
SESAC Vice President of Creatives Services, Shannan Hatch. Photo: Jason Krupek
In her role as SESAC Vice President of Creative Services, Shannan Hatch is an industry-revered songwriter advocate. She leads the PRO’s Nashville-based creative services team in recruiting, signing and nurturing songwriters and publishers, as well as retaining existing writers and publishers.
Since landing her position with SESAC exactly 15 years ago today on August 2, 2002, Hatch has worked closely with songwriters including Steve Bogard, Lee Brice, Jamey Johnson, Runaway June, Craig Campbell, Rob Hatch, Josh Hoge, Jesse Lee, Richard Leigh, Restless Road, Jaron Boyer, Cary Barlowe, Lance Miller, Monty Powell, and Michael Tyler, along with Americana tunesmiths Hayes Carll, Jim Lauderdale, and Allison Moorer, among many others.
To celebrate her 15th anniversary with the organization, MusicRow sat down with Hatch to discuss her impressive career, past accomplishments, and contagious excitement for the future.
How did you first get into the music business? What was the first step that led you into such a successful career?
When I was 18 or 19, running amok, trying to figure out what I wanted to do, a lady named Susan Collier was doing PR and she needed some help. I started working for her part-time. She was friends with Ed Morris who was writing a book and needed help researching. I spent the summer working for her and researching Ed’s book in the old Hall of Fame library.
I gained an appreciation for styles of music that I didn’t gravitate towards naturally. Through that, I learned I really loved the country music business and I loved working with people. So I went back to college and got a degree in public relations at MTSU. I received a marketing and psychology minor, and I find sometimes that psychology minor comes in more handy than anything else.
After college, AristoMedia was looking for someone to work in their PR department under Kay Clary. She hired me so I got the opportunity to work with Jeff Walker. We had a great time and I got to work a lot of his projects including Keith Urban’s first two solo projects.

2016 SESAC Songwriter of the Year Award recipient Josh Hoge, the writer of two No. 1 songs this year, “I’m Comin’ Over” and “Think of You,” with RCA Nashville Recording artist Chris Young and SESAC’s Shannan Hatch.
What was your first job at SESAC and how did you land that position?
My first job was in writer/publisher relations in 2002. I had been doing PR for about ten years and was out every night seeing the shows and meeting the songwriters. I was always looking at the liner notes and seeing who the writers were. Then I’d go out and see them. A lot of my friends were in the tape copy rooms at the publishing companies and were starting to get jobs in publishing. SESAC called me and asked if I was interested in coming over there to work in writer/publisher relations. I was already pretty much doing that anyway so it was a natural transition for me to join them. And 15 years later, I’m still there.
Let’s talk about your creative services team, which is responsible for recruitment, signing and nurturing. Can you talk more about the nurturing aspect?
It’s different for everyone and that’s one of the great things about SESAC. We don’t have to sign everyone that comes through the door. We look at whether it fits with licensing objectives or whether it is a good fit for filling an open slot. But a lot of it has to do with personalities and who we want to work with and who we can work with, which is a really great liberty we have. We all see the same goal and work together, nurturing writers. We set up co-writes and set up publisher meetings. If they’re looking for producers, booking agencies, management, or whatever they need to get to the next step in their career, we help.
What’s the most important advice you give to your writers?
I find that a reoccurring thing I say is, “No one is going to work harder for you than you are working yourself on your career.” So don’t expect me to be working harder than you’re going to work. We all see writers and artists that come to town who think they’ve got a lot of talent. But they haven’t gotten out there on the street and seen what’s actually out there. There can be a lack of reality with a lot of people who come to town. If people don’t live in Nashville, I like to invite them to town to experience Tin Pan South. That’s a really good bar. If you think you can compete with that, then this is a town that you should move to. But if you don’t, then you need to stay where you are. Don’t relocate your family because there are other people doing it every day and are willing to work very hard on their careers.
Name a time in your career when you said to yourself, “Wow, this is really cool!”
Wow, there are so many great things that have happened. My most memorable moments are usually when someone else has done something really great. One of my favorite moments was when my husband won Songwriter of the Year at SESAC. It was a good night. Also having my son at a No. 1 party was a special moment. Being able to see my friends go from pounding the doors, up and down the Row, and writing songs, to having record deals and publishing deals. Each one of those things is celebrated. In those moments, I think, “I’m so glad and so thankful that I get to work in this business and get to celebrate with people who deserve it.”

Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s Pat Collins, Tim Fink, Shannan Hatch, Songwriter of the Year Rob Hatch and SESAC’s John Mullins at the 2014 SESAC Awards in Nashville.
It’s important to celebrate the women in our industry who are succeeding, like yourself. How has being a female in our industry personally shaped your career?
In the music business, it’s changed a lot. When I first started, there were only a handful of women who broke the mold. There were certain jobs that females did. I got to see, for instance, Frances Preston and Connie Bradley running big companies and doing some really great things. I came up in a time that it was starting to change. I feel like it’s going in a really great direction right now. People like Leslie Fram, Tracy Gershon, and Beverly Keel with Change the Conversation, is a great example. I look up to those women and have a lot of respect for what they’ve done. I’ve been very fortunate. My mother is a very strong personality and has always been able to point me in the right direction when I may not be seeing the big picture. She’s my source of inspiration and has always been a person who I can pick up the phone and call. And I’ve got a sister who is a badass and very successful in real estate here in Nashville. I’ve been very blessed to have a lot of great women around me.
What advice would you give someone wanting to succeed? What would you tell yourself 15 years ago?
Don’t ever underestimate yourself. Through the years, I realized that I have an opinion. I have an opinion that matters and people actually want to hear my opinion. I feel like I’ve grown in a business sense a lot in the last five or six years. Things that I was hesitant to say in a room before, I’m not. I wish that I had not hesitated years ago because I do know what I’m doing. I think we all give ourselves a hard time and underestimate what we know and what people want to hear.
The growth of Nashville is changing so much with so many people moving here. How is this growth affecting the industry from your perspective?
I feel like one of the beautiful things about Nashville is the sense of community, and no matter how spread out our entertainment music business gets, I feel like we still have that. There is something very exceptional and unique to this town and this genre of music. I see it growing but I don’t see that sense of community going away. Our sense of community will always set this town and our music business apart from others. The music business is not only a business to me—it’s my lifestyle. The people I’ve chosen to work with and those who have chosen to work with me are an extension of my family. That’s what I love about what I do and I’d like to see that continue. Our generation can really help the younger generation keep that sense of family here in Nashville.

Big Winners: 2010 Publisher & Songwriter of the Year (who wrote Song of the Year “Need You Now”): Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s John Mullins & Shannan Hatch, EMI Foray Music’s Ben Vaughn, SESAC’s Pat Collins, Hillary Scott & SESAC’s Tim Fink. Photo: Ed Rode
What are your thoughts about celebrating 15 years with SESAC?
Old [laughs]. When I first came to SESAC, it wasn’t necessarily a home. It was the next transition in my career. But it became my home and there have been so many fabulous transitions in my journey inside SESAC. People like Kelli Turner, John Josephson, Dennis Lord and Sam Kling have given me a lot of strength and courage to do things differently at SESAC. SESAC’s adapting and changing, just like everything else.
I can honestly say I’m more excited at the future of SESAC than I have been of the previous 15 years, which is a really cool thing to say about a company that you’ve been working at for so long. I don’t have to go out and sell SESAC. People come to SESAC and ask questions now.
It’s not just SESAC, a performing rights organization, it’s SESAC, a music rights organization. That really drives me to expand and learn different things. Being able to look into all of these ways to help writers get more money and having a company that’s growing like this, makes it a brand new day at SESAC.
Industry Ink: ACM, Big Spring Entertainment, Silverado Records
/by Jessica NicholsonDuo Smithfield Visits ACM
Photo (L-R): Trey Smith; Pete Fisher, CEO, Academy of Country Music; Jennifer Fielder. Photo: Michel Bourquard/Courtesy of the Academy of Country Music
The Academy of Country Music welcomed country duo Smithfield to the office while they were in Los Angeles last week. While at the Academy, Smithfield performed their new single, “When You’re Gone,” and other songs from their current self-titled album, Smithfield.
Big Spring Entertainment Adds Taylor Freeman
Big Spring Entertainment is based in Huntsville, Alabama, and has a Nashville office.
“Taylor will have an immediate impact to our bottom-line. Our company has been doubling in volume year over year, and Taylor will continue to expand our footprint,” shared Jason Oschwald of Big Spring Entertainment. “It’s an exciting time to be a part of this company and we are elated Taylor is on board.”
Freeman can be reached at taylor@bigspringentertainment.com.
