
Halie Hampton Mosley
The “My Music Row Story” weekly column features notable members of the Nashville music industry selected by the MusicRow editorial team. These individuals serve in key roles that help advance and promote the success of our industry. This column spotlights the invaluable people that keep the wheels rolling and the music playing.
Halie Hampton Mosley joined Why&How in October 2021 as Vice President of Roster Operations, and has helped define and oversee the goals and initiatives of the Why&How roster and staff. Since joining, Hampton Mosley has been instrumental in streamlining and expanding roster operations, and establishing internal practices such as Why&How’s parental leave policies. She also remains closely involved in Why&How artist strategy for such acts as Chase Rice, Danielle Bradbery, Breland and Kelleigh Bannen, among others.
Prior to joining Why&How, Hampton Mosley spent seven years in Artist Management at Maverick Nashville led by long-time Manager Clarence Spalding. She most recently served as the Day-to-Day Artist Manager for Diamond-selling duo Florida Georgia Line at Hit Farm Management in partnership with Full Stop Management led by Irving and Jeffrey Azoff.
Hampton Mosley will be honored as part of the current class of MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row on March 19. For more details about the class and the event, click here.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I grew up in and around Nashville. All my family is originally from Ashland City, and my grandparents are still there. My mom and dad met there and we moved to Murfreesboro when I was in third or fourth grade, so I did middle school, high school and college in Murfreesboro. I studied business at MTSU.

Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
What were your dreams then?
At one point I thought I might be an attorney. I didn’t really know. I did this thing called DECA in high school where we would formulate business plans and compete with them. I actually ended up getting a marketing scholarship to MTSU because of that program. I thought I could explore a million things with a business degree, but I didn’t really know what I wanted to do.
How did you find out about the music business?
I was getting to the point where I was going to have to start interning for my business credits and a family friend told me about this internship in Nashville. It was at Taillight TV.
I came in, met with their team and ended up doing a production assistant type of internship. One of the first videos I ever remember being on set for was Eric Church‘s “Smoke A Little Smoke.” It was probably that same day that I realized this is a really cool business, but I don’t want anything to do with production. [Laughs]
I met a really great group of people at Taillight. At the end of that semester, the producers put together an intern barbecue. At the time, Lesly Tyson—now Lesly Simon—was married to one of the producers and they held the barbecue at their home. So I met Lesly and I ended up spending an hour in their kitchen asking questions about what she did. I just loved her—I thought she was so smart. She was like, “Why don’t you come intern for me?” So my senior year I went to intern at Sony Music Nashville.

Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
What was that like?
At the time, she had already stepped into the VP role in radio promotion at Arista, so I was assisting all of the imprints. I was packing CDs, sending out promo items and helping with listener and winner stuff for things that they were doing.
When I graduated, they didn’t have any jobs open. I had met people through various events that they would let interns come to, so I had met Pete O’Heeron and he had Cold River Records at the time with Katie Armiger. He knew that all my experience in internships had been in promo, and so he was like, “Why don’t you come try to be a regional?” So I did that.
I was only there for probably a year, but what I did get to do was take a territory and go meet radio and learn what it meant to work a record.
What was next?
It was probably just shy of a year that Sony ended up creating a job for secondary radio promo, so I ended up coming back for that job. I was working smaller markets on behalf of all three of the imprints. I did that for maybe six months before Lesly brought me in and gave me the southeast for Arista.
We had some really great success and fun together. She taught me so much. Carrie Underwood‘s “Good Girl” was my first No. 1, and Brad Paisley‘s “Southern Comfort Zone” was my second. Those were my first two major tours that I was a part of. We went on to do a couple No. 1s with Carrie, which was really sweet.

Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
How did you move out of radio and into management?
Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn were both still on Arista and working to release music individually, but still both managed by Clarence Spalding. I was on the road with Kix, and I remember him asking me if this was what I wanted to do. I told him I really loved what I was doing and was learning so much, but I knew that I didn’t want to be on the road that heavily for my entire career. He was like, “Have you ever thought about management? Why don’t you go meet with my manager?”
I went to have breakfast with Clarence. I was so nervous. [Laughs] After our breakfast, I just stayed in touch with him and a couple months later, his assistant Marne McLyman was moving into more of a day-to-day role. So Clarence called me and said, “I have an assistant job open.” I took it and that would kick off seven years with Clarence.
I remember pretty early on thinking that it was something that I could do longer term, because for the first time I felt like I was getting to see from the second an artist is in a writer room to the moment that they’re singing the song in the stadium.
I sat at a desk outside Clarence’s office and that is how I learned 70% of what it even meant to be a manager. I would listen to the way he talked to his clients, the way he navigated situations when their careers were in certain seasons or the way he interacted with our partners. I just had so much to learn. I would do the same thing with our internal marketing department which was run by Amanda Cates at the time.

Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
How did you transition into more?
