
Tony Martin
Not many country songwriters can say their very first cut was also their first No. 1 hit, recorded by the legendary George Strait. But Tony Martin can.
“That was like hitting the country music sweepstakes lottery,” he says of Strait’s 1988 single, “Baby’s Gotten Good At Goodbye.” “My first demo, the first cut, the first hit, the first single, it was all the same song.”
The son of Nashville songwriter Glenn Martin (a writer for Charley Pride, Eddy Arnold, and Roy Clark), Tony grew up regularly hearing artists and songwriters such as Mickey Newbury, Hank Cochran, and Merle Haggard doing guitar pulls in the living room, interspersing hit songs with favorite unrecorded compositions. “Like a lot of kids, it was just kind of what your dad did,” Martin recalls.
Tony directed his own writing talent to the journalism field, working for a Chicago daily newspaper and later for The Tennessean. He amused newsroom colleagues with parody songs, then his father challenged him to write a serious tune. On his tenth try, Tony composed “Baby’s Gotten Good At Goodbye.”
“When I saw my first check, I thought, ‘This is how much I made this year as a reporter. I think I’ll switch,’” Martin says.
Though both professions involve creative approaches to the written word, Martin says not many writing rules traverse journalism and songwriting. “The only thing I say I’ve taken from journalism is I don’t like a lot of adjectives. Get the right verb, because it makes your picture move. Nobody goes to a movie to watch the person sit there. They want to see movement, even if they are looking at someone’s face. They see that emotion come up. It can be still as rain, but there is movement.”
To date, Tony Martin has notched 16 No. 1 hits, including at least one chart-topper in each of the last four decades. He earned hits with Strait’s “Living and Living Well” and “Go On,” Tim McGraw’s “Just To See You Smile,” Josh Turner’s “Time Is Love,” and his latest, Jason Aldean’s “A Little More Summertime.” Plus, he’s earned a slew of Top 5 hits for Martina McBride, Sara Evans, Mark Wills, and others.
“Planes are easier to catch when they are on the ground”
Martin credits at least part of his success to collaborating with artists early in their careers. “They have their whole lives and they haven’t written about hardly any of it,” says Martin. “I used to come into a writing session like, ‘I have this idea,’ and I realized I was going about it all wrong. They have these interesting lives and stories, so let’s find out what’s going on with them. It’s about drawing those stories out.”
Martin’s No. 1 hit for Dierks Bentley, “Settle For A Slowdown,” came in 2006, as the final single from Bentley’s sophomore project Modern Day Drifter. Penned by Bentley, Martin and Brett Beavers, the song became Bentley’s third No. 1 single.
“The line I always love is, ‘This land is flat as it is mean.’ If you’ve been out in those places like West Texas, it’s like, ‘I have to watch you leave me for a long time, because I can see so far.’ It’s a scene in a movie. I want you to see the picture of the guy standing there. And to be in that vulnerable place, Dierks sells that. I think it’s all his years playing that high lonesome in clubs.
“Dierks is a great writer, and this is writing with an artist who hadn’t really taken off yet. They had just finished his first album, but we were just writing anyway. With artists, you get to play to their strengths. Planes are easier to catch when they are on the ground,” Martin muses.
“It’s nothing more than a bunch of creative choices”
“Whatever You Say,” a 1997 hit for Martina McBride, pulled double duty. Not only did Martin score a hit song for McBride, but “Whatever You Say” also initiated a writing relationship with rising artist Sara Evans.
“The thing that helped us was that [co-writer] Ed [Hill] was using a great demo singer, who had a deal on RCA, named Sara Evans. She took it to RCA to play for Renee Bell. Sara told the label how much she liked the song, and then all of a sudden we get calls from people putting it on hold for Martina. I don’t know how that happened over there, but a whole bunch of credit goes to how Sara pulled it off in the studio.”
Evans returned to Martin, along with co-writer Tom Shapiro, for what would become her own first No. 1 hit, “No Place That Far.” Originally a pop-infused up-tempo track, the song was reconstructed as a more traditional, albeit vocally powerful, ballad after a co-writing session with Evans.
“It’s nothing more than a bunch of creative choices, from the very beginning,” Martin says of his process. “Once you start writing within the construct of what you are creating, you are creating the rules and limitations of it, too.”
