Noah Dewey Joins Magic Mustang Music

Noah Dewey

Noah Dewey

BBR Music Group’s Magic Mustang Music has hired Noah Dewey as Sr. Creative Director of the publishing company.

Dewey has more than 20 years experience in the music industry as a music publisher, recording engineer and producer. He previously worked for Warner Bros., Still Working Music and Disney Music Publishing.

Most recently, Dewey owned independent publishing company Sonic Ark Publishing, which spawned three No. 1 records last year.

“I’m elated to be working with Juli and the amazing writers on the Magic Mustang team! It’s a fantastic opportunity to be a part of the BBR Music Group,” says Dewey.

“I have known Noah for over 20 years. I am so happy to have him as part of our family,” says Juli Newton-Griffith, VP of Magic Mustang Music. “His knowledge of publishing will be invaluable to the future of our company!”

Dewey reports directly to Newton-Griffith and is already on the job.

Americana Music Association Names Lifetime Achievement Award Honorees

Jim Lauderdale

Jim Lauderdale

The Americana Music Association has revealed its 2016 Lifetime Achievement Award Honorees. The six recipients are William Bell, Billy Bragg, Shawn Colvin, Woody Guthrie, Jim Lauderdale and Bob Weir.

The honorees will be celebrated at Americana’s 15th Annual Honors & Awards held at the Ryman Auditorium on Sept. 21. The show is part of the 17th annual Americana Music Festival & Conference, held Sept. 20-25 in Nashville.

“These artists have not only influenced the Americana community, but the musical landscape as a whole,” said Jed Hilly, Executive Director of the Americana Music Association. “They all have been an inspiration to our community and we are humbled they will honor us in song at the Ryman this fall.”

The Lifetime Achievement Award for Songwriting goes to singer and songwriter William Bell. Billy Bragg is this year’s recipient of the Spirit of Americana Free Speech Award. Shawn Colvin has been named the Trailblazer honoree.

The President’s Award is posthumously awarded to Woody Guthrie. Jim Lauderdale is this year’s WagonMaster recipient. Bob Weir will be presented with the Lifetime Achievement honor in the category of Performer.

CMA Broadcast Awards Finalists Revealed

Pictured (clockwise from top left): Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase; Lon Helton; Blair Garner, Kelly Ford, and Chuck Wicks.

Pictured (clockwise from top left): Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase; Lon Helton; Blair Garner, Kelly Ford, and Chuck Wicks.

The Country Music Association revealed the finalists for its Broadcast Awards on Wednesday morning (Aug. 31).

Cam, who is a first-time CMA Award nominee this year with nods in the Song of the Year and Music Video of the Year categories (both for “Burning House”) notified the CMA Broadcast Awards finalists for Personality and Radio Station of the Year with personalized video messages.

In the Broadcast Personality of the Year category (National), Cumulus’ America’s Morning Show (Blair Garner, Kelly Ford, and Chuck Wicks) was nominated as well as Westwood One’s Country Countdown USA (Lon Helton), and iHeartMedia’s The Crook and Chase Countdown (Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase).

Major Market finalists include KKBQ – Houston-Galveston, Texas, KWJJ – Portland, Oregon, WKLB – Boston, WMZQ – Washington, D.C., and WSOC – Charlotte-Gastonia, North Carolina/Rock Hill, South Carolina.

“My friends in radio have been supportive of my career from the very beginning,” said Cam. “They are the ones getting our music out there and helping us reach new fans. I’m so happy I get to deliver the good news about their CMA Broadcast Award nominations – it’s so important to take the time and celebrate all the hard work put in.”

The winners will be notified in mid-October and will be acknowledged at The 50th Annual CMA Awards to be held Wednesday, Nov. 2 (8:00-11:00 PM/ET) and broadcast live by the ABC Television Network from the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville. Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood return to host.

“Much of the sustained success of our format and rise of country’s newest stars can be attributed to the passion and drive of these key radio professionals,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer. “They pioneer the grassroots efforts in communities across the nation to keep Country Music listeners excited and engaged with the genre.”