Randy Goodman came in and began to oversee Rascal Flatts. The good thing about sitting in that seat was that if people needed an extra set of hands, that was me. As Randy got busier, I just started filling in for things. I just slowly started being present and then that would move into being on the road for show coverage. When I started working with Flatts, then I just started looking for holes internally to be able to do that for the whole roster. I would ask Chris Parr if there was an opportunity where Jason Aldean needs coverage or Jason Houser with Darius Rucker. I just started being the person who could be there. Ultimately what that did for me was let me learn how different the inner workings of the different artist camps operated.
Eventually I started handling my first client on my own within Maverick, which was Rachel Wammack. She and I worked together for a couple of years through the development stage.
How did you start working with Florida Georgia Line?
Lou Taylor was also Reba McEntire‘s business manager, so I had gotten to know her in my EA role with Clarence. I had a sit down with her and she asked me what my goals and dreams were. Maybe a couple months after that conversation, she came to me and she said, “I want to chat with you about Florida Georgia Line. There may be an opportunity for someone to be the lead in Nashville as a part of a new Management structure. Would you be open to that?” I think I almost passed out. I thought, “There’s no way I get this job.”

Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
I met with her a couple times and eventually ended up meeting with the guys. They were entering into a partnership with Irving Azoff out of LA, so they had formed their own management entity which I would end up working under in partnership with Full Stop. They needed someone here just to be boots on the ground. They spent a lot of time in LA at that time because we had a lot of promo periods, but they were both still living here and that wasn’t going to change, so it was important to them to have somebody here. That person became me, and it was pretty wild. I give Lou a lot of credit because again, it was another female like Lesly who looked at me and said, “You may not be a hundred percent ready, but I think you are.”
Tell me about your years with FGL.
They were challenging for me, in a good way, because it was the first time I was jumping in with an act at the height of their fame. Obviously I wasn’t on my own—having people like Irving and Jeffrey Azoff forced me to grow up and do a lot of faking it until I made it. I was thrust into new territory because the guys were just involved in so much.
It was a whirlwind. I remember not really having much time to get my feet underneath me. What was really great though was that even from here, I became integrated into the Full Stop system. I was all of a sudden sitting in meetings where Harry Styles was on screen. Learning through the pop processes and how they handled music rollouts and programming that they were doing with partners and stuff like that was really helpful for me.

Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
What was next?
After a couple years with the guys, they were entering into spaces creatively where they were considering taking time to pursue solo endeavors. They had 10 years of an amazing run. I had had a couple conversations with them each individually, so I started thinking about what would be next for me.
We were shooting the “Drinkin’ Beer. Talkin’ God. Amen.” video out at Chase Rice‘s farm, and that was the first time I had formally met Chase, as well as his manager Bruce Kalmick. I spent some time talking to Bruce and he asked me what my next steps were. I wasn’t really sure but one thing that I did know at that time was that I really didn’t want to continue on in a day-to-day capacity. I wanted to get away from the monotony. I loved being able to work on multiple things at one time, because I think it made me better having exposure. I wasn’t so siloed in one project or one process. I said, “I’m looking for a role where I can step in and help on multiple things. I don’t exactly know what that looks like yet or if that job even exists.” He said, “I started this new company and I need to round out my exec team. We’ll create a role and you can come in and help lead our team and multiple accounts.” So that’s what happened.
Now you’re Chief Operating Officer at Why&How. What’s your favorite part about your job?
Over the last couple years, I have watched some of our staff grow and evolve into new roles. We’ve worked really hard to identify their individual strengths and make changes accordingly. The same thing for our clients—I felt really lucky that I came in at a time where Chase was going through a really pivotal moment in his career. Watching him evolve personally and professionally, to go on and have this first ever critically acclaimed album… those are my favorite things. Getting to watch our clients grow, change and evolve musically and personally—and the same with our staff.

Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
Who would you say are your mentors?
Definitely Lesly. I call a couple times a year just to walk through my decisions. Even when I was going through my infertility, I called her. She’s probably the only person that I could say has mentored me in life and work. In terms of management, Clarence obviously is the top—I just don’t think it gets any better. Randy Goodman is also a mentor.
You will be honored at our Rising Women on the Row event next month. What would you tell women who are looking at you and want to get where you are one day?
Don’t be afraid to be the youngest or the least experienced person in the room. As my career has evolved, I look back and can pinpoint so many opportunities being presented to me because I wasn’t afraid to raise my hand, even if I may not have been ready. Raise your hand whenever and wherever you can to help out and to be present and to be someone that people can depend on. Oftentimes inexperience and humility with a strong desire to learn can beat out experience and entitlement.
ASCAP Delivers Record-Breaking $1.737 Billion In Revenues
/by Lorie HollabaughASCAP delivered a record-breaking $1.737 billion in revenue in the 2023 calendar year with $1.592 billion available for royalty distributions to its members—the highest revenue and royalty distributions reported by any U.S. performing rights organization (PRO), and an increase of $204 million or 14.7 percent over the prior year.
