
Brent Maher
By James Rea
Don’t miss Brent Maher’s second appearance on The Producer’s Chair on Thursday, April 24 at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m. Details at www.theproducerschair.com.
•••
Six-time Grammy winner
Brent Maher has 498 credits to his name as a producer, engineer, mixer, composer, guitarist, percussionist, background vocalist and hand-clapper.
His mantle of Grammys are from work with
The Judds (“Mama He’s Crazy,” “Grandpa,” “Give A Little Love,” “Love Can Build A Bridge”);
Kathy Mattea (Good News), and
Willie Nelson,
Merle Haggard and
Ray Price (“The Last of The Breed”). With three decades of experience and over 150 major cuts, Maher has received 30-plus awards from ASCAP and NSAI, plus numerous CMA, ACM, SOCAN and CCMA Awards.
Behind the glass, he has guided the studio work of
Roy Orbison, Diana Ross & The Supremes, Chuck Berry, Ray Price, Sammy Davis Jr., Gladys Knight, Louis Prima, Merle Haggard, Glen Campbell, Tanya Tucker, The Four Tops, Jimmy Buffet, Sly and The Family Stone, Dottie West, Kenny Rogers, Jo Dee Messina, Shelby Lynne, Kathy Mattea, Nickle Creek, Carl Perkins, Olivia Newton John, Dave Loggins, Ray Charles, Bobby Darin, Benny Hester and of course his discovery-The Judds. Not to forget
Ike & Tina‘s “Proud Mary,” The 5th Dimension’s “Age of Aquarius,”
Duke Ellington‘s last album before his death, and
Elvis‘s last No. 1, “Way Down.” Now that’s what I call historical.
Brent’s vision for the Judds’ acoustic County sound catapulted them to the stratosphere and after a record deal with RCA/Curb. He co-wrote many of their hits including “Why Not Me” with
Harlan Howard and
Sonny Throckmorton, “Girls’ Night Out” with
Jeff Bullock, “Rockin’ With The Rhythm of The Rain” with
Don Schlitz, “I Know Where I’m Going” and “Turn It Loose” with
Craig Bickhardt and Schlitz and many more. Maher produced all ten of The Judds’ multi-platinum albums.
During that time, he also produced award winning records and No. 1 singles on
Kathy Mattea, Carl Perkins, Michael Johnson‘s Country hits,
Kenny Rogers (“Buy Me A Rose”) and
Shelby Lynne‘s big band project
Temptation.
On the international scene, Maher produced Canadian Country artist
Johnny Reid making him one of the top-selling artists in Canada in 2009-2011). Maher also developed and produced the Grammy nominated self-titled debut from
Bering Strait.
Over the last twenty years, Brent has operated Moraine Music Group which is home to numerous No. 1s by artists he didn’t produce. Singles that include “There’s Your Trouble,” “Suds In the Bucket,” “Small Town USA,” “Bring On The Rain” and many more.
•••
At 18 Brent joined the Air Force and was stationed near Nashville as an aircraft mechanic until he was 22. He played guitar and trumpet, so he put together a cover band for extra money on the weekend. “I knew that music was what I was supposed to be doing,” he says. “But I also knew that our band was not going to be ground-breaking. I listened to records incessantly and while listening to a great
Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions album, I noticed the back of the jacket said ‘recording engineer.’ At that moment, I thought ‘that’s it! That’s what I’m going to do.’ I took a bunch of correspondent courses through the Air Force in sound, acoustics and electronics and the week before I left the Air Force, I went looking for an engineering gig, but soon found out I was terribly under qualified.
“I tore out about two pages of recording studios out of the phonebook and got turned down by every one. All of the engineers working in the studios at that time had a background mixing TV and radio shows. The last door I walked through was
Fred Foster‘s studio, Foster Recording, on 7th Ave. Little did I know that it was one of the premiere studios in Nashville. That’s where I met
Bill Porter and
Tommy Strong, two of the town’s most respected and acclaimed engineers. They were looking for someone to train as a backup engineer. As fate would have it, I walked through that door with my Sunday-best suit on at the right time and they gave me an opportunity that changed my life.”
A few years later, Porter purchased United Recording in Las Vegas and asked Brent to join him. By then, Brent was an engineer with hits under his belt. The first was “Everlasting Love,” by
Robert Knight, which was a connection that would change his course again in the years to come.
Maher’s first major producing gig was with
Bobby Darin.
“Bobby booked the studio for me to mix an album that he recorded in Los Angeles. He was happy with the mixes, but there was one track that didn’t come together. We decided to record it with a group of musicians I had been working with and he absolutely loved it. Then we put his voice on it. A few months later he said, ‘I’m going to start a record company (Direction Records) and I’d like to be partners.’ I was beside myself. We became very, very dear friends. About a year into it, he had another heart episode and pasted away far too young.”