The categories are established by market size based on population as ranked by Arbitron. Entries for Broadcast Personality of the Year are judged on aircheck, ratings, community involvement, and biographical information. Candidates for Station of the Year are judged on aircheck, ratings history, community involvement, and format leadership.

CMA members who are full-time, on-air personalities, and CMA member radio stations in the United States and Canada were eligible to enter. The entries are judged by a panel of distinguished broadcast professionals, representing all market sizes and regions.

CMA BROADCAST PERSONALITY OF THE YEAR:

National
“America’s Morning Show” (Blair Garner, Kelly Ford, and Chuck Wicks) – Cumulus
“Country Countdown USA” (Lon Helton) – Westwood One
“The Crook and Chase Countdown” (Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase) – iHeartMedia

Major Market
“Chris Carr & Company” (Chris Carr, Jeff “Maverick” Bolen, and Kia Becht) – KEEY, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.
“Dave and Veronica Morning Show” (the late Dave McKay and Veronica Alfaro) – WQYK, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, Fla.
“The Michael J Show” (Michael J. Stuehler) – WPOC, Baltimore, Md.
“The Q Morning Zoo” (Tim Tuttle, Kevin Kline, and Erica Rico) – KKBQ, Houston-Galveston, Texas
“Tanner in the Morning” (“Rob Tanner” Lamb, Willa Hamrick “Catherine Lane”, and “Chris Allen” Gordon) – WSOC, Charlotte-Gastonia, N.C./Rock Hill, S.C.

Large Market
“AJ & Ashley In The Morning” (AJ Maguire and Ashley Stegbauer) – WWKA, Orlando, Fla.
“The Big Dave Show” (David Chandler, Chelsie Shinkle, and Jason Statt) – WUBE, Cincinnati, Ohio
“The Boxer Show” (“Boxer” Brandon Nasby) – WCOL, Columbus, Ohio
“The Randy, Jamie, and Jojo Show” (Randy Carroll, Jamie Martin, and JoJo Meza) – KAJA, San Antonio, Texas
“Woody and the Wake-UP Call” (Woody Johnson, Dan E. Zuko, and Kayla Hanley) – WCOL, Columbus, Ohio

Medium Market
Brent Michaels – KUZZ, Bakersfield, Calif.
“The Gator & StyckMan Program” (Gator Harrison, Greg “StyckMan” Owens, and “Cowboy” Kyle Croft) – WUSY, Chattanooga, Tenn.
“Ken, Kelley, and Daniel” (Ken Hicks, Kelley Bradshaw, and Daniel Wyatt) – WUSY, Chattanooga, Tenn.
“Maverick and Lulu in the Morning” (Maverick Johnson and Luanne “Lulu” Krysz) – WCTQ, Sarasota-Bradenton, Fla.
“Tom and Becky” (Tom Owens and Becky Palmer) – WBBS, Syracuse, N.Y.

Small Market
“Afternoons with Cash” (Cash Williams) – KTTS, Springfield, Mo.
“Barrett, Fox & Berry” (Bill Barrett, Tim Fox, and Tracy Berry) – KKNU, Eugene-Springfield, Ore.
“Ben and Arnie” (Arnie Andrews and Ben Butler) – WCOW, La Crosse, Wis.
“The Eddie Foxx Show” (Eddie Foxx and Sharon Green) – WKSF, Asheville, N.C.
“Scotty & Cara in the Morning” (Scotty Cox and Cara Denis) – KCLR, Columbia, Mo.

CMA RADIO STATION OF THE YEAR

Major Market
KKBQ – Houston-Galveston, Texas
KWJJ – Portland, Ore.
WKLB – Boston, Mass.
WMZQ – Washington, D.C.
WSOC – Charlotte-Gastonia, N.C./Rock Hill, S.C.

Large Market
WCOL – Columbus, Ohio
WCTK – Providence-Warwick-Pawtucket, R.I.
WQDR – Raleigh-Durham, N.C.
WUBE – Cincinnati, Ohio
WWKA – Orlando, Fla.

Medium Market
KATM – Stockton, Calif.
KUZZ – Bakersfield, Calif.
WBBS – Syracuse, N.Y.
WUSY – Chattanooga, Tenn.
WYRK – Buffalo-Niagara Falls, N.Y.