The revenues represent an increase of $215 million or 14.1 percent over 2022. ASCAP increased the value and monetization of its members’ music with domestic revenue from U.S.-licensed performances surpassing $1.327 billion, which is an increase of $149 million or 12.6 percent over the prior year. In 2023, audio streaming revenue rose 21 percent, general licensing revenue rose 23 percent, radio revenue rose 10 percent and audio-visual revenue rose three percent. Total foreign revenues for performances outside the U.S. were $410 million, up $66 million or 19.3 percent over the prior year.
Since the launch of ASCAP’s strategic growth plan in 2015, its compound annual growth rate (CAGR) for Total Revenue through 2023 has increased to seven percent, and the CAGR for Total Distributions over the same time period rose to eight percent.
Total funds available for domestic distributions of ASCAP U.S.-licensed and administered performances were $1.217 billion, an increase of $169 million or 16.1 percent, based solely on U.S. performances of works by ASCAP-licensed songwriter, composer and publisher members. Of that total, $53 million was distributed through Songwize, ASCAP’s royalty administration service provided to members who directly license their works, up 16.8 percent over 2022.
ASCAP represents and aggregates over 19 million copyrights which includes music from Beyoncé, Billy Joel, Cardi B, Dua Lipa, Garth Brooks, Jay-Z, Katy Perry, Lil Baby, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Mariah Carey, Olivia Rodrigo, Paul McCartney, Stevie Wonder, Usher and more.
ASCAP is the only PRO operating on a not-for-profit basis, and does not charge a commission or take a profit and instead, pursuant to its governance and operating principles, must deduct all expenses subject to a reasonable reserve and then distribute all remaining dollars as royalty distributions to its members.
ASCAP has no debt, no shareholders, no private owners and no private equity investors, meaning its music creator and publisher members are the sole beneficiaries of ASCAP’s financial success. A democratically elected Board of Directors composed of music publishers and music creators sets the royalty distribution rules and cost allocations based on follow-the-dollar principles. It is the only U.S. PRO that makes those distribution rules publicly available on its website providing transparency to its membership.
“We are delivering industry-leading technical innovation, legislative advocacy and revenue growth that solely benefits our members, not outside investors or shareholders,” says ASCAP CEO Elizabeth Matthews. “As we like to say, private equity never wrote an iconic love song which is why we fight purely for songwriters, composers and publishers, not for those who use creators and their works of art for their own profits or to secure their own debt. ASCAP differs from others because our mission and purpose is clear and unique.”
“ASCAP’s mission and not-for-profit business model are more important now than ever before, as artificial intelligence (AI) transforms the music landscape, and the need for legislative advocacy to protect creators in D.C. has never been more important,” says ASCAP Chairman of the Board & President Paul Williams. “ASCAP will always be a champion for the humans who create music and demand transparency and fair payment from those who exploit our work. ASCAP makes it possible for our songwriter and composer members to write the next song, to earn a living and to support their families. No one else in the industry has the backs of songwriters like ASCAP.”
Additionally, the PRO marked its 110th year on Feb. 13, and announced several new ASCAP family members, including songwriter and producer Jack Antonoff, pop star PinkPantheress, Jared Leto and Shannon Leto of 30 Seconds To Mars and South African singer-songwriter Tyla.
‘Outlaw Music Festival Tour’ 2024 Lineup Revealed
/by Lorie HollabaughWillie Nelson & Family, Bob Dylan, John Mellencamp and more are among the lineup for this summer’s 2024 “Outlaw Music Festival Tour,” kicking off June 21 in Alpharetta, Georgia.
The 25-date tour also includes Robert Plant & Alison Krauss, Brittney Spencer, Celisse and Southern Avenue. Billy Strings will also join the tour for one special show outside Seattle at The Gorge. Stops on this year’s trek include Charlotte, Raleigh, Virginia Beach, L.A., Spokane, Cincinnati and more through Sept. 17.
“This year’s ‘Outlaw Music Festival Tour’ promises to be the biggest and best yet with this lineup of legendary artists. I am thrilled to get back on the road again with my family and friends playing the music we love for the fans we love,” says Nelson.
Tickets go on sale to the general public this Friday, March 1 via OutlawMusicFestival.com . VIP packages will be available, including great seats and exclusive festival merchandise.
The inaugural Outlaw Music Festival made its debut in 2016 in Scranton, Pennsylvania. The sold-out show was so well received that Blackbird, Mark Rothbaum and Nelson have developed it into one of North America’s biggest annual touring franchises. Musicians such as Chris Stapleton, Neil Young, Luke Combs, Van Morrison, ZZ Top, Eric Church, Bonnie Raitt, Sheryl Crow, Tyler Childers, Sturgill Simpson, The Avett Brothers and many more have been a part of the “Outlaw Music Festival Tour.”