“During that time at United Recording, Ike and Tina Turner came in to record a few sides to complete their record. We hit it off and they did a whole album with me about a year later.”
“On the second project, we recorded ‘Proud Mary,’ which became my first Gold record. Engineering the project was an amazing and inspiring experience on many levels. I hadn’t touched my guitar in years, but I went home one night and I was channeling Ike and I started writing this funky thing and my wife encouraged me to play it for Ike and Tina. The next day after we were done working on their project, I stayed late and demoed the song. It took all the courage I had, but I played it for Ike. I didn’t say I was pitching it, I didn’t say it was me. Ike seemed to be grooving and he said, ‘That’s really funky…Did you write this? Can I play it for Tina?’ They recorded it and I co-produced it with Ike. They recorded ‘Work on Me’ and ‘Love Sweet Love,’ which were also his first cuts, as a writer.”
“Working with Tina was one of the highlights of my career and Ike showed me how to not overwork things and let the groove rule. He was such a great guitar player.
“Oddly enough, a few months later, United Recording burned down. Porter left the studio business to run live sound for Elvis and I was out of a job.
“I felt I should check out what was going on back in Nashville. My first client ever as a recording engineer was
Buzz Cason. He was the co-writer and producer of my first hit, ‘Everlasting Love.’ When I called Buzz, before I said a word, he said, ‘I can’t believe my secretary found you this fast.’ I commented that she never called. And Buzz said, ‘what are you doing on the phone?’ and I said, ‘I called you.’ We were both dumb-founded. Fate had played its hand once again.
“Buzz said, ‘Do you remember the B-side to ‘Everlasting Love,’ ‘Love On A Mountaintop?’ It’s No. 1 in the UK. They want to release an album and we don’t have one. I need you to engineer it. I said [laughing to myself], ‘That shouldn’t be a problem.’
Maher moved back to Nashville to help build Creative Workshop Recording Studio. In the late 70’s at Creative, Maher engineered
Olivia Newton John‘s first album in the U.S. along with projects by
Kenny Rogers, Dolly Parton, Jimmy Buffett, Dottie West, Michael Johnson, Dave Loggins, Larry Gatlin and many others. “I reconnected with
Fred Foster (Monument Records) and engineered some amazing artists on his label including
Roy Orbison, Boots Randolph and
Grady Martin. I engineered ‘Dream Lover’ by
Tanya Tucker and
Glen Campbell, which was written by my old friend
Bobby Darin. Also,
The Faces recorded a few songs at Creative. These were
Ron Wood‘s last recordings with The Faces before he joined
The Rolling Stones.
Beyond his musical career, Maher has given lectures on engineering and production for various schools and universities, he has a large collection of vintage Gretsch guitars and was one of the founding members of Middle Tennessee Fly Fishers. In 2011 he created “Cowboy Golf” and now designs golf courses on ranches, which led to founding the Boots and Bandana Golf Association based in Franklin, Tennessee, at The Pines Golf Course. The events benefit charities that include MusiCares, The Facial Pain Research Foundation, and others.
•••
PC: How did Randy Goodrum’s “Bluer Than Blue” change your life?
BM: I was co-producing
Michael Johnson with
Steve Gibson. As fate would have it, after a
Dave Loggins session that
Randy Goodrum was the keyboard player on, Randy played me ‘Bluer than Blue’ and it was like a light went off in my head that reset the bar-this is how you should feel when you hear a great song.
My friendship with Randy brought me back to writing. Randy was over at my house and he sees this 45 and said, ‘You co-produced Ike and Tina and you wrote the tune by yourself? I gotta hear this. Why don’t you write anymore?’ I thought that page had been turned, but Randy convinced me to start writing songs again. The first song I wrote with Randy, he played it for
Chet Atkins, then Chet cut it on
Perry Como. Shortly afterwards, Randy and Brent co-wrote the No. 1 Hit, ‘A Lesson in Leavin” for
Dottie West and had a second No. 1 on the same song with
Jo Dee Messina in 1999.
When you got back into writing, did you sign a publishing deal?
Around that time,
Gerry Teifer ran ATV Music in Nashville and I went over there looking for songs for my artists but he offered me a deal. I found out real soon what a great organization that was, with
Gerry, and
Sam Trust, out in LA. We all became very good friends and I was a writer at ATV for over 15 years.
How would you describe stylistic focus?
