SunTrust adds Michael Ribas

MichaelRibas

Michael Ribas


SunTrust has added Michael Ribas as Mortgage Loan Officer to its Personal Banking services in the Music Row office. Ribas brings over eight years of experience to his role, originating residential loans to SunTrust Music’s clientele, helping first time homebuyers and private wealth clients. He has a proven track record with SunTrust Mortgage, becoming a member of the Bank’s Chairman’s Club for being one of its top performers.
“Michael Ribas is service-oriented, highly motivated and passionate about helping clients with residential financing needs; he will be a great asset to our team,” says Andrew Kintz, Managing Director of SunTrust Sports & Entertainment division.
Ribas is a member of the Junior Chamber of Commerce and is involved with the Vanderbilt Alumni Committee. His hobbies include pick-up basketball and training for marathons.

Weekly Chart Report (10/25/13)

SPIN ZONE

Sony Music Nashville recording artist Angie Johnson recently performed at WEIO’s Barn Bash in promotion of this week’s No. 32 single, “Swagger." Pictured (L-R): RG Jones, Sony Music Nashville; Kelly Green, WEIO GM; Angie Johnson; WEIO on-air personality Ken Folkes; and Sony Music Nashville's Rusty Sherrill.

Sony Music Nashville recording artist Angie Johnson recently performed at WEIO’s Barn Bash in promotion of this week’s No. 32 single, “Swagger.” Pictured (L-R): RG Jones, Sony Music Nashville; Kelly Green, WEIO GM; Angie Johnson; WEIO on-air personality Ken Folkes; and Sony Music Nashville’s Rusty Sherrill.


After spending 15 weeks on MusicRow’s chart, Darius Rucker’s “Radio” rides the airwaves to No. 1 with 3,111 spins. Meanwhile, Keith Urban and Miranda Lambert’s “We Were Us” quickly approaches the No. 1 spot, landing at No. 2 in its seventh week on the chart. Eli Young Band’s “Drunk Last Night” climbs to No. 3, while Eric Paslay’s “Friday Night” falls to No. 4. The Band Perry’s “Don’t Let Me Be Lonely” sits at No. 5. Rounding out the Top 10 this week is Jake Owen’s “Days of Gold” at No. 6, Joe Nichols’ “Sunny and 75” at No. 7, Cassadee Pope’s “Wasting All These Tears” at No. 8, Brad Paisley’s “I Can’t Change The World” at No. 9 and Love and Theft’s “If You Ever Get Lonely” at No. 10.
Lady Antebellum’s “Compass” is the week’s greatest gainer. The song continues to head north on MusicRow’s chart, rising to No. 28 with another 368 spins. George Strait’s “I Got A Car” makes a solid debut at No. 61 with 310 spins. Florida Georgia Line’s “Stay” jumps to No. 18 with another 300 spins, while Urban and Lambert’s “We Were Us” reaches No. 2 with an added 246 spins. Finally, Jerrod Niemann’s “Drink To That All Night” hits No. 57 with an extra 233 spins.
MusicRow welcomes five stellar debuts this week, with Strait’s “I Got A Car” debuting at No. 61, Kacey Musgraves’ “Follow Your Arrow” at No. 64, The Sins Country’s “Muscadine” at No. 77, Will Hoge’s “Strong” at No. 78 and Taylor Made’s “Somewhere Between” at No. 80.
Frozen Playlists: KWCK, WUCZ, KDKD, KFTX, KIAI, WXXK, WAAG
Lee Brice celebrated the kick-off of his headlining "The Otherside Tour" with some radio and industry friends at the House of Blues in Boston, MA, on Oct. 10. Pictured (L-R): Ginny Rogers (WKLB) John Innamorato (Livenation), Brice and Haley McLemore

Lee Brice celebrated the kick-off of his headlining “The Otherside Tour” with some radio and industry friends at the House of Blues in Boston, Mass., on Oct. 10. Pictured (L-R): Ginny Rogers (WKLB,) John Innamorato (Livenation), Brice and Haley McLemore


Upcoming Singles
October 28
Little River Band/You Dream, I’ll Drive/Frontiers
Mitch Goudy/Blow These Speakers Out/Third Floor Records
Blackjack Billy/Get Some/Bigger Picture
Sheryl Crow/Callin’ Me When I’m Lonely/Warner Bros.-WMN
Eric Church/The Outsiders/EMI Records Nashville
November 4
Tyler Farr/Whiskey In My Water/Columbia Nashville
Luke Bryan/Drink A Beer/Capitol
George Strait/I Got A Car/MCA Nashville

