Thomas Rhett Adds Another Nashville Bridgestone Arena Show To 2023 Tour

Thomas Rhett has added a second Nashville show to his “Home Team Tour 23” this fall after selling out the first Bridgestone Arena date.

Rhett’s second Nashville show will take place Sept. 30, with special guests Cole Swindell and Nate Smith. First tickets are available to Home Team Members beginning tomorrow, April 25, ahead of the general sales this Friday, April 28 at 10 a.m. local time. For more information, click here.

“It’s always a dream come true to play your hometown,” the artist explains. “But getting to play the arena two nights in a row is going to be one of those things I tell my grandkids about one day.”

Rhett will kick off the “Home Team Tour 23” in Des Moines, Iowa on Thursday, May 4, visiting 40 cities in 27 states. The trek follows his string of sold-out international shows, which included performances in the United Kingdom, Ireland and Canada. He also recently achieved a major career milestone, earning 20 No. 1 singles on the country charts in just ten years.

ACM Announces Country Kickoff Event To Lead Into Awards

The Academy of Country Music has announced its take over of The Star in Frisco, Texas, with three days of live music, country events and celebrations beginning May 9 leading up to the 58th ACM Awards.

The events of ACM Awards Week include the ACM Country Kickoff at The Star, a two-day music and entertainment festival which is open to the public, free to all fans and does not require tickets. The festival will allow fans to get up close and personal with some of country music’s biggest stars and celebrate the ACM Awards’ return to north Texas. A beer garden presented by Coors Light will be on hand, in addition to a VIP space presented by Lucas Oil with a prime view of the stage.

The ACM Country Kickoff will also feature food trucks, photo opps, ACM Awards show merchandise and activations by a host of partners, including ACM Lifting Lives, Amazon Music, Ashley HomeStore, Kendra Scott, Lucchese, North Texas Ford and Visit Frisco. The ACM Kickoff at The Star will be held from 3:00 – 10:00 p.m. CT on both May 9 and 10. A detailed performance schedule for the performance stage, as well as a map of the full festival footprint, will be released in the coming weeks.

“We couldn’t be more thrilled to partner with the Dallas Cowboys and the Jones family to bring the Academy of Country Music Awards back to Texas at their world headquarters,” says Academy of Country Music CEO Damon Whiteside. “This world-class venue, shopping and dining district, and luxury area hotels and resorts made the perfect canvas to build our ACM Awards week bigger and better than ever, on behalf of our artists and industry. Texas has some of the most passionate country music fans in the world, and we can’t wait to bring the party to Frisco!”

“Ford Center at The Star in Frisco is not only the perfect location to house the Academy of Country Music Awards, but our entire campus and The Star Entertainment District will be turned into the ultimate country music celebration that week, and we can’t wait to host all of the wonderful and exciting events that come with it,” says Dallas Cowboys Executive Vice President/Chief Operating Officer Stephen Jones.

Ella Langley Releases Track With Koe Wetzel From Upcoming Debut EP

Koe Wetzel & Ella Langley

Alabama-born country singer-songwriter Ella Langley has released her new single, “That’s Why We Fight,” feat. Koe Wetzel via Columbia Records/Sony Music Nashville. The song is the first taste of her upcoming debut EP Excuse The Mess, out May 19.

“‘That’s Why We Fight’ is about one of those relationships where fighting is the thing that keeps you together. Your significant other is your favorite person to fight with. It adds a little spice and keeps things interesting. I wouldn’t recommend a relationship like this, but we’ve all had one. I’ve been a fan of Koe for a long time, and it was really cool he jammed on it.”

Langley will perform during CMA Fest in Nashville on the Chevy Vibes Stage June 11. Later this summer, she will support Jon Pardi on his “Mr. Saturday Night World Tour.” She has previously toured with Wetzel, Randy Houser, Cody Johnson and Jamey Johnson, and shared the stage with Lainey Wilson and Parker McCollum.

Excuse The Mess Track Listing: 
1. “Make Me Wanna Smoke”
2. “Excuse the Mess”
3. “Could’ve Been Her”
4. “That’s Why We Fight (feat. Koe Wetzel)”
5. “Country Boy’s Dream Girl”
6. “Hell Of A Man”
7. “Where You Left It”
8. “Don’t We All”

The MLC Crosses The $1 Billion Milestone

Kris Ahrend, CEO of The MLC

Since beginning payment distribution in April of 2021, The Mechanical Licensing Collective (The MLC) has crossed the $1 billion threshold in royalties paid to music rights-holders, with a current match rate of over 89% for streaming data to a musical work in the MLC database for 2022.