It is very different for each artist. With the Judds, it was all over the board early on. All great music, but difficult to wrap your head around, because their musical appetite was so broad. One song
Kenny O’Dell wrote, ‘Mama He’s Crazy,’ we were sold on, early on. Another that
Dennis Linde wrote called ‘Had a Dream.’ Those two songs established the parameters for the sound. I wanted to create unique acoustic guitar sounds and use mostly acoustic instruments other than bass and steel. That’s when I called
Don Potter, who was my favorite acoustic guitar player at the time. He did some pre-production sessions and once again…it all came together. In 10 albums, we only used electric guitars on about four songs, which included
Mark Knopfler playing on his song ‘Water of Love’ and
Carl Perkins on a song he co-wrote called ‘Let Me Tell You About Love.’ With Wy and Naomi’s vocals at the center of everything, I just didn’t want to clutter things up.
Tell us about SHEL. (Made up of sisters Sarah, Hannah, Eva and Liza)
A few years ago, a friend
John St. John, a radio programmer in Denver asked if I would listen. We drove to Ft. Collins, Col. and I walked into the house and realized I was walking into the domain of SHEL. Everything about the family was dedicated to their music; the whole living room was a rehearsal area. The instrumentation was mandolin, fiddle, keyboards and percussion and I couldn’t even fathom how that could produce, what I was hearing. It was shocking. They were incredibly young yet such accomplished musicians. Liza the drummer was 15 and the eldest was about 22. I found out they’re all classically trained. The last thing they played me was a classical composition that Eva had written called, ‘Tuscany.’ To this day, it is one of the most beautiful pieces of music I’ve ever heard in my life. I left there in a state of shock. Why would I not want to be involved with something so special? So we signed SHEL.
“Part of our artist development plan is to pace songs. We took SHEL to play for the agency that represents Glade products, and our partner in New York got the Splenda spot. In addition, Gareth and Michael Logen have some impressive placements in TV and commercials.”
SHEL has released an EP on Republic and a self-titled debut album, all of which was co-produced by Brent and SHEL. They also produced their own music videos, and even make their own clothes.
How many writers do you have at Moraine?
As a boutique company, we have a few writers, but represent a larger roster. SHEL (Sarah, Hannah, Eva & Liza Holbrook),
Michael Logen, Gareth Dunlop, Mark Selby.
You seem to have gotten away from Country. Was that intentional?
I don’t go out in pursuit of new talent, I just meet them through various ways. I haven’t purposely said, ‘I don’t want to produce Country music, I have just gravitated towards other formats. The new talent that has really turned my head, in the past couple of years, has ranged from folk to soul to blues to Country. I love it all.
Are you still actively writing?
I do some…but mostly for projects or when young artists come to me and want a specific type of song.
How important is social networking and fan engagement today?
It’s important in today’s world and it creates opportunities for young artists to get their music directly to their fans. The negative is when the industry gets more excited about the artist with great social marketing skills, over the artist that is making incredibly innovative music, but less involved in social media.
Do you still record in analog?
Our Trident, which was built back in the 70s, is an analog console. Our outboard gear is analog, but we record on a digital format. We use the radar system and Pro Tools. So we’re capturing the music digitally but we’re using analog processing. I work with a great young engineer,
Charles Yingling, who makes that all come together in the recording, mixing and mastering.
Do you still engineer projects for other producers?
Once in a while… I’ve engineered two records for Fred that I absolutely adore. The first was Willie’s tribute to
Cindy Walker. And the other, which won a Grammy was,
The Last of The Breed album with
Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard and
Ray Price. Being in the middle of that as an engineer was an amazing experience.
Have you ever thought about writing a book?
I’ve been encouraged by some people to do that. My wife is insistent that I do that because of some of the extraordinary circumstances that put me in a position to where I could meet and engineer or produce an amazing array of artists … historical stuff. Sometimes I’ll look back and read my own bio and go, ‘you’ve got to be kiddin’ me.’ I can’t believe I’ve been blessed to work with so many people like
Bobby Darin, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, Carl Perkins, Duke Ellington, and
Elvis that were my childhood heroes and inspired me to pursue music as my career. Yet the new talent I am working with inspires me as much as the legends. The future of music is in good hands with this next generation.
Carrie Underwood Named 'Billboard' Milestone Award Finalist
/by Jessica NicholsonFinal round fan voting is now underway through the Billboard Music Awards, which will air live Sunday, May 18 at 7 p.m. CT on ABC. For more information, visit billboard.com/milestone.
Additional Music Row Properties Sold For Virgin Hotel
/by Jessica NicholsonAs previously reported, the address of the new hotel will be One Music Row, and is expected to open in 2016. The hotel will feature multiple concept suites, food and beverage outlets, and a cutting edge recording studio. Specifically, the Wall Street Journal reports it will have 30 suites, a rooftop bar and restaurant, and spa.
The Nashville Post reports that Hummingbird Productions executive Bob Farnsworth sold his Music Row property to NV Music Row, the company that will develop Virgin Hotel in Nashville. This property, located at 7 Music Sq. W., was sold for $1.057 million.