ELVIS Act To Move Forward In Tennessee
/by Liza AndersonPictured (L-R): RIAA’s Mitch Glazier, Recording Academy’s Todd Dupler, Natalie Grant, Recording Academy’s Alicia Warwick and RIAA’s Jackie Jones during ELVIS Act Advocacy Day at the Cordell Hull State Office Building. Photos: Jason Davis/Getty Images for the Recording Academy
The Ensuring Likeness Voice and Image Security (ELVIS) Act will move forward to the final stage of State General Assembly Consideration and Governor’s Signature in Tennessee after unanimously passing the Senate and House Commerce Committees today (Feb. 27).
The ELVIS Act was introduced by Governor Bill Lee along with State Senate Majority Leader Jack Johnson (R-27) and House Majority Leader William Lamberth (R-44) last month. The major legislation updates Tennessee’s Protection of Personal Rights law, making it the first state in the nation to preserve individual voice, image and likeness against irresponsible and unethical artificial intelligence (AI) in the form of deepfakes and audio cloning, and seeks to protect the future of Tennessee creators from the harmful misuse of technology on some online platforms, including computer-generated recordings that resemble artists’ voices or deepfake videos.
The ELVIS Act advanced following personal testimonies from Christian artist-songwriters Natalie Grant and Matt Maher as well as songwriter and Evanescence founding member David Hodges. Additionally, several Human Artistry Campaign members such as Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI), the Recording Academy, Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and SAG-AFTRA mobilized their teams and orchestrated a day of advocacy at the Tennessee State Capitol, where music creators engaged in discussions with legislators, urging them to support the passage of the ELVIS Act. Participants included Tennessee artists and songwriters, mostly based in Nashville and Memphis.
“Every day, there are new stories about deepfakes and AI-cloned voices and images that manipulates someone’s likeness without their consent. This is not just a problem that effects celebrities, this is a human problem that affects us all. As a mother of three daughters, I am terrified by how this technology has been used to exploit teenagers,” said Grant. “It’s fitting that this bill is named the ELVIS Act, because Elvis performed so many different types of songs–from love songs to the blues, from pop songs to gospel music–but he infused them with his distinct voice, likeness, and personal qualities to create something new. Every individual should have the right to control their unique God-given qualities.”
Hodges said, “In a three-minute tapestry of words and music, my gift, and my job, is to get you to laugh or cry and to remember your most cherished times in life through my songs. The ELVIS Act is the first-of-its kind legislation that will put important guardrails around artificial intelligence for music creators. The Volunteer State is where many forms of the world’s music were either born or popularized. Music is intertwined with our history, culture and economy so when technology spits out something based on ingested works created by people, something that is unauthorized, something an artist never even sang, that is wrong. Period.” He added, “As a professional songwriter, syllables matter. A single note can change a song. For artists their delivery is part of their brand. They carefully choose the songs they record and release. By adding the word ‘voice,’ the ELVIS Act modernizes current law and makes it crystal clear that unauthorized AI-generated fake recordings are subject to legal action in Tennessee.”
All of this comes as the federal bipartisan No AI Fraud federal gains traction on the heels of congressional testimonies from country artist Lainey Wilson and Recording Academy President & CEO Harvey Mason Jr. as well as nearly 300 actors, artists, musicians and songwriters co-signing these protections.
CountryLine Radio Brings Garth Brooks’ The BIG 615 To The U.K.
/by Lorie HollabaughTuneIn has partnered with CountryLine Radio to bring Garth Brooks’ global country music station The BIG 615 to the U.K. through CountryLine’s digital audio broadcasting and streaming platforms.
Beginning today (Feb. 27), country fans can tune in to catch a fresh lineup of programming from The BIG 615, including The Storme Warren Show. With the addition of the new programming, CountryLine Radio, the largest independent country radio station in the U.K., will take on a new mantle, “CountryLine: The BIG 615.”
“It’s an honor to team up with CountryLine to have The BIG 615 broadcasting throughout the U.K.,” says Brooks. “Hearing the same broadcast on two different continents brings us ALL a lot closer.”
“This is huge for U.K. country fans – Nashville has landed!” says Simon Walker, CEO of CountryLine. “We’re thrilled to welcome our partners at The BIG 615 to our airwaves. British listeners are going to quickly learn from Garth and his team that 615 is not just the area code for Nashville, but shorthand for the best country radio station on the planet.”
Listeners can also catch The Nathalie Cox Show, hosted by CountryLine co-founder and creative director Nathalie Cox on the new CountryLine: The BIG 615. The show airs on Sundays from 10 a.m. – 12 p.m. GMT, bringing a British perspective on the best of country music.
“CountryLine and the team behind the brand are the authorities on country music in the U.K.,” says Rich Stern, CEO of TuneIn. “Together, we are bringing a truly global country music station to audiences through a trusted, regional partner for an authentic experience. This partnership further executes upon our mission to change radio distribution to bring listeners the best experiences wherever they are in the world.”
Weekly Register: Beyoncé Tops The Country Streaming Songs Chart
/by Liza AndersonBeyoncé
Beyoncé‘s “Texas Hold ‘Em” tops the country streaming songs chart this week with 26 million new streams, adding to 48 million ATD, according to Luminate data.
