
Jesse Boyce
Singer, songwriter, producer, instrumentalist, bandleader, businessman and entertainer Jesse Boyce has died at age 69.
For more than four decades, Boyce was a cornerstone figure of Music City’s r&b and gospel industries. He wrote, sang and/or produced some of the most prominent soul and disco hits ever made in Nashville.
An alumnus of Leadership Music, Boyce was associated with such top stars as The Temptations, Little Richard, Peabo Bryson, Shirley Caesar, Wilson Pickett and Teddy Pendergrass.
Born in 1948, Jesse Boyce was a native of North Carolina. As a high-school student in Greensboro, SC, he was classically trained on piano, organ, drums, guitar and bass. After earning a degree from American Baptist College in Nashville, he became a top session musician in Muscle Shoals, AL.
As a bass player in The FAME Gang of session players, he backed Candi Staton, Wilson Pickett, Bobbie Gentry, Clarence Carter and many other top stars. The FAME Gang (featuring Boyce) also made records under its own name, including 1969’s “Grits and Gravy” and “Soul Feud.”
During the 1960s, Jesse Boyce began a long association with guitarist/producer Moses Dillard (1947-1993), initially in the r&b group The Dynamic Showmen. Their next band, Moses Dillard & The TexTown Display, featured future star Peabo Bryson.
Boyce began writing and recording in Nashville in 1972. He formed the soul band Bottom & Co., which was signed to Motown Records in 1973. This made Bottom & Co. the first modern Nashville black act on a major label.
He wrote and sang “You’re My Life” (1974) and “Here for the Party” (1975), which made lower reaches of the soul charts for the group. Its Rock Bottom LP was issued in 1976.
Moses Dillard moved to Nashville that year. He and Boyce resumed their musical partnership. Working under the billing The Saturday Night Band, they scored a No. 2 disco hit with Boyce’s written and sung “Come On, Dance, Dance” in early 1978.
Continuing as a studio group, this time billed as The Constellation Orchestra, they hit the disco top-10 again that summer with “Perfect Love Affair.”
Meanwhile, Bill Brandon scored a 1978 top-30 hit on the r&b charts with “We Fell in Love While Dancing,” co-written and co-produced by Dillard and Boyce. In early 1979, Dillard and Boyce co-produced the big Lorraine Johnson disco hits “Feed the Flame” and “Learning to Dance All Over Again.”
This time billed as Dillard & Boyce, the team again gained its own spotlight by issuing their We’re In This Thing Together album on Mercury Records in 1980. Boyce sang lead and wrote or co-wrote all but one of its tunes.
With the disco ensemble dubbed Frisky, Boyce hit the dance charts again with “You Got Me Dancing in My Sleep” and “Burn Me Up” in 1980. He next joined the soul trio Spunk, with whom he made the r&B charts via “Get What You Want” in 1981. Jesse Boyce was the writer, lead singer and co-producer of this group, which reportedly sold four million records in the U.K.
In 1982, he hit No. 1 on the disco/dance charts via Linda Clifford’s version of “Let It Ride,” which he wrote and produced. Over the years, Jesse Boyce’s songs have also been recorded by The Temptations, Ben E. King, The Dells, The Commodores, The Impressions, O.C. Smith, Bloodstone, David Ruffin and The Chi-Lites, among others.
In addition, he became a sought-after session musician on Music Row. As a bass player, keyboardist and/or backup singer, Boyce recorded with Crystal Gayle, Dr. John, John Hiatt, Mickey Newbury, Shirley Caesar, Millie Jackson, Albertina Walker, Lou Rawls, Lonnie Mack, The Osmonds, The Mighty Clouds of Joy and more. He won a NARAS Super Picker Award honoring Nashville’s top session sidemen.
In 1983, Jesse Boyce was signed as a solo artist by Nashville’s Compleat Records. He issued “Bluer Than Blue” (1983) and “It’s Your Chance (To Break Dance)” (1984) for the label. This is also when he became the lead singer for the nostalgic golden-oldie bands The Marvels and The Sons of the Beach.
Around 1986, he began his 30-year tenure as the bass player for Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame legend Little Richard.
He resumed his education at Vanderbilt’s Divinity School and at Memphis Theological Seminary. He composed and recorded soundtrack music for a number of religious documentary films. Boyce eventually became the music minister at Gordon Memorial United Methodist Church in North Nashville.