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New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
George Strait/I Got A Car/MCA – 61
Kacey Musgraves/Follow Your Arrow/Mercury Nashville – 64
The Sins Country/Muscadine/GTR Nashville – 77
Will Hoge/Strong/Prospector-Crescendo – 78
Taylor Made/Somewhere Between/LG Records – 80
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
George Strait/I Got A Car/MCA – 27
Jerrod Niemann/Drink To That All Night/Arista Nashville – 17
Justin Moore/Lettin’ The Night Roll/Valory Music – 17
Kacey Musgraves/Follow Your Arrow/Mercury Nashville – 16
Eric Church/The Outsiders/EMI Nashville – 13
Lady Antebellum/Compass/Capitol – 13
Dan+Shay/19 You+Me/Warner Brothers – 12
Brett Eldredge/Beat Of The Music/Atlantic-Warner Bros. – 10
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Lady Antebellum/Compass/Capitol – 368
George Strait/I Got A Car/MCA – 310
Florida Georgia Line/Stay/Republic Nashville – 300
Keith Urban feat. Miranda Lambert/We Were Us/Capitol Nashville-Hit Red Records – 246
Jerrod Niemann/Drink To That All Night/Arista Nashville – 233
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Josh Pruno/Cut Offs/Lawrence Music Group – 210
Laura Bell Bundy/Two Step/Big Machine – 202
Ryan Broshear/Make Each Moment Last/Painted Horse – 200
Aaron Watson/July In Cheyenne/HTK Records – 197
LoCash Cowboys/Best Seat In The House/Average Joes Entertainment-Tenacity Records – 188

Thomas Rhett stopped by Nashville Mornings at 103 WKDF in Nashville prior to his It Goes Like This release on The Valory Music Co. Tues., Oct. 29. Pictured (L-R): Becca Walls, Rhett, Marty McFly.

Thomas Rhett stopped by Nashville Mornings at 103 WKDF in Nashville prior to his It Goes Like This release on The Valory Music Co., which releases Tuesday, Oct. 29. Pictured (L-R): Becca Walls, Rhett, Marty McFly.


Lew Dickey (second from R) and JT Batson (R) pose with guests at the NASH Bash at Atlanta's Terminal West, which featured host Kix Brooks and performances by Kellie Pickler, Laura Bell Bundy, Jaida Dreyer and Kenny Rogers. (Photo credit: Austin Holt)

Lew Dickey (second from R) and JT Batson (R) poses with guests at the NASH Bash at Atlanta’s Terminal West, which featured host Kix Brooks and performances by Kellie Pickler, Laura Bell Bundy, Jaida Dreyer and Kenny Rogers. (Photo credit: Austin Holt)

Charlie Cook On Air: The Problem With Diary Measurement

Charlie Cook

Charlie Cook


About six weeks ago I wrote about the incredible summer country music stations had in 2013. At the time I attributed some of that success to the amazing tour schedule this year by superstars like Jason Aldean, Taylor Swift, Brad Paisley, Kenny Chesney and Blake Shelton. I don’t remember a year when fans could experience this much live music over a few weeks time.
Not only were the headliners creating this excitement but up and down the roster of opening acts legitimate superstars were coming to the market. Miranda Lambert, Jake Owen, Eric Church, Chris Young and on and on. It was one of those summers where, if you lived in a major market, you could stand still and watch the Top 40 come to life every weekend.
WKLB shot to the top of the PPM ratings in Boston for the first time during the summer, enjoying their best ratings ever. WYCD in Detroit, which has often been the number one station in town, too had a great couple of months while country concerts dominated second only to the Tigers. The same for Pittsburgh and WDSY.
I know having the performers come to town brings with it extra effort on the programming and promotion staffs and this extra effort is what drove the ratings, but at that time I wondered if the live performances or the strength of the music itself was the driver. I said I thought it was more the live music.
Now to be fair, many country stations, in PPM markets, did gangbuster this Summer and even markets where the superstars did not visit did well. The summer Nielsen Audio ratings are now in for diary markets and the results are more mixed than in PPM markets. Many things play into this.
First PPM, even with the limited amount of meters in the market, is much more reliable (and of course immediate) than the diary system. I am becoming more and more disenchanted with the diary system as Nielsen Audio struggles with finding people (under 50) willing to keep the diary. Add to this the challenge of having listeners keep an accurate record of their habits.
What did you have for lunch Tuesday? What station did you listen to from noon to 3 p.m.? What time did you get home Monday night? What was the final score of the Vikings/Giants game? (Yeah I know, who cares?)
There were 55 diary markets reported for the summer book that had Country stations in them. In those 55 markets I counted 89 country stations. Thirty-six of them were down and 44 were up. Many stayed the same. Some markets, like Tulsa and Albany, saw all three of their stations go up. Quite a feat that speaks to the format itself. Nine markets, each with at least two stations, saw all of the stations fall.
As an aside Jackson, Miss. went from 12 percent of the audience listening to Country music to 9.4 percent listening. Really? Have you been to Jackson? Do you really think less than 10 percent of the people in Jackson listen to Country music? It’s friggin’ Mississippi. Do you think Nielsen Audio needs to improve their measurement system in Jackson? That is the problem with diary measurement. But if we look at all 55 markets maybe we can get a feel for the format’s strength this past summer in smaller markets.
I wish the excitement of the live performances could trickle down to markets like Jackson, Dayton and Grand Rapids. I have a tendency to tell programmers to find a way to make similar excitement on the air but this may be easier said than done. There are a number of superstars bring their own excitement. This has been a good music year for a handful of big acts but what about all of the new acts that are not yet established on the radio? With Thomas Rhett being on the Aldean tour, this was a real boost for building his familiarity in the larger markets the tour played, but I wonder how that translates to smaller markets who have yet to see how exciting an act his really is.
This might also be the biggest year for new acts hitting the top of the charts. I’m not sure if the listener can differentiate between Rhett, Brett Eldridge, Tyler Farr, Eric Paslay, Charlie Worsham , et al. Now it is incumbent on the record companies and radio stations to make these acts as familiar in the smaller markets as in the large ones. This will help drive ratings everywhere.
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow.)