Small Market
KORA – Bryan-College Station, Texas
KTTS – Springfield, Mo.
WCOW – La Crosse, Wis.
WKML – Fayetteville, N.C.
WKSF – Asheville, N.C.

Toby Keith Receives Multiple BMI Million-Air Certifications

Pictured (L-R): BMI’s Phil Graham and Leslie Roberts, BMI singer-songwriter Toby Keith, BMI’s David Preston, BMI songwriter Scotty Emerick, BMI’s Jody Williams. Photo: Nathan Zucker

Pictured (L-R): BMI’s Phil Graham and Leslie Roberts, BMI singer-songwriter Toby Keith, BMI’s David Preston, BMI songwriter Scotty Emerick, BMI’s Jody Williams. Photo: Nathan Zucker

Toby Keith was awarded BMI Million-Air certificates for seven hit songs on Tuesday afternoon (Aug. 30) at Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge in Nashville. The songs awarded totaled 23 million radio plays.

BMI executive David Preston presented Keith with the following certificates signifying the number of spins at country radio:

“How Do You Like Me Now” – 5 million performances
“Beer For My Horses”- 4 million performances
“You Ain’t Much Fun” with 4 million
“American Soldier” – 3 million performances
“Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American)” – 3 million performances
“God Love Her” – 2 million performances
“You Shouldn’t Kiss Me Like This”- 2 million performances

Toby Keith. Photo: Nathan Zucker

Toby Keith. Photo: Nathan Zucker

During his remarks, Keith told the crowd, “Going into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in New York City [in 2015] was the pinnacle reward I’ve been given. Songwriters, keep on writing songs because it’s the lifeblood of this industry and things like this can happen. Dreams can come true.”

Keith is a three time BMI Country Songwriter of the Year, with Million-Air certificates for many tracks, including “I Love This Bar” and “Should’ve Been a Cowboy.”

Pictured (L-R): Toby Keith and BMI's Jody Williams. Photo: Nathan Zucker

Pictured (L-R): Toby Keith and BMI’s Jody Williams. Photo: Nathan Zucker

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Plans 50th Anniversary Live CD/DVD Set

nitty gritty dirt band 2016

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band will issue a CD and a CD/DVD set on Sept. 30 to commemorate their 50th year as a band.

Credited to Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Friends and titled Circlin’ Back: Celebrating 50 Years, the project will be released on the band’s own NGDB Records, LLC, and distributed by Warner Music Nashville.

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band album coverRecorded live at Nashville’s historic Ryman Auditorium, the collection features guests such as John Prine, Sam Bush, Vince Gill, Jerry Jeff Walker, Alison Krauss, Rodney Crowell, Byron House, and Jerry Douglas. Jackson Browne, an early member of the Dirt Band, and former member Jimmy Ibbotson, also joined the lineup.

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s current members are Jeff Hanna (guitars/vocals), Jimmie Fadden (drums/harmonica/vocals), Bob Carpenter (keyboards/accordion/vocals) and John McEuen (banjo/fiddle/guitar/mandolin).

The band will return to Nashville on Oct. 4 for a show with the Nashville Symphony.

CMA Awards Nominations Announced

CMA at 50

Garth Brooks, Luke Bryan, Chris Stapleton, Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban will vie for this year’s Entertainer of the Year trophy at the 50th annual CMA Awards, the Country Music Association announced this morning.

Keith Urban, Cam, and Dierks Bentley made announcements on Good Morning America in top categories including Song of the Year, Album of the Year, Single of the Year, Entertainer of the year, Female Vocalist of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year, and Music Video of the Year.

The Country Music Association also announced nominations for Musical Event of the Year, Vocal Group, Vocal Duo, New Artist, Music Video, and Musician of the Year.

Eric Church, Maren Morris, and Stapleton top the list of final nominees with five nominations each. Bentley, Underwood, and Urban received four nominations and Tim McGraw received three nominations. This brings his career total of nominations to 38.

Artists receiving two nominations include Kelsea Ballerini, Brothers Osborne, Bryan, Cam, Old Dominion and Thomas Rhett.