After several weeks at No. 1, Zach Bryan and Kacey Musgraves‘ “I Remember Everything” descends to No. 2 with 17 million streams, adding to 524 million ATD, while Morgan Wallen‘s “Last Night” remains at No. 3 with 12 million new streams, adding to 1.221 billion ATD. Bryan’s “Something In The Orange” stays at No. 4 with 11 million streams, adding to 1.242 billion ATD, and Wallen’s “Thinkin’ Bout Me” reclaims the fifth slot with 10 million new streams, adding to 626 million ATD.
On the country albums chart, Wallen’s One Thing At A Time takes No. 1 once again with 64K in total consumption (1.6K album only/81 million song streams). Bryan’s self-titled collection returns to No. 2 with 37K (2.1K album only/45 million song streams), followed by Wallen’s Dangerous: The Double Album at No. 3 with 36K (342 album only/46 million song streams). The late Toby Keith‘s 35 Biggest Hits lands at No. 4 with 30K (9K album only/26 million song streams), and Bryan’s American Heartbreak holds No. 5 with 26K (943 album only/33 million song streams).
My Music Row Story: Why&How’s Halie Hampton Mosley
/by LB CantrellHalie Hampton Mosley
Halie Hampton Mosley joined Why&How in October 2021 as Vice President of Roster Operations, and has helped define and oversee the goals and initiatives of the Why&How roster and staff. Since joining, Hampton Mosley has been instrumental in streamlining and expanding roster operations, and establishing internal practices such as Why&How’s parental leave policies. She also remains closely involved in Why&How artist strategy for such acts as Chase Rice, Danielle Bradbery, Breland and Kelleigh Bannen, among others.
Prior to joining Why&How, Hampton Mosley spent seven years in Artist Management at Maverick Nashville led by long-time Manager Clarence Spalding. She most recently served as the Day-to-Day Artist Manager for Diamond-selling duo Florida Georgia Line at Hit Farm Management in partnership with Full Stop Management led by Irving and Jeffrey Azoff.
Hampton Mosley will be honored as part of the current class of MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row on March 19. For more details about the class and the event, click here.
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I grew up in and around Nashville. All my family is originally from Ashland City, and my grandparents are still there. My mom and dad met there and we moved to Murfreesboro when I was in third or fourth grade, so I did middle school, high school and college in Murfreesboro. I studied business at MTSU.
Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
What were your dreams then?
At one point I thought I might be an attorney. I didn’t really know. I did this thing called DECA in high school where we would formulate business plans and compete with them. I actually ended up getting a marketing scholarship to MTSU because of that program. I thought I could explore a million things with a business degree, but I didn’t really know what I wanted to do.
How did you find out about the music business?
I was getting to the point where I was going to have to start interning for my business credits and a family friend told me about this internship in Nashville. It was at Taillight TV.
I came in, met with their team and ended up doing a production assistant type of internship. One of the first videos I ever remember being on set for was Eric Church‘s “Smoke A Little Smoke.” It was probably that same day that I realized this is a really cool business, but I don’t want anything to do with production. [Laughs]
I met a really great group of people at Taillight. At the end of that semester, the producers put together an intern barbecue. At the time, Lesly Tyson—now Lesly Simon—was married to one of the producers and they held the barbecue at their home. So I met Lesly and I ended up spending an hour in their kitchen asking questions about what she did. I just loved her—I thought she was so smart. She was like, “Why don’t you come intern for me?” So my senior year I went to intern at Sony Music Nashville.
Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
What was that like?
At the time, she had already stepped into the VP role in radio promotion at Arista, so I was assisting all of the imprints. I was packing CDs, sending out promo items and helping with listener and winner stuff for things that they were doing.
When I graduated, they didn’t have any jobs open. I had met people through various events that they would let interns come to, so I had met Pete O’Heeron and he had Cold River Records at the time with Katie Armiger. He knew that all my experience in internships had been in promo, and so he was like, “Why don’t you come try to be a regional?” So I did that.
I was only there for probably a year, but what I did get to do was take a territory and go meet radio and learn what it meant to work a record.
What was next?
It was probably just shy of a year that Sony ended up creating a job for secondary radio promo, so I ended up coming back for that job. I was working smaller markets on behalf of all three of the imprints. I did that for maybe six months before Lesly brought me in and gave me the southeast for Arista.
We had some really great success and fun together. She taught me so much. Carrie Underwood‘s “Good Girl” was my first No. 1, and Brad Paisley‘s “Southern Comfort Zone” was my second. Those were my first two major tours that I was a part of. We went on to do a couple No. 1s with Carrie, which was really sweet.
Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
How did you move out of radio and into management?
Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn were both still on Arista and working to release music individually, but still both managed by Clarence Spalding. I was on the road with Kix, and I remember him asking me if this was what I wanted to do. I told him I really loved what I was doing and was learning so much, but I knew that I didn’t want to be on the road that heavily for my entire career. He was like, “Have you ever thought about management? Why don’t you go meet with my manager?”