Additionally, Robert T. Porter has sold the lots next to Farnsworth’s, located at 9 and 11 Music Sq. W., for $2.17 million.
The Queen Anne style building located at 1 Music Sq. W., which sat across from ASCAP at the corner of Division and Music Sq. W. (the lower end of 17th Ave. S.), was the first building torn down last week (April 16) in preparation for the new hotel and was sold for $3.18 million.
The three combined parcels have sold for a total of $6.4 million to NV Music Row, led by David Chase to develop the 240-room hotel.
AT&T's GigaPower Could Be Zooming In To Nashville
/by Sarah SkatesAlready available in Austin and coming to Dallas this summer, AT&T U-verse with GigaPower services include Internet speeds reaching up to 1 Gigabit per second. At this speed, AT&T reports users can download an HD online movie in less than 36 seconds, download 25 songs in one second, and download a TV show in less than 3 seconds. It also means access to TV services that include the most advanced AT&T Total Home DVR with more HD TV streams to record and watch multiple shows simultaneously, plus greater DVR storage capacity.
AT&T says it will work with local leaders in these 21 markets to discuss ways to bring the service to their communities. Communities that have suitable network facilities, and show the strongest investment cases based on anticipated demand and the most receptive policies will influence these future selections.
On Feb. 19, 2014, Google announced it was also investigating the expansion of its Google Fiber network to Nashville. With an Internet connection 100 times faster than traditional broadband service, Google is exploring options in nine U.S. metropolitan cities, including Nashville, Raleigh-Durham, Charlotte, Atlanta, San Antonio, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, Portland and the San Jose and South Bay areas. Google Fiber is currently offered in Provo, Utah, and Kansas City. Construction has begun in Austin.
The Producer's Chair: Brent Maher
/by contributorBrent Maher
By James Rea
Don’t miss Brent Maher’s second appearance on The Producer’s Chair on Thursday, April 24 at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m. Details at www.theproducerschair.com.
•••
Six-time Grammy winner Brent Maher has 498 credits to his name as a producer, engineer, mixer, composer, guitarist, percussionist, background vocalist and hand-clapper.
His mantle of Grammys are from work with The Judds (“Mama He’s Crazy,” “Grandpa,” “Give A Little Love,” “Love Can Build A Bridge”); Kathy Mattea (Good News), and Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard and Ray Price (“The Last of The Breed”). With three decades of experience and over 150 major cuts, Maher has received 30-plus awards from ASCAP and NSAI, plus numerous CMA, ACM, SOCAN and CCMA Awards.
Behind the glass, he has guided the studio work of Roy Orbison, Diana Ross & The Supremes, Chuck Berry, Ray Price, Sammy Davis Jr., Gladys Knight, Louis Prima, Merle Haggard, Glen Campbell, Tanya Tucker, The Four Tops, Jimmy Buffet, Sly and The Family Stone, Dottie West, Kenny Rogers, Jo Dee Messina, Shelby Lynne, Kathy Mattea, Nickle Creek, Carl Perkins, Olivia Newton John, Dave Loggins, Ray Charles, Bobby Darin, Benny Hester and of course his discovery-The Judds. Not to forget Ike & Tina‘s “Proud Mary,” The 5th Dimension’s “Age of Aquarius,” Duke Ellington‘s last album before his death, and Elvis‘s last No. 1, “Way Down.” Now that’s what I call historical.
Brent’s vision for the Judds’ acoustic County sound catapulted them to the stratosphere and after a record deal with RCA/Curb. He co-wrote many of their hits including “Why Not Me” with Harlan Howard and Sonny Throckmorton, “Girls’ Night Out” with Jeff Bullock, “Rockin’ With The Rhythm of The Rain” with Don Schlitz, “I Know Where I’m Going” and “Turn It Loose” with Craig Bickhardt and Schlitz and many more. Maher produced all ten of The Judds’ multi-platinum albums.
During that time, he also produced award winning records and No. 1 singles on Kathy Mattea, Carl Perkins, Michael Johnson‘s Country hits, Kenny Rogers (“Buy Me A Rose”) and Shelby Lynne‘s big band project Temptation.
On the international scene, Maher produced Canadian Country artist Johnny Reid making him one of the top-selling artists in Canada in 2009-2011). Maher also developed and produced the Grammy nominated self-titled debut from Bering Strait.
Over the last twenty years, Brent has operated Moraine Music Group which is home to numerous No. 1s by artists he didn’t produce. Singles that include “There’s Your Trouble,” “Suds In the Bucket,” “Small Town USA,” “Bring On The Rain” and many more.