While radio listeners can hear a finished song for what it is, like most writers, Martin hears what a song could have been.
“You see all the choices you left out,” he says. “What they see is the framework in which they now fill in their life and their story. In some ways, by you not being able to put in all of your choices or ideas, you left room for theirs, or at least I tell myself that.”
“When you are in this business, it feels like a slot machine”
If earning a No. 1 song with your very first cut, as Martin did, seems improbable, then earning a No. 1 hit with a song six years after an artist first recorded might seem impossible.
But that’s what happened with Keith Urban’s “You Look Good In My Shirt.” Penned with Mark Nesler and Tom Shapiro, the song was first included on Urban’s 2002 Golden Road album. The song was slated to be the album’s fifth single, but those plans were abandoned. Then, in 2008, a newly-recorded rendition of the song was incorporated into Urban’s Greatest Hits: 19 Kids. That same year, “You Look Good In My Shirt” reached the pinnacle of the country chart.
“You would never even think to pray for that,” says Martin, who notes he and his co-writers wrote the song after hearing Tim McGraw was looking for a Tom Petty-inspired tune to record.
“We were like, ‘Tom Petty sings about sex and drugs. What are we going to talk about?’ and we came up with the line, ‘You look good in my shirt.’” One verse change later, and Urban took the song into the studio.
“I’ve had times where Keith was going to cut a song, and we were feeling confident, but I would still feel nervous. If someone asked why, I would say, ‘Well, Keith hasn’t asked me to change anything yet,’” Martin says. “In fact, I think every time I’ve had to change something, because Keith knows what works for him.”
Nearly 30 years after celebrating his first No. 1 hit, Martin still exudes a humbleness and thankfulness for his success.
“When you are in this business, it feels like a slot machine, except there have to be about 20 things you have to hit all the way across to pull these things off. After writing a song, I don’t have much control over it. They are like children you send out the door. Most just come back and lay around the basement.”
160-Capacity Venue Opens In Nashville’s Germantown Neighborhood
/by Eric T. ParkerThe Back Corner venue in Nashville’s Germantown neighborhood. Photo: TBC
Chattanooga-based restauranteur Daniel Lindley has opened a 160-person capacity concert lounge in Nashville’s Germantown neighborhood called The Back Corner (TBC).
Located behind the chef’s upscale 5th & Taylor restaurant, the two-tier venue publicly opened its doors on Dec. 16 after already hosting a songwriter event with Laura Veltz, Jonathan Singleton and Luke Combs for the Big Machine Label Group’s staff retreat. Shows are expected to begin in January 2017.
“The Back Corner is equipped to be Nashville’s premier small cap venue,” said Nate Cannon, of the venue. “Our capacity is 160, although we can hold more for special events. We are taking time and care compiling our opening calendar. In the meantime, we are concentrating on being the easiest place to drink in the neighborhood and city.”
A suspended sculpture is from Chattanooga-based artist Cessna Decosimo. The menu for the 44′ diamond shaped bar will launch tonight (Dec. 21) with 5th & Taylor-favorite cocktails and fresh juice-based libations, which are a continuation of a partnership with I Love Juice Bar. A bar menu will highlight small plates, provided from 5th & Taylor’s kitchen.
The stage is 225 sq. ft. with a 11′ x 9′ LED screen backdrop. There is a green room with exterior access and private bathroom. Full sound equipment details can be found at thebackcorner.com. Custom steel and glass railings are featured throughout with a mix of reclaimed and custom furniture and lighting, all from designer Daniel James.
Hours are 6 p.m.-12 a.m. Monday-Thursday, and 6 p.m.-1 a.m. Fri./Sat. Contact the venue at 615-242-4747.
Nielsen To Purchase Gracenote Metadata Company
/by Eric T. ParkerExpected to be final at the close of the first quarter of 2017 with financing through a combination of cash and debt, the noted $560 million transaction will allow Nielsen the acquisition of data and technology that underpins the programming guides and personalized user experience for major video, music, audio and sports content. Currently, the 18 year old Gracenote provides reference information for over 12 million movie and television listings and 200 million music tracks, and drives the interfaces of the major streaming digital media services, as well as the connected technology systems in over 75 million automobiles.