Thomas Rhett Previews Debut Album in Nashville

thomas rhett1

Thomas Rhett

Valory Music Co. singer-songwriter Thomas Rhett welcomed industry members to a very appropriate setting for his private album preview taping for Sirius XM The Highway–Nashville’s songwriting mecca, The Bluebird Cafe. Rhett’s debut album, It Goes Like This, releases Oct. 29.

Storme Warren hosted the event, and, unbelievably, the taping marked only the second time that Thomas Rhett has ever performed at the Bluebird Cafe. Among the songs he performed in the intimate setting were “It Goes Like This,” “Beer With Jesus,” “Something To Do With My Hands,” and his upcoming single, “Get Me Some of That,” which his father Rhett Akins co-wrote with Cole Swindell and Michael Carter.
Before introducing another song from the project titled “Whatcha Got In That Cup,” Rhett recounted some sage advice from songwriter Craig Wiseman on the importance of carefully selecting songs to record as an artist. “I was a new writer, and Craig told me, ‘I write a lot of songs. I might not remember writing this song tomorrow, but you will be singing this song for the rest of your life.'”
Of course, being the songwriter behind hits including Florida Georgia Line‘s “‘Round Here” (co-written with Rodney Clawson and Chris Tompkins) and other songs can get confusing when Rhett performs his version of those songs for fans. “They will come up to me and say, ‘Why are you singing cover songs?'” he said, laughing.
He went on to perform another song he co-wrote with Luke Laird and Barry Dean, “1994,” which was later recorded by Jason Aldean. “We were trying to write a ballad that day, and we didn’t like what we were writing,” says Thomas. The ballad was a love song involving a guy, his girl, their preferred romantic spot, and Joe Diffie music spilling from their boom box. “Luke is one of the best at making beats, so he played a loop he’d been working on and sang that line, ‘1994/Joe Diffie comin’ out the stereo,’ and we started writing the song from there.” Rhett recalled being floored when he got the call that Aldean wanted to record it. “They said it was the only song in the listening session that he had wanted to hear more than once,” said Thomas. Rhett also revealed just how the song has impacted his life. “Joe Diffie texted me after that. We text maybe once a month. We actually have a photo of his face next to our tour bus that we hit as we are getting onto it, like they do in sports. It’s mullet Joe Diffie from the Regular Joe record.”
Thomas Rhett’s original career plan was to get a job selling insurance; he studied communications at Lipscomb University while getting more serious about his songwriting, and credits Warner/Chappell’s Ben Vaughn with spurring him into songwriting. “I was playing shows with my cover band at the time, and Ben saw me play. He asked if I could write songs and said that I should try it more. I said, ‘How much are you going to pay me?’ and so they signed me up as a songwriter.”

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Pictured (L-R): Rhett Akins and Thomas Rhett


He invited his father, songwriter Rhett Akins to the stage for several collaborations. Rhett performed his own 1995 hit, “That Ain’t My Truck” before trading lines with Thomas on “Boys Round Here,” which was recorded by Blake Shelton. Rhett commented on the recent father-son accomplishment of having a hand in half of the songs in the Top 10 during one week. “You can’t plan that,” said Rhett. “To have songs written by one of us and recorded by Justin Moore, Billy Currington, Lee Brice, Thomas, Florida Georgia Line to all be recorded and released around the same time and to all go that high on the charts. I don’t know why God allowed that to happen, but it did. Even Scott Borchetta can’t make that happen–or maybe he can,” Rhett quipped.
Rap and rock influences are evident in Thomas’ music and songwriting, and he says it just comes naturally. “The first rap song I heard when I was about 9-years-0ld was DMX‘s “Ruff Ryder’s Anthem,'” said Thomas. “My dad is a songwriter, so of course, I couldn’t escape Country. I knew every Tim McGraw, Garth Brooks and Brooks & Dunn song on the radio when I was growing up.”
They ended with a rendition of “Parking Lot Party,” recorded by Lee Brice. “Lee wasn’t scheduled to write with us that day,” said Rhett Akins. “Luke [Laird], Thomas and I were writing that day, and Thomas didn’t like anything we were coming up with,” he laughs. “We took a lunch break and came back, and Lee happened to walking out of the building as we were walking in. He asked if we had an hour or so to write a song and said he needed an uptempo song. He’s got a fun-loving personality, and had been doing a lot of emotional ballads, so he wanted something uptempo, and we came up with ‘Parking Lot Party.'”
The pride that Rhett Akins took in seeing his son’s success was evident throughout the event; the family collaboration is one more of those classic Nashville moments that the Bluebird Cafe can now add to its fabled history.
Another fun tidbit: racecar driver Danica Patrick was also in attendance.
Pictured (L-R): SiriusXM Producer John Marks, SiriusXM The Highway host Storme Warren, Rhett Akins, Thomas Rhett, G Major Management PresidentVirginia Davis, Big Machine Label Group VP John Zarling and The Bluebird Café  C.O.O./President Erika Wollam Nichols. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Pictured (L-R): SiriusXM Producer John Marks, SiriusXM The Highway host Storme Warren, Rhett Akins, Thomas Rhett, G Major Management President Virginia Davis, Big Machine Label Group VP John Zarling and The Bluebird Café C.O.O./President Erika Wollam Nichols. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Sony Masterworks To Release ‘The Sound of Music’ Soundtrack

