Roots N Blues Festival Honors Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy, Celebrates Attendance Record

Pictured (L-R): Tracy Lane, Shay Jasper, Jeff Tweedy. Photo: LG Patterson

The 15th annual Roots N Blues festival, the only entirely women-owned major music festival in the U.S., wrapped up another successful year. The attendance for this year’s event, hosted Oct. 7-9, nearly doubled from last year, and Saturday marked the largest attendance day in the event’s history with over 10,000 attendees.

Held at Stephens Lake Park in Columbia, Missouri, the three-day festival took over two stages and featured headlining sets from Wilco, Jon Batiste, Bleachers, Chaka Khan, Tanya Tucker, and Old Crow Medicine Show.

On the first night of Roots N Blues, Grammy award-winning vocalist and guitarist of Wilco, Jeff Tweedy, was presented with the 2021 Missouri Roots Songbook honor before his band took the stage. The honor was presented by festival co-owners and co-producers, Tracy Lane and Shay Jasper, who founded the Missouri Roots Songbook in 2018 to encourage the people of Missouri to take pride in the musical heritage of their home state. Previous honorees have included Chuck Berry (2018), John “Blind” Boone (2019), and Sheryl Crow (2021).

Tanya Tucker. Photo: LG Patterson

“The Missouri Roots Songbook tradition, now in its fourth year, is a celebration of musicians with Missouri roots who have altered music history and culture on a global scale,” says Lane. “Jeff Tweedy is a midwesterner whose childhood was spent just across the river from St. Louis, listening to a broad array of musical influences spanning from The Carter Family to The Replacements, and some of us stood alongside him in our teenage years, seeing heavy metal bands on The Landing in the summer. Jeff Tweedy’s compelling and communal storytelling combined with his songwriting genius has resulted in more than 30 years of songs that sound and feel like us.”

“Over 10,000 people participated in a collective celebration of American Roots Music and wholeheartedly supported live music in mid-Missouri throughout the weekend,” adds Jasper. “In hearing the accounts of our patrons and looking at the data collected, we are providing a more inclusive, safe and positive experience for the community and its visitors. Tracy, myself and our incredible team are looking forward to further expanding our featured genres in 2023 while continuing an evolution into the best version of ourselves.”

Next year’s festival will take place Sept. 30-Oct. 2, 2023.

Brittney Spencer. Photo: LG Patterson

Country Music Hall Of Fame Inducts A Trio Of Greats

Pictured (L-R): Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Joe Galante, Lorrie Morgan and Judith Lewis attend the class of 2022 Medallion Ceremony at Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

A record-label genius and two of the finest honky-tonk singers who have ever lived entered the Country Music Hall of Fame on Sunday (Oct. 16) during a star-studded ceremony.

RCA’s Joe Galante, tragically departed singer Keith Whitley and legendary Jerry Lee Lewis were lauded as the 2022 inductees at the Medallion Ceremony in the Hall’s CMA Theater. The capacity crowd in attendance was entertained by compelling video bios of the three honorees and tribute celebrity performances, all of which were surprise appearances.

“Jerry Lee Lewis, Keith Whitley and Joe Galante changed country music in ways that will be felt long after tonight’s ceremony,” said CMA chief Sarah Trahern in greeting the audience. “In very individual ways, they rewrote the rules.”

Hall of Fame CEO Kyle Young presided. He noted Galante’s accomplishments in gaining more autonomy for Nashville’s major labels, in directing star-making marketing and promotion, in becoming noted for his visionary artist signings and team building as the youngest label head on Music Row.

Pictured: Joe Galante inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, presented by Kix Brooks (left) and CEO of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Kyle Young (right). Photo” Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

“He recalibrated the commercial possibilities of country music,” Young noted. He cited the dramatic increase in the number of Gold and Platinum selling country artists during Galante’s 30 years as a label chief.

The careers of The Judds, Dolly Parton, Waylon Jennings, Martina McBride, Ronnie Milsap, K.T. Oslin, Brooks & Dunn, Brad Paisley, Kenny Rogers, Earl Thomas Conley, Charley Pride, Clint Black, Aaron Tippin, Alan Jackson, Restless Heart and Alabama were all impacted by Galante’s leadership.