The acquisition extends Nielsen’s footprint with major clients by including Gracenote’s global content database which spans across platforms including multichannel video programming distributors (MVPDs), smart televisions, streaming music services, connected devices, media players and in-car infotainment systems.
The purchase from Tribune Media Company, which acquired the company three years ago for $170 million, will allow Nielsen the ability to provide clients with deeper analytics on consumer behavior and view of audience engagement from discovery to consumption.
“Gracenote’s metadata and content recognition technology fuels the interfaces of the major video, music and in-car infotainment systems that consumers engage with every day. This acquisition provides Nielsen with a significant asset in our mission of measuring and understanding consumer behavior,” said Karthik Rao, President, Expanded Verticals at Nielsen.
“For the past decade, Gracenote has connected millions of people every day to the TV shows, sports, movies and music they love, making entertainment more accessible and discoverable,” said John Batter, Chief Executive Officer of Gracenote. “We are excited for the opportunity to take the next step with Nielsen and expand our global reach by continuing to deliver innovative, insights-based solutions to clients.”
Gracenote will operate as a business unit within Nielsen. The company will continue to operate from its headquarters in Emeryville, California.
Tony Brown, John Mason Launch Velvet Stone Management
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Rick Caballo, John Mason, Melissa Core, Tony Brown.
Legendary country music producer, executive, and musician Tony Brown has teamed with entertainment attorney John Mason to launch Velvet Stone Management.
Brown and Mason have teamed with Nashville-based branding company Dead Horse Branding, led by Melissa Core and Rick Caballo. Dead Horse Branding has worked with brands including Jep and Jessica Robertson of A&E’s Duck Dynasty, as well as Australia’s lifestyle doctor Dr. Karen Phillip.
Velvet Stone has announced the signing of the Grammy-nominated O’Connor Band featuring Mark O’Connor.
Brown has worked with an array of artists including Reba, George Strait, Trisha Yearwood, Jimmy Buffet, Brooks and Dunn, Steve Earle and Lyle Lovett. Brown worked for MCA Records for 25 years, where he served as the Vice President for 10 years, eventually becoming President of the label. Brown is the producer on nine Grammy Award-winning songs, and took the Grammy home for Country Album of the Year with George Strait, the same year he was honored by the Americana Music Association with a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008.
Mason has represented high-profile deals for the movie Grease, and represented talent including Reba, Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons (Jersey Boys), Smokey Robinson, Travis Tritt, Olivia Newton-John, Shakira, and Brian Wilson. Brown has represented directly or through their heirs six Oscar winners. He has been named “Entertainment Lawyer of the Year,” by Billboard Magazine and earned the A/V national attorney rating in the Martindale Hubbell Law Directory for more than 30 years.
“Velvet Stone is where art marries commerce… A braintrust of experience, style, taste and enough blind faith to take on any challenge. Four partners who complement each other like no other team before,” said Brown.
“The opportunity to help artists in a new and unique way where I can combine my decades of business and legal experience with the creative genius of Tony Brown and the branding and marketing expertise of Melissa Core and Rick Caballo was irresistible—and here we are!” said Mason.
‘Hee Haw’s’ Gordie Tapp Dead At Age 94
/by Robert K OermannHe is best known in the U.S. for his long-running tenure in the cast of the Hee Haw country comedy TV series. The show aired for an impressive 25 years, first as a network series and then in syndication. It was launched in 1969 and endured until 1994.
Tapp portrayed “Cousin Clem” on the show, a member of the “Culhane family.” These deadpan characters sat on a parlor sofa and humorously related their tribulations. He and Archie Campbell also sang and spoke the “Pfft! You Was Gone” and the “Gloom, Despair and Agony on Me” segments each week on the telecasts.
Tapp also starred in the “Samuel B. Sternwheeler” bits, offering nonsensical homilies. Following his ridiculous recitations he would be hit over the head with a rubber chicken or be handed an exploding bomb that left him covered in soot. “Sternwheeler” was also the plantation daddy of Marianne Gordon’s pampered Southern-belle character.
He was the proprietor of the fictional Kornfield Kounty establishment “Gordie’s General Store,” wherein he traded comedic banter with his incompetent employee Gailard Sartain. He partnered with Roni Stoneman to enact the squabbling backwoods couple “LaVern and Ida Lee Nagger.” And like the other cast members, he popped up to deliver one-liners in the show’s cornfield set.