“We are incredibly proud to have reached this milestone in less than two years. It shows that the technology and processes we have built and launched are working effectively,” shares CEO of The MLC, Kris Ahrend. “That said, we know there’s still more work to do, and we are excited to continue our work to ensure we are serving our members well.”

The MLC is a nonprofit organization established under the Music Modernization Act of 2018. It began paying out unmatched historical royalties last June, and to date, has paid out more than 20% of the oldest unmatched royalties for uses that took place between 2007 and 2017. The organization is focused on illuminating the “black box,” or the pool of revenue at a collection society where the songwriter and/or publisher of songs that have generated revenue cannot be located or traced.

During the first two years of operation, The MLC was able to complete every single distribution either on time or early to its 25,000 members. Ahrend and his team look forward to continuing this trend into year three.

“Membership growth remains at the forefront of our priorities,” he says. “As more rights-holders become members, and those members register their songs, the number of songs in our database increases, allowing us to match and pay out even more royalties. We are also actively working on enhancing the tools for members that we have created, to give them visibility into their data and help them manage their data more effectively.

“With the start of the Phono 4 rate period in January, as well as the continued growth in the US streaming market, we expect monthly royalty payments to continue to grow over the next twelve months,” Ahrend says. “We are hopeful that the Copyright Royalty Board will finalize the rates for the Phono 3 rate period, paving the way for us to be able to begin distributing matched historical royalties from 2018, 2019, and 2020 early next year.”

The MLC has made almost all of the remaining unmatched data available to be searched by Members in the MLC Portal. Members can check for any unmatched royalties here.

Anne Wilson Celebrates Anniversary Of ‘My Jesus’ With New Deluxe Album

Anne Wilson. Photo: Cameron Powell

Anne Wilson is releasing My Jesus (Anniversary Deluxe), featuring 26 songs that reimagine and honor her album My Jesus in a new light, on the one-year anniversary of the album’s release.

The newly-packaged record features an all-new live version of “My Jesus (Live From Kentucky)” with a never-before-seen video from her hometown show at Rupp Arena in Lexington. My Jesus (Anniversary Deluxe) also features a brand-new track titled “Still God,” penned by Wilson, Matthew West and AJ Prius, underscoring the importance of maintaining a focus on God through life’s trials and tribulations.

Additionally highlighted in the new collection are live versions of her biggest hits from shows in Nashville and the Rock The South Festival as well as the feature track “Living Water” from the Lionsgate film Jesus Revolution.

Called to her music in the wake of tragedy, Wilson first discovered her voice while singing at her brother’s funeral in 2017, which led to her debut smash “My Jesus.” The ballad helped her make history as the first female soloist to top Billboard‘s Christian Airplay chart with a debut single since the chart’s launch in 2003. It went on to be named ASCAP’s 2022 Christian Music Awards Song of the Year. Her Grammy-nominated 15-song debut album, My Jesus, was released on April 22, 2022.

“The past year of my life has been more life-giving than anything I could’ve ever dreamed of,” shares Wilson. “This record has been such a gift to my life and God has used my music in the most incredible way. So to celebrate its first anniversary, My Jesus (Anniversary Deluxe) is out now! This is for you, Jacob!”

Since breaking onto the scene two years ago, Wilson’s list of accolades includes two wins at the 53rd annual GMA Dove Awards for New Artist of the Year and Pop/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year and two wins at the K-LOVE Fan Awards for Female Artist of the Year and Breakout Single. She also received her first Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Christian Music Album, a nomination for Favorite Inspirational Artist at the 2022 American Music Awards, and a nod from the Billboard Music Awards for Top Christian Song.

Earning a spot on Pandora’s 2023 Artist to Watch: Christian/Gospel list and RIAA’s Class of 2022, Wilson also wrote and published her first book My Jesus: From Heartache To Hope, which made the Evangelical Christian Publishing Association’s Bestseller List. She recently completed 39 dates on the 2023 “Winter Jam Tour,” and is set to appear at CMA Fest on June 11.

Industry Ink: Big Loud, CMHOF, ASCAP, More

Big Loud Proudly Celebrates A Big Week

Pictured: (L-R): Austen Adams, Stacy Blythe, Seth England, Candice Watkins, Patch Culbertson

Big Loud’s top officers are celebrating the last week of ACM voting with t-shirts in proud support of their artists Mackenzie Porter, Morgan Wallen, Hailey Whitters, Hardy and Ernest.

