
Justin Timberlake. Photo: Tom Munro / RCA Records
Justin Timberlake will headline this year’s Pilgrimage Music & Cultural Festival, set for Sept. 23-24 at the Park at Harlinsdale in Franklin, Tennessee. Last year, Timberlake signed on as both partner and producer for the festival.
Also on the performer lineup are Eddie Vedder, Ryan Adams, The Avett Brothers, Mavis Staples, Gary Clark, Jr., Walk The Moon, Fiz and The Tantrums, Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue, The Revivalists, Better Than Ezra, Shovels & Rope, Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives, Jerry Douglas Band, Valerie June, Langhorne Slim, Nikki Lane, Joseph, Pokey LaFarge, Colony House, Amanda Shires, Larkin Poe, Karen Elson, Ruby Amanfu + Steelism, Big Sam’s Funky Nation, Muddy Magnolias, Colter Wall, Banditos, Sinclair, The Shadowboxers, Blackfoot Gypsies, Kingfish, Bishop Gunn, Towne, The Settles Connection, Ralph’s World+Friends, Electric Western Dance Party, and more.
The two-day annual festival debuted in 2015, and was co-founded by Better Than Ezra’s Kevin Griffin.
Two-day passes go for $175 and there are VIP passes for $725. Tickets go on sale Tuesday at pilgrimagefestival.com.
Chris Young To Headline Music City July 4th Celebration
/by Lorie HollabaughChris Young. Photo: David McClister
Chris Young has been tapped as the headliner for “Let Freedom Sing! July 4 in Music City,” Nashville’s July 4 celebration at Riverfront Park. Presented by Dr Pepper Cherry, the free event will also include the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, R&B artist Jonny P, and folk rock duo The Sisterhood, featuring Alyssa Bonagura and Ruby Stewart, daughter of Rod Stewart.
The show kicks off an extended patriotic weekend that will include MercyMe in concert at Ascend Amphitheater on July 6, My Morning Jacket and Margo Price at Ascend July 7, and the Gold Cup soccer double-header featuring the U.S. Men’s National Team taking place on July 8 at Nissan Stadium.
“This is another great lineup that showcases the immense diversity of music that calls Nashville home,” said Beth Seigenthaler Courtney, board chair of the Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp and president at DVL Seigenthaler. “This year we have even more to offer with additional live music at Ascend Amphitheater leading up to a Gold Cup double-header featuring the U.S. national men’s soccer team. We always expect tens of thousands of visitors to enjoy our Independence Day festivities, and, with these additional activities, we expect to fill even more hotel rooms across Davidson County and generate substantial economic activity that is good for the city.”
Artist Updates: Kelsea Ballerini, Scotty McCreery, John Prine
/by Lorie HollabaughKelsea Ballerini On Demand After ACMs
Kelsea Ballerini debuted the encore performance of her unreleased song “High School” on Xfinity On Demand directly following the ACM Awards on Sunday (April 2). Her performance of the song can be seen here.
Scotty McCreery Receives Long Leaf Pine Award From Home State
Pictured (L-R): Sally Williams, Senior VP of Programming and Artist Relations for Opry Entertainment, and GM of the Grand Ole Opry; Grand Ole Opry and Country Music Hall of Fame member and previous recipient of the Order of the Long Leaf Pine Award Charlie Daniels; McCreery; and Andy Lancaster, VP, MWC Advocacy for McGuireWoods Consulting representing former North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory. Photo: Scott Stem
Scotty McCreery was presented with the esteemed Order of the Long Leaf Pine Award from the State of North Carolina at his recent Grand Ole Opry appearance. The North Carolina native received the award in honor of his charitable service to his home state.
Past Order of the Long Leaf Pine Award recipient and Grand Ole Opry and Country Music Hall of Fame member Charlie Daniels was on hand for the presentation.
John Prine Opens The Vault For New Book
Justin Timberlake To Headline 2017 Pilgrimage Music & Cultural Festival
/by Jessica NicholsonJustin Timberlake. Photo: Tom Munro / RCA Records
Justin Timberlake will headline this year’s Pilgrimage Music & Cultural Festival, set for Sept. 23-24 at the Park at Harlinsdale in Franklin, Tennessee. Last year, Timberlake signed on as both partner and producer for the festival.
Also on the performer lineup are Eddie Vedder, Ryan Adams, The Avett Brothers, Mavis Staples, Gary Clark, Jr., Walk The Moon, Fiz and The Tantrums, Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue, The Revivalists, Better Than Ezra, Shovels & Rope, Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives, Jerry Douglas Band, Valerie June, Langhorne Slim, Nikki Lane, Joseph, Pokey LaFarge, Colony House, Amanda Shires, Larkin Poe, Karen Elson, Ruby Amanfu + Steelism, Big Sam’s Funky Nation, Muddy Magnolias, Colter Wall, Banditos, Sinclair, The Shadowboxers, Blackfoot Gypsies, Kingfish, Bishop Gunn, Towne, The Settles Connection, Ralph’s World+Friends, Electric Western Dance Party, and more.