•••
At 18 Brent joined the Air Force and was stationed near Nashville as an aircraft mechanic until he was 22. He played guitar and trumpet, so he put together a cover band for extra money on the weekend. “I knew that music was what I was supposed to be doing,” he says. “But I also knew that our band was not going to be ground-breaking. I listened to records incessantly and while listening to a great Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions album, I noticed the back of the jacket said ‘recording engineer.’ At that moment, I thought ‘that’s it! That’s what I’m going to do.’ I took a bunch of correspondent courses through the Air Force in sound, acoustics and electronics and the week before I left the Air Force, I went looking for an engineering gig, but soon found out I was terribly under qualified.
“I tore out about two pages of recording studios out of the phonebook and got turned down by every one. All of the engineers working in the studios at that time had a background mixing TV and radio shows. The last door I walked through was Fred Foster‘s studio, Foster Recording, on 7th Ave. Little did I know that it was one of the premiere studios in Nashville. That’s where I met Bill Porter and Tommy Strong, two of the town’s most respected and acclaimed engineers. They were looking for someone to train as a backup engineer. As fate would have it, I walked through that door with my Sunday-best suit on at the right time and they gave me an opportunity that changed my life.”
A few years later, Porter purchased United Recording in Las Vegas and asked Brent to join him. By then, Brent was an engineer with hits under his belt. The first was “Everlasting Love,” by Robert Knight, which was a connection that would change his course again in the years to come.
Maher’s first major producing gig was with Bobby Darin.
“Bobby booked the studio for me to mix an album that he recorded in Los Angeles. He was happy with the mixes, but there was one track that didn’t come together. We decided to record it with a group of musicians I had been working with and he absolutely loved it. Then we put his voice on it. A few months later he said, ‘I’m going to start a record company (Direction Records) and I’d like to be partners.’ I was beside myself. We became very, very dear friends. About a year into it, he had another heart episode and pasted away far too young.”
“During that time at United Recording, Ike and Tina Turner came in to record a few sides to complete their record. We hit it off and they did a whole album with me about a year later.”
“On the second project, we recorded ‘Proud Mary,’ which became my first Gold record. Engineering the project was an amazing and inspiring experience on many levels. I hadn’t touched my guitar in years, but I went home one night and I was channeling Ike and I started writing this funky thing and my wife encouraged me to play it for Ike and Tina. The next day after we were done working on their project, I stayed late and demoed the song. It took all the courage I had, but I played it for Ike. I didn’t say I was pitching it, I didn’t say it was me. Ike seemed to be grooving and he said, ‘That’s really funky…Did you write this? Can I play it for Tina?’ They recorded it and I co-produced it with Ike. They recorded ‘Work on Me’ and ‘Love Sweet Love,’ which were also his first cuts, as a writer.”
“Working with Tina was one of the highlights of my career and Ike showed me how to not overwork things and let the groove rule. He was such a great guitar player.
“Oddly enough, a few months later, United Recording burned down. Porter left the studio business to run live sound for Elvis and I was out of a job.
“I felt I should check out what was going on back in Nashville. My first client ever as a recording engineer was Buzz Cason. He was the co-writer and producer of my first hit, ‘Everlasting Love.’ When I called Buzz, before I said a word, he said, ‘I can’t believe my secretary found you this fast.’ I commented that she never called. And Buzz said, ‘what are you doing on the phone?’ and I said, ‘I called you.’ We were both dumb-founded. Fate had played its hand once again.
“Buzz said, ‘Do you remember the B-side to ‘Everlasting Love,’ ‘Love On A Mountaintop?’ It’s No. 1 in the UK. They want to release an album and we don’t have one. I need you to engineer it. I said [laughing to myself], ‘That shouldn’t be a problem.’
Maher moved back to Nashville to help build Creative Workshop Recording Studio. In the late 70’s at Creative, Maher engineered Olivia Newton John‘s first album in the U.S. along with projects by Kenny Rogers, Dolly Parton, Jimmy Buffett, Dottie West, Michael Johnson, Dave Loggins, Larry Gatlin and many others. “I reconnected with Fred Foster (Monument Records) and engineered some amazing artists on his label including Roy Orbison, Boots Randolph and Grady Martin. I engineered ‘Dream Lover’ by Tanya Tucker and Glen Campbell, which was written by my old friend Bobby Darin. Also, The Faces recorded a few songs at Creative. These were Ron Wood‘s last recordings with The Faces before he joined The Rolling Stones.
Beyond his musical career, Maher has given lectures on engineering and production for various schools and universities, he has a large collection of vintage Gretsch guitars and was one of the founding members of Middle Tennessee Fly Fishers. In 2011 he created “Cowboy Golf” and now designs golf courses on ranches, which led to founding the Boots and Bandana Golf Association based in Franklin, Tennessee, at The Pines Golf Course. The events benefit charities that include MusiCares, The Facial Pain Research Foundation, and others.