e63206e229be62ca0016d1d3_280x280Sony Masterworks will release the soundtrack to NBC’s live broadcast of The Sound of Music on Tuesday, Dec. 3. NBC will air the three-hour live production, starring Carrie Underwood as Maria von Trapp, on Thursday, Dec. 5 at 7 p.m. CST.
The cast also includes actors Audra McDonald as Mother Abbess, Stephen Moyer as Capt. Georg von Trapp, Christian Borle as Max Detweilerm, and Laura Benanti as Elsa Schrader. David Chase will serve as the production’s musical director.
The Sound of Music – Music From the NBC Television Event will feature studio recordings for all of the musical numbers performed during the live broadcast, including “The Sound of Music,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” among others.
For more information, visit nbc.com/sound-of-music/.
 

Through The Lens: Artist Pics

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Pictured (L-R): Morris Artist Management’s Brandon Gill and Matt Petty, Jake Owen and Sony Music Nashville’s Senior VP Marketing Paul Barnabee.

Jake Owen was surprised backstage at his Hollywood Bowl show on Oct. 19 with a plaque commemorating reaching one million followers on Twitter. The artist has been known to tweet everything from planking photos to finger injury pics, so it’s no wonder he keeps fans constantly engaged on Twitter. His new CD Days Of Gold is due out Dec. 3, and he’s partnering with Target to release a special exclusive deluxe version of the album that features four bonus songs, including “Summer Jam” a tune featuring Florida Georgia Line.

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Pictured (L-R): Skip Bishop (HitShop), Leslie Fram (CMT), Natalie Stovall, Stacey Cato (CMT)

Natalie Stovall and The Drive debuted some of the songs on their brand new EP for a Nashville crowd Tues. night (Oct. 22) at Anthem. The EP hit the Top 15 in the iTunes Country downloads chart upon its release.

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Pictured (L-R): Dan Pitts (True Artist Management), Dan Rogers (Director, Marketing and Communications Grand Ole Opry), Mandisa and 650 AM WSM’s Bill Cody. Photo Credit: Chris Hollo

 • Mandisa made her Grand Ole Opry debut last night (Oct. 23) during the Opry’s fifth annual “Opry Goes Pink” show in support of Women Rock For The Cure.  Mandisa and other artists including LeAnn Rimes, Amy Grant, Pam Tillis, Lorrie Morgan and Natalie Grant performed on the special show in support of breast cancer awareness.

Nashville Celebrates Aldean's "Night Train"

BMI, ASCAP, Broken Bow Records and Nashville music industry execs gathered at Nashville’s The Pub to toast the team behind Jason Aldean’s two-week No. 1 song “Night Train.” The title track to Aldean’s recent album and Aldean’s 12th No. 1, “Night Train” was co-written by Michael Dulaney and Neil Thrasher, who celebrated their third and ninth chart-toppers, respectively.
Aldean was also recently nominated for three CMA Awards including Entertainer of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year, and Musical Event of the Year.

Pictured (Back row, L-R): peermusic's Kevin Lamb, Broken Bow Records' Benny Brown, producer Michael Knox, Warner-Tamerlane's Alicia Pruitt, BMG Chrysalis’ Kos Weaver, and Broken Bow Records' Jon Loba. (Front row, L-R): BMI's Jody Williams, co-writer Michael Dulaney, Jason Aldean, co-writer Neil Thrasher, and ASCAP's Mike Sistad. Not pictured: We Jam Writers Group's Darrell Franklin and Dann Huff. Photo credit: Rick Diamond

Pictured (Back row, L-R): peermusic’s Kevin Lamb, Broken Bow Records’ Benny Brown, producer Michael Knox, Warner-Tamerlane’s Alicia Pruitt, BMG Chrysalis’ Kos Weaver, and Broken Bow Records’ Jon Loba. (Front row, L-R): BMI’s Jody Williams, co-writer Michael Dulaney, Jason Aldean, co-writer Neil Thrasher, and ASCAP’s Mike Sistad. Not pictured: We Jam Writers Group’s Darrell Franklin and Dann Huff. Photo credit: Rick Diamond