The two-day annual festival debuted in 2015, and was co-founded by Better Than Ezra’s Kevin Griffin.
Two-day passes go for $175 and there are VIP passes for $725. Tickets go on sale Tuesday at pilgrimagefestival.com.
Sony Music Nashville Celebrates During 2017 ACM Awards Afterparty
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): ShopKeeper Management’s Crystal Dishmon, Sony Music Nashville’s EVP/COO Ken Robold and Chairman/CEO Randy Goodman, Miranda Lambert, ShopKeeper Management’s Marion Kraft, and Sony Music Nashville’s EVP, Marketing/New Business John Zarling and EVP, Promotion/Artist Development Steve Hodges
Sony Music Nashville celebrated following this year’s Academy of Country Music Awards with an afterparty held at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
Vanner Records/RCA Records Nashville artist Miranda Lambert set a record with her eighth consecutive win for Female Vocalist of the Year at the 52 Academy of Country Music Awards (ACMs) last night.
Maren Morris took home the ACM honor for Best New Female Vocalist of the Year.
Pictured (Front row, L-R): EM.Co’s Scott Siman, Sandbox Management’s Jason Owen, Faith Hill, Sony Music Nashville Chairman/CEO Randy Goodman. (Back row, L-R): Sony Music Nashville EVP/COO Ken Robold, Tim McGraw, Sony Music Nashville’s EVP, Promotion/Artist Development Steve Hodges and EM.Co’s Kelly Clague.
Arista Nashville’s Seth Ennis, Sony Music Nashville Chairman/CEO Randy Goodman and RCA Nashville’s Chris Young. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images for Sony Music
Pictured (L-R): RCA Nashville’s Kane Brown, Sony Music Nashville Chairman/CEO Randy Goodman and RCA Nashville’s Chris Young. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images for Sony Music
Maren Morris, Sony Music Nashville Chairman/CEO Randy Goodman
RCA Nashville artists Matthew Ramsey of Old Dominion, Miranda Lambert, Kane Brown and Sony Music Nashville’s Chairman/CEO Randy Goodman
Maren Morris attends the Sony Music Nashville ACM Party presented by Hostess at T-Mobile Arena. (Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images for Sony Music)
LifeNotes: Country Radio Great Rhubarb Jones Passes
/by Robert K OermannRhubarb Jones
Country Disc Jockey Hall of Fame member Rhubarb Jones has died at age 65.
Warren “Rhubarb” Jones was a legendary broadcasting figure in Georgia. He was the longest lasting morning radio host in the city’s history. In addition, he spearheaded a number of high-profile charity initiatives.
He was well known to the Nashville music industry as a former board member of both the Country Music Association and the Academy of Country Music. Between 1993 and 2005, he was the host of the Georgia Music Awards gala.
Jones was born in Miami, Florida, but grew up in Tallapoosa, Georgia. He was a graduate of the University of West Georgia and earned a masters degree at Shorter College. During his 36-year radio career, he had on-air stints at WLWI in Montgomery, Alabama; WSKY in Asheville, North Carolina; WWCC in Bremen, Georgia and WCLS in Columbus, Georgia.
He is best known for his long tenure at Y107 and Eagle 106.7 in Atlanta. He was there from 1985 to 2008. For the past nine years, he has been on the communications faculty at Kennesaw State University.
For more than two decades, he ran a celebrity golf tournament and an annual Rhubarb Jones March Across Georgia event. These raised more than $4 million for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Along with Randy Owen of Alabama, Jones established the Country Cares for St. Jude’s Kids fundraiser. He was also a 20-year local host of the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon for the Muscular Dystrophy Association.
Rhubarb Jones died following a heart attack on Sunday, April. 2.
He is survived by daughters Presley Frances Jones and Callie Reeves Jones, by sons David and McCole and by four grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Miller Funeral Home in Tallapoosa, GA.
Ruston Kelly Signs With Washington Square Music
/by Lorie HollabaughRuston Kelly has signed a deal with Razor & Tie imprint Washington Square Music. Kelly’s debut EP with the label, Halloween, is due out April 7. The 10-track collection was produced by Mike Mogis. Kelly has penned songs for Tim McGraw (“Nashville Without You”), the Josh Abbott Band (“Front Row Seat”), and more. His song “Poison” has racked up over 590,000 Spotify streams, and the track “Black Magic” was featured on the season finale of the CBS show Scorpion.