“I am very excited about this year’s list of nominees,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer. “We have artists who received their first CMA Awards nominations decades ago alongside first-timers; we have critically-acclaimed songwriters and artists who have reset the bar for country music. This is going to be an exciting year in addition to celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the CMA Awards.”

The 50th annual CMA Awards will air live on Nov. 2 at 7 p.m. CT on ABC.

A full list of CMA Awards nominations is below:

Entertainer Of The Year
Garth Brooks
Luke Bryan
Chris Stapleton
Carrie Underwood
Keith Urban

Single of the Year
(Award goes to Artist, Producer(s), and Mix Engineer(s))

“Die a Happy Man,” Thomas Rhett
Produced by Dann Huff and Jesse Frasure
Mix Engineered by Justin Niebank
The Valory Music Co.

“Humble and Kind,” Tim McGraw
Produced by Byron Gallimore and Tim McGraw
Mix Engineered by Byron Gallimore
Big Machine Records

“My Church,” Maren Morris
Produced by busbee and Maren Morris
Mix Engineered by Dave Clauss and busbee
Columbia Nashville/Sony Music Nashville

“Nobody To Blame,” Chris Stapleton
Produced by Dave Cobb and Chris Stapleton
Mix Engineered by Vance Powell
Mercury Nashville/Universal Music Group Nashville

“Record Year,” Eric Church
Produced by Jay Joyce
Mix Engineered by Jay Joyce and Jason Hall
EMI Records Nashville/Universal Music Group Nashville

Album of the Year
Dierks Bentley, Black
Maren Morris, Hero
Eric Church, Mr. Misunderstood
Keith Urban, Ripcord
Carrie Underwood, Storyteller

Song of the Year
(Award goes to Songwriter(s))
“Burning House,” Camaron “Cam” Ochs, Tyler Johnson, Jeff Bhasker
“Die a Happy Man,” Sean Douglas, Thomas Rhett, and Joe Spargur
“Humble and Kind,” Lori McKenna
“My Church,” busbee and Maren Morris
“Record Year,” Eric Church and Jeff Hyde

Female Vocalist of the Year
Kelsea Ballerini
Miranda Lambert
Maren Morris
Kacey Musgraves
Carrie Underwood

Male Vocalist of the Year
Dierks Bentley
Eric Church
Tim McGraw
Chris Stapleton
Keith Urban

Vocal Group of the Year
Lady Antebellum
Little Big Town
Old Dominion
Rascal Flatts
Zac Brown Band

Vocal Duo of the Year
Brothers Osborne
Dan + Shay
Florida Georgia Line
Joey + Rory
Maddie & Tae

Musical Event of the Year
“Different For Girls,” Dierks Bentley feat. Elle King
[Capitol Records Nashville / Universal Music Group Nashville]
“Home Alone Tonight,” Luke Bryan featuring Karen Fairchild
[Capitol Records Nashville / Universal Music Group Nashville]
“The Fighter,” Keith Urban (featuring Carrie Underwood)
[Hit Red Records / Capitol Records Nashville / Universal Music Group Nashville]
“Think Of You,” Chris Young (duet with Cassadee Pope)
[RCA Nashville / Sony Music Nashville]
“You Are My Sunshine,” Morgane Stapleton with Chris Stapleton
[Low Country Sound / Elektra Records]

Musician of the Year
Jerry Douglas, Dobro / Lap Steel Guitar
Paul Franklin, Steel Guitar
Dann Huff, Guitar
Brent Mason, Guitar
Derek Wells, Guitar

Music Video of the Year
“Burning House,” Cam
“Fire Away,” Chris Stapleton
“Humble and Kind,” Tim McGraw
“Record Year,” Eric Church
“Somewhere On A Beach,” Dierks Bentley

New Artist of the Year
Kelsea Ballerini
Brothers Osborne
Maren Morris
Old Dominion
Cole Swindell

LifeNotes: Fiddle Great Hoot Hester Passes

Hoot Hester

Hoot Hester

Longtime Opry staff fiddler Hoot Hester died Tuesday (Aug. 30) at age 65. Hester joined the Grand Ole Opry staff band in 2000 and remained there until 2014.