Galante and each of the other inductees were saluted with a video bio that featured rare footage and stills. Young then spoke at length, often repeating the same biographical information. Then came the star surprises.

Pictured: Randy Owen and Teddy Gentry of Alabama perform onstage for the class of 2022 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Randy Owen and Teddy Gentry of Alabama took the stage to sing “My Home’s in Alabama” for the man who made them stars. Miranda Lambert scored her first No. 1 hit when Galante became involved in her career. With just her own solo guitar accompaniment she sang it, “White Liar.” Then Galante-signee Kenny Chesney sang “The Good Stuff.”

Kix Brooks presented the Medallion to Joe Galante while Young unveiled the bronze plaque. These acts mark a person’s official Hall of Fame induction. “It’s really humbling when you get to this place,” Brooks said. “He loves music the same way that we do.”

“This has been a spectacular feeling for me,” said Galante. “I was their record-label head, but I was a huge fan of their music… Business became friendship, and friendship became family. I am both humbled and honored to be here.” He spoke movingly of his late wife Phran, who accompanied him on his journey to greatness.

The Keith Whitley video featured the star’s early singing as a child and as a strikingly accomplished Kentucky teen. Young extolled Whitley’s extraordinary vocal talent.

Pictured: Lorrie Morgan accepts Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum induction on behalf of Keith Whitley presented by Garth Brooks (left) and CEO of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Kyle Young (right). Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

“Not many singers could so inhabit a song,” he said. “He was a singer fo the ages. This was a once-in-a-generation singer.” He also noted the irony of Whitley’s album title when he was the lead singer for J.D. Crowe & The New South, My Home Ain’t in the Hall of Fame.

Mickey Guyton saluted Whitley with “When You Say Nothing at All.” Ricky Skaggs, who was Whitley’s singing partner when they were Kentucky teens, performed “Tennessee Blues” alongside Molly Tuttle and Justin Moses. “This is a bittersweet night for all of us,” Skaggs said. Whitley succumbed to alcoholism in 1989 at age 33.

Young pointed out that Whitley’s influence pervades current country, citing Tim McGraw, Alan Jackson, Blake Shelton and Chesney as disciples. This led to the introduction of another disciple, Garth Brooks.

Pictured: Mickey Guyton performs onstage for the class of 2022 Medallion Ceremony at Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

“For all country-music fans, this night in long overdue,” Brooks said.

“The guy could out-sing 99% of us.” Brooks performed “Don’t Close Your Eyes” as a solo-acoustic gem. He also did the Medallion honors, presenting it to Whitley’s widow, Grand Ole Opry star Lorrie Morgan.

When he died, Whitley “was three weeks away from being a member of the Grand Ole Opry — he didn’t know it,” Morgan shared. “He loved all of these Hall of Fame members — he was such a fan. He would feel so undeserving.”

The Jerry Lee Lewis video illustrated his triumphs as the 1950s rocker of “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” “Great Balls of Fire” and “Breathless,” followed by a decade in musical exile. His 1968-81 comeback was as the peerless country stylist of more than 30 top hits, including “Another Place Another Time,” “What’s Made Milwaukee Famous,” “She Even Woke Me Up to Say Goodbye,” “There Must Be More to Love Than This” and “Thirty Nine and Holding.”

Young said of Lewis, “There is no entertainer like him — a genius of rare musical spontaneity….an unquestioned pillar of rock & roll and country music.” “The Killer,” as he is known, was a charter inductee into the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame in 1986.

Pictured (L-R): Kris Kristofferson and Hank Williams Jr. accept Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum induction on behalf of Jerry Lee Lewis presented by CEO of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Kyle Youn. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Lee Ann Womack saluted Lewis with her version of his 1977 hit “Middle Age Crazy.” The McCrary Sisters had everyone on their feet and clapping to a rollicking, rousing treatment of “My God Is Real.” Lewis was expelled from Bible college for similarly rocking the song. Chris Isaak was joyous and charismatic on “Great Balls of Fire,” supported by Jen Gunderman’s piano pyrotechnics.