I went to have breakfast with Clarence. I was so nervous. [Laughs] After our breakfast, I just stayed in touch with him and a couple months later, his assistant Marne McLyman was moving into more of a day-to-day role. So Clarence called me and said, “I have an assistant job open.” I took it and that would kick off seven years with Clarence.
I remember pretty early on thinking that it was something that I could do longer term, because for the first time I felt like I was getting to see from the second an artist is in a writer room to the moment that they’re singing the song in the stadium.
I sat at a desk outside Clarence’s office and that is how I learned 70% of what it even meant to be a manager. I would listen to the way he talked to his clients, the way he navigated situations when their careers were in certain seasons or the way he interacted with our partners. I just had so much to learn. I would do the same thing with our internal marketing department which was run by Amanda Cates at the time.
Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
How did you transition into more?
Randy Goodman came in and began to oversee Rascal Flatts. The good thing about sitting in that seat was that if people needed an extra set of hands, that was me. As Randy got busier, I just started filling in for things. I just slowly started being present and then that would move into being on the road for show coverage. When I started working with Flatts, then I just started looking for holes internally to be able to do that for the whole roster. I would ask Chris Parr if there was an opportunity where Jason Aldean needs coverage or Jason Houser with Darius Rucker. I just started being the person who could be there. Ultimately what that did for me was let me learn how different the inner workings of the different artist camps operated.
Eventually I started handling my first client on my own within Maverick, which was Rachel Wammack. She and I worked together for a couple of years through the development stage.
How did you start working with Florida Georgia Line?
Lou Taylor was also Reba McEntire‘s business manager, so I had gotten to know her in my EA role with Clarence. I had a sit down with her and she asked me what my goals and dreams were. Maybe a couple months after that conversation, she came to me and she said, “I want to chat with you about Florida Georgia Line. There may be an opportunity for someone to be the lead in Nashville as a part of a new Management structure. Would you be open to that?” I think I almost passed out. I thought, “There’s no way I get this job.”
Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
I met with her a couple times and eventually ended up meeting with the guys. They were entering into a partnership with Irving Azoff out of LA, so they had formed their own management entity which I would end up working under in partnership with Full Stop. They needed someone here just to be boots on the ground. They spent a lot of time in LA at that time because we had a lot of promo periods, but they were both still living here and that wasn’t going to change, so it was important to them to have somebody here. That person became me, and it was pretty wild. I give Lou a lot of credit because again, it was another female like Lesly who looked at me and said, “You may not be a hundred percent ready, but I think you are.”
Tell me about your years with FGL.
They were challenging for me, in a good way, because it was the first time I was jumping in with an act at the height of their fame. Obviously I wasn’t on my own—having people like Irving and Jeffrey Azoff forced me to grow up and do a lot of faking it until I made it. I was thrust into new territory because the guys were just involved in so much.
It was a whirlwind. I remember not really having much time to get my feet underneath me. What was really great though was that even from here, I became integrated into the Full Stop system. I was all of a sudden sitting in meetings where Harry Styles was on screen. Learning through the pop processes and how they handled music rollouts and programming that they were doing with partners and stuff like that was really helpful for me.
Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
What was next?
After a couple years with the guys, they were entering into spaces creatively where they were considering taking time to pursue solo endeavors. They had 10 years of an amazing run. I had had a couple conversations with them each individually, so I started thinking about what would be next for me.
We were shooting the “Drinkin’ Beer. Talkin’ God. Amen.” video out at Chase Rice‘s farm, and that was the first time I had formally met Chase, as well as his manager Bruce Kalmick. I spent some time talking to Bruce and he asked me what my next steps were. I wasn’t really sure but one thing that I did know at that time was that I really didn’t want to continue on in a day-to-day capacity. I wanted to get away from the monotony. I loved being able to work on multiple things at one time, because I think it made me better having exposure. I wasn’t so siloed in one project or one process. I said, “I’m looking for a role where I can step in and help on multiple things. I don’t exactly know what that looks like yet or if that job even exists.” He said, “I started this new company and I need to round out my exec team. We’ll create a role and you can come in and help lead our team and multiple accounts.” So that’s what happened.
Now you’re Chief Operating Officer at Why&How. What’s your favorite part about your job?
Over the last couple years, I have watched some of our staff grow and evolve into new roles. We’ve worked really hard to identify their individual strengths and make changes accordingly. The same thing for our clients—I felt really lucky that I came in at a time where Chase was going through a really pivotal moment in his career. Watching him evolve personally and professionally, to go on and have this first ever critically acclaimed album… those are my favorite things. Getting to watch our clients grow, change and evolve musically and personally—and the same with our staff.
Photo: Courtesy of Hampton Mosley
Who would you say are your mentors?
Definitely Lesly. I call a couple times a year just to walk through my decisions. Even when I was going through my infertility, I called her. She’s probably the only person that I could say has mentored me in life and work. In terms of management, Clarence obviously is the top—I just don’t think it gets any better. Randy Goodman is also a mentor.
You will be honored at our Rising Women on the Row event next month. What would you tell women who are looking at you and want to get where you are one day?