He also appeared with the Western swing ensemble The Time Jumpers, was once a member of Wylie & The Wild West and had an extensive resume as a session musician. Though best known as a fiddler, Hester was also proficient on mandolin and guitar.

Born Hubert Dwane Hester in Kentucky, he was inspired by his fiddle-playing father, piano-playing mother and four uncles who were also musicians. Following high school, he joined the Louisville bluegrass band Bluegrass Alliance.

He moved to Nashville in 1973 and was hired by The Whites. Stints touring with Jerry Reed, Mel Tillis and Donna Fargo ensued.

In the 1980s, he decided to focus on studio work. He joined forces with steel guitarist Buddy Emmons and guitarist Phil Baugh to form Sound Factory. They formed the basis for the “house” bands on the TV shows That Nashville Music and Nashville Alive.

Beginning around 1983, Hoot Hester became a regular at Nashville recording sessions. Throughout the rest of that decade he backed Gary Morris, Randy Travis, Dan Seals, Moe Bandy, Vern Gosdin, Conway Twitty and more on their hit records.

Studio success continued in the 1990s, with Hester appearing on the recordings of Ricky Van Shelton, Kenny Rogers, Ray Price, The Statler Brothers, George Strait, Gene Watson, Steve Wariner and more. In the 2000-2010 era, he could be heard on the discs of such stars as Charley Pride, John Conlee, Radney Foster, Dale Watson, Bill Monroe, Earl Scruggs, Larry Gatlin, Merle Haggard and many others. More recent clients have included Alan Jackson and Charlie McCoy.

He was one of the original members of The Time Jumpers when the band was formed in 1997. In 2012, he appeared on The Time Jumpers debut album. Hoot Hester has also recorded with such diverse talents as Alabama, Manhattan Transfer, Hank Williams Jr. and Ray Charles.

In recent years, he has been performing with his daughter Rachel Hester. Billed as Rachel Hester & The Tennessee Walkers, they had a regular weekly gig at Robert’s Western Wear on Lower Broadway.

Exclusive: Google Fiber’s Martha Ivester Explains Hurdles, Value Of Controversial Ordinance

Google Fiber Logo

In January 2015, Google announced it would bring its high-speed, fiber-optic, gigabit internet known as Google Fiber to Nashville, with plans for up to 1,000 Mbps speeds, enough to download an HD movie in 40 seconds. The speed is positioned to dramatically impact productivity and creativity for thousands of creators living and working in the Nashville area.

Martha Ivester, Head of Operations for Google Fiber Nashville and a previous employee at CAA, recalls a conversation she had with one top label executive.

“The exec said, ‘If I had multiple artists in multiple studios around town, I wouldn’t have to get in my car and go to all the studios. I could actually have them all open on a screen and just be able to have a listen in and see how things are going, and talk when I need to, just how much more effective I could be in my job.’” Ivester tells MusicRow. “There are so many people trying to do great music in Nashville and this would make it easier.”

Google Fiber’s reach in Nashville currently extends to seven properties in the Gulch, including Icon, Laurel House, Terrazzo, The James, Rhythm at Music Row, Element Music Row, and Edgehill Apartments.

Eddie Gore

Eddie Gore

Eddie Gore, owner of Historic RCA Studio C, is also an early Google Fiber customer. He noted the asset and speed of Google Fiber just last week, during an urgent upload of a nine-gig music file to his sound mixer.

“Normally I would have had to either get in the car and spend half the day in traffic, or set my computer to upload overnight. Instead, I took that 8- or 9-gig file and ‘whoosh’ it was just done. I said, ‘Are you kidding me? This is great! To hell with wasted gas!’”

However, Google’s charge to bring fiber high-speed internet directly to residences has collided with a slow rollout, as it faces off with two communications industry heavyweights, Comcast and AT&T, in an issue that centers around utility pole attachment agreements.

Due to the Nashville region’s deep limestone, which restrains underground fiber installation, Ivester says 90 percent of Google’s fiber cables will be connected via utility poles. Nashville Electric Service owns approximately 75 percent of the utility poles in Nashville, while AT&T owns an estimated 25 percent.