He and Dillard co-produced the 1991 Warner Bros. Records gospel CD by New Faith. This group was composed of inmates at the Tennessee State Prison who were serving life sentences. Boyce sang backup on the record and co-wrote four of its tunes. This disc included guest appearances by Sam Moore of Sam & Dave fame, plus soul star Teddy Pendergrass.
He was selected for Leadership Music in 1992 and graduated from the program in 1993.
In more recent years, Jesse Boyce had established his Sovereign Music Group and founded the Midtown Music Academy for at-risk children in North Nashville.
He was diagnosed with advanced-stage prostate cancer in 2003.
Boyce released his final CD, The Messenger, in 2013 billed as Jesse Boyce & Vision.
When his cancer resumed and spread in 2016, he agreed to have his story told in the documentary film Intentional Healing. It premiered at the Nashville Film Festival earlier this year. It includes footage of him recording his song “Dance Again” with Phil Hughley (Gtar Phil) and UMG’s Black Violin.
Jesse Boyce died on Thursday, Aug. 17. He is survived by his wife Asieren; by children Jesse, Rosalind, Walden and Adrienne; by brother Tommy James and sister Dorothy Harris; by five grandchildren and by four great-grandchildren.
Donations are requested to Midtown Music Academy (P.O. Box 233, Madison, TN 37116) or to the Jesse Boyce Music Chair at the Reclamation Center Inc. (2334 Herman St. Nashville, TN 37208).
In Pictures: FGL House, Grand Ole Opry, Chris Lane, Tegan Marie, Larry Gatlin & The Gatlin Brothers, Mitchell Tenpenny
/by Haley CrowFGL House Eclipse Party
The Grand Ole Opry Celebrates Total Eclipse With Sold-Out Shows
Little Big Town. Photo: Chris Hollo
Clare Bowen and Charles Esten. Photo: Chris Hollo
The Sisterhood. Photo: Chris Hollo
Good Morning America‘s chief meteorologist Ginger Zee (left) and The Weather Channel’s Jen Carfagno (right). Photo: Chris Hollo
The Grand Ole Opry hosted five shows over the weekend plus an Opry Plaza Party on Sunday (Aug. 20) in anticipation of the historic 2017 Total Eclipse. Little Big Town, Darius Rucker, Wynonna, and Charles Esten were among the performers who celebrated the once-in-a-lifetime event.
Good Morning America’s chief meteorologist Ginger Zee and The Weather Channel’s Jen Carfagno participated in the Opry’s guest announcer series Sunday evening before covering the eclipse on Monday (Aug. 21). The Opry’s eclipse celebration continued Monday with a Total Eclipse Plaza Party featuring Levon and Ashley McBryde.
Chris Lane Garners Gold With Smash Single “For Her”
Pictured (L-R): CMT’s Cody Alan, Chris Lane, and CMT’s Katie Cook. Photo: Courtesy of CMT
Chris Lane‘s current single “For Her” has officially been certified gold by the RIAA. Lane was surprised with shiny new hardware recognizing the track’s 500,000 sales and streams by CMT Hot 20 Countdown hosts Katie Cook and Cody Alan just minutes before he hyped up the sold-out crowd at the Wrigley Field stop on Florida Georgia Line’s The Smooth Stadium Tour 2017 on Aug. 12.
“It was a dream come true to play Wrigley Field, and for Cody and Katie to surprise me with the GOLD plaque honoring ‘For Her’ was more than I could have ever imagined,” said Lane. “I’m so thankful that this song impacted fans as much as it did me the first time I heard it.”
Tegan Marie Brings Down The House With Opry Debut
Tegan Marie. Photo: Chris Hollo
Pictured (L-R): Brad Bissell (Agent, CAA), Frank Simonetti (Co-Founder and CEO, Sweety High), Veronica Zelle (Co-Founder and CCO, Sweety High), Tegan Marie, John Esposito (Chairman and CEO, WMN), Sally Williams (GM, Grand Ole Opry; Sr. VP Programming & Artist Relations, Opry Entertainment), Lisa Ray (VP Brand Management, WMN), and Dan Rogers (Sr. Director of Marketing, Grand Ole Opry). Photo: Chris Hollo
Warner Music Nashville’s newest addition, Sweety High’s rising star Tegan Marie, made her dreams reality when she debuted at the Grand Ole Opry last Friday night (Aug. 19). Just hours after announcing her label signing, the 13-year-old vocalist stepped onto the Opry stage to perform two originals for the full house, “Keep It Lit” and “Roots.”