•••
PC: How did Randy Goodrum’s “Bluer Than Blue” change your life?
BM: I was co-producing Michael Johnson with Steve Gibson. As fate would have it, after a Dave Loggins session that Randy Goodrum was the keyboard player on, Randy played me ‘Bluer than Blue’ and it was like a light went off in my head that reset the bar-this is how you should feel when you hear a great song.
My friendship with Randy brought me back to writing. Randy was over at my house and he sees this 45 and said, ‘You co-produced Ike and Tina and you wrote the tune by yourself? I gotta hear this. Why don’t you write anymore?’ I thought that page had been turned, but Randy convinced me to start writing songs again. The first song I wrote with Randy, he played it for Chet Atkins, then Chet cut it on Perry Como. Shortly afterwards, Randy and Brent co-wrote the No. 1 Hit, ‘A Lesson in Leavin” for Dottie West and had a second No. 1 on the same song with Jo Dee Messina in 1999.
When you got back into writing, did you sign a publishing deal?
Around that time, Gerry Teifer ran ATV Music in Nashville and I went over there looking for songs for my artists but he offered me a deal. I found out real soon what a great organization that was, with Gerry, and Sam Trust, out in LA. We all became very good friends and I was a writer at ATV for over 15 years.
How would you describe stylistic focus?
It is very different for each artist. With the Judds, it was all over the board early on. All great music, but difficult to wrap your head around, because their musical appetite was so broad. One song Kenny O’Dell wrote, ‘Mama He’s Crazy,’ we were sold on, early on. Another that Dennis Linde wrote called ‘Had a Dream.’ Those two songs established the parameters for the sound. I wanted to create unique acoustic guitar sounds and use mostly acoustic instruments other than bass and steel. That’s when I called Don Potter, who was my favorite acoustic guitar player at the time. He did some pre-production sessions and once again…it all came together. In 10 albums, we only used electric guitars on about four songs, which included Mark Knopfler playing on his song ‘Water of Love’ and Carl Perkins on a song he co-wrote called ‘Let Me Tell You About Love.’ With Wy and Naomi’s vocals at the center of everything, I just didn’t want to clutter things up.
Tell us about SHEL. (Made up of sisters Sarah, Hannah, Eva and Liza)
A few years ago, a friend John St. John, a radio programmer in Denver asked if I would listen. We drove to Ft. Collins, Col. and I walked into the house and realized I was walking into the domain of SHEL. Everything about the family was dedicated to their music; the whole living room was a rehearsal area. The instrumentation was mandolin, fiddle, keyboards and percussion and I couldn’t even fathom how that could produce, what I was hearing. It was shocking. They were incredibly young yet such accomplished musicians. Liza the drummer was 15 and the eldest was about 22. I found out they’re all classically trained. The last thing they played me was a classical composition that Eva had written called, ‘Tuscany.’ To this day, it is one of the most beautiful pieces of music I’ve ever heard in my life. I left there in a state of shock. Why would I not want to be involved with something so special? So we signed SHEL.
“Part of our artist development plan is to pace songs. We took SHEL to play for the agency that represents Glade products, and our partner in New York got the Splenda spot. In addition, Gareth and Michael Logen have some impressive placements in TV and commercials.”
SHEL has released an EP on Republic and a self-titled debut album, all of which was co-produced by Brent and SHEL. They also produced their own music videos, and even make their own clothes.
How many writers do you have at Moraine?
As a boutique company, we have a few writers, but represent a larger roster. SHEL (Sarah, Hannah, Eva & Liza Holbrook), Michael Logen, Gareth Dunlop, Mark Selby.
You seem to have gotten away from Country. Was that intentional?
I don’t go out in pursuit of new talent, I just meet them through various ways. I haven’t purposely said, ‘I don’t want to produce Country music, I have just gravitated towards other formats. The new talent that has really turned my head, in the past couple of years, has ranged from folk to soul to blues to Country. I love it all.
Are you still actively writing?
I do some…but mostly for projects or when young artists come to me and want a specific type of song.
How important is social networking and fan engagement today?
It’s important in today’s world and it creates opportunities for young artists to get their music directly to their fans. The negative is when the industry gets more excited about the artist with great social marketing skills, over the artist that is making incredibly innovative music, but less involved in social media.
Do you still record in analog?
Our Trident, which was built back in the 70s, is an analog console. Our outboard gear is analog, but we record on a digital format. We use the radar system and Pro Tools. So we’re capturing the music digitally but we’re using analog processing. I work with a great young engineer, Charles Yingling, who makes that all come together in the recording, mixing and mastering.
Do you still engineer projects for other producers?
Once in a while… I’ve engineered two records for Fred that I absolutely adore. The first was Willie’s tribute to Cindy Walker. And the other, which won a Grammy was, The Last of The Breed album with Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard and Ray Price. Being in the middle of that as an engineer was an amazing experience.