Silverado Records Promotes Two
Silverado Records’ Marketing Director, Heather Cramsie, has transitioned to Partnerships Director for Exegan Media & Entertainment, Silverado’s parent company. Cramsie has also taken on the role of A&R Director for the newly relaunched rock label Poison Tree Records.
Silverado Records’ administrative assistant Kaylie Thomas has been promoted to Marketing Coordinator for the label.
Details Revealed For Loretta Lynn Country Music Hall Of Fame And Museum Exhibit
/by Jessica NicholsonThe exhibit chronicles Loretta Lynn’s 50-plus years in the country music industry, and will include her handwritten manuscript for the 1970 hit “Coal Miner’s Daughter,” along with the American DR-332 ribbon microphone used during her first recording session at Western Recorders Studio in Los Angeles in 1960. That session would yield her first single, “I’m A Honky Tonk Girl.”
Numerous dresses will be on display, including the green chiffon gown Lynn wore to the 1972 CMA Awards, where she was named Entertainer of the Year. The red dress Lynn wore on the cover of her 1968 album Fist City, will also be included in the exhibit, as will the 1956 model 99 Singer sewing machine Lynn used to make her own stage clothes early in her career.
The Presidential Medal of Freedom, presented to Lynn by President Obama in 2013, will also be on display.
Loretta Lynn: Blue Kentucky Girl will run through Aug. 5, 2018.
Lynn, who is recovering from a stroke she suffered in May, says, “I am so excited for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s exhibit to open this month. It’s gonna show off my 50 some odd years in country music, and I’m so proud to share my life and music with the museum. Y’all come see us!”
“Owen Bradley once described Loretta Lynn as ‘the female Hank Williams,’” said museum CEO Kyle Young. “Like Williams did, Loretta has created music that echoes the challenges and joys of the working class. She has influenced countless artists who followed her, and her unique sound continues to transcend genre and inspire her many listeners. We are thrilled to share the story of this ‘blue Kentucky girl,’ and we look forward to the day when Loretta feels well enough to see the exhibit herself.”
Alan Jackson’s Honky Tonk Highway Tour Rolling Through Fall
/by Sarah SkatesThe outing began in January with sold out stops in Oklahoma and Florida, followed by massive crowds at the Houston Rodeo and Atlanta, and a capacity crowd at downtown Nashville’s Ascend Amphitheater early this summer.
Jackson is a 2017 Country Music Hall of Fame inductee.
Tickets and information for all shows are available by visiting www.alanjackson.com.
Lee Ann Womack
Alan Jackson’s Honky Tonk Highway Tour
Thursday, August 3 – Detroit Lakes, MI (WE Fest) ++
Friday, August 4 – Brookings, SD (Swiftel Center)
Saturday, August 12 – Sedalia, MO (Missouri State Fair)
Sunday, August 13 – West Allis (Milwaukee area), WI (Wisconsin State Fair)
Friday, August 25 – Evansville, IN (Ford Center)
Saturday, August 26 – Champaign, IL (State Farm Center)
Friday, September 8 – St. Charles (St. Louis area), MO (The Family Arena)
Saturday, September 9 – Cedar Rapids, IA (US Cellular Center)
Friday, September 22 – Charleston, WV (Charleston Civic Center)
Saturday, September 23 – Erie, PA (Erie Insurance Arena)
Friday, October 27 – Green Bay, WI (Resch Center)
Saturday, October 28 – Minneapolis, MN (Target Center)
Friday, November 3 – Lafayette, LA (CajunDome)
Saturday, November 4 – Belton, TX (Bell County Expo Center)
++Festival event; Lee Ann Womack does not perform at this show
Artist Updates: Joe Nichols, Little Feather, Aaron Watson
/by Jessica NicholsonJoe Nichols’ Video Featuring Sir Mix-A-Lot Earns Over 2 Million Views In 24 Hours
Joe Nichols
One of the standout tracks on Joe Nichols‘ new album, Never Gets Old, is a country rendition of Sir Mix-A-Lot’s 1992 hit “Baby Got Back.” Nichols teamed with Sir Mix-A-Lot for a video of the new rendition, which premiered Monday (July 31) and quickly earned more than 1 million views on Nichols’ Facebook page and was later picked up by Buzzfeed, driving the clip to more than two million views overnight.