Sally Williams (GM, Grand Ole Opry; Sr. VP Programming & Artist Relations, Opry Entertainment), Dan Rogers (Sr. Director of Marketing, Grand Ole Opry), John Esposito (Chairman and CEO, WMN), Lisa Ray (VP Brand Management, WMN), Brad Bissell (agent, CAA), Frank Simonetti (Co-Founder and CEO, Sweety High) and Veronica Zelle (Co-Founder and CCO, Sweety High) congratulated her on a stellar performance.
“Playing the Grand Ole Opry was the most amazing thing I have done in my entire life,” said Marie. “Everyone there was so nice. It was beyond a dream come true.”
Larry Gatlin & The Gatlin Brothers Visit CMA Offices
Pictured (L-R): Steve Gatlin, Brenden Oliver (CMA), Larry Gatlin, Angela Strader (CMA),
Brandi Simms (CMA), and Rudy Gatlin. Photo: Christian Bottorff/CMA
Larry Gatlin & the Gatlin Brothers treated the CMA staff to a special acoustic performance and meet and greet on Aug. 17 as part of the organization’s recurring Live@CMA series. The Grammy Award-winning trio performed a handful of their No. 1 hit songs including, “All The Gold In California,” “Houston (Means I’m One Day Closer To You),” “Broken Lady,” and more. Following the performance, Larry, Steve and Rudy mingled with CMA staffers talking country music history and 62 years of the Gatlin Brothers.
Mitchell Tenpenny Celebrates Birthday With Surprise Party
[click photo to enlarge]
LANCO Reaches 50 Million Stream Mark With Debut EP
/by Lorie Hollabaugh“It’s something that’s hard to wrap my brain around,” said LANCO lead singer/guitarist Brandon Lancaster. “From day one, we’ve believed in the power of country music songwriting and telling stories through our music, but to watch fans connecting to the stories and seeing our festival crowds grow and people digging it like this is just indescribable.”
The band wrapped recording on their debut album with award-winning producer Jay Joyce earlier this month.
Elyse McKenna Elevated To CEO Of Thiel Audio
/by Lorie HollabaughMcKenna has a 14-year background in marketing and business development, with positions at Applauze, Crowdsurge/Songkick, and Topspin. Prior to joining Topspin in 2013, she founded and served as president of Welcome Mat Entertainment and Modern Family Music, where she managed a variety of clients including Young Buck, Compassion International and TD1. She also established the Nashville office of Sparkart South, a web development agency headquartered in Oakland, CA, and also held held marketing and publicity positions at Third Coast Artist Agency, Brite Entertainment, Greg Oliver Agency, and L.A.B. Media following her move to Nashville in 2002.
“Thiel Audio has a 40-year history, and I’m humbled and honored to grow the brand and deliver quality products that come with that legacy,” said McKenna. “The team around me at Thiel is dedicated to delivering both outstanding sound and beautiful design. The Aurora products hit the sweet spot for people who want to have speakers anywhere and everywhere in their lives without compromising on aesthetic or on sound quality. With the increase in connectivity in wireless products and the use of voice activated technology, we only see the market for these products growing.”
Weekly Register: Lindsay Ell Debuts With Top Country Album
/by Jessica NicholsonLindsay Ell on the set of her video for “Waiting On You.”
Lindsay Ell rules the current country albums ranking this week, with her BBR Music Group album The Project moving 10K to debut at No. 1. Chris Stapleton’s From A Room follows at No. 2, with 7.5K, while Brett Eldredge‘s self-titled album is at No. 3 this week with 7.3K. The late Glen Campbell’s Adios is at No. 4, with 6.5K, while Stapleton rounds out the Top 5 with Traveller moving 5.6K this week.
Will Hoge‘s Anchors debuted at No. 21, with 1.9K, while BMLG’s Alex Williams debuted at No. 43 with Better Than Myself, selling 810 units.
Sam Hunt‘s “Body Like A Back Road” remains this weeks’ top digital country song, moving 36K (1.543 million overall). Kane Brown‘s “What Ifs” is at No. 2, with 20K. Dustin Lynch holds both the No. 3 and No. 4 slots, with “Small Town Boy” moving 19K, while “Love Me Or Leave Me Alone” moves 16.6K. Kelsea Ballerini‘s new track “Unapologetically” rounds out the Top 5 with 16.1K.
Thomas Rhett comes in at No. 6 with “Sixteen” moving 15K.
Information courtesy of Nielsen Soundscan.