Have you ever thought about writing a book?
I’ve been encouraged by some people to do that. My wife is insistent that I do that because of some of the extraordinary circumstances that put me in a position to where I could meet and engineer or produce an amazing array of artists … historical stuff. Sometimes I’ll look back and read my own bio and go, ‘you’ve got to be kiddin’ me.’ I can’t believe I’ve been blessed to work with so many people like Bobby Darin, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, Carl Perkins, Duke Ellington, and Elvis that were my childhood heroes and inspired me to pursue music as my career. Yet the new talent I am working with inspires me as much as the legends. The future of music is in good hands with this next generation.
Kacey Musgraves Meets Katy Perry at the 'CMT Crossroads'
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): John Hamlin, SVP Music Events and Talent, CMT; Katy Perry; Kacey Musgraves; Jason Owen, Sandbox Entertainment; Bradford Cobb, Direct Management; Martin Kirkup, Direct Management.
Kacey Musgraves joined Katy Perry for a taping of CMT Crossroads in Los Angeles on April 18. The pair taped the 50th episode of the critically acclaimed series. Among the songs included in the taping are Perry’s “Roar” “Firework,” and “Teenage Dream.” “I’d say she’s the queen of following your arrow,” Musgraves said of Perry before performing her own Country hit, “Follow Your Arrow.”
CMT Crossroads: Katy Perry and Kacey Musgraves will premiere Friday, June 13 at 10 p.m. ET on CMT. Air dates for VH1, MTV, MTV Hits and Palladia will been announced soon. Musgraves will join Perry for several Prismatic World Tour dates this summer.
[Updated]: Artist Updates (4/21/14)
/by Jessica NicholsonDave Haywood and Kelli Cashiola Haywood
Lady Antebellum‘s Dave Haywood and wife Kelli are expecting their first child in September 2014. The couple announced the news via twitter.
“So excited for a new Baby A on the way in Sept,” they wrote. “And it’s a boy!!!” The couple recently celebrated their second wedding anniversary.
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Motely Crue’s Vince Neil connected backstage with ACM Entertainer of the Year George Strait at the recent ACM Awards. This summer, Big Machine will release a Motley Crue tribute album featuring many of today’s biggest Country artists.
Pictured (L-R): George Strait, Vince Neil, Big Machine Label Group President/CEO Scott Borchetta and SVP of Creative Sandi Spika Borchetta
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Mallary Hope and Ryan Dokke
Kristian Bush is working on a solo album. He posted the news on his website recently, explaining, “From 300 songs, I have chosen 15; the next step is to get that down to 12. The songs need mixing and mastering…[I will also pick] a single, and take new photos, and design the album art…and introduce the music to my friends at radio, and play more live shows.” Bush has been working with Streamsound Records.
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Sony Music Nashville’s Ryan Dokke wed singer-songwriter Mallary Hope on Sunday, April 13, surrounded by parents and grandparents. They were married at Hickory Hills Baptist Church in Mt. Juliet, Tenn. Dokke is part of the Arista promo team.
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Nashville musician Buzz Cason has released new album Troubadour Heart (Plowboy Records) and is touring in support of the project, with several local shows on the line up, including a show Friday, April 25 at The Palace Theatre in Gallatin, Tenn. It is his 12th album to date, and his fifth Americana/Roots album. He is best known for writing “Everlasting Love.”
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Katie Armiger, Jamie Lynn Spears and Jordan Anderson (pictured below L-R) performed Wednesday night (April 16) at My Country 102.3 FM’s Girls with Guitars concert at the Marion Theatre in Ocala, Fla.
Craig Wiseman's Music Row Rally Rescheduled
/by Jessica NicholsonCraig Wiseman
Craig Wiseman and Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee’s 5th annual Music Row Rally has been rescheduled for Wednesday, April 30 in the parking lot of Big Loud Shirt, located at 1111 16th Ave. S.
Hosted by Wiseman, the event will feature fare from local food trucks including Riffs Fine Street Foods, Deg Thai, Jeni’s Splendid Ice Cream, and Smoke Et Al. The Music Row Rally will be held from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. Ten percent of all profits made by the food trucks will be donated to Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee. A $1 donation is asked from all attendees at the door as an additional way to give the charity.
The Music Row Rally will aid in kicking off the 10th Annual Stars For Second Harvest benefit on Tuesday, June 3. The show will be held 7:30 p.m. at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium. Florida Georgia Line will headline for the third consecutive year. Tickets are on sale for $35 at ticketmaster.com.
NaFF Hosts 'Glen Campbell…I'll Be Me' Premiere
/by Eric T. ParkerPictured (L-R): Ashley Campbell, Ted Crockett, James Ketch, Kim Campbell, Trevor Albert, Brandyn Payne, Shannon Campbell. Photo: Shelley Justiss.