Hank Williams Jr. inducted Lewis. “Jerry Lee was one of my teachers,” he recalled. “It was then that I realized I was ‘Born to Boogie.’ Jerry Lee doesn’t ask for your attention, he demands it….He will be The Best as long as people listen to recorded music.”

Lewis, 87, was planning to attend, despite being wheelchair bound and increasingly frail. But doctors advised him on Sunday morning that he should not travel from his Mississippi home to Nashville. So Williams read a statement from the legend.

“I was so looking forward to it,” Lewis wrote. “Country music has always been the genre where I feel most at home. To be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame is the highest honor… Thanks to God for allowing me to experience this honor while I’m still here.”

Kris Kristofferson, who wrote Lewis’s hits “Once More With Feeling” and “Me and Bobby McGee,” accepted the Medallion from Williams. Then Bill Anderson led the crowd in singing the traditional ceremony closing song, “Will the Circle Be Unbroken.” He got a big assist via the fiddle filigrees of Deanie Richardson.

Kenny Chesney performs onstage for the class of 2022 Medallion Ceremony. Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Anderson, Kristofferson, Williams, Skaggs, Owen, Gentry, Kix Brooks, Garth Brooks, Connie Smith, Marty Stuart, Bud Wendell, Charlie McCoy, Don Schlitz, Vince Gill, Ray Stevens, Wynonna Judd, Randy Travis and Oak Ridge Boys William Lee Golden and Duane Allen were among the Hall of Fame members in attendance. The new inductees are the 147th, 148th and 149th members.

The three-hour ceremony began with an audio entertainment, the 1930 Jimmie Rodgers hit “Blue Yodel No.9.” On it, country music’s first superstar was accompanied by jazz legends Louis Armstrong and Lili Hardin Armstrong.

Young’s ceremonial title is Commander General of the Circle Guard. Mary Ann McCready introduced their fellow Circle Guard members David Conrad, Steve Turner, Bill Denny, Mike Milom, Seab Tuck, Jerry Williams, Ken Levitan and Ken Roberts.

Also prior to the inductions, Trahern offered a eulogy for American music icon and Country Music Hall of Fame member Loretta Lynn, who died at age 90 on Oct. 4.

The evening’s performances were accompanied by the Medallion All-Star Band. Richardson and Gunderson were members of the group, led by bandleader Bifff Watson. Their instrumental confederates included Russ Pahl, Rachel Loy, Jeff White, Mark Beckett and young guitar virtuoso Charlie Worsham.

Following the ceremony, guests attended a cocktail supper. Morgan, Galante and Lewis’s wife Judith Lewis mingled with a crowd that included singers Sharon & Cheryl White, The Isaacs, Jeannie Seely, Paul Overstreet and Ranger Doug Green of Riders in the Sky.

Kane Brown Receives Boys & Girls Club’s Champion Of Youth Award

Kane Brown. Photo: Courtesy of 1220 Entertainment

Kane Brown was honored Friday night (Oct. 14) at the Beverly Hills Hilton with the Boys & Girls Clubs of America’s 2022 Champion of Youth Award at the 75th National Youth of the Year celebration.

The Champion of Youth Award is bestowed to individuals for exhibiting above and beyond service to Boys & Girls Clubs. Previous recipients include NBA star Lebron James, entertainer Jennifer Lopez, Olympic champion Michael Phelps, and the late former Secretary of State Colin Powell.

Kane Brown receives the Boys & Girls Clubs of America 2022 Champion of Youth Award. Photo: Courtesy of 1220 Entertainment

Other attendees and advocates included Emmy-winning actor Courtney B. Vance, Entertainment Tonight co-host Nischelle Turner, singer-songwriter Miguel, WWE superstars Titus O’Neil and The Miz, and Oscar award-winning costume designer and Boys & Girls Clubs alumna Ruth Carter.

Additionally, Asha H-R. was named the 2022-2023 National Youth of the Year. She was selected among six finalists to receive the prestigious honor, representing over 4 million youth in Boys & Girls Clubs across the nation.