Chris Young Re-Ups With Sony Music Nashville
/by Eric T. ParkerPictured (L-R): [Front seated] Larry Fitzgerald (Manager, Fitzgerald Hartley Co.), Chris Young, Randy Goodman (Chairman & CEO, SMN), Bill Simmons (Manager, Fitzgerald Hartley Co.). [Back standing] Jess Rosen (Attorney, Greenberg Traurig), Ken Robold (EVP/COO, SMN), Jim Catino (SVP A&R, SMN), Steve Hodges (EVP Promotion & Artist Development, SMN) John Zarling (EVP Marketing & New Business, SMN). Photo: Courtesy of Sony Music Nashville
Under Young’s first recording agreement with Sony Music Nashville, the Murfreesboro, Tennessee native amassed nine No. 1 singles, multiple ACM, BBMA, CMA, CMT, GRAMMY and RDMA nominations and 16 RIAA Gold and Platinum certifications across six albums.
Most recently Young released “Losing Sleep” the lead single from the RCA Records Nashville artist’s hotly anticipated seventh album due later this year.
AristoMedia Group Rebrands Digital Department
/by Lorie HollabaughCasey Childers, Alexa Ryncavage
The AristoMedia Group has rebranded its digital department and redefined two staff positions with the company.
Formally known as AristoWorks, the rebranded digital department is now AristoDigital. The continued goal for AristoDigital is to provide first-class digital marketing, content promotion, influencer engagement, online advertising, SEO, building websites, and design & development services to clients.
Casey Childers has been named Brand & Creative Coordinator. Childers will focus on providing artistic direction for branding & promotion, content curation and strategy, and digital advertising. A graduate of the University of North Alabama, Childers earned a dual degree in entertainment industries and marketing. Childers interned at Bluewater Music before joining AristoMedia’s digital team in April 2016.
Alexa Ryncavage is now the Digital Marketing Coordinator for AristoDigital. Ryncavage’s primary concentration lies in the development of digital strategy, social media management, and digital media buying. A Pennsylvania native, Ryncavage relocated to Nashville to attend Belmont University. She graduated in 2015 with a degree in entertainment industry studies and a minor in music business. During her studies, Ryncavage interned with Sony Music Nashville and the Country Radio Broadcasters. Following graduation, she joined the AristoMedia team as a member of AristoPR before moving to AristoDigital.
“In the short time Casey and Alexa have worked at Aristo, they have established systems that are proving to be successful,” said AristoMedia’s President of Marketing and International Relations Matt Watkins. “Their abilities to plan and execute have resulted in a road map for success for our clients. They have no fear of being creative and are expansive in their efforts. As we operate under a new name for the division, we are excited to have the talent these two individuals offer.”
Martina McBride To Ring In The Holidays With New Tour
/by Lorie Hollabaugh“The Joy Of Christmas is a magical show full of beautiful scenery and classic beloved Christmas music as well as a few hits from my career. It’s a show for the whole family” McBride says. “With this tour we create a sort of Christmas winter wonderland. If this show doesn’t leave you full of the Christmas spirit I’m not sure what will!”
Ticket packages will include three levels of VIP Experiences and packages will include a premium concert ticket, plus an exclusive Christmas card signed by Martina, a meet & greet, and Christmas themed pre-show party with hot cocoa and holiday beverages. For full package details, visit CID Entertainment.
The Joy of Christmas Tour dates: Hobart Arena Island Resort and Casino Island Resort and Casino Chrysler Hall Theatre
11.24.17 Biloxi, MS Beau Ridge Theatre
11.25.17 Lake Charles, LA* L’Auberge Casino
11.26.17 Fort Smith, AR First National Bank of Fort Smith Exhibit Hall
11.29.17 Troy, OH
11.30.17 Paducah, KY* Carson Center
12.1.17 Dubuque, IA Five Flags Center
12.2.17 Manhattan, KS McCain Auditorium
12.7.17 Wabash, IN Honeywell Center
12.8.17 Charles Town, WV Hollywood Casino
12.9.17 Charles Town, WV Hollywood Casino
12.14.17 Champaign, IL The Virginia Theatre
12.15.17 Harris, MI
12.16.17 Harris, MI
12.20.17 Norfolk, VA
12.21.17 Red Bank, NJ Count Basie Theatre
12.22.17 Roanoke, VA Berglund Performing Arts Theatre
Nashville R&B, Gospel Mainstay Jesse Boyce Dies
/by Robert K OermannJesse Boyce
Singer, songwriter, producer, instrumentalist, bandleader, businessman and entertainer Jesse Boyce has died at age 69.