“He’s a really cool guy,” Nichols told MusicRow of first meeting with Sir Mix-A-Lot and getting his stamp of approval on the song. “He said, ‘I love this version of the song, and the reason is because it’s your song. You took it and covered it nothing like me so I respect it because you basically just used the words.’ I thought that was a really cool compliment.”
Curb Records Band Little Feather To Play Nashville “Eclipse Encounter”
The event begins at 1:27 CT on Monday, Aug. 21 at Triple Creek Park, Champion Drive in Gallatin.
Aaron Watson Makes Top 30 With New Single, “Outta Style”
Aaron Watson cracks the Top 30 threshold on the country radio charts this week, marking his highest-charting single to date.
The single, penned by Watson, is the lead offering from his album Vaquero, which debuted at No. 2 earlier this year on the Nielsen Soundscan country albums rankings.
Old Crow Medicine Show To Release ’50 Years Of Blonde On Blonde’ DVD
/by Lorie HollabaughOld Crow Medicine Show is releasing a DVD of their special concert performance commemorating the 50th anniversary of Bob Dylan’s Blonde On Blonde in September. Recorded live in May at Nashville’s Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, 50 Years of Blonde on Blonde THE CONCERT includes 14 songs including “Just Like A Woman,” “I Want You” and “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35.”
The Lee Tucker-directed film is set for release Sept. 15.
The 50 Years of Blonde on Blonde THE CONCERT film world premiere will be held at the Belcourt Theater in Nashville, during the 18th Annual Americana Music Festival and Conference on Sept. 12 at 7:15 p.m. Immediately following the premiere a Q and A with band members of Old Crow Medicine Show will be held. Tickets for the world premiere go on sale Aug. 7 and can be purchased on the Belcourt Theater’s website.
The band’s sixth album, 50 Years of Blonde on Blonde was released April 28 via Columbia Records Nashville.
Old Dominion And Bud Light Add Dive Bar Dates
/by Lorie HollabaughOld Dominion and Bud Light have extended their Dive Bar show partnership from one Nashville show to six shows in various cities, continuing Aug. 15. The mini-tour will include stops in L.A, Chicago, New York, and three other cities through August 30.
Fans attending each of the special shows will get a first listen of Old Dominion’s upcoming sophomore album, Happy Endings, which releases in the midst of the Dive Bar Shows on August 25th. Fans can find more information on the shows or obtain tickets here.
Date Venue City, State
8/15 Harvard & Stone Los Angeles, CA
8/22 Bub City Chicago, IL
8/23 Backforty Saloon Grand Rapids, MI
8/28 McCarthy’s Downtown Cleveland, OH
8/29 The Drinkery Cincinnati, OH
8/30 Arlene’s Grocery New York, NY
Old Dominion perform at Blue Bar in Nashville. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images for Sony Music Nashville
George Strait’s ‘Pure Country’ Gets The Vinyl Treatment For Its Silver Anniversary
/by Lorie HollabaughIn observance of the vinyl edition and the film’s silver anniversary, the Alamo Drafthouse movie theater chain will host special screenings of Pure Country at its 28 locations nationwide throughout the month of August. Known for a completely immersive experience, providing food and beverages during their showings along with a strict no talking/no cell phone policy, the showings will offer fans the perfect way to relive their favorite moments and songs while experiencing Strait’s character Dusty on the big screen once again.
EXCLUSIVE: Industry Executive Shannan Hatch Celebrates 15 Years With SESAC
/by Sherod RobertsonSESAC Vice President of Creatives Services, Shannan Hatch. Photo: Jason Krupek
In her role as SESAC Vice President of Creative Services, Shannan Hatch is an industry-revered songwriter advocate. She leads the PRO’s Nashville-based creative services team in recruiting, signing and nurturing songwriters and publishers, as well as retaining existing writers and publishers.
Since landing her position with SESAC exactly 15 years ago today on August 2, 2002, Hatch has worked closely with songwriters including Steve Bogard, Lee Brice, Jamey Johnson, Runaway June, Craig Campbell, Rob Hatch, Josh Hoge, Jesse Lee, Richard Leigh, Restless Road, Jaron Boyer, Cary Barlowe, Lance Miller, Monty Powell, and Michael Tyler, along with Americana tunesmiths Hayes Carll, Jim Lauderdale, and Allison Moorer, among many others.
To celebrate her 15th anniversary with the organization, MusicRow sat down with Hatch to discuss her impressive career, past accomplishments, and contagious excitement for the future.
How did you first get into the music business? What was the first step that led you into such a successful career?