Typically held in Washington D.C., this year marked the organization’s first debut in Los Angeles, gathering honorable Boys & Girls Clubs alumni, staff, partners and celebrity supporters at the celebration of teens awarded on the local, state and regional levels throughout the year.

Luke Dick Creeps Into Top Five On MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart

Luke Dick. Photo: Adam Murphy

Luke Dick has entered the top five on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart this week, rising one spot to No. 5 and knocking Bailey Zimmerman down to No. 6. Dick has a credit on three songs currently at play, including “Strange” (Miranda Lambert), “Don’t Come Lookin'” (Jackson Dean) and “Gold” (Dierks Bentley).

Zach Bryan keeps the peak position for a fourth week as the sole writer on his own “Something In The Orange,” “Oklahoma Smokeshow” and “Burn, Burn, Burn.”

Ashley Gorley (No. 2), Morgan Wallen (No. 3) and Ernest Keith Smith (No. 4) all remain in their respective spots in the top five.

The weekly MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart uses algorithms based upon song activity according to airplay, digital download track sales and streams. This unique and exclusive addition to the MusicRow portfolio is the only songwriter chart of its kind.

Click here to view the full MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.

Trisha Yearwood Flips The Switch On Opry’s Signature Barn For Opry Goes Pink

Trisha Yearwood. Photo: Chris Hollo

Trisha Yearwood flipped the switch on the Opry’s signature barn backdrop on Friday night (Oct. 14), turning it pink for the night’s show, which helped support the fight against breast cancer.

Performers on the show, along with Yearwood, included Opry members Mandy Barnett, Dailey & Vincent, Oak Ridge Boys and Riders In The Sky, as well as Easton Corbin and Jamie O’Neal. Miko Marks made her Opry debut during the special evening, and Yearwood’s husband and fellow Opry member Garth Brooks made a surprise appearance to close out the show by saluting the duet team of Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty, performing their classic “After The Fire Is Gone.”

The Grand Ole Opry joined together with Susan G. Komen for the annual Opry Goes Pink, presented by Humana. A donation from proceeds of tickets sold will be made to Susan G. Komen for its work against breast cancer.

Trisha Yearwood. Photo: Chris Hollo

CMA Hosts Dinner For Awards Nominees Ahead Of 56th Annual Ceremony

CMA Awards nominees and CMA Board members with CMA CEO Sarah Trahern and CMA Awards Executive Producer Robert Deaton at Belmont University’s Fisher Center for the Performing Arts. Photo: John Russell

The Country Music Association brought this year’s CMA Awards nominees together for a celebratory dinner at Belmont University’s Fisher Center for the Performing Arts Tuesday evening (Oct. 11), a month ahead of the 56th Annual CMA Awards ceremony.

CMA CEO Sarah Trahern welcomed attendees and invited reigning CMA Entertainer of the Year Luke Combs to lead a special toast for the group. The night included a performance by pianist Tyler Merideth, a music teacher at Nashville’s Hillwood High School who is also a CMA Foundation Music Teacher of Excellence.

The 56th Annual CMA Awards will air live from Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena on Wednesday, Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. CT on ABC.

Sun Records Unveils Remastered Version Of ‘Johnny Cash: With His Hot & Blue Guitar’

Sun Records will release a remastered version of Johnny Cash: With His Hot & Blue Guitar on Friday, Oct. 21, just days after the 65th anniversary of the record’s initial unveiling on Oct. 11, 1957.

Featuring classic hits such as “I Walk The Line” and “Folsom Prison Blues,” the iconic record—Cash’s debut LP and the first LP ever issued by Sam Phillips on Sun Records—marks Sun’s first single artist album to be fully mastered in Dolby ATMOS Spatial Audio. The collection will be available digitally at all ATMOS-supporting DSPs and on vinyl. The vinyl LP will be pressed at Memphis Record Pressing where the album’s prominent songs were originally recorded.