Under current law, existing internet providers must move their own lines on each utility pole before a new provider can add new cable. First, the pole owner approves the application for a new utility provider to be added to an existing pole. Existing carriers must then move their own lines, with each carrier sending crews sequentially. According to Ivester, the process can take approximately 60 days, and in some cases, up to 90 days for each company to move its equipment around on the utility pole. An average pole in Nashville has three to four carriers.

“If you multiply that by four, that’s one year for each pole to be set up,” says Ivester. “Google Fiber is currently on 33 utility poles in Nashville. Think about trying to get Google Fiber on 88,000 poles.” To date, Google Fiber has submitted 24,000 pole submissions to NES, and 16,000 of those submissions have been approved.

With the help of Metro Council member Anthony Davis, Google Fiber introduced its One Touch Make Ready ordinance, which would significantly decrease installation time on Nashville’s utility poles, by using one approved contractor to move and install equipment for all carriers at once.

Martha Ivester

Martha Ivester

“For example, on an NES-owned pole, you have four carriers on that pole, NES would send one contractor out, they do all that work and can do it in one day, depending on what their work load is that day and who they subcontract out to,” Ivester says. “It’s pretty significant.

“It is really about setting Nashville up for the 21st century,” she continues. “One of the realities is the current system, in the current way you attach to poles, is something that was devised years ago and is not really appropriate for the scale of deployment that a new provider needs.”

AT&T and Comcast have argued that the One Touch Make Ready policy would disrupt service and cause safety hazards. Additionally, AT&T argues that the One Touch Make Ready ordinance would violate its union contracts with Communications Workers of America, due to non-represented workers that could possibly be changing the lines. According to Ivester, Google Fiber has worked with a variety of contractors, both union and non-union, on their recent installs.

In early August, the first of three council votes were held to consider the ordinance. Metro Council’s next vote will take place Sept. 6.

Rodney Crowell is one musician skeptical of Google Fiber. In an article published in July in the Nashville Scene, his statement provided by Content Creators Coalition begins this way:

“As Google makes its demands on Nashville, a city revered for its export of music, I urge our leaders and lawmakers to examine the realities of artistic life in the digital age. Google is able to exploit artists due to outdated laws (such as the DMCA Safe Harbor provisions), and it is up to all lawmakers to stand up for the music that is our city’s lifeblood, especially in the ever-evolving digital realm. I embrace accessibility, but the protection of Nashville’s artists, revision of antiquated laws, and demand for corporate accountability should come before Google is granted access to our city’s infrastructure. And fellow artists, we who are complicit in this injustice, now is the time to demand your leaders and lawmakers take a stand on our behalf.”

After a full day of negotiations led by Nashville Mayor Megan Barry’s office on Aug. 24, an assembly of internet providers were unable to come to a compromise or agreement on the issue. Ivester asserts that the alternatives suggested to the One Touch Make Ready policy during the meeting with Comcast, Google Fiber, AT&T, NES, and Metro are not sufficient.

“Google Fiber believes that in order to get the city ready to employ this type of infrastructure, that tweaks to the system are not enough. We look forward to a change, which we feel, really makes sense to come out in the form of this ordinance. Competition is a good thing,” Ivester says. “When Google comes to a market, other providers increase their speeds and drop their prices. We’ve seen that in other states and certainly in Nashville. This is not just for ourselves but for anyone who wants to attach in the future. It’s not just the three of us on the poles. There are a lot of other people who would like to see this change as well.”

Andrew Kautz

Andrew Kautz

“Music Row has always been the hub of creativity for Nashville’s music community but has lacked in the core infrastructure needed to help the creative community connect to the rest of the world,” adds Andrew Kautz, Chief Operating Officer for Big Machine Label Group. “I can speak from experience of trying to find affordable and reliable connectivity on Music Row as we struggled just to make our phones work reliably with the existing copper infrastructure. When we made the move to fiber there were very few options and most were still cost prohibitive. Our campus of six buildings are all connected via fiber but we still have limited options for affordable bandwidth. Google Fiber’s roll out is important to Nashville’s creative community and we need to fix the roadblocks that are in place that limit competition. It’s time for Nashville to encourage investment in our technological infrastructure to not only attract new technology companies, but to also better equip our community to connect with the rest of the world reliably and efficiently.”