Gordie Tapp and his fellow cast member Charlie Farquharson were both already well known in their native Canada prior to Hee Haw. Tapp had been a broadcast personality for years. During the 1950s, he was a founding cast member of Main Street Jamboree, a radio and TV series produced in Hamilton, Ontario. Between 1956 and 1965, he hosted the national CBC radio program Country Hoedown.
Despite his TV success in the U.S., Tapp was resolute about staying in his homeland. He was very proudly a Canadian.
After Hee Haw ended, he appeared in TV commercials for Ultramafic beds. He also raised funds for Easter Seals and for the Muscular Dystrophy Association. He annually portrayed Santa Claus on the Hamilton radio station CHML, taking calls from children and talking to them about their Christmas wishes.
In recent years, Gordie Tapp and his wife were residents of a Canadian retirement center. He died there on Sunday, Dec. 18. He is survived by his wife Helen and his children Kate, Jeff and Barbara.
Headliners Announced For 7th Annual Americana Spring Celebration
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Loretta Lynn, The Milk Carton Kids, Margo Price
The Americana Music Association will welcome Loretta Lynn, Margo Price and The Milk Carton Kids as part of its 7th annual Americana Spring Celebration. The event will be held March 30-April 1 at Tennessee’s Blackberry Farm.
“We are so excited to be returning to Blackberry Farm to produce this important and truly spectacular fundraiser. It just keeps getting better and better,” said Jed Hilly, Executive Director of the Americana Music Association. “A weekend at this intimate venue with Loretta, Margo, and Kenneth and Joey will truly be a once-in-a-lifetime experience that no one will soon forget.”
Blackberry Farm, a Relais & Châteux Resort, features 62 accommodations and a plethora of activities, including fly fishing, horseback riding, hiking, cycling, sporting clay, and mountain biking opportunities. The venue also offers a destination spa and an annual series of culinary events.
Reservations are available by calling 1-800-557-8864 or visiting blackberryfarm.com.
Word Records Invests In Christian Hip-Hop With New Imprint
/by Jessica NicholsonJoseph Prielozny
Word Records has launched the hip-hop imprint IVAV (4 Against 5), led by producer Joseph Prielozny. The imprint recently signed artist Steven Malcolm, with a debut self-titled album slated for release Feb. 17.
Prielozny served as an on-staff producer at Reach Records since 2008. At Reach Records, his production duo COBRA worked with chart-topping Christian hip-hop artist Lecrae. Prielozny began working in Word’s A&R department in 2015.
Prielozny brings his production skills to Malcolm’s upcoming project, which includes a collaboration with former Group 1 Crew member Blanca.
While finishing his self-titled album, Malcolm has been touring as part of the 2016/2017 Winter Jam Tour.
The label imprint comes as Christian hip-hop has become increasingly popular in recent years. Artist Lecrae‘s sixth studio album, Gravity, released in 2012 and earned a Grammy. His seventh album, Anomaly, released in 2014 and debuted atop the Billboard Top 200, becoming the first album to top both the Billboard 200 and the Gospel chart simultaneously
UMPG On Andrew Dorff: ‘A Heart of Gold and Unparalleled Talent’
/by Sarah SkatesUniversal Music Publishing Group today issued a statement about the unexpected passing of their songwriter and friend Andrew Dorff.
Andrew Dorff and his team in July 2016 at Park Cafe, when he was honored with four BMI Million-Air Awards. Pictured (L-R): Front Row: BMI’s Phil Graham and Jody Williams, BMI songwriter Andrew Dorff, Universal Music Publishing’s Kent Earls. Back Row: BMI’s Bradley Collins, business manager Anna Marsh, Universal Music Publishing’s Cyndi Forman, Missy Roberts, BMI Songwriter Steve Dorff, BMI’s Leslie Roberts, Universal Music Publishing’s Travis Gordon and Ron Stuve. Photo: Steve Lowry
Peach Pickers Open Tickets For 4th Annual Georgia Benefit At The Ryman
/by Eric T. ParkerThe 4th annual event returns to Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium with a yet-to-be-announced group of artist/songwriter guest appearances. Presented by Jameson Irish Whiskey, the event raises money for the Georgia Music Foundation, which distributes grants in music education, preservation and outreach programs. Each year during the concert, the foundation presents its Flamekeeper Award to a Georgia artist who preserves and promotes Georgia’s musical roots and traditions.