The record debut will mark the final single artist vinyl release in Sun Records’ 70th Anniversary series, which has also featured remastered versions of LPs from Roy Orbison, Carl Perkins, Jeannie C. Riley, The Dixie Cups, Linda Martell, Bettye LaVette and Jerry Lee Lewis.

Johnny Cash: With His Hot & Blue Guitar (Remastered 2022) Track List:
1. Rock Island Line (Remastered 2022)
2. I Heard That Lonesome Whistle (Remastered 2022)
3. Country Boy (Remastered 2022)
4. If The Good Lord’s Willing (Remastered 2022)
5. Cry, Cry, Cry (Remastered 2022)
6. Remember Me (Remastered 2022)
7. So Doggone Lonesome (Remastered 2022)
8. I Was There When It Happened (Remastered 2022)
9. Walk The Line (Remastered 2022)
10. The Wreck Of The Old ’97 (Remastered 2022)
11. Folsom Prison Blues (Remastered 2022)
12. Doin’ My Time (Remastered 2022)

Scholarship Fund Created For Lisa Lee’s Children

Lisa Lee. Photo: Courtesy Academy of Country Music

A scholarship fund has been created for the children of beloved TV journalist and producer, Lisa Lee, who passed away last year after a battle with brain cancer.

Before her tragic death, Lee held the role of Sr. VP/Creative & Content at the Academy of Country Music. As the Academy’s lead staff producer, she oversaw all video production as well as the design, creation, and editing of ACM logos, digital and printed materials including ACM Tempo magazine, the ACM Awards program book, and both the ACM and ACM Lifting Lives websites.

The scholarship fund was created by industry executives Marion Kraft, Sarah Trahern, Jennie Smythe and Teresa George. In a letter to the community, the executives wrote that both of Lee’s children had their college funds depleted in order to help cover the cost of Lee’s care. Lee’s daughter Grayson would like to follow her footsteps and attend Belmont University in the fall of 2023. Her younger son Jackson also wishes to attend college.

“Because Lisa was so beloved by everyone who knew her, especially here in Nashville, we want to do everything we can to ensure her family has the opportunity to thrive again,” the letter reads.

Those wishing to contribute to Lee’s children’s 529 college funds can write a check payable to Edward Jones (Subject Line: 529 Contribution Lee Family). Edward Jones will provide a tax receipt. Checks will need to be mailed to Shopkeeper Management, Attn.: Marion Kraft, 918 19th Ave. S., Nashville, TN 37212.

Those wishing to help the Lee family pay bills and get back on their feet can write checks payable to Lisa Lee Memorial Fund and mail them to First Arkansas Bank and Trust, Attn.: Lise Lee Memorial Fund, PO Box 827, Jacksonville, AR 72078. Donations can also be made via Zelle at LisaLeeMemorial@gmail.com.

Read Lee’s full obituary here.

David Adam Byrnes Lassos New Album ‘Keeping Up With A Cowgirl’

David Adam Byrnes

After peppering out releases for the last few months, David Adam Byrnes has released his new album, Keep Up With A Cowgirl, through Reviver Entertainment Group.

Co-producing the project with Bart Busch, the project features some of his No. 1 hit singles and a few never before heard songs, such as “I Find A Reason,” which was held expressly for this album and is his most streamed song on Spotify.

Marking his first project since his move from Nashville to Texas, Byrnes has spent years trying to find himself as an artist by writing songs he lived and felt instead of the next big hit. Since relocating, every single he’s released has hit the top of the Texas Regional Radio Chart, including his most recent No. 1, “One Honky Tonk Town.”

“I had to get back to me,” Byrnes explains. “I had to get back to why I love country music. I’m so much happier doing the music I truly love, and when you find yourself in music, people seem to take notice.”

Byrnes has notched 10 million total streams, over 100,000 social media followers and a recent double win at the 2022 Arkansas Country Music Awards for Entertainer of the Year and Male Vocalist of the Year.

Pillbox Patti Puts It All On The Table With Deeply Honest Debut Project, ‘Florida’

Pillbox Patti. Photo: Alexa Kinigopoulos

In a town that’s built on the bedrock of songwriters, no one can deny that Nashville has an incomparable legion of dedicated wordsmiths tirelessly pumping out carefully crafted songs every day.