Big Loud Shirt Songwriter Renews Publishing Deal

Pictured (Front row, L-R): Counsel for Big Loud Shirt Derek Crownover, Business Manager Kella Stephenson, Big Loud Shirt Creative Director Matt Turner, Counsel for Big Loud Shirt Austen Adams. (Back row, L-R): Counsel for Rodney Clawson Jess Rosen, Rodney Clawson, Big Loud Shirt’s Owner Craig Wiseman and VP Seth England. Photo Credit: Amy Allmand Photography

Pictured (Front row, L-R): Counsel for Big Loud Shirt Derek Crownover, Business Manager Kella Stephenson, Big Loud Shirt Creative Director Matt Turner, Counsel for Big Loud Shirt Austen Adams. (Back row, L-R): Counsel for Rodney Clawson Jess Rosen, Rodney Clawson, Big Loud Shirt’s Owner Craig Wiseman and VP Seth England. Photo Credit: Amy Allmand Photography.


Rodney Clawson has re-upped his publishing deal with Big Loud Shirt, a company owned and operated by Grammy award-winning songwriter, Craig Wiseman. Since first signing with the independent publishing house in 2008, the newly named NSAI Songwriter of the Year has earned 11 No. 1 songs, five of which went No. 1 in 2013. Clawson co-wrote the current singles “Southern Girl” (Tim McGraw), “Don’t Let Me Be Lonely” (The Band Perry), “Helluva Life” (Frankie Ballard) and “Callin’ Me When I’m Lonely” (Sheryl Crow).
“We are so thrilled to continue our run with Rodney,” exclaims Wiseman. “We have all worked hard and hoped for these amazing years that he’s having and it is the best part of this business when you get to share in these blessed times with your friends who you have believed in. Rodney continues to turn in incredible songs everyday and we see nothing but more hits and more celebrations ahead!”
The CMA Award winner has scored cuts on Jason Aldean’s Night Train, Luke Bryan’s Tailgates & Tanlines, Florida Georgia Line’s Here’s To The Good Times, Tim McGraw’s Two Lanes Of Freedom, Jake Owen’s Barefoot Blue Jean Night and Blake Shelton’s Based On A True Story, among others. He has also had songs released by Big & Rich, Colt Ford, Montgomery Gentry, Justin Moore, Nickelback, Kellie Pickler, Saving Abel and Josh Thompson.

Primetime Nashville: "Don't Open That Door"

nashville-abcSeason 2, Episode 5: “Don’t Open That Door”
Rayna (Connie Britton)’s voice gets tested, and someone gets arrested on last night (Wednesday, Oct. 23)’s episode of Nashville.
A Family Up In Flames
Tandy (Judith Hoag) gave information to the police that could ruin Lamar (Powers Boothe) during the last episode, after she discovered he was involved in her mother’s death. However, to receive immunity, she is forced to not talk about the situation with anyone, including sister Rayna. That decision comes back to bite her later in the episode. She discovers that after a blowup with label chief Jeff (Oliver Hudson), Rayna had told Jeff that she was going to buy out her contract with Edgehill and fully fund her boutique label Highway 65. She would need $20 million to make it work, and persuaded Lamar to give her the funds to complete the buyout.
After the meeting with Jeff, Lamar is arrested for racketeering, extortion and conspiracy. Lamar, meanwhile, thinks Teddy is behind his arrest.
Moving On
Juliette (Hayden Panettiere), ready to move on with her career, holds a press conference about her tour; astute viewers will notice a few of Music City’s own in the audience of reporters.
None too pleased with opening act Layla, she devises a plan to shorten Layla’s performance time on the tour by inviting Will (Chris Carmack) to audition for an opening slot on the tour. He successfully completes the audition, signing on for the tour.
Of course, she needs a guitar player in order to tour. She first turns to Deacon (Charles Esten), who reveals that due to his injury, he is out of commission. Juliette also lets it slip about Rayna’s injured singing voice.
She then turns to Avery (Jonathan Jackson), offering him an apology; when he still turns down the guitarist offer, she gives him the keys to her top-shelf studio as a goodwill gesture.
Fear Factor
One of the episode’s most dramatic moments comes after Juliette lets it slip about Rayna’s voice to Deacon. Deacon, still convinced that his own music days are over, confronts Rayna about her voice. He repeatedly asks her, “Can you sing?” until she finally replies, “I don’t know! Everything is different now.”
Later in the episode she faces her fear that her musical gift is gone. Rayna surprises Juliette at a charity event by asking her to become part of the Grand Ole Opry. Superstar singer Luke Wheeler is also at the event; an impromptu onstage performance request from superstar Luke forces Rayna to test out her voice in front of an audience of fans. She performs the entirely appropriate “Best Songs Come From Broken Hearts” (penned by Bonnie Bishop and Ronnie Rogers). After a shaky start, she proves that her voice is indeed in fine shape, delivering an emotional performance and drawing a standing ovation from the crowd.
Friends of Friends
Avery, Gunnar (Sam Palladio), and Zoe collaborate on a song called “Be My Girl” in this episode; Zoe and Gunnar’s relationship later turns physical.
Meanwhile, Layla (Ashley Peeples) uses Scarlett’s trusting nature against her at a red carpet event; earlier in the episode a media trainer tries to prepare Scarlett for working a red carpet and speaking to media. Later in the dressing room while preparing for the show, Layla notices Scarlett trying to memorize her talking points; Layla rips up the notes and tells Scarlett to be herself. That advice proves disastrous after a reporter asks Scarlett about her uncle Deacon’s carwreck.
The episode ends with Scarlett O’Connor (Clare Bowen) stomping through Deacon’s front door, clearly upset about her first turn on the red carpet. She and Deacon sing “This Town”; the song was co-written by Jaida Dreyer, Cory Mayo and Andrew Rollins.