When I was 18 or 19, running amok, trying to figure out what I wanted to do, a lady named Susan Collier was doing PR and she needed some help. I started working for her part-time. She was friends with Ed Morris who was writing a book and needed help researching. I spent the summer working for her and researching Ed’s book in the old Hall of Fame library.
I gained an appreciation for styles of music that I didn’t gravitate towards naturally. Through that, I learned I really loved the country music business and I loved working with people. So I went back to college and got a degree in public relations at MTSU. I received a marketing and psychology minor, and I find sometimes that psychology minor comes in more handy than anything else.
After college, AristoMedia was looking for someone to work in their PR department under Kay Clary. She hired me so I got the opportunity to work with Jeff Walker. We had a great time and I got to work a lot of his projects including Keith Urban’s first two solo projects.
2016 SESAC Songwriter of the Year Award recipient Josh Hoge, the writer of two No. 1 songs this year, “I’m Comin’ Over” and “Think of You,” with RCA Nashville Recording artist Chris Young and SESAC’s Shannan Hatch.
What was your first job at SESAC and how did you land that position?
My first job was in writer/publisher relations in 2002. I had been doing PR for about ten years and was out every night seeing the shows and meeting the songwriters. I was always looking at the liner notes and seeing who the writers were. Then I’d go out and see them. A lot of my friends were in the tape copy rooms at the publishing companies and were starting to get jobs in publishing. SESAC called me and asked if I was interested in coming over there to work in writer/publisher relations. I was already pretty much doing that anyway so it was a natural transition for me to join them. And 15 years later, I’m still there.
Let’s talk about your creative services team, which is responsible for recruitment, signing and nurturing. Can you talk more about the nurturing aspect?
It’s different for everyone and that’s one of the great things about SESAC. We don’t have to sign everyone that comes through the door. We look at whether it fits with licensing objectives or whether it is a good fit for filling an open slot. But a lot of it has to do with personalities and who we want to work with and who we can work with, which is a really great liberty we have. We all see the same goal and work together, nurturing writers. We set up co-writes and set up publisher meetings. If they’re looking for producers, booking agencies, management, or whatever they need to get to the next step in their career, we help.
What’s the most important advice you give to your writers?
I find that a reoccurring thing I say is, “No one is going to work harder for you than you are working yourself on your career.” So don’t expect me to be working harder than you’re going to work. We all see writers and artists that come to town who think they’ve got a lot of talent. But they haven’t gotten out there on the street and seen what’s actually out there. There can be a lack of reality with a lot of people who come to town. If people don’t live in Nashville, I like to invite them to town to experience Tin Pan South. That’s a really good bar. If you think you can compete with that, then this is a town that you should move to. But if you don’t, then you need to stay where you are. Don’t relocate your family because there are other people doing it every day and are willing to work very hard on their careers.
Name a time in your career when you said to yourself, “Wow, this is really cool!”
Wow, there are so many great things that have happened. My most memorable moments are usually when someone else has done something really great. One of my favorite moments was when my husband won Songwriter of the Year at SESAC. It was a good night. Also having my son at a No. 1 party was a special moment. Being able to see my friends go from pounding the doors, up and down the Row, and writing songs, to having record deals and publishing deals. Each one of those things is celebrated. In those moments, I think, “I’m so glad and so thankful that I get to work in this business and get to celebrate with people who deserve it.”
Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s Pat Collins, Tim Fink, Shannan Hatch, Songwriter of the Year Rob Hatch and SESAC’s John Mullins at the 2014 SESAC Awards in Nashville.
It’s important to celebrate the women in our industry who are succeeding, like yourself. How has being a female in our industry personally shaped your career?
In the music business, it’s changed a lot. When I first started, there were only a handful of women who broke the mold. There were certain jobs that females did. I got to see, for instance, Frances Preston and Connie Bradley running big companies and doing some really great things. I came up in a time that it was starting to change. I feel like it’s going in a really great direction right now. People like Leslie Fram, Tracy Gershon, and Beverly Keel with Change the Conversation, is a great example. I look up to those women and have a lot of respect for what they’ve done. I’ve been very fortunate. My mother is a very strong personality and has always been able to point me in the right direction when I may not be seeing the big picture. She’s my source of inspiration and has always been a person who I can pick up the phone and call. And I’ve got a sister who is a badass and very successful in real estate here in Nashville. I’ve been very blessed to have a lot of great women around me.