Austen Adams (COO, Big Loud) wears his shirt in support of Porter, who is up in the Music Event of the Year for “Thinking ‘Bout You” with Dustin Lynch. SVP of Radio Promotion Stacy Blythe (SVP of Radio Promotion, Big Loud Records) proudly rocks a Wallen t-shirt for this year’s Entertainer of the Year, Male Artist of the Year, Song of the Year and Artist-Songwriter of the Year nominee.  Seth England (CEO / Partner, Big Loud) dresses in support of Whitters, one of this year’s New Female Artist of the Year nominees.

Candice Watkins (SVP of Marketing, Big Loud Records) sports a shirt celebrating Hardy, who has received multiple nominations for “Wait In The Truck” with Lainey Wilson including Song of the Year, Visual Media of the Year, and Music Event of the Year, and a nomination for Artist-Songwriter of the Year. Patch Culbertson (GM/SV, Big Loud Records) wears his t-shirt to support Ernest, who is nominated in the New Male Artist of the Year and the Artist-Songwriter of the Year categories.

Voting for this year’s awards concludes on Monday, April 24. The 58th ACM Awards will be May 11, hosted by Dolly Parton and Garth Brooks.

 

CMHOF Showcases Sustainability In Earth Day Video

The creative team at Country Music Hall Of Fame and Museum released a video in honor of Earth Day tomorrow to highlight the museum’s sustainability practices over the past year. The museum boasts robust composting and recycling efforts for visitors and staff. Nearly 187,000 pounds of glass and other materials have been recycled and composted.

Almost all of the disposable items from their restaurant, catering, and break room areas are compostable, resulting in 208,052 pounds of waste diverted from landfills. In addition, the museum has totaled 34,668 meals provided for Middle Tennessee through donation of 18,246 pounds of food.

The CMHOF’s Green Team continues to spearhead environmentally focused initiatives through a variety of efforts.

 

ASCAP Showcases MTSU Students At The Bluebird Cafe

Pictured (L-R): Mike Sistad (Vice President of Nashville Membership, ASCAP), Harmony Redford, Emily O’Neal, Jaelee Roberts, Beverly Keel (Dean, College of Media & Entertainment, MTSU ), Sofia Lynch, Anna Wharton, Odie Blackmon (Coordinator, MTSU Commercial Songwriting Program)

ASCAP hosted a songwriters round in partnership with Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU) on Wednesday, April 19. The show featured MTSU commercial songwriting program students Sofia Lynch, Emily O’Neal, Harmony Redford and Jaelee Roberts at famed Nashville venue, The Bluebird Cafe.

 

SESAC Hosts April Round At The Bluebird Cafe

Pictured (L-R): ET Brown (Senior Director Creative Services, SESAC), Seth Mosley, Jared Weeks (Saving Abel), Jake Rose, Aaron Gillespie (Underoath), Jason Null (Saving Abel)

SESAC’s monthly round at The Bluebird Cafe took place on Tuesday, April 18. The night’s talents featured Aaron Gillespie of the rock band Underoath, songwriter-producer Seth Mosley and singer-songwriter Jake Rose, as well as Jason Null and Jared Weeks, founding members of the rock band Saving Abel.

 

Wasserman Music Execs Speak At Relix Conference In Nashville

Pictured (L-R): Josh Baron, Lee Anderson, Chappel McCollister, Molly Bailin, Jonathan Levine

Wasserman Music’s Chappel McCollister, Jonathan Levine, Lee Anderson and Molly Bailin spoke at the recent Relix Music Conference in Nashville. The executives discussed the emergence and success of the company in a conversation moderated by Project Admission’s Josh Baron.

As part of a case study at this year’s Relix Music Conference, the group discussed strategically making decisions about opportunities for clients, Wasserman’s focus on artist and genre representation, the intersection of music with sports and branding, and more.

T.J. Martell Foundation, StarVista Live Continue Partnership

StarVista LIVE, the company producing music-themed cruises, partnered with the T.J. Martell Foundation is continuing its partnership to help raise funds and awareness for the organization. Since starting the partnership in 2018, over $425,000 has been raised for the music industry foundation that funds innovative medical research.

Generous patrons on this year’s Country Music Cruise and 70s Rock & Romance Cruise contributed $175,000 via live auctions of guitars autographed by cruise artists.