Producer's Chair: Keith Thomas

keith thomas

Keith Thomas


By James Rea
If one were to ask Keith Thomas why he has been so successful, I’m sure he would say that it’s his ability to find star quality talent. Keith’s early Grammy-winning productions with Bebe & Cece Winans, Amy Grant and Vanessa Williams, when they were just getting started, propelled his career to having one of the most diverse and immense discographies in Nashville. With over 40 No. 1 Billboard Hits as a songwriter, his production body of work includes James Ingram, Peabo Bryson, Michael Bolton, Luther Vandross, Brian McKnight, Yolanda Adams, Trisha Yearwood, Mandy Moore, Selena and Puff Johnson. Jon Secada, Deborah Cox, Regina Belle, Wendy Moten and a cast of artists on the Touched By An Angel soundtrack, which peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard Top Christian Albums chart and No. 3 on the Top Country Charts in 1998.
Although Thomas will tell you himself that he is as “Country” as anyone in Nashville, you wouldn’t know it. None of his seven Grammy awards, 10 Grammy nominations, one Academy Award for Best Song, three Dove Awards, one Dove Award nomination or his two Grammy nominations for producer of the year were Country, which leads one to believe: all evidence to the contrary, but not so…
“I grew up playing gospel music in The Thomas Family band with my sister, my brother-in-law and my Dad, who was a hillbilly musician who played with the Sons of The Pioneers, early-on before they blew up,” says Keith. “We weren’t allowed to listen to anything except Country & gospel. I had to sneak a Carpenters record into the house, that’s how bad it was. We didn’t have hot running water or an inside bathroom until I was 13-years-old. There was a slop jar on the back porch where we fed the pigs and we had cows and pigs and chickens runnin’ in the yard. Momma would say, ‘Go get a chicken’ and I’d grab one and pop its head.'”
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Keith Thomas (right) with his father.