“I can’t overestimate the importance of Georgia to the Peach Pickers,” explains Dallas Davidson, “but the success of this event has proven how special our state’s music means to a lot of people. Last year, when Randy Houser told the audience what Otis Redding’s music meant to him before breaking into ‘I’ve Been Loving You Too Long’ was an awesome moment, especially with all three of Otis’ children standing backstage.”
Rhett Akins adds, “I was so stoked when Kevn Kinney played that I could barely introduce him for sharing stories about listening to [Kinney’s rock band] Drivin’ N Cryin’ when I was living in Athens.”
Dallas Davidson, who chairs the Georgia Music Foundation, says, “Sharing the Ryman stage with our friends and having Jameson Irish Whiskey and Georgia Tourism on board has helped us hit a home run for fans every year. But having the proceeds support the Foundation truly makes it an annual grand slam.”
View a video recap of the 3rd annual Georgia On My Mind concert here.
Artist Updates: Big & Rich, Lee Brice, Jeremy McComb
/by Sarah SkatesBig & Rich Set For Musicians On Call Fundraiser
Big & Rich will be the headlining entertainment at the RIAA’s second-ever inauguration charity event benefiting Musicians On Call. The hit duo will perform their set at the 9:30 Club the evening of the presidential inauguration on Friday, Jan. 20, 2017.
Lee Brice Performs At Military Funeral
Lee Brice sang “Go Rest High On That Mountain” in tribute to U.S. Air Force Maj. Troy Lee Gilbert during a full military honors funeral service on Dec. 19. Gilbert was laid to rest in Arlington National Cemetery 10 years after his F-16 crashed while he protected U.S. troops on the ground in Iraq.
Christmas Extravaganza Benefits Food Bank
Pictured (L-R): KICR MD/ Mornings Derik Walker, Jeremy McComb, KICR’s Jeff McClain and Rick Huckaby
K102 and Nashville North, owned by singer/songwriter Jeremy McComb and business partner Bob Kreaman, recently hosted their 7th Annual Christmas Extravaganza. McComb and songwriter Rick Huckaby performed at the sold-out event which raised over $4000 for McComb’s hometown food bank.
Tony Martin: Four Decades In Song
/by Jessica NicholsonTony Martin
Not many country songwriters can say their very first cut was also their first No. 1 hit, recorded by the legendary George Strait. But Tony Martin can.
“That was like hitting the country music sweepstakes lottery,” he says of Strait’s 1988 single, “Baby’s Gotten Good At Goodbye.” “My first demo, the first cut, the first hit, the first single, it was all the same song.”
The son of Nashville songwriter Glenn Martin (a writer for Charley Pride, Eddy Arnold, and Roy Clark), Tony grew up regularly hearing artists and songwriters such as Mickey Newbury, Hank Cochran, and Merle Haggard doing guitar pulls in the living room, interspersing hit songs with favorite unrecorded compositions. “Like a lot of kids, it was just kind of what your dad did,” Martin recalls.
Tony directed his own writing talent to the journalism field, working for a Chicago daily newspaper and later for The Tennessean. He amused newsroom colleagues with parody songs, then his father challenged him to write a serious tune. On his tenth try, Tony composed “Baby’s Gotten Good At Goodbye.”
“When I saw my first check, I thought, ‘This is how much I made this year as a reporter. I think I’ll switch,’” Martin says.
Though both professions involve creative approaches to the written word, Martin says not many writing rules traverse journalism and songwriting. “The only thing I say I’ve taken from journalism is I don’t like a lot of adjectives. Get the right verb, because it makes your picture move. Nobody goes to a movie to watch the person sit there. They want to see movement, even if they are looking at someone’s face. They see that emotion come up. It can be still as rain, but there is movement.”
To date, Tony Martin has notched 16 No. 1 hits, including at least one chart-topper in each of the last four decades. He earned hits with Strait’s “Living and Living Well” and “Go On,” Tim McGraw’s “Just To See You Smile,” Josh Turner’s “Time Is Love,” and his latest, Jason Aldean’s “A Little More Summertime.” Plus, he’s earned a slew of Top 5 hits for Martina McBride, Sara Evans, Mark Wills, and others.