“Ruston is an inspiring, honest, thoughtful songwriter who puts on a hell of a show,” says Washington Square/Razor & Tie Co-Owner Cliff Chenfeld. “You don’t see that combination often and we are thrilled that he has decided to work with us at Washington Square/Razor & Tie. We also like to hang out with him.”
“When people hear my songs, I want them to be affected in the way music affected me before I started doing it for a living,” Kelly states. “I want them to think, ‘Damn, that made me feel something important I didn’t know I needed to feel.’ I love playing music; it brings me so much joy, and I’m appreciative that Washington Square is helping share my music with the world. If I’m still doing this years from now, that’s more luck than I deserve.”
Weekly Register: RaeLynn’s ‘WildHorse’ Races To No. 1
/by Jessica NicholsonWarner Music Nashville’s RaeLynn debuted at the top of the Nielsen Soundscan country album rankings this week with WildHorse moving 16K. See MusicRow‘s interview with RaeLynn about the new project here.
Keith Urban‘s Ripcord pushes past the 500K RTD mark, with 9.3K sold this week. He lands at No. 2.
Chris Stapleton‘s Traveller moved 6.1K this week, coming in at No. 3, followed by Reba‘s Sing It Now, which moved 5.9K to settle at No. 4.
Little Big Town‘s The Breaker rounds out the Top 5 with 5.4K sold.
Other major label debuts this week come from Lindsay Ell, whose Worth The Wait EP lands at No. 9 on the country album rankings, with 4.4K. BMLG band Delta Rae debuts at No. 39 with A Long and Happy Life EP selling 931.
Last week, Tim McGraw and Faith Hill‘s latest single, “Speak To A Girl,” debuted at country radio on Thursday (March 30), just hours before the sales week ended. This week, the single moved from No. 20 to No. 2 on the country digital tracks rankings, selling 44K.
Sam Hunt’s “Body Like A Back Road” continues its reign atop the country digital tracks rankings, with 59K sold for a RTD total of 546K. Brett Young‘s “In Case You Didn’t Know” is at No. 3, with 26K sold this week. Jon Pardi‘s “Dirt On My Boots” is at No. 4, with 23K. Keith Urban and Carrie Underwood‘s “The Fighter” rounds out the Top 5, with 22.5K.
The top debut comes from Young, with “Mercy” landing at No. 43 on the country tracks rankings and selling 3.5K.
Overall digital track sales are down 23.8 percent YTD, while country digital track sales are down 22.3 percent YTD.
Information provided by Nielsen Soundscan.
Industry Ink: BMLG, Nashville Symphony, Banner Music
/by Lorie HollabaughThomas Rhett Launches Outnumber Hunger Campaign
Pictured (Top row, L-R): Marketing Communication Sr. Planner at General Mills Kristin Merchant, Graham DeLoach (ATH), Bill Satcher (ATH), Michael Hobby (ATH), Zach Brown (ATH), SVP Creative Big Machine Label Group Sandi Spika Borchetta, Big Machine Records CEO Scott Borchetta, Thomas Rhett, Brett Young, Cameron Duddy (Midland), Jess Carson (Midland), Mark Wystrach (Midland) and Associate Director of Marketing at General Mills Jay Piccanatto. (Bottom row, L-R): Ryan Follese, Drake White, Trent Harmon, Elizabeth Hopkins (Delta Rae), Brittany Holljes (Delta Rae), Ian Holljes (Delta Rae), and Eric Holljes (Delta Rae). Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images for Big Machine Label Group [Click to Enlarge]
Vinay Parameswaran Heads To Cleveland Orchestra
Vinay Parameswaran
Nashville Symphony Associate Conductor Vinay Parameswaran has been named Assistant Conductor of The Cleveland Orchestra, as well as Music Director of the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra. Parameswaran’s two-year term will start in August.
Parameswaran was appointed Assistant Conductor of the Nashville Symphony in February 2014 and promoted to Associate Conductor in August 2015.
In his three-plus years with the Symphony, he has conducted classical and pops performances, as well as all of the organization’s annual summer Community Concerts.
Banner Music Holds Pop Up Writers Round On The Row
Banner Music held its first pop up writer’s round at its Music Row location on March 30. The show featured Jerry Salley, Shelby Lee Lowe, and James Robert Webb, along with guest performers Jackson Capps, Matt Roy, and Brian Carper. Later rounds featured Casey Kelly, Alex Dooley, Banner Partner, Daniel Kleindienst, Shane Thompson, Victoria Powell and Christine Inlow.