“I had the honor of knowing Tony Martell, who created this incredible legacy in memory of his son T.J., and we are fortunate to be a small part in delivering on Tony’s promise blending this important work with great music and fun events,” says StarVista LIVE Senior VP Mike Jason. “Post-pandemic, the fans are back enthusiastically embracing great music, luxury travel and community. Our guests are also incredibly generous in supporting life-saving cancer research.”

Plans are in the works for additional engagements to raise much needed funds for cancer research.

Koe Wetzel Adds Fall Dates To ‘Road To Hell Paso’ Tour

Koe Wetzel

Koe Wetzel has added a fall leg to his “Road To Hell Paso” headlining tour.

The newly-announced 22-date run kicks off July 28 in Idaho Falls with stops in Baton Rouge, Indianapolis, Tupelo, Oklahoma City, San Antonio, and more, concluding with shows in Lubbock and El Paso, both of which have inspired a couple of Wetzel’s song and album titles.

Tickets go on sale to the general public on Friday, April 28. Fans can register for presale access starting Tuesday, April 25. For more information, click here.

Wetzel has been on the road playing sold-out shows across the country in support of his latest album Hell Paso, which debuted at No. 12 on the Billboard 200 upon release in September. The Texas-born singer-songwriter has sold over 100,000 tickets thus far this year. In addition to his “Road to Hell Paso” dates, Wetzel will support Eric Church on his “Outsiders Revival Tour” this July. He will also perform at various festivals including a headlining slot at the inaugural Georgia Country Music Fest this Labor Day Weekend.

Additionally, Wetzel is featured on Ella Langley’s new song “That’s Why We Fight,” out today.

Cody Johnson Takes ‘Human’ To No. 1 On MusicRow Chart

Cody Johnson. Photo: Chris Douglas

Cody Johnson tops the MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart this week with “Human.” The touching song was written by Tony Lane and Travis Meadows.

Johnson recently received three nominations for the upcoming 58th Academy of Country Music Awards, making this the most ACM nominations he has ever received and the most nominated Texas-born male artist this year.

“Human” is Johnson’s third MusicRow No. 1, following “‘Til You Can’t” and “On My Way To You.”

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

Brandon Lake Inks With WME

Brandon Lake. Photo: John Castillo

Grammy-winning recording artist Brandon Lake has signed with WME for global representation in all areas.

A worship leader and songwriter for over a decade, Lake has become one of the most sought-after artists in the Christian genre, releasing music via Provident Entertainment/Sony Music Nashville. His debut single “This Is a Move” has been streamed over 18 million times on Spotify, and his latest album House of Miracles includes recent single “Gratitude,” which has held the No. 1 spot at Christian radio for six weeks and counting.

Lake is currently on his sold-out, 26-city “Miracle Nights Tour” with Benjamin William Hastings and made his headlining debut at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium this past weekend with special guest Thomas Rhett. In August, he is set to co-headline the “Summer Worship Nights Tour” with Phil Wickham, hitting arenas in 12 cities. The singer-songwriter is currently working on new music slated to be released this summer.

Becoming Espo: The Story Of Industry Vet John Esposito [Interview]

Pictured (L-R, back row): Chris Janson, Ashley McBryde; (L-R, front row): Dan Smyers, Espo, Shay Mooney

Upon the announcement this week of Espo’s retirement, MusicRow celebrates his legacy by revisiting his journey to becoming one of the most revered label heads in Nashville’s music industry history. The below profile on former Warner Music Nashville Chairman & CEO John Esposito was originally published in MusicRow‘s 2022 Country Radio & Streaming Issue. 

 

If you’ve been to a music industry event in which Warner Music Nashville Chairman & CEO John “Espo” Esposito speaks, chances are you haven’t forgotten him.

The Pennsylvania native stands tall, and dons glasses with dark, circular frames. He speaks with a slight accent, he’s hilariously witty, and is known for his colorful vernacular. In other words, he swears like a sailor.

Since he arrived in Music City to head up Warner Music Nashville (WMN) in 2009, he’s become unequivocally beloved by artists and industry folk alike. So much so that the powerful label head is affectionately called Espo by all.

John Esposito didn’t set out to be a high-ranking music executive when he started his career.

Pictured: A young Espo sits at his drum set.

He majored in journalism at the Indiana University of Pennsylvania, but his passion for music occupied a lot of his time.

“I had no inkling to become a music executive or even make a living in music,” Espo says of his college days. “I was in two bands. I wrote the music editorial for the college paper, I was a disc jockey, and I booked the concerts and coffee houses at the college. Something should have clicked in my head at that point that that was my calling, but I only did it because I’m nutty passionate about music.”