Don’t be afraid to be the youngest or the least experienced person in the room. As my career has evolved, I look back and can pinpoint so many opportunities being presented to me because I wasn’t afraid to raise my hand, even if I may not have been ready. Raise your hand whenever and wherever you can to help out and to be present and to be someone that people can depend on. Oftentimes inexperience and humility with a strong desire to learn can beat out experience and entitlement.
Ryan Beaver Signs With Spirit Music Nashville/2 Mix Music
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R, back row): AJ Burton (Vice President, Spirit Music Nashville/Fluid Music Revolution), Mike Fiorentino (Director of A&R/Production, Spirit Music Nashville), Ryan Beaver and Andy Hodges (Creative Coordinator, Spirit Music Nashville); (L-R, front row): Kara Jackson (Senior Creative Director, Spirit Music Nashville), Derek Wells (Vice President, A&R/Production, Spirit Music Nashville/2 Mix Music), Frank Rogers (Chief Creative Officer, Spirit Music Group/Chief Executive Officer, Spirit Music Nashville) and Kennedy Murphy (Creative Coordinator, Spirit Music Nashville). Photo: Courtesy of Spirit Music Group
Singer-songwriter Ryan Beaver has signed a worldwide publishing deal with Spirit Music Nashville/2 Mix Music.
Beaver is also celebrating his first No. 1 as a songwriter with Warren Zeiders‘ “Pretty Little Poison.” He co-wrote the track alongside Zeiders and Jared Keim.
The Texas native has been writing and performing since he was 17. As an artist, Beaver has released three albums including 2016’s Rx, on which he co-wrote 10 of the 12 tracks, and has toured with The Cadillac Three, Ashley Monroe, Lee Ann Womack, Dwight Yoakam and more. He was nominated for Rising Independent Artist-Writer of the Year in 2017 at the Association of Independent Music Publishers (AIMP) Nashville Country Awards, and took home Rising Songwriter of the Year in 2023.
Beaver also co-wrote Dustin Lynch‘s “Party Mode,” which was the second single on Lynch’s fifth studio album Blue In the Sky, and hit No. 17 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart. His other credits include songs recorded by Blake Shelton, Ryan Hurd, Hardy, Larry Fleet, Parker McCollum, Josh Abbott and Luke Bryan, among others.
“Partnering with Ryan is a very full circle moment for me, personally,” says Derek Wells, Vice President, Spirit Music Nashville/2 Mix Music. “We’ve been musical collaborators for so long and I truly consider him a brother. He’s so representative of the level of artistry and commitment to craft that we want to be associated with here at Spirit Music Nashville. I couldn’t possibly be more excited about this.”
“I am truly excited and grateful to be joining the Spirit/2 Mix family,” says Beaver. “I’ve known everyone for quite some time, making the transition feel effortless. It’s not lost on me how lucky I am to be making music with people I love after all these years and I cannot wait to see what the future has in store. The whole Spirit team, artists and writers are all so inspiring to work with and I look forward to riding the river with this crew.”
UMG Nashville Launches Sing Me Back Home Productions
/by Madison HahnenCindy Mabe and Dawn Gates
Universal Music Group Nashville has started a new TV and film production company, Sing Me Back Home Productions. The company will emphasize storytelling through music integration of UMG Nashville’s roster of past and present artists.
The new division will be helmed by UMG Nashville Chair & CEO Cindy Mabe and SVP of Digital Business and Creative Development Dawn Gates. This new division will develop a content slate for a variety of documentaries, original scripted and unscripted television, feature films and short form content, and will be heavily involved in securing production partners, music supervision and distribution.
“Country music has always been the home of the richest storytellers in music. Storytellers like Merle Haggard, whose song ‘Sing Me Back Home’ helped frame the intent and name behind our production company,” says Mabe. “Songs and stories can transport people and literally sing them back home no matter where they are in the world. Creating a new canvas for our storytellers to paint was a natural next step for our artists to talk to their fans in a new way.
“With several productions underway, this new endeavor fits prominently into what we are sustaining and building as a music company: roots, legacy, music discovery, and storytelling. We are finding faith, family, and heartland are at the core of our business and we are making sure we are building generational content for different mediums across a variety of platforms and shepherding it into the homes of our audience.”
Sing Me Back Home Productions has partnered with ITV America’s Thinkfactory to develop and produce a new docuseries that will follow Michael Trotter Jr. and Tanya Trotter, the Grammy-nominated husband-and-wife duo The War And Treaty. Thinkfactory’s CEO Adam Reed will follow the couple to show how they work together to navigate their careers and home-life. The War And Treaty docuseries, which is already in the works with a broadcast partner, is the first among many projects in development via Sing Me Back Home Productions’ broader collaboration with Thinkfactory Media.
“Country music and its community of artists, past and present, offer such a vast and rich world to explore for content,” shares Reed. “As Thinkfactory doubles down on work rooted in the Heartland, we’re incredibly bullish on the projects we’re developing with Sing Me Back Home, and we admire what Cindy and her group are building at a time when the genre and its hitmakers are flying higher than ever.”