Cary Sherman To Retire From RIAA, Mitch Glazier Promoted
/by Sarah SkatesCary Sherman
Mitch Glazier has been promoted to President of The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), and will ascend to the role of Chairman and CEO in January 2019.
Cary Sherman, the RIAA’s Chairman and CEO, will retire from the organization at the end of 2018 after a storied 40-plus year career as one of the music industry’s most respected and knowledgeable business and policy experts.
Glazier, currently Senior Executive Vice President, will become Chairman and CEO on Jan. 1, 2019, after 18-plus years with the organization. During that time Glazier managed the organization’s public policy and industry relations teams, helping advance a variety of initiatives that helped the American music business transition to a fully digital industry with a stronger set of basic property rights protections. Before joining the RIAA, Glazier served as Chief Counsel for intellectual property to the Judiciary Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. He also serves as Chairman of the Board of the charity Musicians on Call, which brings the healing power of music to the bedsides of patients in hospitals and healthcare facilities across the nation.
Mitch Glazier
Since 1974 – first as outside counsel to RIAA at Arnold & Porter, and then as General Counsel, President and ultimately Chairman and CEO of RIAA – Sherman has been immersed in every legislative, regulatory and policy issue affecting the recorded music industry, from the comprehensive revision of U.S. copyright law in 1976 to the current debate about the effectiveness of laws which provide “safe harbors” for copyright infringement.
Sherman was instrumental in the enactment of the Digital Performance Right in Sound Recordings Act in 1995, which along with his work on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in 1998, established a new right for artists and labels to be compensated by digital music services. That right has since become the core legal foundation obligating streaming services to pay royalties for their subscription services – services that have become the primary catalyst for growth in the business.
Sherman also helped the music community collaborate on multiple issues, from anti-piracy and technology initiatives to litigations such as MGM Studios, Inc. v. Grokster in 2005. At a time when piracy was rampant and the authorized music marketplace was in its infancy, that case reshaped the legal landscape for actions against pirate sites and helped level the playing field for licensed music services.
Mark Your Calendar—April 2017
/by Eric T. ParkerSingle Add Dates
Little Big Town/Happy People/Capitol Nashville
Thomas Rhett feat. Maren Morris/Craving You/Valory Music Co.
James Robert Webb/Six Strings & The Truth/Bison Creek Records
April 10
Eric Church/Round Here Buzz/EMI Nashville
Canaan Smith/Like You Like That/Mercury Nashville
Charlie Worhsam/Cut Your Groove/Warner Bros.
Ray Scott/Livin’ This Way/Jethropolitan Records, LLC
Walker McGuire/Til Tomorrow/Wheelhouse Records
Kayla Calabrese/Me Time/Monarch Music Group
Joe Lasher, Jr./Tap A Little Tail Light/M7 Entertainment
Tony McKee/Problem With Me
Jeremy Bowman/American Party/Funky Cowboy-SMG Nashville
April 17
High Valley/She’s With Me/Warner Bros.
Jake Owen/Good Company/RCA Nashville
SaraBeth/I Want It That Way/Circle S Records
Jerrod Niemann/God Made A Woman/Curb Records
Kentucky Headhunters/God Loves A Rolling Stone/Plowboy Records
Delta Rae/A Long And Happy Life/Valory Music Co.
April 24
Eric Chesser/Good Times & Summer Days/Big Big Entertainment
Album Release Dates
Joey Martin Feek/If Not For You/Farmhouse Recordings-Capitol Christian Group
Brantley Gilbert/The Devil Don’t Sleep (vinyl)/Valory Music Group
Ruston Kelly/Halloween/Washington Square Music
April 14
Bailey Bryan/So Far [EP]/300 Entertainment-Warner Music Nashville
April 21
Brad Paisley/Love and War/Arista Nashville
Charlie Worsham/Beginning of Things/Warner Bros.
Angaleena Presley/Wrangled/Mining Light Music-Thirty Tigers
April 28
Willie Nelson/God’s Problem Child/Legacy Recordings
Little Big Town/The Breaker (vinyl)/Capitol Nashville
Old Crow Medicine Show/50 Years of Blonde on Blonde/Columbia
Allman Brothers Band/The Fox Box [8 CD set]/RED Distribution
Industry Events
Patsy Cline Museum Opening
April 14
Madame Tussaud’s new Nashville location
April 17
TJ Martell Roast: John Esposito at Zanies
April 20-29
Nashville Film Festival at the Regal Hollywood Stadium 27
April 22
Record Store Day
April 25
MusicRow‘s 6th annual Rising Women On The Row breakfast at the Omni Nashville Hotel (tickets required)
April 27
Music City Walk of Fame induction ceremony at 1 p.m. in Walk of Fame Park