After graduating and spending a few years drumming for a band in Pittsburgh, Espo found himself looking for a job in Washington, D.C. On his way to an interview at a radio station, he saw a help wanted sign at a record store called the Harmony Hut.

“So I became a clerk at a record store for damn near minimum wage. To my good fortune, the second day I was at the store, the regional manager came in and said, ‘What the hell are you doing here? You wanna become the assistant manager of one of my stores and I’ll train you how to be in the record store business?’ And that was how my life took off.”

Espo rose through the ranks at Harmony Hut, continuously getting promoted to bigger stores. “The one thing I remember very specifically is I got free albums and free tickets, and that resonated with me, which I would circle back to years later.”

Soon Espo was recruited to work at Macy’s as a buyer. Years later, one of Espo’s suppliers, Mitsubishi, asked him to come work for them as head of sales for the east coast of their operation.

“I was making a really good living at Mitsubishi, but I was seven years in and was bored shitless. I said to my now ex-wife, ‘I have to get into the music business. That’s my calling. I keep spending all my disposable income on instruments, CDs and concert tickets.’”

Following his passion, Espo called up one of his big customers, The Wiz, to see if they could introduce him to music business executives. They, in turn, asked Espo to run their record department. Espo took the job with hopes that he would make connections at a major label. “Within two years I luckily had three different companies pursuing me. Again, no freaking plan.”

By 1994, Espo had his foot in the door of the music business, landing a job at Polygram where he would advance through high-ranking positions before leaving to become the founding general manager and executive vice president at The Island Def Jam Music Group in 1997.

In 2002 he was named president of WEA, Corp., the sales and marketing arm of the Warner Music Group, where he would spend the next seven years. But while Espo was building his career up north, his guiding light of passion caught an interest in Nashville.

“When I was running The Wiz, some people from Sony knew I was a Mary Chapin Carpenter fanatic and asked me if I wanted to go to the CMAs and see her perform. It was 1993, and that was my first trip to Nashville.

Pictured: Espo, second from right, at his post as the Manager of Harmony Hut in Washington, D.C. circa 1980.

“I had no preconceived notions [about Nashville], but I had no idea I was going to enjoy that show so much,” Espo says. “That night I just fell in love with Nashville. I haven’t missed a CMA Awards since 1993, until the pandemic.”

In 2009, Espo was able to follow his love for Music City when he was tapped to become the first president and CEO of Warner Music Nashville.

“I said yes in a heartbeat. I came down here in September of 2009 and never looked back. I had no idea if I’d be successful as a country record label head, but I knew I was going to give it my all and that I was lucky to get that opportunity.”

At the time, Warner’s country music label in Nashville was struggling, with record sales declining. Blake Shelton had been at the label for eight years, and had seen modest success with five No. 1 records, but wasn’t hitting his maximum potential.

“I looked at the roster and the crew that was operating the company and I thought Blake was my greatest opportunity. I thought, I have to help this team make a statement by putting all our eggs in the Blake Shelton basket.”

It worked. Shelton, who is still a WMN artist, boasts 28 No. 1 hits and multiple Gold and Platinum certifications. Over the past two decades he has accumulated more than 8.5 billion global on-demand streams, 13 million career album U.S. sales, and award wins approaching the hundreds.

“I had to convince people that we could win. If we could start winning with Blake, we could win.”

With Shelton on his way to country superstardom, a refined label staff, and success with several key signings such as Brett Eldredge, Hunter Hayes, and Cole Swindell, Espo and his WMN team were in the game.

“Suddenly it felt like a lot of weight was off my shoulders. Everybody at the label was becoming prouder and prouder to be part of a team that was starting to get consideration,” Espo says. “I believe that success begets success. Momentum is so hard to create. When you have it, that’s when you hunker down and work even harder.”

While rebuilding the country label, Espo threw himself into the Nashville music business community, joining the CMA and ACM boards, Leadership Music, NARAS, the Mayor’s Music Council, and more.

“I wanted people to know that there may be people who work as hard as me, but there ain’t gonna be anybody who works harder than me. And I wanted them to know I was committed to being part of this community. I didn’t want anybody to think this was one step on my next path. This was it for me.”

In 2016, Espo celebrated a promotion to chairman and CEO of WMN, and Shelton broke a record for the label with 17 consecutive No. 1 songs on the Billboard Country Airplay chart. In 2018, Espo signed another country hitmaker, Kenny Chesney, who celebrated his 34th No. 1 in January.