“Planes are easier to catch when they are on the ground”
Martin credits at least part of his success to collaborating with artists early in their careers. “They have their whole lives and they haven’t written about hardly any of it,” says Martin. “I used to come into a writing session like, ‘I have this idea,’ and I realized I was going about it all wrong. They have these interesting lives and stories, so let’s find out what’s going on with them. It’s about drawing those stories out.”
Martin’s No. 1 hit for Dierks Bentley, “Settle For A Slowdown,” came in 2006, as the final single from Bentley’s sophomore project Modern Day Drifter. Penned by Bentley, Martin and Brett Beavers, the song became Bentley’s third No. 1 single.
“The line I always love is, ‘This land is flat as it is mean.’ If you’ve been out in those places like West Texas, it’s like, ‘I have to watch you leave me for a long time, because I can see so far.’ It’s a scene in a movie. I want you to see the picture of the guy standing there. And to be in that vulnerable place, Dierks sells that. I think it’s all his years playing that high lonesome in clubs.
“Dierks is a great writer, and this is writing with an artist who hadn’t really taken off yet. They had just finished his first album, but we were just writing anyway. With artists, you get to play to their strengths. Planes are easier to catch when they are on the ground,” Martin muses.
“It’s nothing more than a bunch of creative choices”
“Whatever You Say,” a 1997 hit for Martina McBride, pulled double duty. Not only did Martin score a hit song for McBride, but “Whatever You Say” also initiated a writing relationship with rising artist Sara Evans.
“The thing that helped us was that [co-writer] Ed [Hill] was using a great demo singer, who had a deal on RCA, named Sara Evans. She took it to RCA to play for Renee Bell. Sara told the label how much she liked the song, and then all of a sudden we get calls from people putting it on hold for Martina. I don’t know how that happened over there, but a whole bunch of credit goes to how Sara pulled it off in the studio.”
Evans returned to Martin, along with co-writer Tom Shapiro, for what would become her own first No. 1 hit, “No Place That Far.” Originally a pop-infused up-tempo track, the song was reconstructed as a more traditional, albeit vocally powerful, ballad after a co-writing session with Evans.
“It’s nothing more than a bunch of creative choices, from the very beginning,” Martin says of his process. “Once you start writing within the construct of what you are creating, you are creating the rules and limitations of it, too.”
While radio listeners can hear a finished song for what it is, like most writers, Martin hears what a song could have been.
“You see all the choices you left out,” he says. “What they see is the framework in which they now fill in their life and their story. In some ways, by you not being able to put in all of your choices or ideas, you left room for theirs, or at least I tell myself that.”
“When you are in this business, it feels like a slot machine”
If earning a No. 1 song with your very first cut, as Martin did, seems improbable, then earning a No. 1 hit with a song six years after an artist first recorded might seem impossible.
But that’s what happened with Keith Urban’s “You Look Good In My Shirt.” Penned with Mark Nesler and Tom Shapiro, the song was first included on Urban’s 2002 Golden Road album. The song was slated to be the album’s fifth single, but those plans were abandoned. Then, in 2008, a newly-recorded rendition of the song was incorporated into Urban’s Greatest Hits: 19 Kids. That same year, “You Look Good In My Shirt” reached the pinnacle of the country chart.
“You would never even think to pray for that,” says Martin, who notes he and his co-writers wrote the song after hearing Tim McGraw was looking for a Tom Petty-inspired tune to record.
“We were like, ‘Tom Petty sings about sex and drugs. What are we going to talk about?’ and we came up with the line, ‘You look good in my shirt.’” One verse change later, and Urban took the song into the studio.
“I’ve had times where Keith was going to cut a song, and we were feeling confident, but I would still feel nervous. If someone asked why, I would say, ‘Well, Keith hasn’t asked me to change anything yet,’” Martin says. “In fact, I think every time I’ve had to change something, because Keith knows what works for him.”
Nearly 30 years after celebrating his first No. 1 hit, Martin still exudes a humbleness and thankfulness for his success.
“When you are in this business, it feels like a slot machine, except there have to be about 20 things you have to hit all the way across to pull these things off. After writing a song, I don’t have much control over it. They are like children you send out the door. Most just come back and lay around the basement.”