it.

Wilkins had some festival experience, but his varied background was largely in writing including the now defunct Bone, as well as time in management, being a radio MD at Thunder 94, and as a musician signed to Arista/Dedicated, and on the road with Garrison Starr, Neilson Hubbard, and Josh Rouse.

“We did it with no real long-term aims the first year, there was no big plan. There was no business plan. We literally did it in three and a half weeks. For 2007, we sat down and start thinking, ‘Okay, what are we going to do?’ Because all these people had come out of the woodwork—business people, people in the community, bands—and they pointed the finger at us and said, ‘Your doing this [rock festival] now.’ All the encouragement from all the different sectors pushed us along.” He laughs, “In spite of intelligence pushing us the other way.”

Now, four years later, NBN is drawing an increasing number of attendees from outside of Nashville who enjoy the networking and engaging local scene. Helping entice visitors is glowing press from national outlets like Rolling Stone, Billboard, and Pitchfork, as well as many out-of-town bands on the bill.

Some of the 2009 conference highlights will be the What’s Next for Nashville panel, the return of the Nashville Music Awards, and Robert K. Oermann’s presentation on how Nashville became Music City. Day one and two will be right off the Row at the Martha Rivers Ingram Center for The Performing Arts At Vanderbilt University, while day three of the conference moves to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Ford Theater. The nighttime showcases will be at twelve different venues around town.

Lacking a central location is one of NBN’s shortcomings admits Wilkins. “I think long-term for something like this to succeed, on a bigger scale, you have to create an opportunity where people can walk,” he says. “Right now we’ve got shuttles that go between venues and get people from A to B, but it’s not the same as being able to walk down 6th St. in Austin.” While Music City’s Lower Broadway is foot-traffic friendly, the venues there cater to tourists with country cover bands, rarely offering a local indie act. But they are giving NBN a chance this year. As a trial run, on Friday, Oct. 9, from 7-10 PM, the NBN Honky-Tonk Takeover showcases will hit Tootsie’s, Paradise Park, The Wheel, and Full Moon.

“Even if you just focus on the major [rock acts] that are happening right now [in Nashville] it’s incredibly impressive. What Kings of Leon, Paramore and Jack White are doing on a worldwide basis—each of those things alone would be enough for a scene to hang its hat on,” exclaims Wilkins. “But, we still have a mountain to climb in terms of perception, where the name Nashville is so synonymous with country music that it is sometimes difficult for people to wrap their heads around the breadth and depth of everything else that goes on here, like the gospel, and soul, and incredible work the Symphony does. People like Mat Kearney and Safety Suit have mainstream Top 40 hits, and they’ve done it out of here, by working hard, and getting out there, and not relying on the Nashville system per se, but using this as their base of operations. I think that is the way forward for people who are interested in moving here. Those success stories prove that it can be done.” www.nextbignashville.net

Jason Crabb

“Somebody Like Me”

Spring Hill/Nine North

jcrabbSpend half your life doing any one thing, and at some point, you’re bound to question whether or not that one thing was the right thing. For Jason Crabb, longtime powerhouse lead vocalist for The Crabb Family, that has never been a question. With a soulful voice like his, the ‘right thing’ was always a given. He was born to sing. Baptized in a God-given talent pool, weaned on the hymnal and mentored by Bill Gaither himself, Jason Crabb hit the road at age 14 and, alongside his family, has pursued his calling full-throttle ever since.

But now the Grammy nominated, 10-time Dove Award winner is going solo with his self-titled album and new country single “Somebody Like Me.” Produced by Grammy Award-winning Tommy Sims (Michael W. Smith, Bruce Springsteen, Michael McDonald, Amy Grant) and Norro Wilson (Kenny Chesney, Reba McEntire, George Jones, Shania Twain), Jason Crabb features cameo appearances by country music legend Vince Gill, southern Gospel mainstay The Gaither Vocal Band and acclaimed songstress Sonya Isaacs.

With songs like “Walk on Water” (written by Bobby O. Pinson, Trent Tomlinson, Vicky McGehee) and “Sometimes I Cry,” (written by Gerald Crabb, one of the most prolific songwriters around with 22 No. 1 southern Gospel hits), Jason both acknowledges and encourages hurting people, leaving something more substantive that ‘feel good entertainment.’ Other surprises on the debut include: the bouncing, danceable “Hope For Me Yet,” a Marc Broussard/Radney Foster/Justin Tocket ode to love, “Forever’s End” penned by Randy Goodrum (“Oh Sherry,” “You Needed Me”), reinterpretations of the Crabb Family favorite “Through The Fire,” and “Daystar,” a Cathedrals’ classic, and a worshipful ballad “I Will Love You.”

http://www.jasoncrabb.com/
http://www.myspace.com/jasondcrabb

Gloriana

“How Far Do You Wanna Go?”