For more than four decades, Boyce was a cornerstone figure of Music City’s r&b and gospel industries. He wrote, sang and/or produced some of the most prominent soul and disco hits ever made in Nashville.
An alumnus of Leadership Music, Boyce was associated with such top stars as The Temptations, Little Richard, Peabo Bryson, Shirley Caesar, Wilson Pickett and Teddy Pendergrass.
Born in 1948, Jesse Boyce was a native of North Carolina. As a high-school student in Greensboro, SC, he was classically trained on piano, organ, drums, guitar and bass. After earning a degree from American Baptist College in Nashville, he became a top session musician in Muscle Shoals, AL.
As a bass player in The FAME Gang of session players, he backed Candi Staton, Wilson Pickett, Bobbie Gentry, Clarence Carter and many other top stars. The FAME Gang (featuring Boyce) also made records under its own name, including 1969’s “Grits and Gravy” and “Soul Feud.”
During the 1960s, Jesse Boyce began a long association with guitarist/producer Moses Dillard (1947-1993), initially in the r&b group The Dynamic Showmen. Their next band, Moses Dillard & The TexTown Display, featured future star Peabo Bryson.
Boyce began writing and recording in Nashville in 1972. He formed the soul band Bottom & Co., which was signed to Motown Records in 1973. This made Bottom & Co. the first modern Nashville black act on a major label.
He wrote and sang “You’re My Life” (1974) and “Here for the Party” (1975), which made lower reaches of the soul charts for the group. Its Rock Bottom LP was issued in 1976.
Moses Dillard moved to Nashville that year. He and Boyce resumed their musical partnership. Working under the billing The Saturday Night Band, they scored a No. 2 disco hit with Boyce’s written and sung “Come On, Dance, Dance” in early 1978.
Continuing as a studio group, this time billed as The Constellation Orchestra, they hit the disco top-10 again that summer with “Perfect Love Affair.”
Meanwhile, Bill Brandon scored a 1978 top-30 hit on the r&b charts with “We Fell in Love While Dancing,” co-written and co-produced by Dillard and Boyce. In early 1979, Dillard and Boyce co-produced the big Lorraine Johnson disco hits “Feed the Flame” and “Learning to Dance All Over Again.”
This time billed as Dillard & Boyce, the team again gained its own spotlight by issuing their We’re In This Thing Together album on Mercury Records in 1980. Boyce sang lead and wrote or co-wrote all but one of its tunes.
With the disco ensemble dubbed Frisky, Boyce hit the dance charts again with “You Got Me Dancing in My Sleep” and “Burn Me Up” in 1980. He next joined the soul trio Spunk, with whom he made the r&B charts via “Get What You Want” in 1981. Jesse Boyce was the writer, lead singer and co-producer of this group, which reportedly sold four million records in the U.K.
In 1982, he hit No. 1 on the disco/dance charts via Linda Clifford’s version of “Let It Ride,” which he wrote and produced. Over the years, Jesse Boyce’s songs have also been recorded by The Temptations, Ben E. King, The Dells, The Commodores, The Impressions, O.C. Smith, Bloodstone, David Ruffin and The Chi-Lites, among others.
In addition, he became a sought-after session musician on Music Row. As a bass player, keyboardist and/or backup singer, Boyce recorded with Crystal Gayle, Dr. John, John Hiatt, Mickey Newbury, Shirley Caesar, Millie Jackson, Albertina Walker, Lou Rawls, Lonnie Mack, The Osmonds, The Mighty Clouds of Joy and more. He won a NARAS Super Picker Award honoring Nashville’s top session sidemen.
In 1983, Jesse Boyce was signed as a solo artist by Nashville’s Compleat Records. He issued “Bluer Than Blue” (1983) and “It’s Your Chance (To Break Dance)” (1984) for the label. This is also when he became the lead singer for the nostalgic golden-oldie bands The Marvels and The Sons of the Beach.
Around 1986, he began his 30-year tenure as the bass player for Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame legend Little Richard.
He resumed his education at Vanderbilt’s Divinity School and at Memphis Theological Seminary. He composed and recorded soundtrack music for a number of religious documentary films. Boyce eventually became the music minister at Gordon Memorial United Methodist Church in North Nashville.
He and Dillard co-produced the 1991 Warner Bros. Records gospel CD by New Faith. This group was composed of inmates at the Tennessee State Prison who were serving life sentences. Boyce sang backup on the record and co-wrote four of its tunes. This disc included guest appearances by Sam Moore of Sam & Dave fame, plus soul star Teddy Pendergrass.