Coming up for the company will also be the release of documentary Gloria Gaynor: I Will Survive via partnership with Storyville Entertainment. Emmy-nominated Betsy Schechter produced the film which follows the journey of music icon Gloria Gaynor. The documentary premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, and was the official opening night film at the Nashville Film Festival, where it also won the Audience Award. The film also won the Best Feature Documentary Award at La Femme Women’s International Film Festival in Los Angeles and most recently won The Palm Springs International Film Festival audience award “Best Of Fest.”
“We are thrilled to have the expertise of Cindy, Dawn, and the Sing Me Back Home team to partner on producing Gloria Gaynor: I Will Survive,” shares Schechter. “Just like her iconic song ‘I Will Survive,’ Gloria’s life is equally inspirational and this film has the power to impact audiences around the world for years to come.”
Dylan Scott Featured On The Cover Of MusicRow’s 2024 Country Radio & Streaming Issue
/by MusicRow StaffMusicRow, Nashville’s leading music industry publication, virtually revealed the winners for the 2024 CountryBreakout Awards today (Feb. 27). The 22nd annual CountryBreakout Award winners were announced on all MusicRow online platforms, including Facebook, Instagram and X (formerly Twitter).
Ahead of Country Radio Seminar (CRS) 2024, winners were determined by spin performance on the MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart in 2023.
The 2024 winners included Male Artist of the Year Morgan Wallen (Big Loud/Mercury/Republic Records), Female Artist of the Year Lainey Wilson (Broken Bow Records/BMG Nashville), Group/Duo of the Year Dan + Shay (Warner Music Nashville), Breakout Artist of the Year Megan Moroney (Columbia Records/Sony Music Nashville), Independent Artist of the Year BoomTown Saints (8 Track Entertainment) and Label Group of the Year UMG Nashville. KRWQ’s Bryce Burtner took home the Reporter of the Year title, while Ashley Gorley was named Songwriter of the Year for the fifth time.
MusicRow Magazine’s 2024 Country Radio & Streaming Issue was also released today, with Curb Records’ Dylan Scott on the cover.
Scott is a triple threat–a powerful vocalist with a deep, unmistakable drawl; an old-soul songwriter with a young spirit and a family man with a tender heart. The ACM Award-nominated, multi-Platinum singer has notched four No. 1 singles at radio (“My Girl,” “Nobody,” “New Truck” and “Can’t Have Mine”), as well as top five hit, “Hooked.”
Following his first career nomination for Best New Country Artist at the all-genre iHeartRadio Music Awards and a coveted spot among CRS’ New Faces of Country Music, his Platinum-certified ode to his wife, “Nobody,” earned him a 2021 CMT Music Award for Breakthrough Video of the Year. Scott then presented that same award at the 2022 CMT Music Awards on CBS.
Scott earned a 2023 ACM nomination for New Male Artist of the Year. Alongside Jason Crabb, he won his first GMA Dove Award in 2023 for the song “Good Morning Mercy.” With career streams exceeding 2.6 billion, the Louisiana native has provided tour support for Garth Brooks, Luke Bryan and Chris Young, among others, cementing him as an in-demand live act. Livin’ My Best Life, the latest album from Scott, features fiery, No. 1 single “New Truck,” along with the viral TikTok ballad, RIAA-certified Platinum, No. 1 radio single “Can’t Have Mine.”
The Country Radio & Streaming Issue takes a close look at Big Loud’s radio success and strategies with SVP, Promotion Stacy Blythe and VP, Promotion Ali Matkosky, and discusses country music’s growth with Spotify’s Head of Editorial Nashville Rachel Whitney. The CRS New Faces Class of 2024 is spotlighted along with The Big 615’s Storme Warren, who shares more about the new platform with MusicRow.
The issue also features a special profile on veteran radio promoter Diane Richey, who recently retired after decades of success in the music business, as well as lists of past CountryBreakout Award winners and categories.
Single copies of MusicRow‘s 2024 Country Radio & Streaming Issue are available for purchase at musicrow.com for $25, and are included with yearly MusicRow subscriptions.
Bobby Bones & The Raging Idiots’ Seventh ‘Million Dollar Show’ Set For April
/by Lorie HollabaughBobby Bones & The Raging Idiots‘ seventh annual “Million Dollar Show,” benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, is set for April 3 at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium.
The group will perform during this year’s show, along with Sam Hunt, Jon Pardi, Megan Moroney, Nate Smith, Ben Rector, Mat Kearney, Ian Munsick, Edwin McCain and Lauren Watkins, with appearances from special guests.
Bones as well as The Bobby Bones Show have raised more than $24.5 million for St. Jude, in addition to funds for other charitable causes.
Tickets go on sale to the general public this Friday (March 1). The BTeam presale and The BIG98 presale will take place today (Feb. 27) and tomorrow (Feb. 28). For more information, click here.