What advice would you give someone wanting to succeed? What would you tell yourself 15 years ago?
Don’t ever underestimate yourself. Through the years, I realized that I have an opinion. I have an opinion that matters and people actually want to hear my opinion. I feel like I’ve grown in a business sense a lot in the last five or six years. Things that I was hesitant to say in a room before, I’m not. I wish that I had not hesitated years ago because I do know what I’m doing. I think we all give ourselves a hard time and underestimate what we know and what people want to hear.
The growth of Nashville is changing so much with so many people moving here. How is this growth affecting the industry from your perspective?
I feel like one of the beautiful things about Nashville is the sense of community, and no matter how spread out our entertainment music business gets, I feel like we still have that. There is something very exceptional and unique to this town and this genre of music. I see it growing but I don’t see that sense of community going away. Our sense of community will always set this town and our music business apart from others. The music business is not only a business to me—it’s my lifestyle. The people I’ve chosen to work with and those who have chosen to work with me are an extension of my family. That’s what I love about what I do and I’d like to see that continue. Our generation can really help the younger generation keep that sense of family here in Nashville.
Big Winners: 2010 Publisher & Songwriter of the Year (who wrote Song of the Year “Need You Now”): Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s John Mullins & Shannan Hatch, EMI Foray Music’s Ben Vaughn, SESAC’s Pat Collins, Hillary Scott & SESAC’s Tim Fink. Photo: Ed Rode
What are your thoughts about celebrating 15 years with SESAC?
Old [laughs]. When I first came to SESAC, it wasn’t necessarily a home. It was the next transition in my career. But it became my home and there have been so many fabulous transitions in my journey inside SESAC. People like Kelli Turner, John Josephson, Dennis Lord and Sam Kling have given me a lot of strength and courage to do things differently at SESAC. SESAC’s adapting and changing, just like everything else.
I can honestly say I’m more excited at the future of SESAC than I have been of the previous 15 years, which is a really cool thing to say about a company that you’ve been working at for so long. I don’t have to go out and sell SESAC. People come to SESAC and ask questions now.
It’s not just SESAC, a performing rights organization, it’s SESAC, a music rights organization. That really drives me to expand and learn different things. Being able to look into all of these ways to help writers get more money and having a company that’s growing like this, makes it a brand new day at SESAC.
SESAC, RMLC Arbitration Results In New Rates
/by Sarah SkatesArbitration between SESAC and the Radio Music License Committee (RMLC) has resulted in changes to the rate SESAC charges terrestrial radio stations represented by the RMLC, as well as how those fees are calculated.
The new SESAC license agreement will transition from the previous rate card method of determining fees, to a percentage of revenue license structure. The arbitration panel determined that SESAC’s blanket fee for the 2016-18 license period should be set at 0.2557 percent of radio station net advertising revenue. Fees paid to ASCAP and BMI are also determined by a percentage of revenue.
While the total sum paid to SESAC going forward is expected to decrease due to the change in calculation method, the organization says that this is a step in the right direction for all three PROs, because it indicates an increase in the value of music and could be a stepping stone for setting more favorable rates in the future.
Additionally, the SESAC license structure will transition from three separate agreements to a unitary license that will include coverage for over-the-air, HD multicasting and streaming.
This is for the period from Jan. 1, 2016 through Dec. 31, 2018. The decision is retroactive, meaning stations who overpaid will receive a credit.
Read the official press releases from SESAC and RMLC.
Clay Hunnicutt Talks Big Loud Records’ Two-Year Anniversary, Taking Jillian Jacqueline To Country Radio
/by Jessica NicholsonClay Hunnicutt. Photo: Delaney Royer
Big Loud Records, led by President Clay Hunnicutt, celebrates its two-year anniversary today (Aug. 1)
“It feels like a blink of an eye,” says Hunnicutt, who in the past year has led the label to its first No. 1 song, with Chris Lane’s debut single “Fix.” Along the way, they staffed up internally, adding Stacy Blythe, Tyler Waugh, John D’Amico, Dave Kirth, Nikki Wood, Brianne Deslippe and Maggie Abrams to the promotion team.
Lane’s current single “For Her” sits in the Top 20 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart. Fellow Big Loud Records newcomer Morgan Wallen’s single “The Way I Talk” sits inside the Top 40.
Big Loud will soon release to radio music from its newest country signing, singer-songwriter Jillian Jacqueline, who inked a recording contract with Big Loud Records earlier this year.