The Nashville Film Festival hosted the worldwide premiere of James Keach’s (Director/Producer) and Trevor Albert’s (Producer) latest documentary, Glen Campbell…I’ll Be Me, on Friday evening, April 18.
The 104-minute behind-the-scenes, beyond-the-music documentary follows Campbell, family and friends through a public diagnosis of Alzheimer’s in 2011 to his final concert in 2012. Most recently, Campbell was moved into a care facility, which his family references during comments before the showing on the red carpet.
“We knew if we were to produce a film for one of the greatest entertainers, we had to do it the right way,” said Keach, who produced and acted in the the full-length film Walk the Line.
“We were on a tightrope every single performance,” said Albert after expressing initial conservations for taking on the project, which spanned 151 live shows. “But even [some of the shows] at the end of the tour, may have been some of his best.”
The project features a pairing of serious, heavy moments mixed with the comic relief of Campbell himself, as family members’ vulnerably exposing their own progressions of grief, towards acceptance and activism.
Big Machine Label Group will release a soundtrack, including “I’m Not Gonna Miss You,” an unreleased studio-produced work from Campbell, featured at the end of the documentary. Additional artists will be featured on the forthcoming release.
Brad Paisley, Kathy Mattea, Bruce Springsteen and Chad Smith (Red Hot Chili Peppers) personally described dealing with the devastating disease in their own families in the film. Guest commentary was additionally featured from Jimmy Webb, Sheryl Crow, Vince Gill, Buddy Jewell, Scott Borchetta, Paul McCartney, Larry Gatlin, Keith Urban, Steve Martin, Blake Shelton, Bill Clinton and Nancy Pelosi.
New titles performed included “A Better Place” and “In My Arms,” in addition to Ashley Campbell’s “I’ll Do The Remembering,” a title written and performed for her father.
Campbell performed covers of “Lovesick Blues” (Hank Williams) and “Nothing But The Whole Wide World” (Jakob Dylan). Signature hits included “Gentle On My Mind,” “Try A Little Kindness,” “Wichita Lineman,” “The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress,” “By The Time I Get To Phoenix,” “Rhinestone Cowboy,” and “Southern Nights.”
The 45th Annual Nashville Film Festival takes place through Saturday, April 26 with music-centered projects Béla Fleck: How to Write a Banjo Concerto, The Ballad of Shovels & Rope, and The Winding Stream – The Carters, the Cashes and the Course of Country Music.
Francesca Battistelli Celebrates Gold Single
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Matt Goodwin (Francesca’s drummer & husband), Josh Bailey (SVP, A&R, Word Entertainment), Ian Eskelin (producer), Francesca Battistelli, Dale Mathews (SVP of Music Publishing and Church Resources, Word Entertainment), Rod Riley (President and CEO, Word Entertainment), Kellyn Bailey (Francesca’s Brand Manager, Word Entertainment).
Francesca Battistelli has earned gold status with her single “Free To Be Me,” which has sold more than 500,000 copies. “Free To Be Me” is a chart-topping hit from Battistelli’s My Paper Heart album (Fervent Records). Industry colleagues at Word Entertainment surprised the singer-songwriter on Thursday, April 17 in Nashville with a plaque commemorating the honor.
“Free to Be Me” earned Battistelli a Best Gospel Performance Grammy nomination in 2009. In 2011, she garnered a Dove Award for “Artist of the Year”; Battistelli is the first female to win the Artist of the Year honor since Amy Grant in 1992.
Battistelli will release her third Fervent Records album, If We’re Honest, on Tuesday, April 22.
Battistelli celebrates with Rod Riley (Word Entertainment President & CEO).
Blake Shelton To Perform at iHeartRadio Music Awards
/by Jessica NicholsonBlake Shelton
Blake Shelton is among the performers added to the lineup of the inaugural iHeartRadio Music Awards, to be aired live from Los Angeles’ Shrine Auditorium May 1 on NBC. Additional newly announced performers include Drake, Kendrick Lamar, Pharrell, Pitbull, Shakira and Thirty Seconds to Mars. They will join recently announced entertainers Luke Bryan, Ariana Grande, Arcade Fire and Ed Sheeran.
Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Steven Tyler, Imagine Dragons, Chris Martin, Lorde, Demi Lovato are also set to make appearances on the show.
In addition to performances at the Shrine Auditorium, the event will feature artists playing iconic venues across Los Angeles, including The Roxy and the Hotel Cafe.
Category finalists for the iHeartRadio Music Awards were announced on March 26. Shelton is nominated twice in the Country Song of the Year category, for “Boys ‘Round Here” and “Mine Would Be You.”