He was selected for Leadership Music in 1992 and graduated from the program in 1993.
In more recent years, Jesse Boyce had established his Sovereign Music Group and founded the Midtown Music Academy for at-risk children in North Nashville.
He was diagnosed with advanced-stage prostate cancer in 2003.
Boyce released his final CD, The Messenger, in 2013 billed as Jesse Boyce & Vision.
When his cancer resumed and spread in 2016, he agreed to have his story told in the documentary film Intentional Healing. It premiered at the Nashville Film Festival earlier this year. It includes footage of him recording his song “Dance Again” with Phil Hughley (Gtar Phil) and UMG’s Black Violin.
Jesse Boyce died on Thursday, Aug. 17. He is survived by his wife Asieren; by children Jesse, Rosalind, Walden and Adrienne; by brother Tommy James and sister Dorothy Harris; by five grandchildren and by four great-grandchildren.
Donations are requested to Midtown Music Academy (P.O. Box 233, Madison, TN 37116) or to the Jesse Boyce Music Chair at the Reclamation Center Inc. (2334 Herman St. Nashville, TN 37208).
Workshop Management Promotes Jenn Stookey To Creative Director/Manager
/by Lorie HollabaughStookey started at Workshop Management in 2015 and previously served as a management assistant. She is a graduate of Belmont University.
Under her new role Stookey serves as the manager for UK-based Milestones who release their debut LP in Spring 2018 on Fearless Records. She will also operate as the day-to-day manager for Mayday Parade, Glen Phillips of Toad The Wet Sprocket, Marie Miller, and producer Chad Copelin.
Stookey will also serve as a creative director for the company’s branding division, Workshop Projects, which has secured sponsorship & endorsement deals with Twix, Ford Music, and Hilton Hotels among others, and their newly-launched music licensing division, Workshop Songs, which represents artists such as Layup, Upstate & Kilgore for sync opportunities.
“Jenn’s hard work, passion and talent has added tremendous value to every client on our roster. She’s a self-starter who approaches the role of artist manager with a fresh perspective and cutting edge ideas. She’s someone we can build our business around and are thrilled to be able to support her in this new role which allows her to continue to develop and grow our management roster while also expanding our branding and licensing divisions to offer even more services to our clients,” said Josh Terry, founder/CEO of Workshop Management.
Workshop Management is located at 800 18th Ave. S., Suite C in Nashville.
Jerrod Niemann’s ‘Ride’ Set For Oct. 6, Diamond Rio Guests On New Track
/by Lorie HollabaughNiemann taps into Nashville’s stable of amazing tunesmiths for the new collection, which features songs by Shane McAnally, Ashley Gorley, Ross Copperman, Rodney Clawson, Craig Wiseman, Dallas Davidson, Natalie Hemby, Josh Osborne, Chris DeStefano and more. The project has already yielded two singles, the feel-good “A Little More Love” duet with longtime buddy/labelmate Lee Brice, and the romantic “God Made A Woman,” and features a new song with guest harmonies by 90’s country favorites Diamond Rio, “I Ain’t All There.”
Track listing for Jerrod Niemann’s THIS RIDE:
1. “Zero to Crazy” (Ashley Gorley, Chris DeStefano, Shane McAnally)
2. “But I Do” (Josh Osborne, Jimmy Robbins, Jon Nite)
3. “Leavin’ a Trail” (Corey Crowder, Luke Dick, Cole Taylor)
4. “I Got This” (Rodney Clawson, Josh Osborne, Luke Dick)
5. “Out Of My Heart” (Ashley Gorley, Dallas Davidson, Chris DeStefano)
6. “A Little More Love” with Lee Brice (Ross Copperman, Natalie Hemby, Shane McAnally, Kristi Neumann)
7. “God Made A Woman” (Michael Ray, Joel Shewmake, Jeff Hyde)
8. “Whiskey Waitin’ On Ice” (Jerrod Niemann, Lance Miller, Rob Hatch, Brandon Hood)
9. “Feelin’” (Jeremy Stover, Chris Janson, Luke Dick)
10. “I Ain’t All There” featuring Diamond Rio (Jerrod Niemann, Lance Miller, Richie Brown)
11. “Come Back” (Jimmy Yeary, Matt Dragstrem, Craig Wiseman)
12. “The Regulars” (CJ Solar, Tina Parol, Jessie Jo Dillon)
13. “This Ride” (JT Harding, AJ Babcock, Pete Good)