Over the last few years, more of Music City’s prolific lyricists have decided to put their own voice behind their art, such as Nicolle Galyon‘s recent project Firstborn, Ben BurgessBig Loud debut Tears The Size Of Texas, and plenty of others along the way.

The newest addition to this group of songwriters taking their turn in the spotlight can be found in Nicolette Hayford.

After more than a decade of writing songs for other artists, including Ashley McBryde (“A Little Dive Bar in Dahlonega,” “One Night Standards”), Lainey Wilson, Steve Moakler, William Michael Morgan, Chrissy Metz and more, the 2021 MusicRow Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year has emerged with her own artist project with the rough-around-the edges moniker of Pillbox Patti.

Venturing off with her own tribe of writers, such as McBryde, Aaron Raitiere, Benjy Davis, Connie Harrington, Joe Clemmons and producer Park Chisolm, Pillbox Patti aims to convey her take on growing up while delivering it in an honest, yet not always pretty package that’s one part playful and one part painful.

The Monument Records recording artist’s debut project, Florida, named after her home state, features a personal collection of songs that range from the funky bopper of “Suwannee” to the nostalgic “Young and Stupid,” the love crazy “Hookin Up” to the guitar-licked swayer of “Good People,” a few odes to her home town of Starke that can be heard on “Eat Pray Drugs” and “25 MPH Town,” and more.

Within the eight-song project, Hayford and her co-writers break down every wall, opening up a level of authenticity that’s generally hard to find. This is best exemplified on the hardest-hitting song of the album, “Valentine’s Day.” Chronicling Hayford’s real life experiences, the chilling song pulls back the curtains on her abortion story at the age of 15 on Valentine’s Day.

“I had a lot of stories to tell and a lot of healing to do,” Hayford shares. “As a writer I spent years helping artists tell their truths and I have always really enjoyed that part of the craft, but I realized that I needed to tell my own truths or I was going to lose myself in this town.”

She continues, “I wasn’t on anybody’s dime but my own so no one was telling me how or where or what kinds of songs I could cut or get away with. It was about me and for me with no other agenda. I had never given myself that freedom or permission before. Florida is a result of that freedom.”

Pillbox Patti at Patti-Palooza. Photo: Robert Chavers

Earlier this week, Hayford took over The House rehearsal studio outside of Nashville to host her very own Patti-Palooza.

Decked out in inflatable pool toys, string lights, fake pills and plenty of alcohol, the night saw Hayford take the stage to perform Florida in its entirety. She also peppered in a handful of unreleased songs along the way, including the Jessie Jo Dillon-penned “Low Life,” the empowering “Die Alone,” and her ode to never growing up in “To Be Young.”

“Thank y’all so much for being here. This shit is really important to me. I made an album that I’m really proud of and really excited about with my favorite people ever,” the CMA and ACM-nominated writer gushed to the packed room. “Welcome to Patti-Palooza.”

Backed by a drummer and Florida‘s producer, Park Chisolm, on guitar, Hayford enamored the crowd as she rolled through the sexy slow burner of “Candy Cigarettes.” The room fell silent during the stripped down “Valentine’s Day.”

Pillbox Patti at Patti-Palooza. Photo: Robert Chavers

“There’s a lot of people in this room that wrote that song with me. Thank you for giving me space to do that,” she said following the tear jerker, listing off each of her co-writers. “I really appreciate y’all. Thank you for writing that song and all of these songs with me.

“I have to say thank you to my co-writers, all of them, because songs don’t write themselves,” she added knowingly.

Through Florida, Hayford sets out to tell her truth, while also speaking to the people often forgotten in country music. “I hope it sheds a light on the badass, cool ass, good ass people on the other side of these small towns. The kind of people I know and came up with, that aren’t livin’ in a paint by number country song,” she sums.

Pillbox Patti’s debut project, Florida, is available everywhere now.

Pillbox Patti at Patti-Palooza. Photo: Robert Chavers