Jacqueline first arrived at the Big Loud offices as a songwriter, hoping to successfully pitch her songs to artists on the roster. Soon after the introduction, and after later hearing her in a concert setting, the Big Loud team knew she would make the perfect addition to their roster.
“The moment that I personally saw it so clearly is when she did a song called ‘Sad Girls,’ that will be on her album,” Hunnicutt tells MusicRow. “She performed it at a local Nashville bar and Nashville is such a jaded town that when you go to bars and listen to singer-songwriters, everybody winds up talking more than paying attention to the music. It was one of only two or three times when I’ve been in the room where somebody played and the entire room just shut up. Then song after song, it just got better and better. She is one of the first artists to walk in here and say, ‘This is my style and what I do.’ We’ve been able to let that out and amplify that. She has a clear vision for the artist and brand she wants to be.”
Before promoting Jacqueline’s new music to radio, Hunnicutt and the Big Loud Records team have been introducing her music directly to fans, releasing “Reasons,” “Hate Me,” “Bleachers,” and the latest, “God Bless This Mess.” She is working on her full-length debut album.
Hunnicutt, who spent 15 years with iHeartMedia prior to joining Big Loud Records, had no reservations about the fight that will lay ahead in getting Jacqueline’s music played on country radio.
The country music industry is two years on from “tomatogate,” a controversy that exploded when radio consultant Keith Hill referred to female artists as the “tomatoes” of country radio, garnish listeners preferred sparingly in a “salad” of male artists. In the past two years, newcomer female artists have made some headway on country radio, most notably with Black River Entertainment’s Kelsea Ballerini notching three consecutive No. 1 singles from her debut album, and Mercury Nashville artist Lauren Alaina reaching No. 1 with “Road Less Traveled,” after six years of trying to score a radio hit. RaeLynn earned a No. 1 debut with her Warner Nashville project WildHorse, while Big Machine Label Group’s Carly Pearce has flirted with the Top 20 with her single, “Every Little Thing.”
“I think people get way too caught up in the male versus female thing, and saying females have a problem in the [country] format and things like that,” Hunnicutt says. “I’ve been in the business 29 years. This conversation has been going on since the day I started.”
He notes that some of the females making the strongest impact on radio just happen be part of groups.
“A lot of times the format gets caught up in the solo female. There are some unbelievable female talents out there. Little Big Town with Karen and Kimberly, those are two of the most dominant women in the format. If they weren’t in bands or duos, they would constantly be nominated for Female Vocalist of the Year just as well as some of the others, or for Entertainer of the Year. I think they get discounted sometimes when we go, ‘Oh, there are no females on the charts.’ Lady Antebellum doesn’t sound like Lady Antebellum without Hillary Scott. That’s a strong female in the format. Will the format discount that because it’s not a solo female act?
“When you look back at our format’s history, and I believe this about Jillian, the women that are really great artists are women of substance. They have great stories to tell, or they are really great songwriters. They are strong, independent women. If you look at Trisha Yearwood, Martina McBride, go back to Loretta [Lynn] and Patsy [Cline] and some of the other generations—Miranda Lambert and Carrie Underwood right now—these are strong women who know exactly who they are, and they sing about things they relate to and they do it in a fantastic way.”
While Big Loud continues working with Jacqueline, Wallen and Lane on the country side, the company plans to extend its reach beyond the country genre, working with rapper/singer Ernest K Smith. Hunnicutt says Big Loud has signed on to work with other artists in various stages of development, and that there is potential for a fourth country artist on the label’s roster.
Earlier today, Big Loud announced its rebranding, bringing all of its operations under the name Big Loud. Hunnicutt says the move helps the company’s public image more closely resemble its inner workings.
“Everybody works on everything. It is a combined team effort and there are a lot of blurred lines because there are shared resources and personnel between the four companies,” Hunnicutt says. “You look at some of the great brands. Look at ESPN. There is ESPN 2, ESPN News, Classics, ESPN U, and things like that. You take a great brand and build off that. It started with four different companies, but it’s a seamless organization, internally, and now, externally.”
“The entire mantra of Big Loud is passion,” says Hunnicutt. “If we feel an artist has huge potential and great talent, that’s what we are into. We are not under any mandate to sign 15 acts or to hit a certain threshold. With artists like Morgan Wallen, we just fell in love with his songs and passion. If it’s a non-country artist that comes along, we try to work together because we are into it. These are passion projects.”