Emblem Music Group/Warner Bros.

gloriana100509By any measure, Gloriana has become one of country music’s hottest young acts. Taylor Swift called on the four-member group to open her Fearless 2009 tour, and Brooks & Dunn and LeAnn Rimes have also chosen them for opening slots. They have appeared on Good Morning America and The Today Show, as well as Access Hollywood and Sirius/XM, among scores of others. Following the band’s recent Top 10 debut single “Wild At Heart,” they are now releasing “How Far Do You Wanna Go?” to radio.

Ultimately it’s the fans who have made Tom Gossin, Mike Gossin, Rachel Reinert and Cheyenne Kimball collectively one of 2009’s hottest new country acts. Gloriana’s self-titled Emblem Music Group/Warner Bros. Records debut premiered at No. 3 on Billboard’s Top 200 and at No. 2 on the Billboard Country Album Chart. The album had the best first-week sales of any new country artist in 2009, and “Wild At Heart” is the best-selling song by a new country artist in 2009, selling over 350,000 copies to date. The diversity of their appeal can be seen in the fact that they have appeared both on the Grand Ole Opry and in the pages of several magazines aimed at teens.

Gloriana was produced by Grammy Award-winner and Emblem Music Group label owner Matt Serletic (Rob Thomas, Willie Nelson, Aerosmith), and mixed by Justin Niebank (Keith Urban, Rascal Flatts) and Chris Lord-Alge (Faith Hill, Tim McGraw). Emblem Music Group is Serletic’s Diamond and multi-Platinum award-winning label, with over 50 million album sales to its credit. In the early stages of the album’s development, Serletic began writing with one of Nashville’s finest songwriters, Jeffrey Steele, and co-wrote the group’s debut single “Wild At Heart” with Josh Kear and Stephanie Bentley. At the same time, the group was collaborating with a talented array of Nashville songwriters including Trey Bruce, Kyle Cook, Ben Glover, Chuck Jones, Kevin Kadish, Wayne Kirkpatrick, and Danny Myrick.

“I know how much music has impacted all of our lives,” says Tom. “It connects us all, it moves us and it can change a person,” adds Mike. “We hope that our music will do that for others for a long time to come.”

http://www.gloriana.com/
http://www.myspace.com/gloriana

Richie Fields

“Losing You”

Joint Journey Records

rfields-pp92109“The crisp riffs and melodic harmonies throughout ‘Losing You’ flow magnificently, and Richie’s emotion is pouring through his vocals. The guy has a great voice. This is a top-notch track, one that SHOULD be playing at radio everywhere.”
—STEELTOWN ROCK (http://steeltownrock.com/)

Richie Fields’ latest single, “Losing You,” was written by hit makers Gerald Smith (Collin Raye, Lorrie Morgan) and Wynn Varble (Brad Paisley, Darryl Worley), and showcases Richie’s distinctive baritone. The power ballad is from Fields’ upcoming CD, due in stores in 2010. The track was produced by J. Gary Smith (Andy Griggs, Lonestar) and associate producer, Clif Doyal.

Richie has been touring non-stop this summer, going as far west as Denver’s famed Grizzly Rose and as far east as Ocean City, Maryland’s Cowboyz Smokehouse & Saloon. Upcoming shows include stops in Laramie and Cheyenne, Wyoming; Macon, Georgia; Hanover and Hagerstown, Maryland.

Recent media coverage includes a “Spotlight Featured Artist” slot in the debut issue of AirPlay Direct’s new digital magazine, the Direct Buzz, and also in Country Weekly (”Who’s New”-June 8, and “Listen Up!”-July 13). Television appearances include the Pentagon Channel, Inside Music Row, Hit Country TV and True Country GoTV networks.

www.richiefields.com
www.myspace.com/richiefields

Mica Roberts

“Days You Live For”

Show Dog Nashville

mroberts-daysMica Roberts’ new single release is “Days You Live For,” and the Oklahoma native is busy making the radio rounds to get the word out. A talented vocalist and musician who hit the road after high school, Roberts earned her performance stripes playing amusement parks, campgrounds and on a cruise ship before landing high profile jobs as an in-demand backup singer.

If you want to know Roberts, you are going to have to get to know her hometown Locust Grove, Oklahoma. A tiny town of 1400 people, Locust Grove is about 50 miles east of Tulsa and is still the place Roberts calls home. She still owns the family farm there where she grew up and forged her lifelong love of music.

When Mica arrived in Nashville she did everything she could to get a job. “I just wanted to stay there and support myself,” Mica recalls. “I waited tables and sang in a local club called the Bull Pen Lounge.” In 1997, nine years after she made the move to town, she she became Faith Hill’s background vocalist and toured with her for four years. This led to other opportunities from Billy Bob Thornton to her hero Willie Nelson and eventually head Show Dog Toby Keith, whom she has backed up for the past seven years.

“My dream is to make music with an edge and energy all its own,” says Roberts. “I draw inspiration from the people I’m around and from my life. I believe in the music I’m making and I know people will connect with it if given the opportunity.”

http://micaroberts.com/

http://www.myspace.com/micaroberts