Pictured (L-R): Espo, Scott Hendricks, Shay Mooney, Blake Shelton, Max Lousada, Gwen Stefani, Dan Smyers and Ashley McBryde attend the 2020 Warner Music Group pre-Grammy party in Hollywood, California. Photo: Lester Cohen/Getty Images for Warner Music

“One of the good things I observed from New York before coming here is that, if they do it right, a country artist can have a much longer career than most other genres. But they have to be willing to work as hard after years of success as they did when they started. With Blake and Kenny, when we’re about to launch a project, they’re getting on airplanes and flying to visit radio and streaming companies. They display the same hunger they had when they were first trying to break.”

WMN has seen incredible success in recent years with Dan + Shay, who have garnered nine billion global career streams to date, 42 total RIAA certifications and achieved nine No. 1 singles at country radio.

Dan + Shay’s massive commercial appeal has been, in part, due to their embracing global opportunities—something that WMN is privy to.

“We were the first Nashville-based label to put a full-time international team in place,” Espo says.

With fans around the world taking more and more interest in country music, especially country music with pop sensibilities, Dan + Shay were able to harness this global opportunity.

“If an artist is willing to work—knowing that it’s a grind in the beginning just like the beginning part of their career was—and if they are willing to get on airplanes and go play small clubs [overseas] while at the same time they’re playing arenas in the U.S., they have an opportunity to open up markets. And Dan+ Shay were 100% on board, as was their management team, who understands that opportunity as well. They are the poster children with 9 billion global streams. They’ve topped the charts everywhere.”

In 2019 WMN signed another monumental artist, Gabby Barrett. Her now 5x-Platinum debut single “I Hope” was the most-streamed country song of 2020 and reigned atop the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart for a record-breaking 27 weeks. Her follow up, “The Good Ones,” also achieved Platinum certification and spent three weeks at No. 1.

Pictured (L-R): Brett Eldredge and Espo celebrate Glow, Eldredge’s 2016 Christmas album.

“It was an incredibly competitive deal,” Espo says of signing Barrett, who at the time was beginning to make waves with “I Hope” after leaving American Idol. “Every label wanted to sign her.

“I remember people interviewing me pre-pandemic, probably in 2019. We were having success with Gabby and Ingrid [Andress]. They hadn’t chart topped yet, although they were on their way. We were also getting traction with Ashley [McBryde]. And all the questions were about, ‘Did you purposely sign women? Are you crazy for signing women when it’s so tough to break women?’

“Then when we started having success, the questions turned into ‘Is radio making it easier?’ And my answer is, they never make it easy. You’re signing artists. I’m not looking at them as a female artist, a male artist, or a six foot tall artist. Our job is to sign geniuses and we just happen to be lucky that we signed those three.”

In his more than a decade at WMN, some of Espo’s proudest moments are signing his first new artist, Eldredge; Blake Shelton winning CMA’s Entertainer of the Year in 2012; Dan + Shay releasing “Tequila” to massive appeal; welcoming Chesney and Zac Brown Band to the label family, and having Cody Johnson put his faith in WMN, resulting in his massive consumption growth. Just to name a few.

He’s also pretty stoked for WMN’s building remodel on Music Row.

“We wanted to be the major that put a stake in the ground and said, ‘We’re going to be on Music Row,’” Espo says. “[The renovated office building] is going to be so much more artist friendly, so much more inviting to people, and it will still allow us the charm of Music Row.”

Pictured (L-R): Kristen Williams, Espo, Scott Hendricks, Blake Shelton, Ben Kline, Narvel Blackstock and Cris Lacy celebrate RIAA certifications for Shelton

When looking back on Espo’s career so far, and looking forward to the future, one thing is clear: he is led by a desperate passion for music.

“I had no plan other than just keep being successful at what you do so that they’ll keep paying me so I can keep getting tickets,” Espo shares. “[My former boss] Lyor Cohen had a big impact on my life. One of his expressions that I use all the time is: I’ve worked my entire life for an all access backstage pass. That’s the only thing I work for.”

So, how did Espo get his nickname?

“With John being the most common male name on the planet earth, I just decided that being Espo would be easier. When somebody yelled John in a room, a hundred heads would turn. When they say Espo, I’m likely the only Espo in the damn room.”

And with that, Espo has continued to turn heads in every damn room he’s entered during his career. His wit, tenacity, and most of all, passion, have set him apart in his nearly 15 years on Music Row.