Born and raised in the Atlanta suburb of Conyers, Ga., Keith was singing lead with his father’s gospel group at the age of nine. His self-taught style as a keyboard player led him, while still in high school, to recording sessions in Atlanta and later to the gospel act, The Sharrett Brothers, for whom he wrote several songs, while finishing his college studies. The first time his ability as a songwriter was fully recognized, however, was when Ronnie Milsap included two of his compositions on his Milsap Magic album in the late 70s. Milsap invited Keith to bring his family to Nashville and by 1979, he relocated and become a staff writer for Milsap Music.
“Ronnie would go out of town and give me his studio and his engineer and I would spend 18 hrs a day in a state-of the art studio, while he was on the road, for about a year and a half,” said Thomas. “I was playing on Ronnie’s records and producing my own demos and I eventually got a loan and bought a huge rig that I took to sessions. So I learned to engineer and produce that way. The time I spent at Ronnie’s with all that free studio time, I learned so much and will always be grateful”
A year later he took a similar post with gospel label Word Records (for whom he had recorded with the Sharrett Brothers). As well as two of his own solo albums for Word, he became producer to Carman, First Call, Paul Smith, the Gaither Vocal Band, Kenny Marks and The Imperials.
After producing BeBe and CeCe’s, 1987 Grammy Award-winning debut, Thomas established his own independent production and publishing company, Yellow Elephant Music, in Franklin, Tenn., and in 1992 he purchased the Bennett House in Franklin for his own studio.
From that point on, Thomas was linked with a series of high-profile artists, beginning with Whitney Houston (co-writing “Take A Chance”), Vanessa Williams (“Save The Best For Last,” “The Sweetest Days” and ” Colors Of The Wind,” which garnered his Academy Award for Best Song).
Once settled in The Bennett House, Keith turned his attention again to Amy Grant by writing and producing “Baby, Baby,” “I Will Remember You” and “House Of Love” for her House of Love album. The album had several hits for Keith including the songs, “Lucky One” and the title track. Keith produced records for James Ingram, Peabo Bryson, Deborah Cox, Regina Belle and Wendy Moten. In 1995, Keith wrote and produced the hit song, “I Could Fall In Love” for Selena.
In 1997, Thomas completed tracks for Amy Grant’s next album, Behind The Eyes and Vanessa Williams’ follow up album, Next. He also produced records for Michael Bolton, Luther Vandross, Brian McKnight, Tamia and Puff Johnson.
In early 1998, Keith produced several songs for Vanessa and Jon Secada for the movie, Dance With Me. He also produced the track, “I Do (Cherish You)” for 98°’s multi-platinum album on Universal Records, 98° and Rising. The song was also featured in the Julia Roberts/Hugh Grant romantic comedy, Notting Hill. In Addition, Keith was nominated for a Grammy for Producer of the Year in 1998.
In late 1998, Thomas served as the principle Producer and co-Executive Producer for the multi-artist Touched By An Angel and in early 1999, Thomas produced the track “Precious Wings” on MJJ artist Tatyana Ali for the Sesame Street movie, Elmo In Grouchland. During that year he also produced tracks for Yolanda Adams, Wild Orchid and Williams. Thomas also produced the song, “You’re Where I Belong” for Trisha Yearwood for the movie, Stuart Little.
In 2000, Keith produced At Last for Gladys Knight and he wrote and produced the hit song, “I Wanna Be With You” for Mandy Moore. The song was featured in the Columbia Pictures film, Center Stage.
Over the past 13 years, Thomas has produced 43 more albums, whose artists include Carman, Charlotte Church, Jessica Simpson, Steve Camp, Jordan Pruitt, Rissi Palmer, Heather Headley, Laura Turner and Forever Jones, just to name a few.
You can watch Thomas (the on-camera mentor/producer/personality) in a new reality show, Chasing Nashville, which airs on Lifetime Oct. 22. The show tracks seven female artists from North Carolina, West Virginia & Kentucky.
The Producer’s Chair: When did you stop the pursuit of an artist career?
Keith Thomas: I think when I got married and the responsibility of having a young son (Jeremy) at the time. I was offered the opportunity to go on the road with Amy Grant and open for her. During that time period, we were new to Nashville and I just couldn’t leave my wife by herself. So the artist thing took a back seat and so did the acting.
Acting?
I wanted to be an actor even more than I did a musician or a producer. I had a scholarship to act. The Alliance Theater in Atlanta offered to send me to New York and promised me all lead roles if I would go. So my Dad being a primitive Baptist Minister went to one of the rehearsals with me and some weird stuff happened. I was about 18 and he said, ‘You’re not going to New York.’ So that dream went away very quickly. My first trip to New York was when I went to meet Vanessa Williams to do ‘Save the Best for Last.’ I’m walking down the streets of New York and there was a theater with the door open and I walked in and the smell just took me, I had a panic attack … I was there again. So it’s been since college since I acted but it’s still in there. I’d love to do that.
Country is now more accepting of new grooves. Considering your pop and R&B background, does that attract you more?
KT: Absolutely, I love Country and I grew up on it but growing up I just felt like I wanted more in terms of chords and arrangements and orchestral stuff. I wanted to go the full gambit, but at the core it’s who I am. I love the fact that Country music is more accepting of programming.
Was it growing up in Atlanta that got you into R&B and pop?
KT: I started discovering The Stylistics and Gino Vanelli, The Commodores and The O’Jays and I just gravitated to it. So much so that, by the time I was making records, people didn’t know if I was black or white. The first time I met Vanessa Williams in New York, she walked in and said: ‘Oh, you’re white.’
When you left Milsap’s publishing company, how did you wind up at Word?
KT: Neal Joseph was head of A&R at Word. Mike Blanton, who managed Amy Grant, introduced me. I started doing sessions for Brown Bannister who would sometimes use me for background vocals and arranging. Neil had a Word Sampler project that he wanted me to do. They had 4-5 artists and whoever got the biggest response got a record deal. So Kenny Marks, the artist that I produced got the record deal. Just as I was finishing that, I got Steve Camp. I did his record, Run To The Battle and it was No. 1 for six months.
To what do you attribute its success?
KT: At the time I felt like I was producing a little ahead of where the gospel music thing was and it was kind of pushing the envelope. And then even more so when I got into BeBe and CeCe. BeBe thought he was going to get kicked out of the church because of some of the stuff we were doing. But it worked; people accepted it and they became huge icons.
When artists like Peabo Bryson and Luther Vandross are looking for songs, is their method the same as the Nashville song search, as we know it?