“I look at Kansas City, the first fiber city,” says Ivester. “Someone came in and bought up a bunch of properties and started renting them out to software developers and started this kind of startup village in Kansas City. It was one of the first cities in the US to have Google Fiber, so all these tech whiz kids came in and starting creating. I see that happening in Nashville. We have this great quote we use at Google, from Vint Serf, known as the father of the internet. He says that 99 percent of what we will do on the internet hasn’t even been invented yet. I truly believe that is the case with music. I think there will be true innovations that will come from Nashville and we want to help with that.”

In the meantime, Ivester emphasized the availability of Google’s Fiber Space in Nashville, which is located in the Icon Building at 1108 Division Street, and is open Monday-Saturday from 10 a.m.-7 p.m.

“It’s a community space. We have customer service for the customers we have, but I keep saying to artists to go to the Fiber Space,” Ivester says. “Its doors are open to the music community. Come into the Fiber Space and use it.”

Dottie West Remembered 25 Years After Fatal Car Accident

Jeannie Seely places a memorial cross on the 25th anniversary of the crash that claimed Dottie West's life.

Jeannie Seely places a memorial cross near the Briley Parkway exit in Nashville on the 25th anniversary of the car accident there that claimed Dottie West’s life.

Grand Ole Opry star Jeannie Seely paid tribute to her friend Dottie West on Tuesday (Aug. 30) with a memorial cross on the 25th anniversary of the car accident that claimed the entertainer’s life.

Seely placed the cross at the Briley Parkway exit on Interstate 40 in Nashville where the crash took place in 1991. West was a passenger in the car, driven by an elderly neighbor who was driving her to the Grand Ole Opry. West died from injuries sustained in the crash on Sept. 4, 1991.

West recorded 15 Top 10 country hits in her extensive career, including two duets with Kenny Rogers. She is buried in McMinnville, Tennessee.

Nash Pop Camp Unites Writers From Nashville, L.A., New York

 Pictured (top left photo, L-R): Eric Daigle (Holy Graffiti), Courtney Allen (Starstruck), Shane Stevens (Holy Graffiti), Soaky Siren, Erika Nuri, Nash Overstreet, Cameron Montgomery, Jesse Lee, Jesse McCartney. Picture bottom L to R: Lauren Jane Sanders, Rachel Knepp, Marcus Cobb, Bryan Lyda, Rachel Tripp, James Slater, Jimmy Robbins, Dave Pittenger

Pictured (top row, L-R): Eric Daigle, Holy Graffiti; Courtney Allen, Starstruck; Shane Stevens, Holy Graffiti; Soaky Siren; Erika Nuri; Nash Overstreet; Cameron Montgomery; Jesse Lee; Jesse McCartney. Pictured (bottom row, L-R): Lauren Jane Sanders, Rachel Knepp, Marcus Cobb, Bryan Lyda, Rachel Tripp, James Slater, Jimmy Robbins, Dave Pittenger

Songwriters from Nashville, Los Angeles and New York City schmoozed on a rooftop party at Nashville’s Element Music Row on Aug. 20 as part of the inaugural Nash Pop Welcome Party.

The event is a collaborative work betweenStarstruck Writers Group and artist development company Holy Graffiti, in an effort to cultivate relationships among rising songwriters, artists and musicians.

“Nothing brings me more joy than to have some of the most talented people in the world all in one beautiful room, breaking bread, and celebrating new relationships, and new music, from first time collaborations. Hopefully this party helped to inspire fresh ideas and excitement for what’s to come,” said Holy Graffiti’s Shane Stevens.

“Before I knew Shane Stevens, I was a fan of his work,” says Courtney Allen, Creative Director for Starstruck Writers Group. ” The best thing about this industry is that you get to work with your friends. Eric, Shane and I share the same passion and vision so it seemed like a no brainer to team up with them to create something truly special that has never been done before in Nashville. This is just the beginning of big things to come for Starstruck and Holy Graffiti,” said Allen.

Music tech company Jammber sponsored the event, as the company’s CEO/founder Marcus Cobb offered a presentation that showed Jammber’s ability to manage creative projects and income for artists, songwriters, producers and contributors.