KT: It’s different. They have their individual songwriters and producers who they reach out to. The pop world is a little closed off and a different process.
How long have you been working with Amy Grant?
KT: I was her band leader on her very first concert at Vanderbilt. Her then husband Gary Chapman and I were writing songs together so, that was beginning of it. After I did that show, they offered me to go on the road and have 20 min in front of her. After passing on that, we stayed in touch.
How did you meet Bebe and Cece?
KT: I went to visit a friend on the PTL Club and I met Bebe there. I said, ‘I’d love to try and get you a deal.’ I’m doing a solo project for Word and I’d love for you to do a guest vocal spot on the project and we can take that and shop it for a deal. And that’s what happened. He won a Grammy with the song that we wrote, “It’s Only Natural,” and that got them their deal on Sparrow.
How did you meet Vanessa Williams?
KT: I got a call from Ed Eckstein who was running Mercury. He said; ‘I love your work, I heard the Bebe and Cece Winans stuff that you’ve done and I’d like to get you involved with Vanessa Williams, would you come to New York and meet her?’ So I took eight songs with me that I had written. They were just tracks and melodies and Ed said: ‘I love these. I want Cynthia Weil to write the lyrics.’ I didn’t know who she was but I said great. So he faxed over her discography. So I’m looking at that fax and oh my God, I felt like a fool. So I called her when I got home and we wrote those eight songs together. Six of them made the album. She’s the one who also introduced me to James Ingram. She’d say, ‘Who else do you want to work with?’ And I’d say my goal is to work with James Ingram. In a couple of days I had a message on my machine. Now James is one of my best friends. He’s my brother. In many ways, I’ve accomplished what I wanted to accomplish.
Who has been one of your most significant mentors along the way?
KT: David Sonenberg who also managed The Fugees, Black Eyed Peas, Lauryn Hill, and The Spin Doctors managed me for 18 years and he changed my life. I was the only producer that he managed at the time.
How did he change your life?
KT: He taught me how the business really worked. It’s very complicated and very political. I was pretty naive, especially coming into the pop market. Understanding how that all worked. I’ve watched him do so many deals and consequently, I’ve been able to do the same kind of deals. He and I split around 2002 and then Irving Azoff managed me for a while.
What is the most important aspect of artist development that you do?
KT: The most important aspect, I guess would be getting an artist to a place where they’re prepared. Not just in singing and artistry but, what to expect in the industry, teaching them how to connect with the fans, important steps with the media and understanding what happens with fame and money and how to handle that. Each artist has different areas that need to be worked on.
Do you prefer to work with artists who write?
KT: I do. I feel like the artist has to have something to say and it’s got to be believable. If they can’t sell it, it doesn’t work for me. It can work but it’s more about the production than it is about the artist and I’m all about the artist. I like an artist that knows who they are and willing to do whatever it takes to make it. The music industry is about taking one opportunity at a time and capitalizing on it and going to the next step. Very rarely do you just get that one shot and it takes you all the way. You gotta build it and you gotta be able to work and I don’t want to be a producer that works harder than the artist. I’ve done that and it doesn’t pay off.
Tell me about your company, Levosia Entertainment.
KT: It’s a production, publishing and management company. I signed Celica Westbrook four years ago, who was on The Voice. Forever Jones had their own reality show last year on Bounce TV. They’re a black gospel group and their 25-year-old daughter Dominique is a star.
Are you working with anyone else right now?
KT: I’ve got one girl in Atlanta who is a female Michael Bublé. I went down to Atlanta to shoot interviews of my family members for my brother’s birthday. So the younger of my two brothers said: ‘hey, why don’t we go and do an interview at the house where we grew up.’ So I’ve got my camera out front and he says: ‘I’m going to knock on the door.’ We talked the beautiful 24-year-old girl who opened the door, into letting us come through the rental. So when we were done, I said to her: ‘What do you do?’ She said, ‘I sell organic popsicles…and I like to sing.’ So I turned my camera on and asked her to sing and she killed me, a capella. She came up to Nashville and we went in the studio and it was shocking how great it was. Her popsicles are for sale at Whole Foods for $3 a piece.
Do you work with the same engineer all the time?
KT: Yes, Jonathan Crone. He’s been with me for seven yrs now.He’s from Berkley. He plays guitar, produces and he writes … the whole package.
Have the changes in the industry since the ’90s affected every genre, or did some escape?
KT: It’s everywhere. Even the urban side of things, which is where the big sales are right now and the Top 40 dance music are lucrative, but not like it was 10 years ago. I just read that this used to be a $38 billion industry a decade ago and now it’s a $16 billion industry. Buying singles instead of albums and the whole sharing thing I get, but at the same time there are so many people that never get paid. Like Lady Gaga having 1 million spins and only receiving $162, you can’t make a living doing that. The art is not as important any more. The democratization of the music itself has driven the cost down, but it’s also driven the revenue down. People don’t need it as much because they have so many other forms of entertainment. Back in the day, my per-track fee was $80,000 per track and from that I could pretty much count on what I was going to get on the back end. Now, the track fees are, well let’s just say, they’re not what they used to be and there’s very little back end. So, whatever you get up front is basically, what you’re going to get. And hopefully you have the single.
KT: I spend so much time trying to figure things out because I want to become part of that process. Until we get the whole streaming thing figured out, it’s just morphing into whatever it’s going to be. I don’t know what that is yet. I do know that there are more artists out there than there’s ever been. I’m deep into marketing. How do I get somebody’s attention for 20 seconds? I don’t know where it’s going to go but I want to be a part of that process and figure it out.
What would you like your future to hold?
KT: Ultimately for me, down the road, it’s either to have my own label or go into a situation where I can control that. I want to be in a place where I can oversee it all because of my track record with finding talent, even from back in the day, when I signed Katy Perry. One thing I didn’t tell you about, I’m working on Danny Gokey’s new project.
If you could produce anyone you wanted, who would that be today?
KT: Michael Bublé, Bruno Mars and Justin Timberlake.
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